Revealed: Marc-Andre ter Stegen revised injury timeline as Barcelona receive much-needed boost

Reigning La Liga goalkeeper of the year Marc-Andre ter Stegen is set to return ahead of schedule for an injury-riddled Barcelona.

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German No.1 underwent back surgery in NovemberInitially expected to return in FebruaryReports suggest that he could be back by end of monthWHAT HAPPENED?

Ter Stegen was supposed to be a long-term absentee for the Blaugrana, facing over two months on the sidelines after undergoing surgery to fix an ongoing back issue. But the goalie has made progress in his return, and according to Spanish publication , he could be back before the end of the month.

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Ter Stegen was facing a race against time to feature in Barca's round of 16 clash with Napoli in the Champions League. The first leg, set for February 21, was reportedly a rough target date, but it appears he will be back in the side well before that fixture.

(C)Getty ImagesWHAT XAVI SAID

The Barca boss has consistently shown faith in his side's depth to deal with the loss of his star goalie, and rubbished claims that the Blaugrana will dip into the market for depth at the position: "We have confidence in our players and Inaki Pena has been playing at a very high level."

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GettyWHAT NEXT FOR BARCELONA?

Barca's attention now turns to the Spanish Super Cup, where they will take on Osasuna. A win would see the Blaugrana face one of Atletico Madrid or Real Madrid in the final, with a chance to defend their crown.

Inter's most expensive signings – How the Nerazzurri spent almost €1.8 billion on incoming transfers

Exactly how much money have Inter spent on new players this century?

Inter are one of the most decorated clubs in Italy and have had some absolute superstars wearing the famous Nerazzurri jersey during their illustrious history.

Some of these stars came through the club's youth academy, but more often than not Inter would splash the cash to sign players from elsewhere.

There were the likes of Ronaldo and Christian Vieri arriving at the Giuseppe Meazza stadium in the 1990s on massive transfer fees and that trend continued in the 21st century.

Just think Hernan Crespo, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Wesley Sneijder, and many more!

But, how much exactly have Inter spent over the years?

Inter most expensive transfers by season

SEASON

MOST EXPENSIVE SIGNING

FEE

TOTAL SPENDING

2022-23

Joaquin Correa

€23.60M

€38.60M

2021-22

Zinho Vanheusden

€16M

€40.50M

2020-21

Achraf Hakimi

€43M

€126.50M

2019-20

Romelu Lukaku

€80M

€197.72M

2018-19

Radja Nainggolan

€38M

€97.60M

2017-18

Milan Skriniar

€34M

€137.63M

2016-17

Joao Mario

€41M

€160.85M

2015-16

Geoffrey Kondogbia

€36M

€102.45M

2014-15

Gary Medel

€8M

€16.95M

2013-14

Hernanes

€18M

€59.89M

2012-13

Samir Handanovic

€15M

€76.55M

2011-12

Ricardo Alvarez

€12M

€41.70M

2010-11

Giampaolo Pazzini

€18M

€38.14M

2009-10

Diego Milito

€28M

€97.20M

2008-09

Ricardo Quaresma

€24.60M

€70.10M

2007-08

Cristian Chivu

€16M

€41.80M

2006-07

Zlatan Ibrahimovic

€24.80M

€48.40M

2005-06

Walter Samuel

€16M

€30.40M

2004-05

Fabian Carini

€10M

€15.95M

2003-04

Adriano

€23.40M

€54M

2002-03

Hernan Crespo

€40M

€116.18M

2001-02

Francesco Toldo

€26.50M

€112.19M

2000-01

Robbie Keane

€19.50M

€64.25M

Total

€1.78B

Inter top 10 most expensive player signingsGetty10Alessandro Bastoni | €31m | Atalanta | 2017

After coming through the ranks at Atalanta, Bastoni made his debut in November 2016 and Inter came calling in the summer of 2017 after just three appearances for the Bergamo side, paying a hefty €31 million for the centre-back before loaning him back to Atalanta for two seasons.

However, they recalled him back in 2018, renewed his contract until 2023 and then sent him to Parma for another loan spell.

The defender has since returned to Inter and is currently a key part of Inter's starting XI in both Serie A and the Champions League.

AdvertisementGetty Images9Nicolo Barella | €32.5m | Cagliari | 2020

Inter pounced on the opportunity to lure Barella away from Cagliari in 2019, initially signing him on a one-season loan with an obligation to buy.

Barella made 27 appearances for Inter during the 2019-20 season and Inter spent €32.5m to land him on a permanent basis, with a four-year contract taking effect.

The Italian star then led Inter to Scudetto success in 2020-21, was selected as the best midfielder in Serie A and earned a place in the league's Team of the Year as well.

In 2021, Barella signed a contract extension with the club until 2026.

Getty Images8Milan Skriniar | €34m | Sampdoria | 2017

After eye-catching performances for Sampdoria in the 2016-17 season, including becoming the youngest defender to make at least 35 appearances in Serie A, Skriniar moved to Inter in the summer of 2017 for €34m.

He signed a five-year contract and became the most-expensive Slovak player of all time.

With over 150 appearances for the Nerazzurri under his belt already, Skriniar is rapidly on his way to becoming a legend at Inter.

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Getty Images7Geoffrey Kondogbia | €36m | Monaco | 2015

Part of the excellent Monaco team consisting of players like Fabinho, Berbatov, Bernardo Silva, Anthony Martial and many more, Kondogbia helped lead the Ligue 1 side into the Champions League after almost a decade-long absence in 2014-15.

In their dream run to the quarter-final of the tournament, Kondogbia also scored a goal against Arsenal in the round of 16 and in the summer of 2015 Inter came calling, splashing €36m on the Frenchman, who signed a five-year deal.

Kondogbia spent three seasons at Inter before moving to Valencia and later Atletico Madrid.

Norway's Women's World Cup crisis: Superstars Ada Hegerberg and Caroline Graham Hansen being held back as early exit looms

Hege Riise's squad is packed with top-tier talents, but they are yet to score Down Under and facing an embarrassing group-stage failure

Ada Hegerberg is a Ballon d'Or winner and six-time European champion. Caroline Graham Hansen has won 23 major trophies in three countries, which includes two Champions League triumphs. Maren Mjelde and Guro Reiten are both in double figures for titles won at Chelsea. Ingrid Engen has won the league in three different countries and recently lifted her first Champions League trophy. Emilie Haavi was just named Serie A's Most Valuable Player as Roma won the competition for the first time. Frida Maanum was nominated for the Women's Super League's Player of the Season award.

All of these names are in Norway's 2023 Women's World Cup squad and yet, the Scandinavian nation is on the brink of crashing out in the group stages – only 12 months after suffering the exact same fate at the European Championship.

Individuals don't make a team, that's for sure. There's a reason why so many nations see 'golden generations' pass by without living up to the success that many anticipate them achieving. But even knowing that, it seems remarkable that Norway could be about to succumb to another dramatically underwhelming tournament so soon after the last – and under a different coach, too.

There have been positive signs for the 1995 World Cup winners in recent years, such as Lise Klaveness' applaudable representation of the federation as its president and Hegerberg’s decision to end her five-year absence from the national team after seeing improvements at home with regards to women’s football.

But as this tournament has shown, the nation is still a way off success on the pitch. In fact, it’s not even achieving what should be the bare minimum.

GettyThe Law of Jante

When the team news came out for Norway’s crucial match with Switzerland on Tuesday, it was shocking. Following a disappointing defeat to New Zealand in the first game, head coach Hege Riise dropped Graham Hansen to the bench.

This is one of the best players in the world, a game-changer and a galvaniser, someone who played a huge role when Barcelona won the Champions League just last month – and this was an incredibly important game. It was a huge decision.

Graham Hansen would spend less than an hour on the sidelines before, at 0-0, being thrown on to try and get Norway the goal they desired. The winger was very lively and came close on a few occasions, but the game would end goalless.

“There's a lot I want to say, but you might have to bite your tongue,” she told after the final whistle. “I feel like I've been trampled on for a year. You talk about standing together as a team and as a nation. I feel that over the past year I've just taken it on the chin. I thought I had earned a certain amount of respect.”

Asked if she believed there were other reasons for her being on the bench, Graham Hansen replied: “I think I'll leave it until after the championship. I think that in Norway we have a tradition of putting everyone in the same box. The Law of Jante is strong”, she added, referring to an attitude of disapproval towards standing out and expressing individuality.

Riise stood by her decision after the game and praised Graham Hansen’s impact from the bench. The following day, the player apologised for her comments in a press conference. “My emotions got the better of me,” she said.

AdvertisementGettyHard to brush under the carpet

You can’t ignore what happened though, right? After all, frustrations have boiled over before. Indeed, Graham Hansen took a break from the national team after the Euros last summer, while Hegerberg didn’t play for Norway for five years.

And the decision not to play Graham Hansen was certainly a big shock. In Riise’s press conference after the match, one journalist raised their hand and put the following to the coach: “Our football expert says that if you have one of the best players in her position, if you cannot find a space for her on the team, then you fail as a coach. What's your opinion?”

“Well, that's his opinion,” Riise responded. “I reached this decision based on what I find to be best for the team. That was my starting point and that's what I do today. I stick by that decision and that assessment. The opinions of others? Well, it's difficult for me to influence other people's opinion, but I stick to what I did.”

GettyUnderperforming

That it is players like Graham Hansen and Hegerberg that have been vocal about their frustrations at the national team, and gone against that Law of Jante, is no surprise. After all, these are two supremely-talented footballers who play for two of the biggest and best-supported clubs in the game, at Barcelona and Lyon, respectively. They want to be successful and their desire to be so with the national team is at the heart of any outspokenness.

And this team should be doing better. After the defeat to New Zealand, Graham Hansen told : "We go from championship to championship and underperform."

When we talk about ‘golden generations’ not living up to the hype, it’s often that the team has fallen in the knockout rounds too many times or just not got over the hurdle in the final. But after failing to get out of the group stage at Euro 2022, losing 8-0 to England in the process, Norway could be about to exit at the same stage at this 2023 Women’s World Cup, despite being the favourites to top a group that features New Zealand, Switzerland and the Philippines. That’s quite a dramatic underperformance.

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GettyMore than one problem

And these problems don’t just stem from benching Graham Hansen. First of all, this is a team that lacks defensive depth. They have a couple of top-level players in these areas, but are otherwise fragile. Yet it feels like the team is not set-up in a way that best masks that or protects the weakness from being exposed, either in the formation or the players in midfield that can offer support.

That would be fine if they scored lots and lots of goals, which they are capable of given how top-heavy the squad is. Hegerberg, Graham Hansen, Reiten, Haavi, Maanum – these are all attack-minded players, but Norway haven’t found the back of the net yet at the World Cup.

Again, there is team selection that can be questioned here. For example, why is Reiten, who just put up the highest number of assists in the WSL from a left-wing position, playing in midfield? Her ability to isolate a defender one-on-one and whip in a dangerous cross is one of her biggest strengths. In midfield, she has been crowded out and stifled, unable to be at her creative best.

Of course, more is expected from the individuals, too. They can create more, finish better, defend more effectively – and they’ve acknowledged that throughout the tournament. But it does also feel like Riise can get more out of them than she currently is.

‘Florentino Perez never loses’ – Why Real Madrid have a ‘70 or 80 per cent' chance of completing Kylian Mbappe transfer from PSG in 2024

Real Madrid have a “70 or 80 per cent” chance of signing Kylian Mbappe in 2024, with Javier Tebas claiming that “Florentino Perez never loses”.

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Blancos heavily linked with French superstarSet to become a free agent next summerThe next Galactico at the Bernabeu?WHAT HAPPENED?

The Blancos have been heavily linked with the France international forward for several years, but missed out on his signature when a move to Paris Saint-Germain was made in 2017. They have also failed to put a deal in place across recent windows, despite having offers of €200 million (£174m/$212m) plus on the table.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT THEY SAID

Mbappe has, however, stopped short of signing another new contract at PSG, meaning that he could become a free agent next summer. La Liga president Tebas expects that situation to play into Real’s hands, telling when asked about welcoming another World Cup winner to Spain: “Convinced, no, but it is a destiny for him, for sure. I think he will be in La Liga next season at 70 or 80 per cent.”

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Blancos president Perez is famed for his Galacticos recruitment policy – having signed the likes of Luis Figo, Zinedine Zidane, David Beckham and Cristiano Ronaldo in the past – and Tebas added on why Mbappe is likely to end up at Santiago Bernabeu when discussing future transfers and the contentious European Super League plans that Real have played a prominent part in: “Florentino never loses, he doesn’t lose at anything.”

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Getty ImagesWHAT HAPPENS NEXT?

Mbappe has admitted in the past that Real would be a dream club for him and he has already made history at PSG – becoming the club’s all-time leading goalscorer – to suggest that a new challenge will be sought at some stage in the near future.

Anderson Talisca: How the 'New Rivaldo' went from Benfica talisman & Chelsea transfer target to Cristiano Ronaldo's perfect partner at Al-Nassr

The Brazilian might just be the best player in the Saudi Pro League right now, but his career could have turned out far differently

Very few casual football fans would have been aware of Anderson Talisca's existence before Cristiano Ronaldo's shock transfer to Al-Nassr in January. Indeed, the five-time Ballon d'Or winner's arrival in Saudi Arabia soon sparked an unprecedented European exodus, with other household names such as Karim Benzema, N'Golo Kante and Jordan Henderson also accepting mega-money contracts in the Middle East.

The Pro League hasn't just attracted players who are into the final stretches of their careers, either. Neymar, Sergej Milinkovic-Savic, Riyad Mahrez and even 21-year-old Spain playmaker Gabri Veiga have also been persuaded to turn their backs on Europe.

The world is now watching as the Saudi game grows at an exponential rate – which has presented Talisca with a unique opportunity. The Brazilian could easily have shrunk into anonymity at Al-Nassr as merely a supporting cast member, existing only to help keep the spotlight on Ronaldo, but has instead made it his mission to show people that he is also a superstar.

The question is, how did a player with Talisca's immense talent go under the radar for so long?

GettyWhere it all began

Talisca was born in the city of Feira de Santana in Bahia – the fourth-largest state in Brazil. Like most children in the country, he was raised in poverty, and quickly realised that football could be a path to a better life.

After honing his skills on the street, Talisca stepped into Vasco da Gama's youth ranks as a 13-year-old and spent two years with the club, before joining then-Brasileiro Serie B outfit EC Bahia in 2009.

He graduated from Bahia's academy four years later, at which point they had been promoted to the top-flight, and made his professional bow in a clash with Corinthians. Talisca opened his scoring account for the club in his second appearance against Sao Paulo, and soon became a regular in Cristovao Borges' team.

The raw edges in Talisca's game were clear, but so was his limitless potential. "We have to understand that at this age this inconsistency of performance is natural," Borges told reporters when quizzed on the forward's development. "He is a national-team player. Just be patient."

Talisca went on to net a crucial last-minute goal at Cruzeiro that ensured another season in Serie A for Bahia, who parted ways with Borges in December 2013 before appointing another Brazilian coach in the form of Marquinhos Santos. The manager was impressed with Talisca's dedication right from the off, and his ability from a dead-ball.

"Talisca has been reaping the rewards of his training," said Santos. "He is a player who dedicates himself. He is always one of the last to leave the field. After training, he is insistently training free-kicks. It's still early days, he's a young man who has potential and my biggest concern is with his head. Let him continue to evolve and become a great player."

AdvertisementGettyThe big break

Talisca found the net nine times in the first half of Bahia's 2014 season, and his impressive performances eventually attracted the attention of Portuguese giants Benfica, who forked out €5million for the Brazilian starlet that July. Jorge Jesus gave his newest signing big billing, telling the media at his unveiling: "He’s another one who is going to make millions for Benfica."

The manager's words had the desired impact as Talisca scored eight league goals in his first three months at Benfica, including a stunning hat-trick in a 5-0 victory over Vitoria Setubal. Jesus received widespread praise for unearthing a new gem, which prompted a surprise outburst from Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho.

"I think Benfica hired well," Mourinho said to Portuguese broadcaster . "They say Talisca is unknown, but he is only so unknown because he's only not playing in England because he doesn't have a work permit. If he had one, he would be here!"

Jesus then fired back in hilarious fashion: "They knew as much about him as I know about D’Artagnan and the Three Musketeers!"

Former Bahia coordinator Newton Mota was the man who really deserved all the credit for discovering Talisca, and he wasn't at all surprised by his fast start to life at Estadio Da Luz. "People call him Yaya Talisca [after Yaya Toure], but I think he is closer to Rivaldo, who was left-footed, with long strides and good shot from distance," Mota told.

Benfica were flying in the Primeira Liga, but had only picked up one point from their opening three Champions League games. They were eight minutes away from being held to a disappointing 0-0 draw at home to Monaco on matchday four, too, only for Talisca to score a last-gasp winner after ghosting in at the back post to meet a corner on the half-volley.

That was the moment he truly announced himself to European audiences and lived up to his tag as the 'new Rivaldo'. Although Benfica still ended up exiting the competition at the group stage, his status as one of the continent's most exciting young players had been secured, and links to Chelsea began to intensify.

Jesus' side finished the 2014-15 season as Portuguese champions and also lifted the Taca da Liga trophy, with Talisca managing 14 goal contributions across all competitions. He also received his first call-up for Brazil, but everything changed when Jesus cut ties with Benfica to join their arch rivals Sporting CP.

GettyThe turning point

Rui Vitoria was the man selected to replace Jesus after an impressive four-year spell in charge at Vitoria Guimaraes, and he instantly set about stamping his authority on the squad, insisting on a 4-4-2 formation with two combative central midfielders, which essentially eliminated the need for the playmaker role Talisca had made his own under Jesus.

The Brazil Under-23 international only started three league games in the first half of the 2015-16 campaign, and he was forced to come out and address reports of tension with the new manager. "Every player has to go through such moments" Talisca said in December of that season. "There is insecurity and lack of confidence, but I am working hard. I played more under Jesus, but there is no personal feud with Rui Vitoria."

Talisca scored nine goals in all competitions despite his limited playing time, including a brilliant free-kick against Bayern Munich in the Champions League quarter-finals. Benfica ended up losing that tie 3-2 on aggregate, but earned plenty of plaudits for their surprise run in Europe, and bounced back to clinch their third successive league title.

Vitoria had undoubtedly taken Benfica to another level, and decided that Talisca's services were no longer required ahead of his second season in the dugout. Liverpool and Wolves emerged as suitors for the former Bahia wonderkid, but Besiktas won the race for his signature – agreeing a two-year loan deal with Benfica.

Less than a month later, Talisca came up against his parent club in the Champions League. Benfica were 1-0 up when the Brazilian was introduced to the action as a second-half substitute, and they managed to hold their lead under deep into stoppage-time. However, with seconds remaining, a needless foul gifted Besiktas a 25-yard free-kick, and Talisca stepped up. Inevitably, he was able to whip the ball into the far corner using his instep, and didn't hold back with his celebration before being mobbed by his team-mates.

In his post-match interview with , Talisca accused Benfica of not paying him his final salary after the birth of his daughter, before emphatically denying that his exit from the club was financially motivated: "I want to send a message to Benfica management, because they didn't respect me. There were people who criticised me and said that I left Benfica because of money, but that is a lie."

Talisca ended his maiden season at Besiktas with 17 goals and another league title, earning the nickname 'Kiralik Katil' from supporters, which translates to 'Hired Assasin'. He was the top scorer for the club in all competitions in 2017-18, too, but Besiktas dropped a level as a team and they were not able to make his transfer permanent.

Benfica were still determined to offload Talisca, who had burned all of his bridges at Estadio Da Luz, and it was reported that Mourinho reignited his interest in the attacking midfielder, this time as Manchester United boss.

Guangzhou Evergrande beat United to the punch, though, snapping Talisca up on an initial loan deal in June 2018. Four months later he joined them outright for €19m (£17m/$21m), bringing his time in European football to a premature end.

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GettyHow's it going?

Talisca spent three years at Guangzhou, scoring 39 goals and setting up another 13 in 65 appearances. He added one Chinese Super League title to his crown during that period, and was identified as a top target by Saudi giants Al-Hilal in the early months of 2021.

The allure of even greater riches in the Middle East did indeed prove too much for Talisca to ignore, but it was Al-Nassr who won the race for his signature as they struck a bargain $9m deal with Guangzhou in May that year. Talisca was an instant hero in the eyes of Al-Nassr fans for turning down their main rivals, and their bond grew as he quickly established himself as the most important member of the squad. A prolific haul of 31 goals from his first 37 games saw Talisca singled out as the new Pro League poster boy – but Ronaldo took that title from him at the start of the year.

They quickly forged a strong partnership, though, not least because of their Portuguese language connection, and combined for a number of crucial goals in the second half of Al-Nassr's 2022-23 campaign. However, the league title did not come back to Mrsool Park, which ensured another busy transfer window in the summer.

Al-Nassr bolstered their squad by bringing in the likes of Sadio Mane, Marcelo Brozovic, Aymeric Laporte and Seko Fofana, along with Ronaldo's Portugal colleagues Otavio and Alex Telles. Talisca's position at the club was called into question after Mane's arrival, with it suggested that head coach Luis Castro would be unable to fit the Brazilian into his line-up next to the ex-Bayern Munich star and Ronaldo.

A potential return to Besiktas was mooted for Talisca, but he committed to staying put – only to suffer an injury that saw him miss the first few weeks of the new season. Fears over Al-Nassr's tactical set-up were raised again upon his return to full fitness, despite the club's poor start in the Pro League.

As it turns out, Talisca was actually the missing piece in the puzzle. Al-Nassr have been flying since welcoming the former Benfica man back into the fold, winning 17 of their last 18 games in all competitions.

That has included picking up maximum points in the AFC Champions League group stages, with Talisca scoring all three goals in their latest victory over Al-Duhail. He's already up to 17 goals for the season in total, just four fewer than Ronaldo.

WATCH: Wrexham captain Ben Tozer opens up on how he 'turned a negative into a positive' after tragically losing his father weeks after Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney's side earned League Two promotion

Wrexham defender Ben Tozer has opened up on the death of his father, which occurred shortly after his side won the National League title last season.

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Tozer's father passed away in summerDefender made emotional social media postWrexham star opened up on the effectWHAT HAPPENED?

Two months after the Welsh team gained promotion to League Two by winning the National League, Tozer's dad, Keith, died of leukemia. The Red Dragons captain made an emotional post on social media that many supporters took as encouragement to seek medical care.

AdvertisementWATCH THE CLIPWHAT TOZER SAID

"Well, my dad told me that he had leukemia and he was in hospital," the centre-back told the podcast. "Sadly, he died two days later. Because it happened so quick, it was such a shock, but when you go through something like I say try and turn a negative into a positive and if it can help people.

"I've had lots of people come up to me and say thankfully: 'It made me go and get checked, I don't want to see my boy in the same situation you're in'. It's powerful. I'm grateful that hopefully it has helped people along the way."

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Toze said in his social media post that his father's illness progressed so quickly "because he had left it too late. Unknowingly, he was masking the fact he was [in] complete agony. "Go and get checked" we regularly said. He was just too scared of what it could be."

Moores joins Nottinghamshire coaching staff

Peter Moores, England’s former head coach, has joined Nottinghamshire as a coaching consultant until the end of the season

David Hopps30-Jun-2015Peter Moores, England’s former head coach, has been brought in by Nottinghamshire as a coaching consultant until the end of the season. Moores, who was sacked by England last month, has joined the backroom staff at Trent Bridge on a three-month contract.Moores recently spoke of his desire to return to coaching in an interview with ESPNcricinfo, saying that the hunger was “just starting to come back”.The move reunites him with Mick Newell, Nottinghamshire’s director of cricket, who was made an England selector under Moores. Nottinghamshire have struggled in the Championship so far this season, having won only one match and starting the latest round of matches at the bottom of the table.”We need to improve our four-day performances quickly and Peter, with his vast experience and proven reputation as a coach, can help us do that,” Newell said.”Having such a knowledgeable and respected individual on our doorstep, who is available for the rest of the season, is a fantastic opportunity for us to take. Peter is an excellent one-to-one coach, who will bring fresh ideas and can work with players to improve their form. It also offers our existing coaching team the opportunity to learn from him.”Newell told Nottinghamshire’s players of the decision to appoint Moores after the second day of their Championship match against Worcestershire at Trent Bridge. The decision first took shape for Newell during a comprehensive defeat last week against Yorkshire at Headingley which perhaps for the first time made the threat of relegation a real one.”I’ve been doing this job for 13 years now,” Newell said. “I felt there was a need for fresh ideas and voices in the dressing room. A lot of those players have had to listen to me for a long time. You start to wonder if you’re having a positive influence on the team.”We felt it was a good time to shake it up and bring someone new in. He’s a bloke who lives 20 minutes away and is a very high quality coach. It seemed a no-brainer.”We’ve known each other through the county circuit but we got to know each other well with England. I got more of an insight into him in that time. Building teams and working with players excites him as a coach.”He can come here with no shackles and do what he likes doing. This team is looking for something and we hope it’s the start of something to boost us.”It would be natural to wonder whether if Moores is successful in turning around Nottinghamshire’s season it might be the start of Newell taken a less hands-on role at Trent Bridge. If that conversation ever takes place, it would be a conversation for the end of the season. Newell is honest enough to understand that the future cannot be predicted with certainty, but he certainly will not be stepping back in the months ahead.”I’ll be on the field still and I’m very much in the dressing room,” Newell said. “I’m very much responsible for the selection of the team. Peter doesn’t want anything to do with that. I might not do quite as many throwdowns.”Moores was removed as England coach for the second time in May, after a year in the job. He has previously had great success in the Championship, winning titles with Sussex and Lancashire, as well as coaching at the ECB’s academy in Loughborough. His son, Tom, is currently on the books at Nottinghamshire.”I feel very excited about the opportunity to work as a consultant coach at a club as prestigious as Notts,” Moores said. “My role will be to support Mick and the rest of the coaches and to be there to help the players in whatever way possible.”I’m looking forward to adding something to the group during the business end of the season. Trent Bridge is a great place. I look at it as being one of the great cricket grounds in England and, living only 20 minutes down the road, I know the significance cricket has in the area. “It will be really interesting getting up close with some of the lads, watching them play, seeing where they are at and helping them maximise their talent, because there are some very talented players there.”The job is to help people play some good cricket, working alongside the players and the coaches to help Nottinghamshire win games. League positions look after themselves if you’re playing well.”

Messi, Oblak and La Liga Team of the Season so far

As the Spanish top flight enters its winter break, we look back at the players who have shined throughout this first half of the campaign

Getty1GK: Jan Oblak

Usually so formidable at the back, rotten luck with injuries has seen Atletico Madrid look uncharacteristically vulnerable when out of possession.

Luckily for Diego Simeone's men, they can still count on Oblak, who continues to be near-unbeatable between the posts even without the likes of Diego Godin and Jose Gimenez screening him.

The Slovenian boasts the meanest defensive record in La Liga, keeping eight clean sheets to date and conceding a mere 12 goals.

AdvertisementGetty Images2RB: Dani Carvajal

Statistics can be misleading, but Dani Carvajal's importance to Real Madrid is underlined by their woeful record without him.

The right-back has struggled with injury in the 2018-19 season, playing nine of the Merengue's opening 16 Liga games and starting just eight. 

Incredibly, Madrid have not lost any of the games Carvajal has started, while suffering defeat in five of the other eight (including the 3-0 reverse at the hands of Eibar, which saw Carvajal enter as a late substitute.)

Even while seeing his playing time restricted, Dani continues to show he is a cut above the rest.

Getty3CB: Gerard Pique

While there have been a few jitters, particularly during the early stages of the season, Gerard Pique has been Barcelona's defensive rock.

The centre-back has seen a host of players line up alongside him as Barca have suffered badly with injuries.

Samuel Umtiti and Thomas Vermaelen have missed most of the campaign, leaving newcomer Clement Lenglet to receive a baptism of fire at Camp Nou.

Despite those difficulties and instability, Pique has been an ocean of calm. He has also popped up with three goals in La Liga to help the leaders' cause.

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Getty Images4CB: Marc Bartra

Betis have been one of the revelations of the Liga season so far, combining flashes of exhilarating football with a sturdy base at the back. Marc Bartra, who arrived in Andalusia at the start of 2018, is the cornerstone of that defensive effort.

The former Barcelona and Dortmund centre-half has been ever-present so far in the 2018-19 campaign, marshalling a backline that ranks among Spain's tightest.

Bartra has endured a difficult professional career marked with setbacks – not least the injuries sustained in Dortmund's horrific bombing attack – but, at 27, he is performing at the peak of his powers.

Belgium, that was pathetic! Winners, losers & ratings as hopeless Belgium crash out of World Cup after Lukaku horrorshow

The Golden Generation crumbles. Belgium are out of the World Cup following a 0-0 draw with Croatia, who advance from second place in Group F.

In a chaotic week involving reported rifts within the squad and just about all the eyes of the footballing world on them, Belgium's performance was chaotic in all the wrong ways.

Roberto Martinez's side crashed out of Qatar 2022 having failed to make it out of the group stages following a lifeless draw with Croatia.

And while ahead of kick-off a draw was good enough to advance, they almost fell behind inside the first minute thanks to a swift kick-off routine involving Luka Modric and Ivan Perisic. In part, that told the story of the game; Croatia weren't sharp enough, but Belgium were even worse, and never looked like actually sustaining a consistent threat.

The tempo upped somewhat after the break, but considering Morocco were ahead against Canada, it wasn't anywhere near good enough. Romelu Lukaku coming off the bench to miss as many as four glorious opportunities – the first two of which were open nets – painted a dismal picture of Belgium's reality. With each one squandered, elimination looked more and more inevitable.

Eden Hazard being given a handful of minutes in the dying embers was truly the last roll of the dice, but was of course not enough to get the Red Devils – currently second in FIFA's world rankings – over the line and into the World Cup knockout stages.

GOALruns through the winners, losers, and player ratings on an admittedly dark hour in Belgium's football history.

Getty ImagesThe Winners

Morocco:

While Croatia and Belgium played out to a bore draw, Morocco pounced on a fragile Canada and stole a march atop of Group F for their efforts.

With all the eyes on Martinez's men and whether they would finally kick into gear, the pressure was still on Morocco, who were coming up against a side who have proven they can hurt their opponents despite already having been eliminated.

But Morocco weren't shaken by the task or the occasion and fired in an early goal, setting up their stall well and building a platform to work on. Indeed, they added a second and held on four a 2-1 win, securing first place in the group in the process.

Thibaut Courtois:

He's really good, isn't he?

With Belgium's ageing back line not quite as watertight as it once was, and his side chasing the game in search of victory, Thibaut Courtois went from scratching his head for 45 minutes to suddenly needing to keep Belgium in the game.

He produced a stunning trio of saves early in the second half, making them all look far more routine then they actually would've been, to keep the scores level and never looked flustered.

On another poor night for the Red Devils, the Real Madrid stopper can hold his head high.

Pep Guardiola:

The Manchester City boss would've been sat underneath his widescreen TV licking his lips.

Not because he's a particularly big fan of Croatian football, but because his prized asset Kevin De Bruyne is heading home at the earliest convenience.

We're certain he's already thinking about how he'll greet him at the training ground. Throw an arm around him, join in with the belittling of the Belgium squad and fuel him with vengeance in time for the return of Premier League football on Boxing Day.

By the time the domestic season restarts, De Bruyne should be close to full fitness, raring to go once again. That's dangerous.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesThe Losers

VAR:

It's a conversation that we all have, every single week, but it needs to happen. VAR was at it again.

Whether or not the penalty awarded to Croatia in the 15th minute was soft or not, there's a more important question to be asked – why is the referee being sent over to the monitor to check for offside?

Not only that, but Anthony Taylor was only sent over there after Luka Modric had already got himself ready to take the spot kick. It's endlessly confusing and becomes more frustrating with every questionable decision.

Streamline the technology or scrap it altogether.

Belgium's 'Golden Generation':

Sometimes you have to say goodbye to those you love the most, even if it seems an absurd decision.

Belgium moving on from their 'Golden Generation', though, becomes less absurd and more necessary every time you watch them. In what was a laboured game all round, it was the old guard who stood out for all the wrong reasons.

Dries Mertens was hooked at half-time, De Bruyne looked lost without the help of others in midfield, Eden Hazard didn't even get a chance from the start, and the less said about the back line, the better.

In order for Belgium to move forward, they need to sweep this golden generation discourse under the carpet, put it to the back of their minds and start afresh with the younger talent within the squad, because it's absolutely there.

Romelu Lukaku:

The whole world is routing for you, Rom. They really are. But as time goes on, it gets harder and harder to believe that you're the top-level striker you think you are.

Let's get the excuse out of the way first; the 29-year-old has been injured for the bulk of the season and is obviously not match sharp.

Having said that, it's hard to blame match sharpness on him missing glorious chances to score. Four, Romelu. ? Unfortunately, though, it's not a new thing to see Lukaku lack a clinical edge in front of goal, certainly in moments where it matters and the opposition is tough. And when he missed the first two, you just knew he wasn't going to make the net bulge.

Simply put, Belgium needed a hero. These are the moments you live and die by. Unfortunately for him, Belgium's World Cup campaign received a final nail in its coffin as a result of him missing an open net – twice – and then spurning yet more presentable opportunities.

Getty ImagesBelgium player ratings: Defence

Thibaut Courtois (7/10):

Did well to bat away an effort from Mateo Kovacic early on in the second half and was down low shortly after to stop an effort from Marcelo Brozovic. After an untroubled first half, the towering stopper showed his class in the second.

Leander Dendoncker (7/10):

Key in keeping Ivan Perisic quiet when he tried to burst inside. Played in a brilliant, low cross from the touchline back to the penalty spot for Mertens in the first half which deserved an assist.

Toby Alderweireld (6/10):

Seemed to have Croatia troubled with his long-range passes whenever he used them. Ought to have tried the long ball more often.

Jan Vertonghen (6/10):

No calamities, but wasn't able to speed up the game or press high up the pitch and make it more difficult for Croatia to play.

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Getty ImagesMidfield

Thomas Meunier (4/10):

Offered nothing in terms of attacking thrust. Helped out his defenders, but needed to do more than that on a night where Belgium needed a win. Really underwhelming.

Kevin De Bruyne (6/10):

Had to spend too much time in a defensive setting helping out his colleagues, which rendered him rather useless for the most part unless Belgium had the chance for a quick counter-attack. Needed an extra body in midfield to free up the magician.

Axel Witsel (5/10):

Did his job out of possession competently, but needed to offer more in terms of getting on the ball and ensuring Belgium stayed in control.

Timothy Castagne (3/10):

A similar story to Meunier, but perhaps more disappointing considering we know what Castagne is capable of in an attacking sense.

Ten reasons why Real Madrid's team is the worst in recent history

Los Blancos have endured a desperately poor campaign in 2018-19 and it is hard to believe the same team were an all-conquering force just a season ago

The 2018-19 campaign has been a disastrous one for Real Madrid thus far, following three years of relative stability – and undoubted success – under Zinedine Zidane.

As they limp on into the new year in the hope of improvement, with the help of Opta, Goal takes a look at why this team is the worst Los Blancos outfit in recent history.

Getty1Unconvincing in Champions LeagueThey may have been crowned Club World Cup champions for a record-breaking fourth time in December, but Real Madrid have a serious fight on their hands if they are to maintain their status as Europe's kings. They were uncharacteristically shaky in the group stage and lost twice to CSKA Moscow, including a 3-0 defeat at the Bernabeu – their biggest ever home defeat in European competition. The last-16 draw has been kind – on paper at least – by pitting them against Ajax, but they will need to find another gear should they wish to defend their title.AdvertisementGetty2Poor work in the transfer marketIt is clear now that Real Madrid had no contingency plan for the exit of Ronaldo. Their transfer dealings during the pre-season window were uninspiring and they quite simply failed to strengthen the squad adequately enough. There had been talk of stars such as Neymar and Eden Hazard making their way to the Spanish capital, but Madrid's big-money signings ahead of the 2018-19 campaign were Mariano Diaz, who returned to the club from Lyon after one season, Alvaro Odriozola, who has been back-up to Dani Carvajal for much of the season, and Vinicius Jr., an unproven teenager.Getty3Isco is fading into obscurity

As mentioned, Ronaldo’s exit from the Bernabeu opened up an opportunity for some of those who had been forced to play second fiddle while the forward was in town, and one of those who was expected to take his game to the next level was Isco. The Spain international had shown glimpses of his capacity to take the initiative in games over the past two campaigns in particular, but he hasn’t reached the same level of performance in 2018-19.

Isco has been forced to contend with a place on the bench more than he would have liked and his return of four goals and two assists in 21 appearances leaves plenty to be desired. To top things off, the midfielder is said to be unhappy at the club after reportedly clashing with Santiago Solari.

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Getty4They are dropping too many pointsOne must go back 13 years to find the last time Real Madrid posted a points tally of 30 after the first 18 games of the Liga season. They have dropped points against the likes of Eibar and Levante, while Real Sociedad's 2-0 win at the Bernabeu this January was the first time the Basque club achieved that feat since 2004. Lost Blancos are languishing in fifth place at the time of writing, and dropping points remains a worrying habit.

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