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Can Lin Yun-Ju round off mesmerising year in style?

Published in Table Tennis
Friday, 06 December 2019 00:13
One last opportunity to steal the show in 2019

Lin’s awe-inspiring progress has been clear for all to see and the Chinese Taipei player’s efforts have been further recognised after receiving nominations for the Male Table Tennis Star and Breakthrough Star awards at the 2019 ITTF Star Awards ceremony in Zhengzhou, China on Wednesday 11th December.

Zhengzhou is also where the teenager’s campaign officially concludes as Lin looks to sign off his year in style at the Grand Finals.

The world’s finest will be present in the Henan Province based city with the likes of Fan Zhendong, Ma Long and Timo Boll all included on the entry list and all of whom Lin has overcame.

Another intriguing possibility is a potential meeting between Lin Yun-Ju and defending champion Tomokazu Harimoto, in what would be an electrifying contest between two of the most exciting young stars the sport has to offer. Last year Harimoto shocked the world with his gold medal success in Incheon – could the prestigious trophy end up in the hands of another teenager ace in 2019?

Regardless of how he concludes his campaign in Zhengzhou, it’s fair to say it’s been a year to remember for Lin.

Breakthrough moment

The initial buzz surrounding Lin in early 2019 came courtesy of his impressive outings in the doubles game: competing at the 2019 ITTF Challenge Plus Oman Open Lin took home two gold medals in Muscat. He formed title winning alliances with Cheng I-Ching and Liao Cheng-Ting in the respective mixed and men’s doubles events. But, it’s his performances as an individual that really has fans excited.

Seeded 16th for the men’s singles category Lin enjoyed a stunning run of results at the 2019 ITTF World Tour Platinum Japan Open, beating the likes of China’s Lin Gaoyuan and the “Thrill from Brazil” Hugo Calderano on his way to a runner up finish in Sapporo.

A fantastic performance in Japan but it was his outing at the T2 Diamond Malaysia 2019 that truly announced Lin’s arrival as a world beater. Opening with a powerful 4-0 win against Japanese stalwart Jun Mizutani, the Chinese Taipei teenager then went on to topple World and Olympic champion Ma Long at the quarter-final hurdle, before securing his spot in the final with victory over pen-hold grip specialist Wong Chun Ting.

Halted in the gold medal showdown one month earlier at the Japan Open, this time there was no stopping Lin who blew away Fan Zhendong 4-1 to take top honours. Lin Yun-Ju had arrived, sending a clear message to the sport’s elite that a new name was in town.

Continuing to make presence felt

One thing that became apparent soon after his successful T2 campaign was that Lin was more than just a one-hit wonder, picking up his first ITTF World Tour men’s singles title in Olomouc, Czech Republic one month later beating German stars Timo Boll and Dimitrij Ovtcharov along the way.

Most recently Lin’s quest for glory took him to Chinese shores for the Chengdu Airlines 2019 ITTF Men’s World Cup, an event which saw 20 of the sport’s biggest stars meet face-to-face in fierce competition.

Making his first appearance at the tournament, Lin captured the hearts of fans across the world as he once again stunned home favourite Ma Long to take his place on the third step of the medals podium.

A tremendous moment for one of the stars of tomorrow and there could be yet more reasons for Lin to celebrate come the evening of Sunday 15th December.

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Melbourne (Australia), Düsseldorf (Germany) and Durban (South Africa) have all made final bids for the chance to host the 2023 ITTF World Table Tennis Championships Finals.

While Kuwait had expressed an interest to stage this historic event, they have not submitted a final bid.

The candidates were to submit their bids by 30th November 2019. Now the deadline has passed, between December 2019 and February 2020, ITTF Officials and Staff will conduct the evaluation of bids and inspections of these cities. Finally, in March 2020, the candidates will be invited to present their bids, as the ITTF AGM votes on the allocation of host for the 2023 ITTF World Table Tennis Championships Finals.

The 2023 ITTF World Table Tennis Championships Finals will be the third edition under the revolutionary, expanded format to ensure maximum participation of ITTF member national associations.

More table tennis history in the making, but where?

Held since 1926, the ITTF World Table Tennis Championships represent the greatest annual event in the sport, not merely in terms of historical significance, but boasting the highest global interest among players, fans, media and partners.

The potential economic impact for host cities weighs in at tens of millions US dollars. This is also a huge PR opportunity for cities thanks to unrivalled TV and digital media exposure.

The fact that the three national associations bidding to host the 2023 Finals represent three different continents will ensure a truly international flavour to the sport’s most prestigious annual event, which following this year’s event in Budapest (Hungary) will take place in Busan (Korea Republic) in 2020, Houston (United States) in 2021 and Chengdu (China) in 2022.

“The race to stage the 2023 ITTF World Table Tennis Championships Finals is really exciting, as we have two candidates, Australia and South Africa, who are vying to host the event for the very first time, while Düsseldorf put on one of the most memorable events in our sport’s history in the 2017 edition. We are looking forward to seeing a highly competitive bidding process develop further now.” – Steve Dainton, ITTF CEO

“The final three bids received to stage the 2023 ITTF World Table Tennis Championships Finals are all very exciting. Each of them is different in its own way, but at the same time all are very promising potential hosts. Early in 2020, the ITTF will plan inspections with all three candidate hosts, which will then be invited to present their bids at the 2020 Annual General Meeting for the final decision and allocation of the event.” – Vicky Eleftheriade, ITTF Competition Director.

An event designed to keep moving with the times

It is interesting to note that from 2021 onwards, every detail about the competition is being designed to make the event experience more compelling than ever. A grand total of 128 players in singles and 64 pairs in each of the doubles will be competing in a straight knockout to eventually be crowned world champions.

The next steps for Melbourne, Düsseldorf and Durban are to get ready for eventual site inspections and provide further conviction that they are up to the task of winning the right to host the 2023 ITTF World Table Tennis Championships Finals.

So, Australia, Germany or South Africa? The race is on to stage table tennis’ greatest event in 2023! Where do you think it will be?

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Chelsea transfer ban cut, able to buy in January

Published in Soccer
Friday, 06 December 2019 03:14

Chelsea will be able to sign players in January after the Court of Arbitation for Sport (CAS) reduced the club's transfer ban.

Chelsea were handed a two-window transfer ban and fined £460,000 ($599,000) in December 2018 after FIFA found them guilty of breaching rules relating to the transfers of 29 players under the age of 18.

The club were found to have breached Article 19 and Article 18b of the Regulation of Transfers and Status of Players by FIFA's Control, Ethics and Disciplinary Committee.

Friday's decision by CAS marked Chelsea's second appeal of the ban after FIFA rejected an earlier attempt to lift the ban and upheld their decision in May, but altered the ruling to allow the club to sign players younger than 16.

FIFA opened its investigation into Chelsea's academy for potential transfer rule breaches in 2016, when pictures emerged of Bertrand Traore playing against Arsenal in a non-competitive match as a 16-year-old.

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The club said they had approval from both the Football Association and Premier League to play Traore in trial games.

Chelsea have shown few signs of being affected by the transfer ban this season under the leadership of Frank Lampard, who took over last summer, leading to academy graduates including Tammy Abraham, Mason Mount and Fikayo Tomori taking leading roles in the side.

Solskjaer aims dig at City ahead of derby

Published in Soccer
Friday, 06 December 2019 02:03

MANCHESTER -- Manchester United manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has aimed a dig at Manchester City ahead of the derby saying "at least we play every year now."

City's slip down the English football pyramid meant there was no Manchester derby between April 1996 and November 2000.

Solskjaer, who moved to Old Trafford in 1996, did not play in his first derby until April 2001 and on the eve of the latest meeting between the Manchester rivals, the Norwegian took the chance to reference City's less illustrious past.

"At least we play every year now," Solskjaer said.

"It took many years before I played a Manchester derby myself. It's changed in a way. Man City are a better team now than when I was playing.

"Manchester derbies are always special games but you can't say it matters more. For the fans, of course. We're up for it."

Solskjaer also said he has been in contact with Manchester United loanee Chris Smalling and former striker Romelu Lukaku in the aftermath of a controversial newspaper front page.

Italian newspaper Il Corriere dello Sport previewed Inter's Friday night clash against Roma with a photo of both Lukaku and Smalling above the headline "Black Friday."

"First of all, when you see that paper you say wow really is that possible?," Solskjaer added. "It's the worst front page I've ever seen and we've been in touch with Chris just so he knows we'll back him, and Romelu as well.

"I don't work in your line of business but wow, it's incredible and at least we don't see that here, that has to be stamped out. Chris has been fantastic but we know sometimes if you change the environment it can go both ways but Chris is the type to relish these challenges.

"He's cultured, enjoys life down there, it's new experience for him. He's a boy who couldn't be here without being a regular and so happy for him because we can see the top player he is."

Solskjaer hopes Anthony Martial will be fit enough to play some part at the Etihad Stadium on Saturday but Paul Pogba has been ruled out.

Top European clubs' best and worst signings since 2009

Published in Soccer
Friday, 06 December 2019 00:52

Jump to: Barcelona | PSG | Juventus | Bayern Munich

In the run-up to the January transfer window, we're ranking some of the best and worst signings by Europe's elite clubs over the past decade -- just as we did for the English Premier League.

We looked at every arrival from the 2009-10 season onward -- though only permanent deals count, meaning no loans or promotions from the youth team -- and whittled down each list to five.

There's no magic formula to decide how they rank; it's purely how we think fans (having asked a few ourselves) would place them. No doubt you will agree with some and disagree with others.

*Goals and appearance data is for all competitions

REAL MADRID'S BEST

5. Karim Benzema, 2009-

Bought for: €35m from Lyon
Appearances: 483; Goals: 236

Benzema was unveiled at Real Madrid in the same week as a certain Cristiano Ronaldo in 2009, so comparisons were always going to be made. But the Frenchman has scored over 200 goals and made nearly 500 appearances for the club: given Madrid paid Lyon just €35m for him, that's quite a return.

4. Casemiro, 2013-

Bought for: €6m from Porto
Appearances: 213; Goals: 20

Every great team needs a player to do the dirty work, and the Brazilian is that man for Real. He wasn't a natural defensive midfielder but took his chance, and his work at the base of their midfield has won him four Champions League trophies.

3. Raphael Varane, 2011-

Bought for: €10m from Lens
Appearances: 292; Goals: 12

One of the most highly-rated young defenders around when he joined Real at age 18, Varane has made good on his potential. A classy player who has won almost everything there is to win, he's still only 26.

2. Luka Modric, 2012-

Bought for: €35m from Tottenham
Appearances: 315; Goals: 19

It seems incredible that a player of Modric's class was available for such a cheap fee, but it was clear he had outgrown Tottenham after four fine years in the Premier League. The Croatian midfielder has improved with age, and his 2018 Ballon d'Or and FIFA the Best awards (helped by his wonderful performances at the World Cup) were a fitting honour.

1. Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009-18

Bought for: €94m from Manchester United
Sold for: €100m to Juventus
Appearances: 438; Goals: 450

What more can you say about Ronaldo? The fact that he was sold for more than he was bought for, even at age 32, says a lot. So too does his record of better than a goal a game at Real. A legend. One of the best of all time.

REAL MADRID'S WORST

5. Kaka, 2009-13

Bought for: €67m from AC Milan
Sold for: Free, to AC Milan
Appearances: 120; Goals: 29

A host of personal honours in 2007, including the Ballon d'Or, saw the Brazilian arrive as one of the best players in the world. But things didn't work out and he returned to Milan for nothing at age 31. He was never quite the same again and ended his career in MLS with Orlando City SC.

4. James Rodriguez, 2014

Bought for: €75m from Monaco
Appearances: 120; Goals: 37

It just goes to show that you should never buy a player purely based on their World Cup performances. Yes, James was incredible for Colombia in 2014, but he struggled to replicate that form in Madrid, and even Bayern didn't fancy signing him after a two-year loan spell.

3. Pedro Leon, 2010-13

Bought for: €10m from Getafe
Sold for: €6m to Getafe
Appearances: 14; Goals: 2

It's fair to say Jose Mourinho won't be signing Pedro Leon ever again. Asked at a news conference why the new midfielder wasn't playing in 2010 he replied: "You talk of Pedro Leon as if he was [Zinedine] Zidane or [Diego] Maradona or [Alfredo] Di Stefano. He was playing for Getafe two days ago." Those comments hurt the winger and he later told Cadena SER: "I felt humiliated at Madrid." It's no wonder it didn't work out.

2. Asier Illarramendi, 2013-15

Bought for: €32.2m from Real Sociedad
Sold for: €16m to Real Sociedad
Appearances: 90; Goals: 3

Incredibly, after the Galacticos era, Illarramendi's fee was the most Real Madrid had ever paid for a Spanish player. However, despite playing in plenty of games over his two seasons, he was allowed to rejoin his former club for around half what they signed him for. In their quest for a replacement defensive midfielder, the club then spent €20m on Lucas Silva and that really didn't work out either.

1. Nuri Sahin, 2011-14

Bought for: €10m from Borussia Dortmund
Sold for: €7m to Borussia Dortmund
Appearances: 10; Goals: 1

If only we could include Julien Faubert (who joined on loan from West Ham in 2009), we would -- mainly because of this photo of club legend Alfredo Di Stefano being utterly bemused who he was. But instead, Real's worst is a Turkey midfielder who went from being on top of the world to the scrapheap in just a few short years.

Having starred for Dortmund, Sahin was barely given a kick of the ball in Madrid after struggling with fitness issues and spent two years on loan at Liverpool and then back at his former club before they made the move permanent.


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Burley: Messi is keeping Valverde in a job at Barcelona

Craig Burley believes Lionel Messi is single-handedly covering up deficiencies at Barcelona.

BARCELONA'S BEST

5. Javier Mascherano, 2011-18

Bought for: €24m from Liverpool
Sold for: Free, to Hebei China Fortune

Appearances: 334; Goals: 1

After five years in England with West Ham and then Liverpool, Mascherano had to reinvent himself when he joined Barcelona. The Argentine midfielder suddenly became a tremendous centre-back and won five major trophies in his first season. As committed a player as you will find in the game.

4. Neymar, 2013-17

Bought for: €86.2m from Santos
Sold for: €222m to PSG

Appearances: 186; Goals: 105

The initial deal to bring the Brazilian in from Santos was shrouded in controversy and court cases that have dragged on for years, but his impact on the pitch was undoubted. Goals, assists and a "MSN" partnership with Lionel Messi and Luis Suarez that brought him eight trophies in four years. It all turned sour when he bought out his massive release clause to join PSG for a world-record fee, but he almost went back this summer and still harbours a desire to return.

3. Marc-Andre ter Stegen, 2014-

Bought for: €12m from Borussia Monchengladbach
Appearances: 209

It seemed a bit of a gamble when the 22-year-old ball-playing goalkeeper moved to Camp Nou to take over from Victor Valdes. It seemed a downright silly move when Chile star Claudio Bravo was signed that same summer to take the No. 1 spot. However, Ter Stegen won his place in 2016 and hasn't let it go since, becoming one of the best around. (He ranked as the No. 3 goalkeeper in the 2019 FC 100.)

2. Jordi Alba, 2012-

Bought for: €14m from Valencia
Appearances: 309; Goals: 16

Barcelona don't let too many youth team talents slip away, but Alba was one who made his name at Valencia and then returned to Camp Nou later in his career. Now one of the world's best left-backs, his understanding with Messi and relentless workrate makes a mockery of the paltry fee the Catalan club parted with in 2012.

1. Luis Suarez, 2014-

Bought for: €65m from Liverpool
Appearances: 263; Goals: 187

It wasn't the best of starts to his Barcelona career as Suarez arrived having been banned for four months for biting Italy defender Giorgio Chiellini at the 2014 World Cup. The Uruguayan has often courted controversy in his career, to put it mildly, but there's no arguing that he has blossomed into one of the best strikers around.

BARCELONA'S WORST

5. Douglas, 2014-19

Bought for: €4m from Sao Paulo
Sold for: Free to Besiktas
Appearances: 8; Goals: 0

You'd be forgiven for missing the career of the Brazilian full-back at Camp Nou given he spent most of his five years out on loan. He just wasn't good enough to play for the club: sometimes it's that simple.

4. Philippe Coutinho, 2018-

Bought for: €120m from Liverpool
Appearances: 76; Goals: 21

Having splashed out so much money on a seemingly perfect player for the Barcelona style, it's baffling that things didn't work out for the Brazilian. Coutinho just didn't settle and, after 18 months, opted to join Bayern Munich on loan. He has a buyout fee of €120m which at least means Barca wouldn't lose money.

3. Zlatan Ibrahimovic, 2009-11

Bought for: €47m plus Samuel Eto'o from Inter Milan
Sold for: €24m to AC Milan
Appearances: 46; Goals: 22

It was one of the world's most expensive transfers, but Ibrahimovic lasted only one season before moving to AC Milan on loan. His record of 22 goals in 46 games is pretty decent, but it was the nasty fallout with coach Pep Guardiola that made this such a bad deal. "When you buy me, you are buying a Ferrari. If you drive a Ferrari, you put premium fuel in the tank, you drive onto the motorway and you floor the accelerator. Guardiola filled up with diesel and went for a spin in the countryside. If that's what he wanted, he should have bought himself a Fiat from the start" was the famous quote from his autobiography.

2. Dmytro Chygrynskiy, 2009-10

Bought for: €25m from Shakhtar Donetsk
Sold for: €15m to Shakhtar Donetsk
Appearances: 12; Goals: 0

Spot the odd one out in this list of clubs: Shakhtar Donetsk, Barcelona, Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk, AEK Athens. Chygrynskiy arrived at Camp Nou with a reputation as a ball-playing centre-back; he left a year later with that reputation in tatters.

1. Arda Turan, 2015-

Bought for: €34m from Atletico Madrid
Appearances: 55; Goals: 15

Amazingly, Turan is still a Barcelona player despite having not played for the club since 2017. Falling out of favour, he didn't play a minute in 2017-18 and was sent on a lengthy loan spell to Istanbul Basaksehir, where he recently received a suspended jail sentence of nearly three years for firing a gun in a hospital. His Barcelona contract ends next summer and you can safely assume it won't be renewed.


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Laurens: Mbappe stays another year at PSG

Julien Laurens thinks Kylian Mbappe's value will only go up and Real Madrid cannot afford to wait to sign him.

PSG'S BEST

5. Thiago Silva, 2012-

Bought for: €42m from AC Milan
Appearances: 284; Goals: 16

A real class act of a centre-back, Thiago Silva has given everything to PSG and is a leader both in the dressing room and on the pitch. Arguably one of the greatest Brazilian defenders of all time, his absence from the famous 7-1 defeat by Germany at the 2014 World Cup speaks to his importance.

4. Nene, 2010-13

Bought for: €5.5m from Monaco
Sold for: Free, to Al-Gharafa
Appearances: 112; Goals: 48

It's easy to forget players who were around before the QSI takeover in 2011, but Nene was the best of the lot. The Brazilian winger could teach Neymar a thing or two about settling in Paris, as his goal record shows, but when the money and big-name players starting coming in, he left for Al-Gharafa.

3. Edinson Cavani, 2013-

Bought for: €64m from Napoli
Appearances: 288, Goals: 195

When you become the all-time leading scorer at a club, you know it has gone well. Cavani arrived having scored over 100 goals in three seasons at Napoli and just kept scoring in Paris, even though he was asked to play out wide by various coaches over the years.

2. Zlatan Ibrahimovic, 2012-2016

Bought for: €20m from AC Milan
Sold for: Free, to Manchester United
Appearances: 180, Goals: 156

Cavani might have eventually scored more goals, Ibrahimovic was "king" of Paris and if he'd had another 100 games at the club then the record would easily be his. The Swede brought more than just goals to PSG. He helped turned them into the force they are today.

1. Kylian Mbappe, 2017-

Bought for: €180m from Monaco
Appearances: 101; Goals: 71

Not yet 21, Mbappe has already won three league titles (one with Monaco) and a World Cup with France. He is the future. He is the heir to Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo at the pinnacle of the sport, and if he continues his level of scoring, he will one day be considered one of the best of all time.

PSG'S WORST

5. David Luiz, 2014-17

Bought for: €55m from Chelsea
Sold for: €35m to Chelsea
Appearances: 89; Goals: 8

What worked for Thiago Silva did not quite work the same for David Luiz. PSG paid a world-record transfer for a defender at a time when FFP was at its height of strictness, which is why this one makes the list. Even though the Brazilian picked up plenty of silverware in the French capital, it wasn't a massive surprise to see him move on within a few years.

4. Diego Lugano, 2011-13

Bought for: €3m from Fenerbahce
Sold for: Free, to West Brom
Appearances: 34; Goals: 4

Hype is a terrible thing. Winger Lucas Moura suffered when he signed from Sao Paulo in 2013, but at least he made over 150 appearances for the club in total. Lugano arrived in 2011 as one of the most highly-rated defenders in the world and yet made only 12 league appearances.

3. Mateja Kezman, 2009-10

Bought for: €4m from Fenerbahce
Sold for: Free, to South China
Appearances: 53; Goals: 10

An unmitigated disaster that was probably on the cards after the striker had already flopped at Chelsea. Kezman spent most of his time at the club as a substitute, or on loan to Zenit where he also failed to impress. He's now an agent and represents Serbia midfielder Sergej Milinkovic-Savic among others.

2. Jese, 2016-

Bought for: €25m from Real Madrid
Sold for:
Appearances: 16; Goals: 2

Usually you could expect a player bought from Real Madrid to be something of a coup for PSG. But the signs were there as he struggled with injury and form at the Bernabeu. That carried on in Paris and loan spells to Las Palmas, Stoke, Real Betis and now Sporting CP make it clear he has no future at the club.

1. Neymar, 2017-

Bought for: €222m from Barcelona
Appearances: 66; Goals: 56

This is bound to upset people but when you spend that amount of money on one player, you expect them to play. Neymar made headlines in October for missing as many games as he has played for the club in two years, and that's to say nothing for his off-pitch distractions and public courting of a move back to Barcelona. PSG fans would miss his goals, but they wouldn't miss him too much if the club signed a decent replacement.


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1:53

Is Cristiano Ronaldo being mismanaged at Juventus?

Ale Moreno and Craig Burley debate Juve's handling of Ronaldo after his latest hat trick for Portugal.

JUVENTUS' BEST

5. Miralem Pjanic, 2016-

Bought for: €32m from Roma
Appearances: 153; Goals: 22

Getting a midfielder of Pjanic's class, just as he was reaching his peak, was incredible business. The Bosnian controls games and committed his future to the club with a five-year deal in 2018.

4. Leonardo Bonucci, 2010-17, 2018-

Bought for: €15.5m from Bari; €35m plus Mattia Caldara from AC Milan
Sold for: €42m to AC Milan

Appearances: 379; Goals: 24

First time or second time? Both, probably. Bonucci is one of the finest Italian defenders around and spent seven years in Turin before opting to move to Milan in 2017. That didn't work out and he returned a year later for less that he was sold for.

3. Andrea Pirlo, 2011-15

Bought for: Free, from AC MIlan
Sold for: Free, to New York City FC
Appearances: 164; Goals: 19

It's incredible to think that one of the best midfielders of his generation moved for nothing to one of the biggest clubs in Europe ... but he did. After a decade at Milan, Pirlo moved on and promptly won four straight Scudetto titles. Easily one of the best free transfers ever.

2. Paul Pogba, 2012-16

Bought for: €1m, from Man United
Sold for: €105m to Man United
Appearances: 178; Goals: 34

The only thing more incredible might be that Manchester United let Pogba leave for a measly £800,000 fee (set by a tribunal) back in 2012, then bought him back for a then-world record four years later. The France midfielder isn't everyone's favourite player, but he's one of the best around and helped himself to four titles before making Juve a massive profit.

1. Cristiano Ronaldo, 2018-

Bought for: €100m from Real Madrid
Appearances: 59; Goals: 35

This list isn't just about a player's performances on the pitch, it's about the impact of the signing, and Ronaldo landing in Turin was huge. One of the two world's best players with Lionel Messi, and arguably of all-time, Ronaldo's arrival was a game-changer. Still in his early-mid 30s, CR7 is a goal machine, a marketing machine and continues to set records whatever he does.

JUVENTUS' WORST

5. Gianluigi Buffon, 2019-

Bought for: Free, from PSG
Appearances: 656

How do you reward a club legend with over 650 appearances and 17 seasons under his belt? With a place on this list apparently. Sorry. But this is more about the decision to bring the goalkeeper back to the club for free after letting him leave for PSG. It was silly and emotional, with the 41-year-old a shadow of his former self as he closes on the all-time Serie A appearance record of Paolo Maldini.

4. Angelo Ogbonna, 2013-15

Bought for: €13m from Torino
Sold for: €11m to West Ham
Appearances: 55; Goals: 0

When Juventus already boast the likes of Andrea Barzagli, Leonardo Bonucci and Giorgio Chiellini in defence, Ogbonna's arrival was always going to pale in comparison. The fact he moved on to West Ham inside two years proved he couldn't hack it in Turin.

3. Emre Can, 2018-

Bought for: Free, from Liverpool
Appearances: 43; Goals: 4

It seemed quite a coup when Can joined Juventus for nothing from Liverpool. Still in his mid-20s, the Germany midfielder's versatility should have seen him feature regularly, but he was left out of new coach Maurizio Sarri's 22-man Champions League squad. "On Tuesday they phoned me and told me, in a conversation that didn't even last a minute, that I was not on the list and they didn't give an explanation. That does make me angry and furious because I think that I played well last season, above all in the Champions League," he said.

2. Diego, 2009-11

Bought for: €24.5m from Werder Bremen
Sold for: €15.5m to Wolfsburg
Appearances: 47; Goals: 7

Having come through the same Santos side that saw the likes of Robinho, Elano and Alex star, Diego arrived in Turin with some serious hype after shining for Werder Bremen. But one year was all it took for the Brazilian to quit and he headed back to the Bundesliga.

1. Felipe Melo, 2009-2011

Bought for: €25m from Fiorentina
Sold for: €13m to Galatasaray
Appearances: 78; Goals: 4

The fiery Brazilian midfielder never seemed to be able to keep a lid on his temperament and was sent off in a key match against Inter for elbowing Mario Balotelli, while he also committed the cardinal sin of insulting his own club's fans after some disappointing results. He wasn't the same after he cost Brazil a semifinal spot by getting sent off against Netherlands at the 2010 World Cup for a stamp on Arjen Robben and was quickly allowed to depart by Juve.


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1:08

Hislop: Lewandowski is world's best striker

Shaka Hislop is in awe of Robert Lewandowski after the Bayern striker netted again in the thrashing of Dortmund.

BAYERN MUNICH'S BEST

5. Jerome Boateng, 2011-

Bought for: €13.5m from Man City
Appearances: 297; Goals: 8

You have to feel sorry for the multiple trophy winning defender that all people remember is when Lionel Messi made him fall over with a swivel of the hips in the Champions League. But Boateng has been a class act at Bayern and has given his all even when falling out of favour in recent seasons.

4. Serge Gnabry, 2017-

Bought for: €8m from Werder Bremen
Appearances: 60; Goals: 22

It seemed unlikely that the winger would make the grade at Bayern, having failed to do so at Arsenal, but his year at Werder and spell on loan at Hoffenheim convinced the German giants to give him a go and he's rewarded them. Always full of potential, the 24-year-old is starting to show his true worth and his four-goal performance against Tottenham in the 2019-20 Champions League group stage is proof of what he can do.

3. Arjen Robben, 2009-2019

Bought for: €25m from Real Madrid
Sold for: Retired
Appearances: 309; Goals: 144

Football hasn't seemed the same since there has been no Dutch winger cutting in from the right to curl a left-footed shot into the corner of the net. Robben made himself a legend at Bayern, alongside Franck Ribery who signed in 2007, and goes down as one of the great wingers to have played the game.

2. Manuel Neuer, 2011

Bought for: €30m from Schalke
Appearances: 358

An incredible deal for Bayern to land the Germany No. 1 for such a small fee. Neuer redefined the art of his chosen position, playing as a sweeper-keeper and helping himself to seven titles, a Champions League and World Cup. One of the greatest goalkeepers ever and a committed club servant.

1. Robert Lewandowski, 2014-

Bought for: Free, from Dortmund
Appearances: 263; Goals: 218

A goal-scoring machine who has netted almost 400 in nearly 600 games during his career, Lewandowski joined Bayern on a free transfer. A FREE TRANSFER! Arguably the best Bosman move of all time as the Poland striker has rewarded the club with buckets of goals and silverware aplenty. Just an incredible player and Bayern have done well to keep him out of the clutches of Europe's other top clubs.

BAYERN MUNICH'S WORST

5. Luiz Gustavo, 2011-2013

Bought for: €17m from Hoffenheim
Sold for: €16m to Wolfsburg
Appearances: 100; Goals: 6

If Pep Guardiola doesn't think you're worth playing, then you have issues. Thiago Alcantara and Mario Gotze's arrivals pushed the Brazilian down the pecking order, and he moved on in search of regular football after failing to impress during two-and-a-half years at the club.

4. Douglas Costa, 2015-18

Bought for: €30m from Shakhtar Donetsk
Sold for: €40m to Juventus
Appearances: 77; Goals: 14

The Brazilian winger would probably have been a success if it wasn't for the fact that Ribery and Robben occupied the wide positions at Bayern. Badly timed injuries didn't help but then neither did his public criticism of boss Carlo Ancelotti for not playing him. A lot of money to spend on a player who did very little, but at least they made a profit.

3. Sandro Wagner, 2017-2019

Bought for: €13m from Hoffenheim
Sold for: €5m to TJ Teda
Appearances: 30; Goals: 10

Having begun his career at Bayern before leaving for a journeyman existence, it made some sense that Sandro would want to come back to act as backup to Lewandowski. But he barely played and it wasn't long before he grew tired of life on the bench and opted to move to China.

2. Mario Gotze, 2013-2016

Bought for: €37m from Borussia Dortmund
Sold for: €22m to Borussia Dortmund
Appearances: 114; Goals: 36

He won three straight Bundesliga titles, two German cups and a World Cup (with Germany) during his time at Bayern, but the move was a disaster and the forward admitted that he'd made a mistake in moving there. Criticised by club legend Franz Beckenbauer for behaving like "a child" on the pitch, Gotze went back to Dortmund with his tail between his legs.

1. Renato Sanches, 2016-2019

Bought for: €35m from Benfica
Sold for: €25m to Lille
Appearances: 53; Goals: 2

Having won the 2016 Golden Boy award for his performances for Benfica and Portugal, the 18-year-old was on top of the world. A year later he was on loan at Swansea. The young midfielder's star fell quickly at Bayern and he was sold without making much of an impact on the team. The good news for Bayern is that there could have been an additional €45m to pay, based on objectives, but they certainly never had to part with a penny there.

South Africa lose title sponsor as freefall continues

Published in Cricket
Friday, 06 December 2019 02:29

South Africa's men's team will lose their major sponsor, Standard Bank, who have opted not to renew their deal when it expires on April 30, 2020. This ends an association with cricket that dates back to 1998. Standard Bank sponsored South African cricket between 1998 and 2011, when it ended its sports associations with both cricket and football. The company then returned to cricket in 2016 and signed a four-year deal with Cricket South Africa (CSA) which is understood to be to the tune of R400 million (approx. US$ 27.3 million). Currently, they are only the title sponsor for the men's team and their withdrawal is a direct result of administrative and governance problems at CSA which Standard Bank believes is tarnishing its reputation.

"Standard Bank is committed to upholding the highest levels of leadership, integrity and governance. In light of recent developments at CSA, which are a culmination of long-standing problems which have damaged Standard Bank's reputation, it has decided not to renew its partnership with CSA," Thulani Sibeko, Standard Bank Group Chief Marketing and Communications Officer said in a statement released on Friday morning.

Cricket South Africa's protracted problems, which include a court battle against the South African Cricketers' Association (SACA), projected financial losses of at least R654 million (approx. US$44.7 million) in the next four-year cycle, and the suspension of six staff members - three of whom were given notice of their suspension on Thursday - came to a head last weekend when five journalists' accreditation was revoked during the Mzansi Super League (MSL).

On Monday, CSA CEO Thabang Moroe confirmed CSA made the decision because they did not approve of the way these reporters were writing about the organisation. That same day, Standard Bank expressed its "grave concerns," about the situation at CSA and demanded a meeting with CSA to "know about developments within CSA, especially those that relate to governance and conduct."

Sources told ESPNcricinfo that Standard Bank had been severe on CSA officials at the meeting and demanded they "clean up their act". On Tuesday, Standard Bank issued a statement expressing its satisfaction that the meeting was "productive" and that they were left with the assurance that CSA would "urgently take the South African public into its confidence about the state of governance at the cricket administrative body". It also said CSA had agreed to "urgently implement remedial actions to address stakeholder concerns, including the unacceptable manner in which it treated members of the media".

However, just three days later, Standard Bank has confirmed it will not renew the sponsorship deal. Between Tuesday and Friday, three independent directors, Professor Shirley Zinn, Iqbal Khan and Dawn Makhobo, have resigned from the CSA board, and there have been calls from all quarters for the CEO and President, Chris Nenzani to step down.

Among the chorus has been former UCB managing director Ali Bacher, who was involved in mediating an agreement between Moroe and Graeme Smith, which would have seen Smith become director of cricket on October 1. Critiques have also emerged from development sponsors The Willowton Group and, last night, the Gauteng Cricket Board, the biggest provincial affiliate of CSA. In addition to the voices of dissent, CSA also faces allegations of credit card abuse from Khan, and a second commercial rights dispute with South African Cricketers' Association (SACA) in as many months.

Now, CSA has also lost its only major team sponsor after deals with Sunfoil and Momentum ended last year.

James Faulkner set for Lancashire T20 Blast return in 2020

Published in Cricket
Friday, 06 December 2019 02:17

James Faulkner, the Australian left-arm seamer, will return to Lancashire for his fourth stint at the club for next year's T20 Blast.

Faulkner first appeared for the county in 2015, and has been one of their overseas players in the Blast since 2018. This season, he took 11 wickets with an economy rate of 7.88 as Lancashire topped the North Group, but were beaten by eventual winners Essex in the quarter-finals.

"I am thrilled to be returning to Emirates Old Trafford for next season's Vitality Blast," Faulkner said. "It feels like a home away from home for me and I cannot wait to get started again in May.

"We were unlucky not to progress past the quarter-finals last year and we are all determined to put that right in 2020. We will be going all out to repeat the success of 2015, which remains one of the proudest memories in my cricketing career.

"Emirates Old Trafford is an amazing place to play cricket and I can't wait to reunite with the squad next summer. I'm determined to win the Vitality Blast trophy back for the Club."

Paul Allott, the club's director of cricket, said: "James is a fantastic, well-rounded cricketer of significant experience and we are delighted to welcome him back to Emirates Old Trafford for a fourth season in 2020.

"He is the very definition of an all-rounder. He can bowl in any situation, which he has done successfully for us at both the beginning and back end of an innings, and is still a powerful batsman, not to mention his outstanding ability in the field too.

"His enthusiasm in representing the Red Rose is evident and he has established himself as a key figure in our T20 side. He is a proven winner and a great role model to the younger players."

CSA CEO Thabang Moroe suspended for alleged misconduct

Published in Cricket
Friday, 06 December 2019 03:27

Thabang Moroe, the chief executive of Cricket South Africa, has been suspended with immediate effect, but with full pay, following allegations of misconduct. An investigation into his actions, which will include an independent forensic audit, is expected to be conducted soon.

Chris Nenzani, the CSA president, has been tasked with appointing an acting chief executive for the duration of Moroe's suspension. Nenzani has been mandated to look at all options, including holding discussions with Dave Richardson, the former South Africa cricketer who was ICC chief executive till recently and is believed to be interested in getting involved with the CSA.

ESPNcricinfo understands that former chief executive Haroon Lorgat, Moroe's predecessor, and former acting CEO Jacques Faul, have already been approached by several provincial presidents, but neither has heard from Nenzani yet.

Moroe's suspension comes after five days of mounting pressure on CSA's administration. There have been calls from several quarters for Moroe and the CSA Board to step down in the wake of a full-blown crisis spanning management, player and media relations, and financial affairs.

The catalyst for the recent sequence of events was the revoking of accreditation of five journalists on Sunday during the Mzansi Super League. No reason was given for the sanction but on Monday morning, Moroe told a national radio station that the board was unhappy with the reporters' coverage of CSA. By then, CSA's actions had been condemned by the South African National Editors' Forum, South African Cricketers' Association, and men's Test and ODI sponsors Standard Bank, who also summoned CSA to a meeting that afternoon.

The reports CSA had problems with ranged from its disputes with SACA, including a court case over a proposed restructure of domestic cricket, the delay in appointing a director of cricket, which former captain Graeme Smith was being lined up for, the non-existence of a selection panel weeks before a series against England, and CSA's mounting expenses - and debts - including that of running the MSL.

Taken together, this has left South African cricket in a state of turmoil, which will be discussed at a special sitting of the Board on Saturday, where it is hoped that clarity will be offered on key positions ahead of England's visit.

Of particular concern is the position of director of cricket. Smith's initial reluctance, and eventual withdrawal, was understood to be largely due to Moroe's presence, and with Moroe suspended, Smith may be more willing to reconsider. However, there are less than three weeks before the Boxing Day Test against England, so decisions need to be taken swiftly.

CSA has also interviewed former national selector Hussein Manack and suspended interim director of cricket Corrie van Zyl for the director of cricket position, and former selection convenor Linda Zondi, former international Monde Zondeki, and current Jozi Stars selections convenor Patrick Moroney for the role of convenor of selectors.

Those interviews were conducted with Moroe at the helm, and including members of the Board who have since resigned such as Dawn Makhobo, who walked away from CSA on Friday morning.

A whirlwind of events this morning also revealed that CSA has suspended three other members of staff - financial manager Ziyanda Nkuta, procurement manager Lundi Maja, and administrator Dalene Nolan.

That brought the total number of suspended employees to seven, with van Zyl, chief operating officer Naasei Appiah, and head of sales and sponsorship Clive Eksteen sidelined last month for alleged dereliction of duty relating to a delayed payment of commercial rights fees to SACA, from last year's MSL.

Support for van Zyl, Appiah and Eksteen has been widespread, particularly from SACA, which claimed Moroe was privy to communication over the MSL payment and complicit in its delay. SACA has since said that there has been a second commercial rights violation, this time concerning a fantasy game for this year's MSL, for which CSA had used players' images they did not have rights to.

On Wednesday, SACA said its members would consider a players' strike in response to CSA's lack of engagement, and while industrial action remains a possibility, it will not take place during the series against England.

"SACA re-iterates however that industrial action by the players should be viewed only as a very last resort. We also wish to reassure cricket fans, and other cricket stakeholders, that SACA will not embark on industrial action with the players during the upcoming England series. We are very aware of the importance of this series to the Proteas and to England, to the many fans from both countries and to the media and commercial partners," Tony Irish, SACA's outgoing CEO, said in a statement.

More to follow...

Live Blog - The Pakistan Super League draft

Published in Cricket
Friday, 06 December 2019 03:07

Welcome to ESPNcricinfo's live blog for the Pakistan Super League draft. The new season starts in February 2020. If the page doesn't load, please refresh

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