Man City eye half-price £40m swoop to sign "incredible" star who Pep loves

As they look to welcome their next addition following James Trafford, Manchester City are now reportedly eyeing a cut-price move to sign a midfield star who Pep Guardiola loves.

Man City closing in on Trafford

For much of the summer, Trafford looked Newcastle United’s to lose. The Magpies, whilst they missed out on other targets, looked likely to secure the goalkeeper’s signature. And then Manchester City came calling to deal those at St James’ Park even more frustration. Now, the Citizens are the ones in pole position and have reportedly agreed a deal worth £27m to welcome Trafford back to the Etihad.

Re-signing for the club for the first time since swapping Manchester for Burnley in 2023, Trafford will hope to take hold of the No.1 shirt once and for all under Guardiola.

Given that Ederson’s Man City future is far from a guarantee these days amid links to the likes of Galatasaray, Trafford’s ambition is certainly a realistic one. The 22-year-old is one of the most talented young shot-stoppers in the Premier League and could thrive when handed the main responsibility between the sticks for Guardiola.

Starts

45

26

Save Percentage

84.5%

69.2%

Pass Completion Rate

73.3%

87.9%

Saves P90

1.89

2.05

Although the England international still has a way to go to match Ederson’s ability on the ball, as do most goalkeepers, he will arguably provide City with a more reliable shot-stopper when looking at save percentage last season.

James Trafford for Burnley.

Meanwhile, with Trafford on his way, Man City have now reportedly shifted their focus towards another midfield reinforcement who Guardiola is a huge fan of.

Man City eyeing half-price Paqueta swoop

According to journalist Graeme Bailey, Man City are now eyeing a half-price £40m move to sign Lucas Paqueta amid reports that the Brazilian is set to be cleared of all betting charges.

A player who Guardiola reportedly loves and one who former West Ham United boss David Moyes dubbed “incredible”, Paqueta could yet receive the chance to get back on track and finally secure the biggest move of his career courtesy of Man City.

£150k-per-week ace in London this week after agreeing Arsenal move

Arsenal remain very active behind-the-scenes in terms of their summer recruitment plans, as manager Mikel Arteta and new sporting director Andrea Berta attempt to close the gap on Premier League champions Liverpool next season.

Arsenal set to sign Real Sociedad midfielder Martin Zubimendi

The north Londoners, after months of talks, recently sealed a deal for Spain international midfielder Martin Zubimendi, as per numerous reliable reports.

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News of Zubimendi’s potential move to London Colney was first revealed by The Mail back in January, and Berta has been working to finalise a deal for the 26-year-old ever since – coming after his predecessor Edu and ex-interim director Jason Ayto laid most of the groundwork (Ben Jacobs).

The Real Sociedad favourite is now set to become Berta’s first signing as the Gunners’ new transfer chief, but he largely has both Ayto and Edu to thank for this, as they were the “driving forces” behind Zubimendi’s switch (Ben Jacobs).

Arsenal transfer spending under Arteta (via Sky Sports)

Money on new signings

19/20 – winter

£0

20/21 – summer

£81.5m

20/21 – winter

£900k

21/22 – summer

£156.8m

21/22 – winter

£1.8m

22/23 – summer

£121.5m

22/23 – winter

£59m

23/24 – summer

£208m

23/24 – winter

£0

24/25 – summer

£101.5m

24/25 – winter

£0

Despite some concerns about Real Madrid mounting a late hijack, especially after Zubimendi’s cryptic comments regarding his future, Fabrizio Romano is among the credible media sources to share news last week that the player travelled to London and put the finishing touches on his Emirates Stadium move.

Arsenal will also pay around £55 million for Zubimendi, despite his lower release clause, as a gesture of good faith to Sociedad which also allows the club to pay the fee in installments.

With Zubimendi’s done and dusted, attention is swiftly turning to who could follow him, and that man is apparently £150,000-per-week Chelsea goalkeeper Kepa Arrizabalaga.

Romano has given his ‘here we go’ to Arrizabalaga’s Arsenal move today, with the player also travelling to the club this week as he puts the finishing touches on his N5 transfer.

Kepa Arrizabalaga travelling to London this week after agreeing Arsenal move

The 30-year-old has been poised to join Arsenal for a little while now as he looks to battle David Raya for the number one spot (David Ornstein), with The Athletic’s James McNicholas sharing more on the situation.

Kepa is personally in London “this week” to finalise his move to Arsenal, so the Stamford Bridge outcast appears set to become Berta’s second signing of the summer.

The former Athletic Bilbao ace’s capture has already been widely praised, with his meagre £5 million cost coming as a potential bargain given Kepa’s extensive top-level experience.

“Arsenal do need a replacement for Neto, what a loan spell that was, it didn’t work, that is for sure,” said pundit Adrian Clarke on Inside Gooners earlier this month.

“Kepa Arrizabalaga, he’s available for just £5m, that sounds like the deal of the century, doesn’t it.”

Sean Abbott five-for leads Surrey to crushing win over Middlesex

Luke Hollman’s career-best 5 for 16 in the format to no avail at Lord’s

ECB Reporters Network20-Jun-2024 Surrey 185 for 9 (Curran 48, Evans 41, Hollman 5-16) beat Middlesex 129 for 8 (Davies 35, Abbott 5-18) by 56 runsSean Abbott’s 5 for 18, including wickets with successive balls led the way as Surrey crushed London rivals Middlesex by 56 runs at Lord’s to return to the top of the South Group table.The Aussie seamer mixed slower balls with great yorkers to expose the home side’s fragile batting and ensure they were never in the hunt for a victory target of 186.Abbott’s wasn’t the only five-wicket haul of the night with Luke Hollman taking a career-best 5-16 in the format, including three in one over, but Tom Curran (48 from 28) and Laurie Evans (41 from 20) steered Surrey to a challenging 185 for 9 despite the Middlesex leg-spinner’s heroics.For Middlesex defeat was their 13th in a row at home in the Blast, a run now stretching back more than two years.Dom Sibley, dropped on nought by Martin Andersson, soon departed lbw for 5 after Surrey were invited to bat, but thereafter Dan Lawrence and Laurie Evans dominated the remainder of the powerplay for the visitors.Evans was particularly belligerent, upper-cutting one from Henry Brookes over the ropes before bludgeoning Tom Helm over mid-on for a second six. Lawrence was more classical, creaming one for four through the covers and cutting to good effect.The introduction of Hollman though changed the landscape. The leg-spinner began the fightback, pinning Evans lbw attempting to sweep one off the stumps before causing skipper Ollie Pope to sky one to extra cover in his next over.He wasn’t done there producing a trio of wickets in his third over – and it might have been more. Lawrence found the hands of Helm at long-on, while Rory Burns should have been stumped first ball, Jack Davies fumbling the chance, but the wicketkeeper atoned two balls later when Surrey’s red-ball skipper was undone by a googly. And Hollman capped a magical over, trapping Jamie Smith, a man with a strike-rate of 210 this season, lbw.The Brown caps had stumbled to 106 for 6, but Curran remained and counter-attacked fiercely. Three times the allrounder cleared the ropes with Brookes the bowler to suffer most, though the former Warwickshire quick gained some recompense when Curran holed out two short of 50 in the last over.Chasing 186, Andersson perished early caught in the deep off Abbott and when he removed Stephen Eskinazi and Holden with the last two balls of the powerplay, the latter for a first-ball duck, undone by a yorker, the rate was already over 10.Leus Du Plooy, recovered from a virus, fell in the next over to Curran and the hosts, dismissed for a worst ever score of 78 in the format nine days earlier, were staring at defeat once more at 41 for 4.Davies (35) cracked Abbott’s hat-trick ball through mid-on for four, but the usually explosive Ryan Higgins was trapped in front later in the over.At the other end, Curran was forced out of the attack after being struck on the arm, but Hollman was unable to repeat his heroics with the ball bat in hand and Davies became Abbott’s fifth victim as the visitors won comfortably.

Outscored Delap: Everton could sign their own Isak in "sensational" £42m ST

Dominic Calvert-Lewin’s future is still up in the air, but that won’t prevent Everton from signing a new striker this summer.

After an impressive start to life at the helm, David Moyes is looking for ways to take the Toffees to the next level. It’s like he never left.

Backed by The Friedkin Group, Moyes means business. However, his efforts to sign Ipswich Town’s Liam Delap appear to have been thwarted, the English striker opting to sign for Chelsea.

He’s not the only talented forward on the market, though, and Everton may yet secure a thrilling addition.

Everton could sign Delap alternative

As reported earlier this week by German outlet BILD, Everton are among the clubs to have registered their interest in Stuttgart striker Nick Woltemade this month, though the DFB-Pokal champions are hoping to tie the 23-year-old down to a new deal.

Arsenal and Atletico Madrid are among the other contenders, so it won’t be easy for The Toffees, but Moyes will hope to convince the German that he would be making a prudent move by joining the ranks at Bramley Moore.

Stuttgart's Nick Woltemade

Stuttgart have placed a loose valuation on their towering talisman, but they could be seeking as much as €50m (£42m), should the competition remain thick over the coming weeks.

Why Everton should sign Nick Woltemade

With Delap a no-go, Everton would strike gold in signing Woltemade, with his distinctive, rounded style of play leading data-driven site FBref to record Newcastle United’s Alexander Isak as one of his most comparable players, among those in his postition across Europe’s top five leagues.

Everton manager DavidMoyesbefore the match

Woltemade scored 17 goals across 33 matches in all competitions this season, including every round of Stuttgart’s triumphant DFB-Pokal campaign, and has been hailed for his “sensational” finishing ability by reporter Bruno Alemany.

That 17-goal return surpasses Delap’s, the Ipswich man bagging 12 from 37 matches in the Premier League, but it’s his complete skill set which suggests Moyes should do everything he can to complete a deal.

Harking back to FBref, Woltemade is recorded to have ranked among the top 3% of centre-forwards across Europe’s top-five leagues over the past year for shot-creating actions, the top 11% for passes attempted, the top 13% for progressive passes and the top 4% for successful take-ons per 90.

He’s the full package, all 6 foot 6 of him. It’s definitely a peculiar profile, with Woltemade a clinical finisher, progressive passer and creative outlet, with neat footwork and clever movements.

This does bear a similarity to Isak, who has been hailed as “the complete striker” by Newcastle legend Alan Shearer.

Matches (starts)

34 (34)

28 (17)

Goals

23

12

Assists

6

2

Shots (on target)*

2.9 (1.4)

1.8 (0.9)

Big chances missed

18

11

Accurate passes*

14.9 (77%)

12.3 (72%)

Big chances created

11

8

Key passes*

1.1

1.3

Dribbles*

1.2

1.1

Duels won*

2.8

4.4

The Sweden striker scored 27 goals from 42 appearances this season, but he also dazzled with his silky running and nimble shimmies from left to right, left to right.

He’s of course operating at a higher level than Woltemade, but the template is there and Everton could offer the grounded pathway to achieve his goals.

VfB Stuttgart's Nick Woltemade in action with Bayern Munich's JoaoPalhinhaand Bayern Munich's Kim Min-jae

The problem, as ever, is that Woltemade is a talented striker with a good track record, and thus bagging him will be no easy feat. But if Everton can sign such a unique profile, physical and imposing and technical and dynamic, it could revolutionise the club’s frontline.

With similarities to Newcastle’s Isak, throwing the kitchen sink at a deal is surely a no-brainer.

Moyes' own Richarlison: Everton to make huge offer for "sensational" CF

Everton could be about to land a star who could follow in Richarlison’s footsteps on Merseyside.

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Birmingham plotting move for £15k-p/w colossus to fuel PL promotion push

Birmingham City are now keen on signing a £15k-per-week Premier League player to fuel next season’s promotion charge, according to a report.

Blues eyeing back-to-back promotions

Birmingham were always expected to return to the Championship this season, but they managed to do so in emphatic fashion, sealing the League One title by amassing 111 points, which is a new EFL record.

However, the third-tier title triumph is just the first step of the journey under the helm of chairman Tom Wagner, who has made it clear the Blues will not be resting on their laurels in the summer transfer window, saying: “We won’t rest until we’re at the very, very top – that’s the objective,”

“I can assure you that this summer we will be working harder than we did last summer.”

Wagner means business: Sky journalist drops exciting Birmingham transfer plan

The Blues are not messing around…

ByTom Cunningham May 1, 2025

Jay Stansfield finished the season with 19 League One goals, but there are signs that a striker with more experience at Championship level could be brought in this summer, with Torino’s Che Adams believed to be of interest.

Not only that, but Birmingham are also looking to bolster their options at the opposite end of the pitch, with a report from EFL Analysis revealing they are now plotting a move for AFC Bournemouth goalkeeper Mark Travers.

The Blues are looking to assemble a squad capable of winning another promotion next season, and Travers is on their wishlist, with the goalkeeper unlikely to remain at the Vitality Stadium beyond the end of the season.

Middlesbrough's MarkTravers

The 25-year-old joined Middlesbrough on loan in the January transfer window, where he seemingly caught the eye, with a number of other unnamed clubs said to be queuing up for his signature.

"Brilliant" Travers could be coup for Birmingham

The 6 foot 3 colossus has impressed Michael Carrick during his time at the Riverside Stadium, with reporter Craig Johms describing him as the “big positive” from Boro’s January transfer window.

Having impressed for a play-off-chasing Championship side in the second half of the campaign, there are clear signs the £15k-a-week goalkeeper could fit the bill for Birmingham, given that they have aspirations of a Premier League return.

Sheffield United's Callum O'Hare in action with Middlesbrough's MarkTravers

Scott Parker was left impressed by the Irishman’s performances for Bournemouth in their promotion-winning 2021-22 campaign, saying: “It’s a sign of a top ‘keeper that in big moments makes big saves.

“Saves you think ‘wow he should not have saved that, he’s kept us in the game there’. Over the past three or four months, Travs is coming into the realms of making big saves at big moments and Saturday was a massive save. That’s not just Saturday. That’s happened over the course of it.

“I’m very pleased with Travs, he’s done brilliant, he’s developed brilliantly.”

Having also impressed at Premier League level prior to joining Middlesbrough on loan, Travers is exactly the calibre of player Birmingham need to sign to fuel their promotion push, and there is every indication he could be Chris Davies’ first-choice keeper on a long-term basis.

Tottenham: Postecoglou could be without £170k-p/w star after injury update

It is right back to business for Tottenham and Ange Postecoglou after their heroics in the Europa League on Thursday, with Champions League qualification chasers Nottingham Forest awaiting them on Easter Monday as Nuno Espírito Santo looks to upset his former club.

Tottenham enter first Europa League semi-final since 1984

Spurs edged past Eintracht Frankfurt in the quarter-finals, courtesy of Dominic Solanke’s vital spot-kick, and Postecoglou’s side were forced to display some last-gasp pieces of defending to keep hold of their precious advantage on hostile away turf.

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Bodies were on the line over a dogged, mature display which we’ve scarcely witnessed at Spurs all season long, and Postecoglou was thrilled by the effort from his players, as Tottenham set up their first Europa semi-final since 1984.

“They’ve been so united in believing in what we’re trying to achieve here and that is what gave me heart all along that if we got our own slice of luck in terms of getting some players back that I really believed this team could achieve,” said Postecoglou on Spurs’ win over Eintracht.

Nottingham Forest (home)

April 21st

Liverpool (away)

April 27th

West Ham (away)

May 3rd

Crystal Palace (home)

May 10th

Aston Villa (away)

May 18th

“That is what keeps driving me. It isn’t so much my belief in them, it’s their belief in what we’re doing and both players and staff have been outstanding. I am the front man for it but they take responsibility for it as well and all my decisions and everything I do, but not at any stage have I felt they lost any belief in me or what we’re doing.”

Postecoglou has been repeatedly tipped for the Tottenham axe following a dismal Premier League season, having already lost 17 top-flight matches, but their Europa League campaign represents a golden opportunity for the Lilywhites to make history and fulfill the Australian’s goal of winning silverware during his second term in charge.

All eyes are on the next round, where they will face off against fairy-tale semi-finalists Bodo/Glimt, but they must first take on both Forest and travel to Anfield for a clash against Liverpool.

Tottenham could be without James Maddison against Nottingham Forest

As Spurs prepare to host the former at home, Postecoglou has shared a pre-match update on star £170,000-per-week midfielder James Maddison.

Maddison was forced off against Eintracht after his nasty collision with goalkeeper Kaua Santos, which resulted in the away side being awarded Solanke’s decisive penalty.

The Englishman ultimately playing a crucial role in helping Tottenham to the semis, but as a result, Postecoglou has now confirmed that Maddison is a Tottenham injury doubt for Forest.

“It’s fair to say he’ll probably be a bit sore, so he’s probably a doubt for Monday,” said Postecoglou on Maddison’s condition.

“The rest of the group, again, they all worked hard, so they’ll be sore, but they should all be okay for Monday night. Sonny will still be out. He’s been dealing with a foot problem for a while, so now is as good a time as any to give him the right time to to get over it. He’ll definitely miss Monday. Everyone else should be okay.”

The 28-year-old has bagged 10 goals and 11 assists throughout all competitions, and he’ll likely be a sore miss against Forest, but with nothing to play for domestically, it is far more imperative that he’s fresh and ready for their European tie.

England make 400-plus twice for the first time, Bashir breaks Anderson's record

The pick of the stats from an enthralling second Test between England and West Indies at Trent Bridge

Sampath Bandarupalli21-Jul-20241 England registered their first-ever instance of 400-plus totals in both innings of a Test match with 416 and 425 at Trent Bridge. There had been 11 previous instances of a team posting 400-plus totals in both innings of a Test match, with India’s effort against England in Rajkot in February this year being the recent most.2 Number of Test totals by West Indies, higher than their 457 on the losing side. West Indies made 526 for 7 against England in 1968 at Port of Spain, which they lost by seven wickets following an aggressive second-innings declaration. They were bowled out for 463 against India in Kolkata in 2011 while following on with a first-innings deficit of 478 runs.1441 Runs aggregated by England and West Indies at Trent Bridge are the third-most for a Test match since 1980, where all 40 wickets fell. The 2015 Lord’s Test between England and New Zealand saw 1610 runs, while there were 1553 made between England and Pakistan in the 2006 Leeds Test.10 Number of Test matches with three 400-plus totals, including the Trent Bridge Test. The last of the previous nine was the 2009 Ahmedabad Test between India and Sri Lanka.20y 279d Shoaib Bashir’s age coming into the second Test. He is now the youngest England man to bag a five-wicket haul in a home Test. James Anderson, who retired last week, was the previous youngest, at 20 years and 296 days old, going into his Test debut in 2003 against Zimbabwe, where he took a five-fer in the first innings.3 Number of five-plus wicket hauls for Bashir in the five Test matches he played, all at the age of 20. There have been only three Test five-fers in total by other England players under the age of 21 – one each by Bill Voce, Anderson and Rehan Ahmed.2013 The last instance of West Indies getting bowled in a session before Sunday was against New Zealand in December 2013. West Indies were bowled out for 103 in 31.5 overs in the post-tea session on the third day in Hamilton.In contrast, the 457 all-out in the first innings by the West Indies was their first 450-plus total in Tests since September 2014.241 West Indies’ losing margin at Trent Bridge is the second-highest in terms of runs despite a 400-plus total in the match. India lost to England by 247 runs in 1990 at Lord’s despite a 454-run first-innings total.There have also been 16 instances of a team losing by an innings margin despite a 400-plus total in the match.

Born into cricket, Gaby Lewis enjoys being Ireland's leading batter

The team’s top run-getter in T20Is talks about making her debut as a 13-year-old, and juggling a radiography course with cricket

Firdose Moonda14-Jul-2022If Irish cricket had a royal family, Gaby Lewis’ would be it. Her father and grandfather played first-class cricket for Ireland between the 1960s and 1990s, her older sister, Robyn, played alongside her at the 2016 T20 World Cup, and last month, at 21, Lewis became Ireland’s youngest captain. Born and raised in the game, it’s almost all she knows.”My first memory is being down at my club in YMCA in Sandymount,” Lewis says. “I don’t have any memories of my grandfather playing, but I definitely have memories of my dad. I even played a few games with him and batted with him. And my mom coached us for a bit. I was always down at the club, me and my sister. We were just born into it.”Ireland are currently hosting Australia and Pakistan for a tri-series, and last month they had South Africa over for three ODIs and three T20Is. Ireland won one match in that series – a ten-run victory in the opening T20I in Dublin, in which Lewis top-scored with 52 off 38 balls. In the process, she went past Clare Shillington to become Ireland’s leading run-getter in women’s T20Is. She’s also their only century-maker in the format.Even though she’s so young, Lewis has already played international cricket for nearly eight years now, making her Ireland debut as a 13-year-old, in a T20I against South Africa in 2014.Related

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“It’s always been like that,” she says. “You’re used to playing against people older than you. Back then, cricket was quite small, and everyone who played cricket knew everyone else. It didn’t seem strange because other younger players like Lucy O’Reilly [who also made her debut at 13], who I was quite close to, had gone through it as well. I just absolutely loved it.”Lewis started off in the middle order but two years later was promoted to open the batting with Shillington, her club team-mate. And before she made her ODI debut, in 2016, Lewis had already featured in a T20 World Cup, getting a taste of playing against teams with fully professional set-ups and greater match experience than Ireland had. “I remember that I wasn’t scared because I’d batted with Claire before and she made it quite easy,” she says.”World Cups are the best tournaments to play in,” Lewis said. “You’re playing against high-quality opposition. Being from Ireland, we play against teams with a mixture of abilities. We have Qualifiers where we play against the likes of the European teams and then you can go to World Cups and play against the likes of Australia – there’s a huge gap.”By the time Lewis played her second World Cup, the 2018 T20 event in West Indies, she realised that cricket was growing and a professional expansion was on the horizon for her.”We were playing against teams where you know their players have had a career, and that’s what I knew I wanted. I thought it was only a matter of time before it would filter through the countries.”Lewis became Ireland’s youngest captain, at 21, when she led them in place of regular captain Laura Delany last month against South Africa•George Tewkesbury/Getty ImagesIt took another four years before professionalisation came to Ireland. In March this year, seven women’s cricketers were given full-time contracts and nine more, including Lewis, who is a student, got part-time deals.”I am studying radiography full-time,” she says. “I think it’s very important to study as a cricketer. There’s only so many hours you can train, especially when you are on tour. It’s important to plan for that time after cricket, and if I can work one day a week while I am playing cricket, I think it’s very important. I got into the course through my school exams and it was an opportunity I couldn’t turn down. It’s hugely important, especially on tour, to have something to take my mind off cricket.”Being a student-sportsperson comes with its own challenges, as Lewis discovered when the Women’s World Cup Qualifier in Zimbabwe last November was called off after the spread of the Omicron variant of Covid-19 in southern Africa. While packing to return home, Lewis put her study notes in her suitcase, which was mislaid in transit.It took the team almost five days to get home, via Oman, and their belongings were only returned to them two weeks later. “Oh, the stress, the stress! I didn’t think that putting my notes in my suitcase would end up like that,” Lewis says. “It’s a lesson learnt. Always carry your notes in your hand luggage. But it turned out okay – I passed the exam.”Although Lewis started off in the game as an allrounder, in the last four years, she has put away her legspin to focus more on her batting, and has also worked on the mental side of her game.”Over the last few years, I struggled with my bowling and that started to creep into my batting, so I just decided to park it [bowling] for the time being. I went through quite a hard patch a year and a half ago and worked with a psychologist about sticking to my routines and processes and trusting the game.”Lewis: “I love playing for Ireland, and I love the girls that I play with. Once we execute our skills and stick to our plans, I have no doubt we can win games. It won’t happen quickly and that’s fine”•Sam Barnes/Getty ImagesIn September 2019, Lewis scored only 21 runs in four matches in a T20 World Cup Qualifier, which was the worst of her bad patch. Since then, she has averaged nearly 40 in T20Is, with three 50-plus scores, including the century, and 51.14 in ODIs with four fifties.”I don’t have specific bowlers that I fear or that I enjoy,” she says. “With us as a nation, you play a variety of standards, so it’s important to focus on what we do and not so much the opposition we play. I just focus on the ball that’s coming down and how to react as opposed to who’s bowling it.”She’s been rewarded for her form with contracts in two franchise leagues – the Hundred and the Fairbreak Invitational, which has broadened her cricketing experience and allowed her to rub shoulders with different players. Lewis was her country’s only representative in the Women’s Hundred last year and one of three Irish players at the Fairbreak event this May.”The Hundred was brilliant,” she said. “It’s a great format of the game for people who don’t really know that much about cricket, especially people who don’t really have such high concentration levels. It simplifies the game. And the crowds they got – they are very lucky with the timing of it being just after Covid – so people went after work and it’s got that kind of vibe.”The Fairbreak competition was really nice to have everyone come together from different parts of the world and play together. It was a great opportunity for players to bowl to world-class players and know what it takes to take their cricket to the next level.”Despite cricket’s increasing franchising, she doesn’t see either tournament as having the same pride of place as the international game, especially for someone who has Irish cricket in her blood.”I love playing for Ireland and I love the girls that I play with. I can see a place for both,” she said. “There’s a lot of belief in our group. Once we execute our skills and stick to our plans, I have no doubt we can win games. We know it takes time. It won’t happen quickly, it’s a slow process and that’s fine.”

Corey Anderson: 'It's natural for me to be aggressive and try and take on the boundaries'

The big-hitting New Zealand allrounder is looking to get his blade flashing after a hiatus, at the CPL 2020

Deivarayan Muthu20-Aug-20201:02

Corey Anderson: ‘Expecting lower scores towards the end of the CPL season’

On New Year’s Day in 2014, Corey Anderson walloped a 36-ball century against West Indies – his first ever one-day hundred in professional cricket. In May that year, he cracked 95 not out off 44 balls to help Mumbai Indians pull off a coup against Rajasthan Royals in the IPL. He then sparkled with both bat and ball in the 2015 World Cup.That is how we remember Anderson. In the last five years, though, the New Zealand allrounder has barely made a headline. His last Test was four and a half years ago, last ODI in 2017, and last T20I in 2018. Multiple injuries have ravaged his career since, limiting his bowling in particular, which in turn has been a reason for him going unsold in lucrative T20 leagues like the IPL.ALSO READ: Corey Anderson’s struggle (2017)Anderson has suffered finger, groin, rib, shoulder and heel issues. Bones in his spine are fused together with screws and a titanium cable. “It’s like owning a Ferrari and every time you take it out of the garage it breaks down,” former New Zealand opener Mark Richardson once said of Anderson on .That Ferrari is up and revving now after five months of downtime in Dallas, where Anderson’s fiancée is based. After his deal with Somerset for the T20 Blast was cancelled, and Australia’s Marcus Stoinis pulled out of CPL 2020, Anderson “hopped, skipped, and jumped” from Texas to the Caribbean to join defending champions Barbados Tridents.Need 72 off 30? Dial A for Anderson•Getty ImagesHe was supposed to make his CPL debut in 2014, for the Guyana Amazon Warriors, but was asked to withdraw by New Zealand Cricket due to fitness concerns. Now he’s looking to utilise the opportunity to reignite his career.”It’s probably a combination of stuff that’s making it exciting to be back in the Caribbean,” Anderson tells ESPNcricinfo from Trinidad. “Hopefully now I get to make my [CPL] debut here for Barbados. Somerset is such a great county to play for, so to miss out on that is obviously disappointing, but to be able to have cricket and getting back to a slightly more unusual routine, it’s a lot more enjoyable.”ALSO READ: ‘I’ve got to progress my game instead of trying to please people’ (2017)Coming off a shoulder surgery, Anderson only played as a specialist batsman for Auckland in last season’s Super Smash and hasn’t bowled in T20 cricket since February 2019. He is confident, though, of returning to bowling this CPL and fulfilling the two-in-one role in the Super Smash later this year as well.”Hopefully things start potentially easing up in the world with Covid,” he says. “Time will tell on that, but in regards to what that four or five months look like, the CPL is a great platform leading into the home summer.”I think playing as a batter is an ability that I have in a T20 game, and it makes the balance of the side a lot easier if I’m bowling. So, yeah, to be able to do that and come back and start bowling again is great. It makes me feel like I’m a complete player. How much I’ll be called upon to do that job [bowling] is probably in question. I’m not too sure. Have to see what Jason [Holder, the captain] and Trevor [Penney, the assistant coach] have got up their sleeves for that. But I’m happy to do any form of job, and hopefully if the weather holds up next week, I can get back on the grass again.”ESPNcricinfo LtdAnderson is cautious about looking too far ahead, especially to the 2021 T20 World Cup. “I’m probably someone that needs to stay in the now a little bit more. Sometimes, it’s easy to get ahead of yourself in cricket. It can be taken away from you very, very quickly. It’s going to be very clichéd: one game at a time and one competition at a time and figure out where the process goes after that. Then, hopefully, the results and performances can speak for themselves.”The time away from cricket has helped him gain perspective on his life and career. “I’ve probably learnt the hard way sometimes. I’ve had injuries since I was young, and that kind of has plagued me throughout my career. There has also been the positive side of it – being injured and being out of the game actually gives you the ability to reassess what you’re doing outside of cricket. It’s very easy to get tunnel vision when you’re travelling and playing and touring all around the world.”Anderson moved to Auckland from Northern Districts in 2019, and has been working with Aaron Walsh, the mental skills and performance coach at the Aces. He has also talked to former New Zealand fast bowler Shane Bond, whose career too was notoriously stop-start because of injuries.”I get along with him extremely well,” Anderson says. “He was one of the best in the world, and he really played a fifth of what most other greats of the game played and he’s got an unbelievable record. He’s great to chat to about it [dealing with injuries]. Bondie is very black and white with his thoughts and he’s a good guy to bounce ideas off and sort of look at short-term stuff and long-term stuff. He’s been through similar stuff – whether it’s back surgery or things like that – and he can give you a decent bit of perspective about it.”Anderson’s strength remains his robust batting, which can catapult teams to winning totals from a variety of match situations. His power-hitting in the middle order was most recently on bright display in the T20 Blast in England two years ago, where he was the fifth-highest scorer, with 514 runs in 15 innings at a strike rate of just a shade under 170. Somerset reached finals day that season. One of his sixes during his brutal 72 off 30 balls against Glamorgan cleared the scoreboard into the St James churchyard.Anderson has 90 international wickets under his belt but he has hardly bowled for the better part of two years•Getty Images/Sportsfile”From a young age, I tried to hit the ball hard and I liked hitting boundaries and not do a hell a lot of running (). I think it has just been a part of my game and it’s my point of difference in comparison to a lot of other guys. I think T20 has obviously bridged that gap, so a lot more people have more of the power game or understand where their strengths are. I probably think it’s a little bit more natural for me to be aggressive, attacking, and try and take on those boundaries.”I do try and do a little bit of work with range-hitting and things like that. But [with] range-hitting sometimes you can get carried away. It’s a better thing to do at new grounds you haven’t played at, understanding the dimensions of the ground. And it’s nice to know if you’re standing in the middle of the wicket, if you want to try and hit a six, you know you can hit that boundary, regardless of the size of the boundary, depending on what you’ve done during your planning.”In this year’s CPL, which will be played only in Trinidad, the spinner-friendly pitches will pose a big challenge for Anderson’s big-hitting method, but it’s one he is looking forward to.”I think it’s an expectation of playing in two grounds over a four-week period for the whole competition. Yeah, you can expect those wickets to gradually slow up as the competition goes on as well, and you can see those guys [quality spinners] come into effect massively as well. I’m sure the scores will reflect that and they will be a little bit lower than what we can expect at the start of the comp. I just think you have to play accordingly and we’re lucky we’ve got quality spinners [Rashid Khan, Mitchell Santner] in our side, but I’m sure every other team is going to do the same thing.”If not for Covid-19, Anderson might not have played the CPL. He now has another chance to turn up as the match-winner he once was.

Brandon Nimmo-Marcus Semien Trade Grades: Did Mets or Rangers Win the Deal?

The Mets and Rangers pulled off the first blockbuster trade of the MLB offseason on Sunday, as the two sides are swapping expensive, big-name players to fill needs.

ESPN MLB insider Jeff Passan reports New York and Texas are finalizing a deal that would send infielder Marcus Semien to Queens in exchange for outfielder Brandon Nimmo. It’s a deal that seemingly came out of nowhere, as neither player was considered a prime trade candidate this winter.

The additions will mark big changes to each team’s lineup. Here’s a look at what each team is getting and who came out on the better end of the deal.

Mets Acquire: Marcus Semien

Semien has three years remaining on his contract entering the 2026 campaign. / Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

The Mets got older with this deal, but filled a pretty massive hole in the infield. Jeff McNeil has underperformed since signing a four-year, $50 million deal before the 2023 season. He isn’t unusable at second base, but Semien could represent a marked improvement at the position.

Semien is coming off back-to-back disappointing seasons at the plate, but he has more upside than McNeil, and is a far better defender. The 35-year-old won his second Gold Glove in 2025.

The issue here is Semien’s bat, which has gone quiet since he won a Silver Slugger while leading the Rangers to a World Series title in 2023. During that season, he slashed .276/.348/.478, with 29 home runs, 100 RBIs, a wRC+ of 128, and tied a career-high with 6.5 fWAR. In the two seasons since, he has failed to top a .700 OPS.

In 2025, Semien slashed .230/.305/.364, with 15 home runs, 62 RBIs, and a full-season career-low wRC+ of 89 in 127 games. He produced 2.1 fWAR, but most of that came from his exceptional defense at second base, where he had seven outs above average.

Semien just turned 35, and still has three seasons remaining on the seven-year, $175 million deal he signed with the Rangers in December of 2021. He’s under contract through 2028 and will make $26 million in each of the next two seasons, before making $20 million in the final year.

The Mets desperately wanted to improve defensively this offseason. This deal did this. But they’ll need Semien’s bat to improve, or he’ll just be an expensive, aging contract. The good news is, they moved off of Nimmo’s deal, which will make room for Semien’s, and have several different paths to replacing Nimmo in the outfield.

Grade: B-

Rangers Acquire: Brandon Nimmo

Nimmo batted .262/.324/.436 in 155 games this season. / Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Texas had an aging roster with a lot of money committed to a few players. Semien, Corey Seager, Jacob deGrom, and Nathan Eovaldi were all set to make more than $25 million in 2026. The team is looking to cut payroll. While this deal takes on more long-term money, it cuts the yearly bill down while adding a power bat to the outfield, something sorely needed.

Nimmo has played his entire career for the Mets, and his best full season came in 2022, when he slashed .274/.367/.433, with 15 home runs, 64 RBIs, 102 runs scored, and a 132 wRC+. That 5.5 fWAR season earned him an eight-year, $162 million deal from New York. The former first-round pick has been a solid contributor, but hasn’t quite hit that high since.

In 2025, he slashed .262/.324/.436, with career-highs in home runs (25), and RBIs (92), and a 114 wRC+. Thanks to average to below-average defense in left field, his fWAR was only 3.0. He’s a corner outfielder-only at this point, and his value will largely come from his bat moving forward.

Nimmo is owed $102.5 million over the next five seasons, but at $20.5 million per year, the Rangers will actually save money over the next three years.

After the Rangers non-tendered Adolis Garcia on Friday, they had an opening in the outfield alongside Wyatt Langford and Evan Carter. Texas needed to save money and find a solid outfield bat to fill that role.

Perhaps a knock-on effect of this deal is that moving Semien opens a spot on the infield—and top prospect, shortstop Sebastian Walcott, is almost big league ready. This could be the move that gets him to the majors.

Grade: B