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Some of the biggest moves in this summer's transfer market are taking a long time to come to fruition, and part of the reason for that is the size of the contracts involved. Which players are the most overpaid? Which player's deal is the hardest to move? Here are 10 of the most bloated contracts -- some even unmovable -- in terms of weekly wages in football today.

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10.) Diego Costa

The "angriest man in football" has never come across as someone afraid to assert his worth. Or at least what he thinks he's worth. Still, eyebrows were apparently raised last season when Costa -- who had scored just three league goals at that point since returning to Atletico Madrid from Chelsea -- asked for a pay raise. That raise was not granted, and you can see why: He's already on something like £140,000-a-week, which for an aging striker who can't stay fit and isn't scoring goals... is quite a lot. Surprisingly, he was this summer linked with a move back to the Premier League with Everton.

9.) Oscar

In some respects, you can't blame a player for taking the money when a team from the Chinese Super League comes calling. Footballers' careers are short and it's hard to turn that sort of money down. The problem comes when you elect to return to a higher standard of football -- which, when you move there in the prime of your career, is an urge that will come to many. Take Oscar, for example: he moved to Shanghai SIPG nearly three years ago, but he's still just 27. Yet if he wants to come back to Europe, or South America, who's going to match wages said to be around the £400,000-a-week mark?

8.) Danny Drinkwater

Such is the financial insanity of football. Danny Drinkwater's wages of £100,000-a-week actually aren't too exorbitant in relative terms. The problem comes in what sort of value he might have provided for that money, the answer to which is: not much. None at all, really, when you consider that since his £35 million transfer from Leicester City in January 2018, Drinkwater has made just 12 league appearances for the Blues, last season only playing a total of 30 minutes, which came in the Community Shield. In that sense, Drinkwater's contract definitely qualifies as "bloated."

7.) Philippe Coutinho

Everyone was so optimistic about Philippe Coutinho's move to Barcelona in January 2018, the hope being that he could be a replacement for Andres Iniesta. That has... not entirely gone to plan, and the word on the street is that Barca got buyer's remorse pretty quickly, and they would now very much like to rid themselves of Coutinho and his around £240,000-a-week wages. There are certainly bigger contracts in football, but this ranks up there with the worst of them on the expectations vs. delivery scale.

6.) Gonzalo Higuain

You have to feel pretty sorry for Gonzalo Higuain, really. It must be quite a blow to have been rejected by three teams in one season. First, Juventus, his parent club, loaned him out to Milan, who quickly decided he wasn't worth their time and shifted him on to Chelsea, who after a few months also declared they were not keen to retain the Argentine. Of course, sympathy might fade a little after a glance at his pay cheque; Higuain is apparently taking home something close to £300,000-a-week, a wage packet that -- along with his lack of goals -- isn't likely to have potential suitors queuing around the block.

5.) Paul Pogba

When the apocalypse comes, after some nuclear war has wiped out humanity as we know it and the world is rubble and ashes, whatever primitive lifeforms remain will still be arguing over whether Paul Pogba is a social media obsessed chancer or an unappreciated genius. At the time of writing, it seems that Pogba's relationship with Manchester United is only heading one way, and that it would be for the best if he left. But to where? Who will take on his wages, reported to be £290,000-a-week? Whether you think he's great or terrible, everyone can agree he's not a sure thing, and even in today's money-drenched game, if you're paying that sort of dough, you want a sure thing.

4.) Gareth Bale

The man who scored in two Champions League finals has plenty of cause to be annoyed by his treatment at Real Madrid. He seemingly can do no right, with rumours of his lack of integration in the dressing room and Spain in general apparently overshadowing all the good he has done at the Bernabeu. That said, perhaps the vast six-year, £350,000-a-week contract he signed in 2016 doesn't help his popularity, and is the biggest reason he's still at Real, a club seemingly keen to move him and his contract from the moment he signed it. The trouble is, who will take a player on such extraordinary money with a long and well-documented injury history? The answer at the moment seems to be: nobody.

3.) Neymar

You could say that on the list of problems with Neymar, the size of his contract is actually pretty far down. Not turning up for training and a laissez-faire attitude toward teamwork in general are probably bigger issues, but you can be pretty sure that plenty more teams would be queueing up to take him off PSG's hands if his remuneration were a little more reasonable. With a deal worth a reported £775,000-a-week, with which most clubs could pay a decent whole team, Barcelona seem the only club keen to liberate him from his Parisian prison, a prison that is presumably constructed entirely from stacks of cash.

2.) Mesut Ozil

Though they did escape falling into an Alexis Sanchez-shaped hole (see below), Arsenal did trip straight into another one. In fact, after they tripped, they dug a little more and covered themselves with dirt all the way to their noses in giving Mesut Ozil a contract worth around £350,000-a-week in 2018. The error was compounded by the subsequent dithering that saw Aaron Ramsey depart for nothing, Juventus giddily taking advantage while Arsenal were left with a player draining money from their coffers while offering little on the pitch. Fenerbahce were the latest club to reportedly investigate signing Ozil, before looking at the number of zeros on his pay slip and breaking into a cold sweat. Probably.

1.) Alexis Sanchez

Arsenal have received plenty of entirely justified criticism for their handling of contracts and transfer business in the last couple of years, but they certainly dodged a bullet when it came to Alexis Sanchez. Manchester United took a hefty punt on the Chile international, a punt that has sailed high and wide into the crowd, with Sanchez not nearly justifying his basic wage of £350,000-a-week, nevermind a reported appearance bonus of £70,000 and various other juicy clauses. In the real world, you wonder what performances would justify that sort of money, but even in the oddness of football, it's a colossally bloated and, by the looks of things this summer, an entirely unmovable contract.

Westbrook 'eternally grateful' to Oklahoma City

Published in Basketball
Friday, 12 July 2019 17:36

Russell Westbrook thanked Oklahoma City fans Friday night in a heartfelt Instagram post, saying he is "eternally grateful" for the 11 years he spent in a Thunder uniform.

The Thunder agreed Thursday night to a blockbuster trade to send Westbrook to Houston, reuniting him with former Oklahoma City teammate James Harden. The Rockets will send Chris Paul, two protected first-round picks (2024 and 2026) and two pick swaps (2021 and 2025) to Oklahoma City, ESPN's Adrian Wojnarowski reported.

View this post on Instagram

I can't even begin to put into words all of the emotions I have right now. It's been one heck of a journey Oklahoma! When I came here, I was 18 years old, bright eyed, and completely unaware of all the amazing things that would soon take place. I grew up in Oklahoma with an amazing bunch of people. The people here are what makes this place so special. From the fans, my coaches, my teammates, the entire Thunder organization, Mr. Bennett, Sam Presti, my friends, and everyone in the entire community. You are all what makes Oklahoma such a beautiful place, and the reason I've loved playing here all of this time. You have supported me through all of the ups and the downs, and stood by me through the good times, and tough times. For that I am eternally grateful to you. I've met so many amazing people who have helped shape me into the man that I am today. I hope I have impacted the Oklahoma community as much as Oklahoma has made an impact on me and my family. I'm leaving Oklahoma with so many friends and so much gratitude. I could never thank you all enough for sticking with me. It's been a dream and a whirlwind. #WHYNOT

A post shared by Russell Westbrook (@russwest44) on

Meanwhile, Harden appeared at a sneaker event Friday and was asked about the agreed-to trade that will pair the NBA's two highest scorers over the past five seasons: Harden with 11,958 points and Westbrook with 10,025.

"When I left OKC, I was sad. Then Houston made a home for me," Harden said. "Rockets is my home. And now an opportunity came available where Russ wasn't happy. Now we're back. It's going to be a lot of fun this year, I guarantee you that. Believe it."

Westbrook and Harden, two former league MVP guards, were Thunder teammates for three seasons, the last of those being the 2011-12 campaign in which that duo and Kevin Durant took Oklahoma City to the NBA Finals. The Thunder lost in five games to LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and the Miami Heat, and Harden departed that summer for Houston, where he has been an All-Star ever since.

The Westbrook-Paul swap has not been formally announced, but the Thunder acknowledged Westbrook on their Twitter account.

Thunder general manager Sam Presti worked with Westbrook and his agent, Thad Foucher, to help honor his hopes of playing with the Rockets, league sources said.

"We're excited to have Russell Westbrook," Rockets owner Tilman Fertitta told Fox 26 in Houston on Thursday. "I would watch him play for Oklahoma City, and he's so athletic. At the same time, this franchise just had the two years with the most wins it's ever had in consecutive years, and we wouldn't have accomplished that without Chris Paul. Chris Paul is unbelievable, and he's gonna be sadly missed."

Source: LeBron's No. 6 to wait due to Nike issue

Published in Basketball
Friday, 12 July 2019 18:54

LeBron James won't be giving up his No. 23 to new teammate Anthony Davis after all.

The planned jersey swap for the 2019-20 season has been postponed due to potential production and financial issues with manufacturer Nike, a source told ESPN's Dave McMenamin, confirming a Yahoo! Sports report.

James wore No. 23 during both of his stints with the Cleveland Cavaliers and last year in Los Angeles. It's the number Davis wore during his seven seasons with the New Orleans Pelicans.

After the Lakers agreed to a blockbuster trade for Davis last month, James appeared to confirm on social media that he would switch back to No. 6 -- which he wore with Team USA in the Olympics and with the Miami Heat -- while giving No. 23 to Davis.

That swap hit some road blocks in recent weeks.

A league source confirmed to ESPN that the NBA notified the Lakers that a March 15 deadline for jersey changes had passed, but it would waive it if Nike, the league's official outfitter, complied. The company did not, as the unused inventory of No. 23 James jerseys already produced would have led to a financial hit "well into the tens of millions of dollars," a source told ESPN.

James, per the Yahoo! report, thus decided to postpone the jersey change out of what the website called consideration for fans who already purchased his No. 23 and a desire to keep the situation from becoming a distraction.

As of Friday, James had yet to file an official request to change from No. 23 to No. 6 for the 2020-21 season, a league source told McMenamin. James has until March 15, 2020, to do so.

The Lakers will introduce Davis during a news conference on Saturday in El Segundo, California. James is expected to attend.

Cards scratch Wainwright due to back spasms

Published in Baseball
Friday, 12 July 2019 16:04

ST. LOUIS -- St. Louis Cardinals right-hander Adam Wainwright was scratched from his scheduled start against Arizona due to back spasms.

Daniel Ponce de Leon replaced the 37-year-old on Friday night.

A three-time All-Star, Wainwright is 5-7 with a 4.31 ERA in 16 starts this season. The Cardinals did not put him on the injured list, and manager Mike Shildt said he could make his next start as early as Sunday.

Wainwright has a $2 million base salary and has earned a $500,000 bonus for making five starts and $1 million apiece for making 10 and 15 starts. He would earn $1.5 million for 20 and $2 million apiece for 25 and 30.

Ponce de Leon is 1-0 with a 2.16 ERA in three starts and three relief appearances this season.

The Diamondbacks started left-hander Robbie Ray, who is 6-6 with a 3.96 ERA.

Kemp's short tenure with Mets comes to end

Published in Baseball
Friday, 12 July 2019 17:12

The New York Mets have released veteran outfielder Matt Kemp.

Triple-A affiliate Syracuse, with which Kemp had been playing, announced the move Friday.

The Mets signed Kemp, 34, to a minor league contract in May, a few weeks after the Reds released the three-time All-Star. He ended up appearing in eight games for Syracuse as he dealt with a broken rib suffered in April, hitting .235 (8-for-34) with one home run and three RBIs in the minors.

Kemp is a .285 career hitter with 281 homers, 1,010 RBIs and an .822 OPS in 14 major league seasons with the Dodgers, Padres, Braves and Reds. He batted .290 with 21 homers and 85 RBIs in 146 games for Los Angeles last season but struggled after being traded to Cincinnati as part of the Yasiel Puig deal during the offseason.

Jess Judd wins World University Games gold

Published in Athletics
Friday, 12 July 2019 12:28

BUCS champion claims 5000m title in Naples

Britain’s Jess Judd was able to upgrade her bronze medal from two years ago to a gold on day five of the World University Games in Naples.

Judd powered away from Canadian Nicole Hutchinson (15:51.75) and Dutch athlete Julia Van Velthoven (15:51.75) to win the 5000m in 15:45.82.

“I’m so happy,” said Judd. “I’ve done so many championships and I’ve never won, so I really wanted to win.

“I’m just over the moon. It was the most difficult race I’ve been in; I can’t believe I won.

“I keep joking that I’m a lone wolf and I do my own thing, but this week the team have been really nice and they’ve taken me in.

“It’s so great, that meant a lot.”

Brazil continued their good run of sprints medals. Gabriel Constantino took gold in the 110m hurdles in 13.22.

Britain’s Khai Riley-La Borde finished sixth in his semi-final with 13.94.

The day had begun with the women’s 20km race walk, which Australian Katie Hayward won in 93:30. Japan’s Koki Ikeda won the men’s event in 82:49.

Ukrainian Iryna Klymets won the women’s hammer with a throw of 71.25m. Polish athletes Malawia Kopron (70.89m) and Katarzyna Furmanek (69.68m) were second and third.

In the men’s 3000m steeplechase, Moroccan Mounaime Sassioui won in 8:30.24. Briton Mark Pearce was seventh in 8:42.63.

Ukranian Olha Korsun jumped a personal best of 13.90 to take the gold in the triple jump.

A day one athletics report is here, while a day two round-up is here, a day three report here and a day four report here.

Senior European champion takes under-23 gold, while Oliver Bromby and Cameron Fillery claim medals for GB on day two in Gävle

Elvira Herman and Alina Reh both broke championship records on the second day of action at the European U23 Championships in Gävle, Sweden.

Adding the under-23 100m hurdles title to her senior European gold medal won for Belarus in Berlin last summer, Herman clocked 12.70 to miss her PB by 0.06 but finish 0.01 inside Noemi Zbaren’s four-year-old record mark.

Poland’s Klaudia Siciarz secured silver in a PB time of 12.82, while France’s Laura Valette claimed bronze in 12.97.

“It was a beautiful result, I’m so happy with that,” said the winner. “It’s exciting to run a championship record, I wanted to show that form here.

“It was a very interesting race, the other girls pushed me to that fast time.”

Reh dominated the 10,000m final, leading from gun to tape to cross the finish line in 31:39.34 ahead of her German team-mate Miriam Dattke with 32:29.45. Jasmijn Lau of Netherlands was third in 33:35.66 and GB’s Julia Paternain sixth in 33:51.31.

European senior fourth-placer Reh, who claimed under-23 5000m silver two years ago, had lapped the whole field except Dattke before the half-way mark and went through 5000m in 15:42.70.

“Throughout the race I tried to stay focused and not to go too fast,” said Reh, who is also set to race the 5000m in Gävle. “I found my pace and kept my rhythm then I decided I should aim for the championship record. Why not?!

“I’m very happy now, but I’m going for the double in the 5000m so I need to recover fast. It’s going to be much harder than today, but I’m still going to go for a medal.”

Like Herman, Miltiadis Tentoglou of Greece added the under-23 title to his senior honours, winning the long jump with a European-leading 8.32m to add another gold to a haul which includes European indoor and outdoor titles. GB’s Jacob Fincham-Dukes was ninth with 7.56m and Reynold Banigo 11th with 7.45m.

There was medal success for Britain in the men’s 100m and 110m hurdles as Oliver Bromby and Cameron Fillery claimed silver and bronze respectively.

Henrik Larsson won the close 100m final in front of a home crowd, clocking 10.23 (+2.2m/sec) to get gold ahead of Bromby in a time of 10.24 and Joris van Gool of Netherlands with 10.27. GB’s Dom Ashwell was sixth in 10.37.

In the hurdles, Jason Joseph won for Switzerland in 13.45 (+1.4m/sec) as Poland’s Michał Sierocki secured silver (13.63 PB) and Fillery bronze (13.64) after clocking a 13.60 personal best in his semi-final. James Weaver ran 13.92 for seventh.

There was another gold for Switzerland in the heptathlon as Géraldine Ruckstuhl clocked a 2:12.05 800m to move from second in the standings to first ahead of Germany’s Sophie Weissenberg – 6274 points to 6175. Hanne Maudens of Belgium got bronze with 6093.

Poland’s Ewa Swoboda added the European under-23 100m title to her senior European indoor 60m gold, claiming a clear win in 11.15 (+0.6m/sec) ahead of France’s Cynthia Leduc (11.40) and Germany’s Lisa Nippgen (11.45).

In the triple jump, Lithuania’s Diana Zagainova got gold by 4cm, leaping 13.89m as GB’s Naomi Ogbeta just missed a medal with a best of 13.64m for fourth.

European indoor shot put champion Konrad Bukowiecki continued his winning ways after claiming gold at the World University Games, throwing 21.51m.

Marija Tolj won the discus title for Croatia with a lifetime best of 62.76m, while Russia’s Sofiya Palkina won the hammer title with a throw of 71.08m.

In the 200m heats, Toby Harries won his heat in 20.86, the quickest overall, while Shemar Boldizsar ran 20.96 for third in his race to also progress. Their GB team-mate Kristal Awuah booked her place in the women’s semi-finals after running 23.88, while Cameron Chalmers made the 400m final, clocking 46.39 for second in his heat.

Jemma Reekie was back on the track after 800m qualifying the day before and booked her spot in the 1500m final after running 4:21.35 for second in her heat. Spencer Thomas clocked 1:49.12 to make the 800m final, while Alex Knibbs won his 400m hurdles heat in 51.24.

Divine Oladipo achieved the qualifying mark of 16.00m to secure her spot in the shot put final, throwing 16.15m in the first round, while Jake Norris threw 69.47m in hammer qualifying to book a place in the final.

GB team co-captain Morgan Lake cleared 1.78m on her first attempt and that was all that was needed to book her place in the high jump final.

Results can be found here, while a report on day one action is here.

Roger Federer says the "stars are aligned" after beating rival Rafael Nadal to reach the Wimbledon final.

The Swiss, chasing a ninth Wimbledon crown and 21st Grand Slam title, will face world number one Novak Djokovic after a 7-6 (7-3) 1-6 6-3 6-4 win.

He said his performance against Nadal in a match that "lived up to the hype" gave him confidence for the final.

"This is like a school: the day of the test you're not going to read many books that day," the 37-year-old said.

"I don't think there's much I need to do in terms of practice.

"It's quite clear the work was done way before. I think that's why I was able to produce a good result today. It's been a rock solid year of mine, I won in Halle [for a record 10th time last month], the stars are aligned right now.

"From that standpoint I can go into that match very confident."

'Age kicks in' - Federer

Federer, who turns 38 in less than four weeks' time, will become the oldest finalist here since Ken Rosewall in 1974.

While his years on the clock have not stopped him reaching a record-extending 12th Wimbledon men's singles final, they are keeping his celebrations in check after his victory over Nadal.

"Age kicks in. I know it's not over yet," said the Swiss, who is now into his fifth final at the All England Club since turning 30.

"There's no point to start partying tonight or get too emotional, too happy about it, even though I am extremely happy.

"I think I can with experience really separate the two. If it was the end of the tournament, it would be very different right now. I'd be speaking very different, feeling very different. There is, unfortunately or fortunately, one more."

He said Friday's victory over Nadal, which was their first meeting at the grass-court Grand Slam since their epic 2008 final which the Spaniard won, would go down as one of his favourites to look back on.

"It lived up to the hype, especially from coming out of the gates, we were both playing very well," he said. "Then the climax at the end with the crazy last game, some tough rallies there.

"It had everything at the end, which was great. I'm just relieved it's all over at this point."

'We are not done' - Nadal

Nadal said Federer had deserved the victory, adding he himself had not played as well as in previous rounds and by the time he started finding his game towards the end of the match it was too late.

"I think his return was better than my one this afternoon. I didn't receive well today," the 33-year-old said.

"I think today the backhand didn't work as good as in the previous rounds. I was little bit too worried about my backhand, so I was not able to move with freedom to the forehand."

Nadal managed a smile when asked - for what he sighed was the 1,000th time - about the rivalry between himself, Federer and Novak Djokovic, who between them hold 53 Grand Slam titles - and soon to be 54.

Between them, come Sunday, they will have won the past 11 major titles.

And, helped by the fact the next generation is still failing to break through in a meaningful way, they are not finished yet.

"It is great to be part of this rivalry, be in the middle of these three players that achieved that much in this sport in the same era," he said.

"It is something that is going to be difficult to see it again. We are not done, so... things continue."

Watch the quirkier moments from day eleven at Wimbledon as Roger Federer beats Rafael Nadal, Xavier Malisse produces an incredible 'hot dog' winner and Barbora Strycova takes a direct hit.

WATCH MORE: Malisse hits brilliant hot dog winner

WATCH MORE: Federer beats Nadal in thrilling Wimbledon semi-final

Defending champion Novak Djokovic defied a mid-match slump to reach the Wimbledon final with a four-set victory over Roberto Bautista Agut.

In an agitated display, the Serb beat Spain's Bautista Agut 6-2 4-6 6-3 6-2 to reach his 25th Grand Slam final.

Djokovic, chasing his fifth Wimbledon title, will face Roger Federer - who beat Rafael Nadal - in Sunday's final.

"This has been the dream tournament for me since I was a child," said 32-year-old Djokovic.

"So to be in another final is a dream come true. Regardless of the history and many finals I've played, playing finals at Wimbledon is something different so I'll definitely enjoy that experience.

"I had to dig deep. It's the semi-finals and Roberto was playing his first Grand Slam semi-final. He was not overwhelmed.

"He played really well. He was managing his nerves in the first set but later on he established himself and started to play better.

"I got a bit tight. It was a close opening four or five games of the third set - that's where the match could have gone a different way. I'm glad it went my way."

Asked if he would be watching the second semi-final between Federer and Nadal, 15-time Grand Slam champion Djokovic said: "Of course I will watch it - my coaches will probably see the whole match. I'll definitely see parts of it.

"I'm a fan of that match-up as well. Federer v Nadal is one of the most epic rivalries of all time."

Djokovic stutters but battles back

Bautista Agut - who had been expecting to be in Ibiza for his stag do on Friday - had won both of his ties with Djokovic in 2019, in Doha and Miami, yet this was to be their first meeting on grass.

But he showed little sign of troubling Djokovic in the first set, having his opening service game broken as Djokovic steamrolled his way into a 3-0 lead.

Looking cool, calm and in control, the world number one broke Bautista Agut again at set point, hitting 12 winners and three aces in a 36-minute set.

But Djokovic looked unsettled in a second set in which he changed his racquet on numerous occasions, falling to an early break from which he didn't recover.

He hit 13 unforced errors as Bautista Agut twice held to love, serving out the set at the first opportunity with a little help from the net cord.

Djokovic grew more agitated in the third set, taking a swipe at the grass early on after skewing a return, but he found the composure needed to go a break up midway through.

Ending a 45-shot rally with a backhand winner allowed Djokovic to hold the following game, in which Bautista Agut had held two break points, before serving out the set.

Djokovic spurned three break points in the opening game of the fourth set, ramming his finger into his head while looking towards his box as his frustrations got the better of him.

But he quickly went a double break up as Bautista Agut started to run out of gas, before serving out the set on his fifth match point.

Bautista Agut free to go on stag party

The Spaniard, whose friends and future-wife Ana were in the players' box, later said his stag-do could still take place this weekend.

"We had everything reserved until Sunday," said Bautista Agut. "They all knew before there was a small chance to be here.

"I think they really had a good plan. They spent Wednesday in Ibiza then they came to watch a good match, the semi-final of Wimbledon.

"Maybe tomorrow we will go back (to Ibiza)."

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