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Spanish footballer Nico Hidalgo has died aged 32 following a lengthy battle with lung cancer, his former clubs said on Saturday.
Hidalgo, a midfielder, began his career at Motril, making his senior debut in 2010, before moving to Granada B in 2012.
He then joined Serie A giants Juventus in 2014, although he did not make a first-team appearance and would be immediately loaned back to Granada.
He was later loaned to Cadiz, who he joined permanently in 2017. He also played for Racing Santander and Extremadura.
Hidalgo was diagnosed with cancer in 2021 and retired the following year.
"With Nico's departure, not only is an excellent footballer gone, but also a great person. But the affection of his teammates, coaches, workers, directors and fans will always be present," Granada said in a statement.
"We will never forget your smile and your joy. Your fight is our inspiration. Rest in peace." Cadiz said in a statement posted to X.

Crystal Palace striker Jean-Philippe Mateta is "conscious" after being taken to hospital following a wildly reckless challenge from Millwall goalkeeper Liam Roberts just eight minutes into Saturday's FA Cup fifth-round clash.
Palace chairman Steve Parish confirmed to the BBC at half-time that Mateta had a gash behind his ear and was at a local hospital receiving further treatment as he expressed his anger at the tackle, which saw Roberts sent off.
After the match, Palace manager Oliver Glasner said that Mateta is "conscious."
"He's conscious and he's in hospital, but his ear obviously looks terrible. [It's a] very serious injury, so of course we hope all the best for him and let's see," Glasner said.
Roberts rushed outside the 18-yard box and leaped to clear a long ball but his high left-footed follow-through struck Mateta in the side of the face.
Mateta remained on the ground for several minutes and needed lengthy medical treatment before he was fitted with a neck brace and carried off the field toward an ambulance.
"In all the time I've been watching football I don't think I've ever seen a worse challenge. If you're kicking someone in the head then you don't know what damage may have been done," Parish said.
Referee Michael Oliver initially did not even show Roberts a yellow card despite being only a few yards away from the incident but then brandished a straight red after being called over by VAR to review the incident on a pitchside monitor.
"They're professionals and they have to treat each other like professionals and have a duty of care for your fellow professionals," Parish said.
"That keeper has not had one [duty of care]. Credit to the players carrying on and it is difficult for me to think about anything else with JP [Mateta] in hospital.
"In all the time I've watched football, someone mentioned there was one like it in the World Cup in 1982.
"Why the referee [Michael Oliver] needed to go to the screen I have got no idea."
Mateta is Palace's leading scorer with 12 Premier League goals this season. Despite his lack of firepower up front for the remainder of the match, Palace still earned a 3-1 victory over the 10-man Millwall side.
"Maybe we are not really happy today. We can't be really happy," Glasner added.
"Of course, it's a great win in going into the quarterfinals, but when you lose a player, especially with a foul like this, you have two different feelings in your stomach."
Information from the Associated Press contributed to this report.
McSweeney, Scott and Thornton end South Australia's 13-year trophy wait

South Australia 268 for 7 (Nielsen 68, Lehmann 67, Scott 54*, Siddle 3-40, Sutherland 3-67) beat Victoria 204 (Sutherland 50, Thornton 4-27, McAndrew 3-47) by 64 runs
Victoria were bowled out for 204 in 43.3 overs in reply at Adelaide Oval as SA captured their first 50-over trophy since 2011/12.
Victoria's run chase, with Marcus Harris flying on 41 from 42 balls, was well on track at 74 for 1 in the 14th over. But McSweeney, who hadn't taken a wicket all tournament with his gentle offspin, then provided an unlikely - and decisive - turn.
Harris gave himself room to hit McSweeney through the offside, but smacked the ball straight to Jason Sangha at cover. In his next over, McSweeney dismissed dangerman Peter Handscomb for 1. The SA captain instinctively flung his right hand at a lofted straight drive, parried the ball, and completed a stunning catch on the second grab.
In SA's innings, Nielsen top-scored with 68 from 93 balls, Lehmann made 67 from 75 and allrounder Scott, the player of the tournament, finished with a flourish with an unbeaten 54 from 37 deliveries.
Victorian captain Sutherland took three of the initial four wickets and veteran Peter Siddle claimed 3 for 40.
SA made a solid start with openers Nielsen and Mackenzie Harvey putting on 44 runs before Sutherland struck in the eighth over. Harvey, who hit two fours and a six in his 23 from 23 balls, chopped on to his stumps when attempting to force through the off-side.
Sutherland claimed Daniel Drew in the 14th over and McSweeney soon followed. When Sangha fell to Sutherland, SA were wobbling 118 for 4 in the 26th over, before Nielsen and Lehmann steadied with a 56-run partnership.
Lehmann later combined with Scott for a brisk 67-run stand, with the latter reaching his half-century from 36 balls in a flurry featuring seven fours and a six.
Vidarbha's one hand on the Ranji Trophy after Nair's 132*

Vidarbha 379 and 249 for 4 (Nair 132*, Malewar 73) lead Kerala 342 (Baby 98, Sarwate 79, Nalkande 3-52, Rekhade 3-65, Dubey 3-88) by 286 runs
Two seasons on, Nair is at the forefront of Vidarbha's charge to a third Ranji Trophy title, having batted all day to construct an unbeaten 132, his 23rd first-class century and fourth first-class century of the season. It helped stretch Vidarbha's lead to 286 at stumps, but crucially they still have six wickets remaining. If Nair does lift the trophy, it'll be his third - his first two were with Karnataka in his first two seasons, 2013-14 and 2014-15.
Malewar and Nair put on 182 for the third wicket - Malewar making 73 to go with his superb 153 in the first innings - to defuse any tension there might have been in the Vidarbha camp after they lost Parth Rekhade and Dhruv Shorey inside the first three overs. Rekhade was bowled through the gate by Jalaj Saxena's in-drift, and Shorey was out to Mohammed Azharuddeen's brilliance as he dived full stretch to pluck a healthy edge in front of first slip to give MD Nidheesh an early wicket.
Kerala could have had a third very quickly, but Malewar was aided by luck when DRS deemed a not-out lbw decision off Saxena to be umpire's call. It was the start of a frustrating few hours for Kerala, where they dropped a sitter of a big-match player, two of their frontline seamers - Nidheesh and N Basil - received warnings twice for running onto the danger area of the pitch and then saw two healthy nicks off Saxena, their most prolific and in-form spinner, go through a vacant slip cordon when the need of the hour was to attack, not defend. All these factors combined to give Vidarbha the push they needed.
In the seventh over of the day, Malewar survived again, this time overturning an lbw call on DRS after being given out to Nidheesh, with replays showing the ball swung in late and would have missed leg stump. Things were happening quickly, and Kerala should have remained on the offensive. They didn't and paid the price.
Nair was good enough to pick gaps through the cover as Kerala left the off side open to have him drive against the turn. His ability to mix that up by playing a superb reverse sweep all along the ground made him a tough prospect to bowl at. Malewar's temperament stood out as he absorbed the pressure from Saxena and played largely within himself until he got to his half-century and then stepped out to play a glorious drive over mid-off.
As the partnership grew, Kerala resorted to a leg-stump line briefly to try to unsettle the batters. But given Vidarbha were sitting pretty with a lead, realisation dawned for Kerala that they needed to be a little more on the offensive, by which time the pair had already put on 100 runs.
Nair survived on 65 when a leading edge off Saxena didn't carry to the bowler, and he responded by offsetting any pressure by playing the reverse sweep. En route, he went past the 800-run mark for the season and charged into the 80s by hitting Aditya Sarwate for two back-to-back sixes - one over long-on and long-off. As he brought up his century, Nair dropped his bat, removed his gloves and showed two palms towards the dressing room - a symbolic gesture to signal his nine hundreds across the season - before taking guard and continuing to blunt the bowling.
Then a sharp tuner from Sarwate spun back in to trap him lbw, a decision that Kerala got overturned in their favour through the DRS. But moments like those were far and few amid a largely frustrating day for Kerala, whose hopes of a maiden title seem all but gone, with them needing a miracle to make a match of this on the final day.
Shashank Kishore is a senior correspondent at ESPNcricinfo
DC eye playoff spot as they opt to bowl against RCB

Toss Delhi Capitals chose to bowl vs Royal Challengers Bengaluru
Delhi Capitals captain Meg Lanning won the toss and elected to bowl against Royal Challengers Bengaluru in the final game of the Bengaluru leg of WPL 2025. If DC win tonight, they will confirm their place in the playoffs.
Smriti Mandhana wanted to bowl as well and hoped to get their "first win at home" this season. RCB made one change to the XI that lost against Gujarat Giants, with left-arm spinner Ekta Bisht replacing legspinner Prema Rawat.
Royal Challengers Bengaluru: 1 Smriti Mandhana (capt), 2 Danni Wyatt-Hodge, 3 Ellyse Perry, 4 Raghvi Bist, 5 Richa Ghosh (wk), 6 Kanika Ahuja, 7 Georgia Wareham, 8 Sneh Rana, 9 Kim Garth, 10 Ekta Bisht, 11 Renuka Singh
Delhi Capitals: 1 Meg Lanning (capt), 2 Shafali Verma, 3 Jemimah Rodrigues, 4 Annabel Sutherland, 5 Marizanne Kapp, 6 Jess Jonassen, 7 Sarah Bryce (wk), 8 Niki Prasad, 9 Minnu Mani, 10 Shikha Pandey, 11 Shree Charani
In-form India and New Zealand face off to see who they will meet in the semis

Big picture: Kohli joins 300 club
Scroll down to the form guide section. Actually, no need, because, spoiler warning, both teams have WWWWW next to them going into this match. These are two exceptional ODI outfits in potentially title-winning form, deep and balanced thanks to the allrounders they possess. They're particularly well-suited to conditions at this Champions Trophy - particularly, perhaps, to those in Dubai where this contest will take place - thanks to their spin options and the variety of batting gears in their top orders.
There has also been, especially over the last five years and a bit, a lot of history between these two teams.
This should, for all those reasons, be a main-course kind of contest, but it's an appetiser in the context of where this Champions Trophy stands. India and New Zealand are both through to the semi-finals, and know exactly where and when their respective semi-finals will be played. All that remains to be decided is whom they'll face there, and it's unlikely there's a "preferred" opponent for either team, given it's a choice between South Africa and Australia.
Form guide
India WWWWW (last five ODIs, most recent first)
New Zealand WWWWW
In the spotlight: Shreyas Iyer and Kyle Jamieson
Team news: Daryl Mitchell fit, but where does he fit in?
India didn't train on Saturday, but Rishabh Pant had an extended session in the nets on Friday, which suggests he could get a game - he has only played one ODI, back in July 2024, since his return from injuries suffered during his car crash. Given that as many as five left-hand batters could feature in New Zealand's top eight, there's a chance India may replace one of their two left-arm fingerspinners with the offspinner Washington Sundar. If Pant plays and adds his left-handedness to India's top five, it relieves them of the need for Axar Patel as a floater.
India (probable): 1 Rohit Sharma (capt), 2 Shubman Gill, 3 Virat Kohli, 4 Shreyas Iyer, 5 Rishabh Pant (wk), 6 Hardik Pandya, 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 Washington Sundar, 9 Harshit Rana, 10 Kuldeep Yadav/Varun Chakravarthy, 11 Mohammed Shami/Arshdeep Singh.
New Zealand (probable): 1 Devon Conway, 2 Rachin Ravindra, 3 Kane Williamson, 4 Daryl Mitchell, 5 Tom Latham (wk), 6 Glenn Phillips, 7 Michael Bracewell, 8 Mitchell Santner (capt), 9 Kyle Jamieson, 10 Matt Henry, 11 Will O'Rourke.
Pitch and conditions: spin to win?
This, of course, may also have something do to with the quality of India's spinners. In any case, the pitches in Dubai, far from being square turners, have tended to be merely slow, with the large outfield also serving as an ally to the slower bowlers.
Bangladesh and Pakistan both won the toss against India and chose to bat, reflecting the trend for dew not to be much of a factor at this time of the year. It's possible that bat-first may still be the way to go, given the tendency for the pitches here to slow down over 100 overs.
A clear, pleasant day is expected on Sunday, with a maximum temperature of 24 degrees Celsius.
Stats and trivia
- India and New Zealand have only met once before in the Champions Trophy: the final in 2000 when an unbeaten Chris Cairns century led New Zealand to a four-wicket win.
- India have won each of their last five completed ODIs against New Zealand; New Zealand won five in a row before that stretch.
- Tom Latham's unbeaten 118 made all the headlines, but he also enjoyed a big moment on the field during New Zealand's tournament-opener against Pakistan: the catch of Shaheen Shah Afridi, off Matt Henry, was his 100th as wicketkeeper in ODIs.
Quotes
"That's a lot of ODI games and a lot of international games and yeah, he's been I mean, words fall short to express how good a player he's been, and what a great servant of Indian cricket he's been."
KL Rahul on Virat Kohli's impending milestone
Karthik Krishnaswamy is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo

President Donald Trump said Friday that he would pardon baseball great Pete Rose and criticized Major League Baseball for barring the all-time hit leader from the sport's Hall of Fame for gambling.
Rose, who died last year at 83, was banned from baseball for life. He admitted in 2004 that he had bet on games, though never against his own team. Commissioner Rob Manfred in 2015 rejected Rose's bid for reinstatement.
"Over the next few weeks I will be signing a complete pardon of Pete Rose, who shouldn't have been gambling on baseball, but only bet on his team winning," Trump posted on Truth Social. "He never betted against himself, or the other team. He had the most hits, by far, in baseball history, and won more games than anyone in sports history."
Trump did not say what the pardon would cover. Rose served five months in prison after pleading guilty to tax evasion charges in 1990.
In a statement to ESPN, John Dowd, who investigated Rose for MLB in 1989 and served as Trump's lawyer seven years ago, noted that MLB is "not in the pardon business nor does it control admission to the HOF."
Rose, who spent most of his 1963 to 1986 career with the Cincinnati Reds, won the World Series three times and remains Major League Baseball's career leader in hits, games played, at-bats, singles and outs.
Reuters contributed to this report.

AUSTIN, Texas Eighteen-year-old rookie Connor Zilisch won the pole for Saturdays Focused Health 250 NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Circuit of the Americas.
Driving the JR Motorsports No. 88 Chevrolet, Zilisch ran a lap of 97.262 seconds at 88.832 mph to nip teammate Ross Chastain, who turned in a lap at 97.446 seconds.
It was Zilischs second Xfinity Series pole in what will be his seventh race in the series. He also won the pole in NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series action at COTA last year.
Chevrolet drivers swept the top five qualifying spots with William Byron third for Hendrick Motorsports and JR Motorsports drivers Justin Allgaier and Carson Kvapil completing the top five.
Toyota rookie Corey Heim was sixth, ahead of Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota driver Taylor Gray and the fastest Ford of Sam Mayer, who was eighth.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. It was the first day of school for IndyCar on Friday and Kyle Kirkwood of Andretti Global raced to the head of the class.
The driver from Jupiter, Fla., drove across the state from the Atlantic Coast to Tampa Bay for this weekends Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg the season opening race for the 2025 NTT IndyCar Series season.
He then scorched the 14-turn, 1.8-mile temporary street circuit at 1:00.4409 for a speed of 107.212 mph in the No. 27 Chilis Honda for Andretti Global the fastest overall driver in Fridays practice session.
IndyCar practice sessions on Friday are split into two groups followed by another practice with all cars on track.
I think we were in this position last year where we were quick out of the gate, Kirkwood said. We have to continue that.
Good day for the Chilis Honda. First official session of the year, weve led. Extremely happy with that. Happy that we know our cars are still quick around street courses.
All positive.
Three-time and back-to-back IndyCar Series champion Alex Palou of Chip Ganassi Racing was second in the No. 10 DHL Honda at 1:00.6004 (106.930 mph). Team Penskes Scott McLaughlin was third fastest in the No. 3 Chevrolet for Team Penske at 1:01.0002 (106.279 mph) before he crashed during the final practice session.
McLaughlins No. 3 Chevrolet made hard left-side contact into the barrier in Turn 3. The car sustained a suspension failure and stopped on course. McLaughlin climbed from the car without assistance from the AMR IndyCar Safety Team.
He was seen and released from the IndyCar Medical Unit.
It was a mistake on my part, McLaughlin said. I was a little wide at the exit of Turn 3 and there is a bit of a bump there. That put me wider than I wanted to be and into the wall.
Andretti Globals Colton Herta was fourth in the No. 26 Gainbridge Honda at 1:001.0603 (106.125 mph) and defending race winner Pato OWard rounded out the top five at 1:01.1161 (106.028 mph) in the No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet.
Twenty-seven car/driver combinations practiced on Friday.
It was different, just compared to last year, Team Penske driver Josef Newgarden said after practice. We didnt have the hybrid here is probably the biggest year-over-year change.
Then the tires have taken an iteration, if you will. It was a known thing. Weve been working on this in the off-season. Firestone has been pretty transparent and open that were looking for a different mix between the primary and the alternate. They definitely have different properties to what they had last year. A lot to dive in.
There wasnt a lot of laps. I ran pre-sim laps on the primaries and then I did that one run on the alternate. Felt really good on the primaries, so-so on the alternates. I didnt really do a good lap at all. Kind of understand why. Were going to pick apart everything tonight and try to be in a big spot for tomorrow.
Good to be back. What a great atmosphere today. I think St. Pete has typically felt like this even on a Friday, but today looked really, really great.
Nice to be back at the track.
Newgarden was the first to the checkered flag in last years Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg ahead of OWard. Six weeks later, however, Newgardens win was disqualified for manipulating the teams push-to-pass system.
I think theres definitely motivation for us to do well, Newgarden said. That seems obvious. I wont shy away from saying that.
Definitely we want to come out here and do a great job this weekend. It would be very gratifying to win the race.
I dont think that needs to be our focus, Newgarden said referring to last years DQ. I dont see how this year is different. Every year I show up at St. Pete its about putting up a solid result on the board. I really mean that. Im not just trying to be poetic.
You have to get a result on the board to start the year and you got to start thinking championship right away. If we can come out of this weekend with a good result, a clean car, I think that its going to be a win.
Do we ultimately want to have a dominant day, be out front, make a statement? Absolutely. I hope that happens. Im not going to try to force that. I think we need to get what we can this weekend, what were capable of, move on to the next and have a really solid year.
Thats more where our focus is right now.
IndyCar is back on track Saturday for a practice from 10:15-11:15 a.m. Eastern Time. Qualifying is set for 2:30 to 4 p.m. featuring three rounds of knockout qualifying culminating in the Firestone Fast Six.
How bright is Man City's future? Assessing Guardiola's squad

Pep Guardiola insists there's reason for optimism at Manchester City, despite a troubled campaign that has seen the defending champions reduced to battling for a place in the top four.
Following Wednesday's 1-0 win over Tottenham Hotspur, a result that boosted their hopes of playing Champions League football next season, the City boss laid out what he believes should be a "bright future" at the Etihad Stadium. (The victory moved them into fourth place, a point above Chelsea, with 11 games remaining.) "The young players and the new acquisitions maybe the club will do in the summertime -- in the next transfer window -- have to lead this club for the next few years," he said.
They echoed his comments after Sunday's 2-0 defeat to Liverpool. "I saw a bright future," Guardiola told the BBC. "Other than Kevin [De Bruyne] and Nathan [Ake], they are the future of this club in the next years, with others who will come in future windows.
Guardiola and new director of football Hugo Viana -- who has replaced the outgoing Txiki Begiristain -- are facing a summer rebuild as they plot their way back to the top. There's a core of established stars to build around and some exciting young players with huge potential, but also decisions to be made on some of the old guard, including Kevin De Bruyne, who is out of contract in the summer.
Ahead of Saturday's FA Cup fifth-round tie vs. Plymouth Argyle (stream LIVE, Saturday, 12:15 p.m., ESPN+), we take a look at the state of City and whether the future is as bright as Guardiola believes.
The untouchables
One nice thing for City is that they're not starting their rebuild from scratch. Erling Haaland has signed a mammoth contract that runs through 2034, and Phil Foden, who has already racked up more than 300 club appearances before the age of 25, has shown no desire to ever leave the Etihad.
Beyond those two, defender Rúben Dias has been a key part of City's success since arriving from Benfica in 2020 and is a vocal presence in the squad. He has struggled for form and fitness this season -- like many of his teammates -- but is still only 27 and a strong character in the dressing room. Dias could take on an even more prominent role if there is an exodus of experienced players in the summer.
There has been a long-held belief by some at City that Rodri would one day be keen to return to Spain, but that talk has died down and there's hope he will be fully recovered from his knee injury by the time preseason training begins in July and August.
The significant investment in Omar Marmoush in January means he will also be part of City's future. The Egyptian, signed for 60 million from Eintracht Frankfurt, has made a positive start in a difficult situation after joining an underperforming team midseason.
Legends coming to the end?
This is where Guardiola and Viana will have to make big decisions.
Éderson, Bernardo Silva, Ilkay Gündogan and Kevin De Bruyne have been cornerstones of the team that won the treble in 2023 and completed four titles in a row in 2024. But nothing lasts forever, and there are now serious question marks about their futures.
Each situation is different and delicate. De Bruyne is out of contract in the summer, while Gündogan has a one-year option in his deal that would take him to 2026 if it's exercised. There's interest in De Bruyne from teams in Saudi Arabia and the United States, and Galatasaray believe they have got a good chance of landing Gündogan. Éderson was close to moving to the Saudi Pro League last summer, and Silva has long wanted to return to continental Europe, whether Spain, France or Portugal.
The problem facing City is that Éderson, De Bruyne and Bernardo would need to be replaced, and that won't be cheap. Florian Wirtz at Bayer Leverkusen is a target to replace De Bruyne, but there would be stiff competition from Bayern Munich and possibly Real Madrid.
If Éderson leaves, City could either make Stefan Ortega first-choice and sign an understudy or make a move for another No. 1 such as FC Porto's Diogo Costa.
Are they part of the future, or is it time to go?
Top of the list is Jack Grealish. At 29 and with four years at City under his belt, he should be indispensable. But he's not. He has not been a regular in the team since the treble season, which means, naturally, his future is up in the air.
With two years left on his contract, City would demand a fee before letting him leave. There have been vague links with Tottenham Hotspur or a return to Aston Villa, but it's likely to take significant investment -- translation: wages plus transfer fee -- to get a deal over the line.
Pep Guardiola shuts down questions about LaLiga president Javier Tebas accusing Man City of manipulating their balance sheets
It's different with John Stones because the issue isn't his performances, but his durability. Into his ninth season at the Etihad and approaching his 31st birthday, he has only once been able to make more than 25 league appearances in a single campaign. His latest injury picked up against Real Madrid is set to rule him out for between eight and 10 weeks.
Guardiola's biggest problem this season has been injuries, and it would be natural if he began to favor players he knows can stay fit.
Youngsters looking to establish themselves
The success of City's next cycle will depend heavily on the young players the club have already invested in. If defenders Abdukodir Khusanov and Vitor Reis; midfielders Nico Gonzalez, Claudio Echeverri and Rico Lewis; and forwards Savinho, Jérémy Doku, Oscar Bobb and James McAtee can realize their undoubted potential, then their next formidable team won't be far away.
Savinho, Khusanov and Lewis -- all starters against Liverpool on Sunday -- are only 20, while Reis and Echeverri, two of the most exciting prospects to come out of South America in recent, are still teenagers. The main issue with young players is that there's always an element of risk.
It's impossible to tell at 19 or 20 who might be a world-beater by the time they're 25 or 26. City can only hope that the gambles pay off.
The next generation coming through
City have one of the best academy setups in the country and they currently sit top of Premier League 2 (for under-21s) and the under-18 Premier League north group. Midfielder Nico O'Reilly (19) and defender Jahmai Simpson-Pusey (19) have both made appearances this season, while striker Divin Mubama (20) scored against Salford City in the FA Cup in January.
City have been good at moving on young players for big fees, although they turned down a substantial bid from Chelsea for O'Reilly on deadline day in January. The decision might have been influenced by a growing feeling that City missed a trick by not asking for more when Cole Palmer moved to Stamford Bridge in 2023.
And what about Pep in all of this?
The City boss quieted the noise around his own future by signing a contract extension in November. His deal runs until 2027, and he insisted after the Champions League defeat to Real Madrid that he intends to honor it. But it hasn't stopped nagging questions about whether Guardiola needs the stress that comes with another rebuild. He has achieved everything in England and the only challenge left in management is to lead a national team at a major tournament. After such a grueling campaign and so many problems to navigate, City fans will only feel confident he's definitely staying when they see him on the training pitch preparing for next season.