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Avs add depth at F, sign Rodrigues for 1-yr., $2M

Published in Hockey
Monday, 12 September 2022 10:25

DENVER -- The Stanley Cup champion Colorado Avalanche added more depth at forward by signing Evan Rodrigues to a one-year, $2 million deal on Monday.

The move comes on the heels of losing Nazem Kadri in free agency to Calgary. The Avalanche are banking that Rodrigues can help fill the void.

Rodrigues arrives in the Mile High City after a season in Pittsburgh, where he set career highs with 19 goals and 24 assists. Rodrigues was the lone Penguins player to skate in every game last season.

"We are excited to add a two-way player with Evan's versatility to our group," Avalanche general manager Chris MacFarland said in a statement. "He is coming off his best offensive season and has shown he can play in a variety of roles and help a lineup in many ways."

It's been a busy offseason for the Avalanche since beating the Tampa Bay Lightning in the Stanley Cup Final in June as they hoisted the trophy for the first time since 2001. Among the moves, they brought back defenseman Josh Manson, along with signing left wingers Artturi Lehkonen and Darren Helm. They also signed right winger Valeri Nichushkin to a contract extension, retained forward Andrew Cogliano and traded for goaltender Alexandar Georgiev.

Rodrigues, 29, has played in 316 career NHL games in his time with Pittsburgh and Buffalo, the team that signed him as a free agent in April 2015. Before turning pro, he played at Boston University, where he helped the Terriers to the 2015 NCAA championship game before losing to Providence.

After spending time hanging out with the Stanley Cup all summer, the Avalanche get back to work this week with rookie camp.

When it comes to golf, Sunday was a great day for Ireland. Shane Lowry won the BMW PGA Championship and Padraig Harrington won the PGA Tour Champions' Ascension Charity Classic. 

After Harrington's win, however, the 51-year-old called his fellow Irishman, but Lowry didn't answer — at 3:30 a.m. in England. 

"If Shane is not still partying, I'm not happy," Harrington said in a video from the PGA Tour Champions. "Or else he's not answering my phone call."

The phone kept ringing; however, the 2019 Open Championship was not picking up. 

"I'm assuming there must be a problem with the connection," Harrington said. "There's no way he wouldn't be answering."

When the call went to voicemail, Harrington had a friendly dig for Lowry. 

"Good God he's a lightweight," Harrington said. "He must have gone to bed."

Was Lowry snoozing or sloshed? Well, let's connect some dots. 

After the 35-year-old's victory Sunday at Wentworth, cameras caught Lowry complaining that he had to be picked up at 6:45 a.m. He did have some celebratory beverages after the win. How many? Who knows.

But at 8:25 a.m. local time in London, Lowry posted a picture holding a coffee while looking groggy, with the caption, "Morning after the night before."

Whether it was too much booze or Lowry just isn't a morning person, he might want to give Harrington a call back ASAP.

After competing in two LIV Golf events as an amateur, David Puig won’t have such a designation when he tees it up in this week’s LIV event at Rich Harvest Farms outside of Chicago.

The Arizona State senior informed GolfChannel.com that he has decided to forego the remainder of his college eligibility – Puig had two years left, counting an extra season granted because of the pandemic – and turn professional.

Puig will slot into Torque GC, the four-player team captained by Joaquin Niemann that includes Scott Vincent and Jed Morgan. It’s the third different team for Puig, who as an amateur played on Fireballs GC and Cleeks GC in his first two starts, respectively.

The 20-year-old Spaniard also announced the decision on his Instagram page, saying, "Although it has probably been the hardest decision that I've ever made ... I will always be a Sun Devil and will continue to help build this amazing program – the program that gave a young kid from Spain absolutely everything."

Puig didn’t compete for the Sun Devils in their fall season opener last weekend in Scottsdale, Arizona. Arizona State is now set to play the Olympia Fields/Fighting Illini Invitational, a 54-hole event that runs concurrent to this week’s LIV event and will be held at courses just over 60 miles apart.

While his playing career at Arizona State is over, Puig said he plans to remain in Tempe to live, practice and finish his degree.

Golf Channel's Brentley Romine reveals his top 30 NCAA men's preseason rankings, team and individual, and tells you everything you need to know.

In less than three full seasons with the Sun Devils, Puig won three times and posted seven other top-10s after arriving just prior to the Spring 2020 semester. He was twice an All-American and in his final college start, he tied for 11th while going 2-1 in match play at the 2022 NCAA Championship at Grayhawk, where Arizona State finished runner-up to Texas.

Puig turns pro as the ninth-ranked amateur in the world, fresh off a T-4 individual showing at the World Amateur Team Championship. He also advanced to the Round of 16 at the U.S. Amateur last month.

“David is an amazing Sun Devil, is and has been the heart and soul of our team, he’s very loyal to our school and our program,” Arizona State head coach Matt Thurmond said last month when Puig was still undecided about his future with the program. “Whatever he does, we support him because we know he does the right things for the right reasons.”

The Sun Devils placed second behind Auburn on Sunday at the Maui Jim Intercollegiate. They began the season ranked fifth in Golf Channel’s preseason team rankings.

As LIV Golf events don't currently offer world ranking points, 18 players with LIV Golf experience played the BMW PGA Championship — the DP World Tour's flagship event — to try and halt their decline in the Official World Golf Ranking. 

So where do the LIVers stand in the world rankings after the conclusion at Wentworth? 

Talor Gooch was the highest defector on the leaderboard, finishing a solo fourth. With that, he jumped 11 spots in the world to No. 35. 

Patrick Reed, who fared T-5, stayed at No. 50 in the world. The only other defector inside the OWGR's top 100 who played the BMW PGA and didn't move in the rankings was Abraham Ancer, who stayed at No. 24. 

Lee Westwood placed T-13 and jumped from No. 100 to 96 and Sam Horsfield (T-18) moved from No. 95 to 88. Pablo Larrazabal went from No. 69 to 68 and Richard Bland, who cracked the world's top 50 earlier this year, is now No. 76, one spot up from last week. 

Meanwhile, some LIV players who were hoping to increase their ranking at Wentworth ended up doing the opposite. 

Shaun Norris dropped from No. 93 to 97; Sergio Garcia, who withdrew after Round 1, went from No. 74 to 77; and Ian Poulter fell from No. 118 to 121, despite finishing T-32. 

Though LIV events do not offer world ranking points, the Saudi-backed league did recently apply for such designation. 

Noting some of the non-defectors' movement in the OWGR, BMW PGA champion Shane Lowry jumped from No. 23 to 19, cracking the world's top 20 for the first time since early 2020. 

Runner-up Rory McIlroy jumped one of the newest LIV defectors, Cam Smith, for the No. 2 spot in the world and Smith fell to No. 3. Jon Rahm, who was T-2 with McIlroy, stayed at No. 6 in the world. 

The Presidents Cup will take place Sept. 22-25 at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Golf Channel and NBC will showcase the biennial competition and Peacock will provide simulcast coverage. The four-day event features a team of 12 U.S. players against a team of 12 International (non-European) players. The sides will compete in foursomes (alternate shot), fourballs (better ball) and singles.

The event will begin with five foursomes matches on Thursday and five fourball matches on Friday. They will play four foursomes and four fourball matches, respectively, on Saturday, followed by 12 singles matches on Sunday.

"Live From the Presidents Cup" will also provide highlights, interviews, updates and analysis throughout the week. Click here for more general information on the matches.

(All times Eastern and airing on Golf Channel, unless otherwise noted)

Monday, Sept. 19
Noon-3PM: Live From the Presidents Cup
6-8PM: Live From the Presidents Cup

Tuesday, Sept. 20
10AM-5PM: Live From the Presidents Cup
6-8PM: Live From the Presidents Cup

Wednesday, Sept. 21
10AM-5PM: Live From the Presidents Cup
6-8PM: Live From the Presidents Cup

Thursday, Sept. 22
12:30-1PM: Live From the Presidents Cup, opening ceremony
1-6PM (GC/Peacock): Presidents Cup, Day 1 foursomes
6-8PM: Live From the Presidents Cup

Friday, Sept. 23
10-11:30AM: Live From the Presidents Cup
11:30AM-6PM (GC/Peacock): Presidents Cup, Day 2 fourballs
6-8PM: Live From the Presidents Cup

Saturday, Sept. 24
7-8AM (GC/Peacock): Presidents Cup, Day 3 foursomes
8AM-6PM (NBC/Peacock): Presidents Cup, Day 3 foursomes and fourballs
6-8PM: Live From the Presidents Cup

Sunday, Sept. 25
10AM-Noon: Live From the Presidents Cup
Noon-6PM (NBC/Peacock): Presidents Cup, Day 4 singles
6-8PM: Live From the Presidents Cup

Martial slams ex-Utd bosses Mourinho, Solskjaer

Published in Soccer
Monday, 12 September 2022 13:19

Manchester United forward Anthony Martial has criticised Jose Mourinho and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer for the way he was treated during their managerial spells.

The France international was United's top scorer during the 2015-16 campaign but, when Mourinho became United manager the following season, the forward struggled for regular minutes as a starter.

- Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga, MLS, more (U.S.)

Although United won two major trophies in Mourinho's debut season, Martial blamed the Portuguese for missing out on a place at the 2018 World Cup.

"It started with the story of the shirt number," he told France Football as quoted by RMC Sport. "During the holidays, he sent me a message asking me if I would change to No. 11, explaining that it was great because it was the number of the legend Ryan Giggs. I told him that I had the greatest respect for Giggs but that I would prefer to keep my No. 9. And when I go back to the club, I see my No. 11 shirt, the story didn't go well.

"He disrespected me, directly. He talked about me in the press, little phrases, a bit like he had done with Karim Benzema at Real Madrid. In the [2017-18] season, I was the team's top scorer in the first half of the season, he brought in Alexis Sanchez and then I didn't play much. It was the World Cup season as well, and it cost me a lot at the end, especially as the French team won. I should have been there."

Following Mourinho's dismissal in 2018, Solskjaer replaced him and although Martial enjoyed a resurgence in form, he said he was unable to perform during the latter seasons of the Norwegian's stint.

"The last two seasons, I have regularly played injured," Martial added. "People don't know that, I couldn't accelerate during the four months following the COVID season. Solskjaer tells me that he needs me, so I play.

"Given my game, if I can't accelerate, it becomes very complicated. And I get criticised -- the coach never bothered to tell the media. Obviously, I end up getting injured for good and when I come back, finished, I don't play anymore.

"I took it very badly. I had a feeling of injustice. You are asked to sacrifice yourself for the team and behind you are dismissed. For me, it's almost treachery. That's all I hate. I can be blamed, but not for being fake."

Martial is recovering from an Achilles injury picked up last month with new United manager Erik ten Hag unable to give a timeframe for the striker's return.

Xavi: Bayern trip no 'house of horror' for Barca

Published in Soccer
Monday, 12 September 2022 13:19

Despite some gory defeats for Barcelona at the Allianz Arena in recent years, coach Xavi Hernandez insists his team are not entering a "house of horror" when they face Bayern Munich on Tuesday.

Barca lost 3-0 in Munich in the Champions League group stage last season and have failed to win in six visits to their German counterparts, drawing twice and losing four times for an aggregate score of 14-4.

- Marcotti's Musings: Barca win big, Juve done in by VAR, more
- Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga, MLS, more (U.S.)

On top of that, the 8-2 defeat in the quarterfinal in Lisbon in 2020 remains omnipresent heading into this week's fixture, with both teams tied on three points at the top of Group C following the opening games.

"I wouldn't say it's a house of horror, it's Bayern Munich," Xavi smiled when asked about Barca's poor record in Munich at a news confernece on Monday.

"I've experienced both sides of the coin, beating them and losing to them. I know [recent results have not been favourable], but football is cyclical.

"It's true we have never won here, which shows the difficulty of this week's game. But we are in good form and we are excited for Tuesday."

A lot has changed at Barcelona since they last lost in Munich nine months ago, a result which saw Xavi's side eliminated from the Champions League in the group stage for the first time in 20 years.

They signed eight players this summer for over €150 million, including Bayern striker Robert Lewandowski, Raphinha from Leeds United and Sevilla's Jules Kounde, who are all expected to start on Tuesday, and have 13 points from 15 after five LaLiga games.

"Everything is different," Xavi added. "We have improved in many aspects and we feel capable of competing.

"There have been so many changes but above all I would say the mentality. After that defeat, I told the players that this is Barca, that we have to run, work hard, and show personality. It was not the image of Barca that we wanted.

"The mentality has now changed. We have more personality now. The signings have also had an affect and wins breed confidence."

Lewandowski has made a big difference. The Poland striker has scored nine goals in six appearances since moving to Barca for €45m and Xavi says he is relishing facing his former side.

"Robert is fine," Xavi said. "He's relaxed, calm, confident. He is a natural leader for the team. It's a special game for him and he is really motivated.

"He rested at the weekend so he's fresh and he is in good form. Obviously, Robert is one of our arms in attack, but we have other players, too, and we want to show that on Tuesday."

Lewandowski spent eight years at Bayern alongside Thomas Muller, who joked earlier on Monday he will have to remember not to pass to him when he makes his return to the Allianz Arena.

"For the past 10 days, Sadio [Mane] has been having fun telling me not to pass the ball to Lewy by accident," Muller said in a news conference.

"We have to play our game, but we can't let Lewy play his game. He's a top striker, he's dangerous in or close to the box. We have to stop him from getting into shooting positions."

Bayern coach Julian Nagelsmann, meanwhile, hopes Lewandowski is given a warm reception by Bayern supporters.

"I will be happy if our fans give him a good reception," he said. "That would be normal when someone has done so much for the club.

"He was an important part of the Bayern family. I am looking forward to seeing him again. We spoke a couple of weeks ago, not about football, but it will be nice to see him in person."

Bayern, who have drawn three in a row in the Bundesliga but beat Internazionale 2-0 in Europe last week, will be without Kingsley Coman, while Barca have travelled to Germany with a full squad.

Man Utd-Leeds, Chelsea-Liverpool PL games off

Published in Soccer
Monday, 12 September 2022 13:19

Chelsea's Premier League clash with Liverpool and Manchester United's home game against Leeds next Sunday have been postponed due to policing issues surrounding the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II, but seven other Premier League fixtures will go ahead this weekend.

All football in the United Kingdom was postponed last weekend as a mark of respect to the queen following her death at the age of 96 on Thursday.

But following discussions between the football governing bodies and the authorities in the U.K., all scheduled midweek games will go ahead as planned this week, with the exception of Arsenal's Europa League tie against PSV Eindhoven on Thursday. That game has been postponed by UEFA due to police in London being required to focus on the huge crowds expected to travel to the capital ahead of next Monday's State Funeral.

But while the majority of Premier League games are to go ahead, the high-profile fixtures at Stamford Bridge and Old Trafford have been postponed as a consequence of police officers being redeployed to provide security for the queen's funeral, with authorities anticipating over a million people arriving in London during the 48 hours before the funeral on Monday morning.

Brighton vs. Crystal Palace, which had recently been postponed due to a planned, but now cancelled, rail strike will also not go ahead.

A Premier League statement read: "Following extensive consultation with clubs, police, local Safety Advisory Groups and other relevant authorities, there was no other option but to postpone the three fixtures.

"The Premier League would like to thank the U.K. Football Policing Unit and other police forces across the country, as well as our broadcast partners, for their support during this process, and will continue to liaise with them ahead of the weekend.

"For the matches being played during the period of National Mourning, tributes will be paid to The Queen at Premier League stadiums. New dates for the postponed matches will be announced in due course."

Two things have become abundantly clear in the opening weeks of the Premier League season: Everyone has way too much money to burn, and almost no one is enjoying themselves. You could even make the case that money has made almost no one any better.

Chelsea spent $310 million in transfer fees to seemingly become a thinner team at the front and back and fire their Champions League-winning manager after losing to Dinamo Zagreb. (In turn, they plucked away the manager of one of the league's only 100% positive stories, Brighton.)

Manchester United spent $264 million to get blown out by Brentford and, after a brief rally, lose at home to Real Sociedad. Liverpool spent $99 million to watch its midfield depth issues get worse, draw with Everton and get overrun by Napoli.

West Ham spent $200 million to sit in the relegation zone, and Aston Villa has spent $220 million over two years to nearly join them. Nottingham Forest spent $178 million to watch its odds of relegation barely change.

Wolves spent $150 million to become a more cartoonish version of their "soccer without goals" selves. Everton paid $94 million to trade Richarlison for Neal Maupay and go nearly four months (and counting) between wins.

Hell, Manchester City spent $153 million and brought in the goal-scoring son of Odin himself (okay, son of Alfie), Erling Haaland, all to basically stay the same. (They've scored 20 goals in their first six EPL matches with him; they scored 24 in their last six without him.)

Acknowledging that teams could jell and improve as new pieces better get to know their surroundings -- and acknowledging that Leicester has attempted to avoid ridiculous spending and is currently in last place (and you evidently have to light your checkbook on fire just to keep up) -- there are lots of different forms of anxiety in the Premier League. This piece could talk about just about any team, but here are six that are feeling distinct types of anxiety at the moment.

Jump to: Leicester | Nottingham Forest | Wolves | West Ham | Liverpool | Chelsea


Leicester: When trying to be fiscally responsible goes wrong

We'll start with maybe the most surprising name on the relegation contenders list. Caesars currently lists Leicester as the No. 3 most likely team to go down -- their betting odds are +190, equivalent to a 34% chance. Considering they won the Premier League barely six years ago, and considering they finished fifth in both 2020 and 2021, this is absolutely jarring. But it's well-earned.

Leicester has allowed 16 goals in six matches, their worst defensive start in nearly 40 years. When they finished fifth in 2021, they did so with a defensive core of goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel and centre-backs Jonny Evans, Wesley Fofana and Caglar Soyuncu. Schmeichel, 35, moved on to Nice this summer, Fofana moved on to Chelsea in a big-money deal, and Soyuncu's form (and/or his relationship with manager Brendan Rodgers) has regressed to such a degree that it looked like he might leave during the transfer window as well -- his only match this season was in a dire League Cup win over Stockport County.

- O'Hanlon: How Leicester went from top four to relegation candidates (E+)

Thus far, the new defensive arrangement has been a disaster. Danny Ward, Schmeichel's replacement, is boasting just a 50% save percentage and minus-2.5 goals prevented (StatsPerform's comparison of your goals allowed to the post-shot xG for shots on target). The centre-backs in front of him -- the 34-year old Evans and a combination of Daniel Amartey and a pre-departure Fofana -- have struggled as well. After allowing at least two goals in each of their first four matches, they seemed to take a step forward in allowing only one to Manchester United. But three days later, they gave up five to Brighton. The only player Leicester spent a transfer fee to acquire this summer was Reims centre-back Wout Faes, but he only just arrived.

That's right, in a summer in which the Premier League smashed all spending records, Leicester acquired Faes and backup goalkeeper Alex Smithies (on a free transfer from second-division Cardiff). That's it.

They invested a massive sum of money in new training facilities that were unveiled last year, and they have been remarkably disciplined in their avoidance of panic moves and their focus on the long-term. But when most of your competition has lost its mind and brought in as much talent as humanly possible, and you're looking at a slightly stale roster (one that might have a stale relationship with its manager), problems will develop.

Perhaps Faes solves some problems. Lord knows Leicester has made plenty of astute additions through the years. But the Foxes' biggest issue at the moment is transition defense, and those problems start well before the back line gets involved. In what I call transition possessions -- those that start outside the attacking third and last 20 or fewer seconds -- Leicester has allowed a league-worst five goals. Thirteen percent of opponents' shots have been worth at least 0.3 xG (most in the league), and opponents are averaging 0.14 xG per shot overall (also the most).

Perhaps even more alarming: It could be worse. They pulled their only point from a draw with Brentford in which they scored two goals from shots worth 0.6 xG.

It could -- and should -- also be better, though. They have gotten little from Jamie Vardy thus far (zero goals from shots worth 1.2 xG), but the combination of Patson Daka and Kelechi Iheanacho brought life to the attack last Sunday. Both James Maddison and Youri Tielemans have played well, combining for two goals and two assists among 21 chances created, and if they get more from their forwards, the attack could brighten immensely.

And if Vardy were to start seeing more use from the bench late in matches, it might help to fix the team's persistent late-match issues: Their goal differential in the final 30 minutes of matches is a shocking -1.4 per match. That average is almost unsustainably poor, but it is calling to mind struggles from last year, when stoppage-time goals turned two draws to losses and two wins to draws over the second half of the season. Add those six lost points to last year's tally, and they would have reached the Europa League again.

In theory, there's still too much high-end talent for Leicester not to rally at some point. But how many points will they drop in the meantime? And will such a rally take place with Rodgers still at the helm? He was the betting favorite for Next Manager Sacked before Chelsea cut to the front of that line, and managers don't usually survive losing streaks.


Nottingham Forest: The risk of trying to buck a trend

In 2017-18, all three teams promoted from England's second division -- Newcastle, Brighton and Huddersfield -- survived to play in the Premier League for a second season, and only Huddersfield was within six points of the drop zone.

Life's been tough for newbies ever since. In three of four seasons, two of three promoted teams have immediately gone back down, and in the other season (2019-20), Aston Villa survived by one point to prevent it from happening there too. Huddersfield and Sheffield United lasted only two seasons before going back down, and Leeds needed a late-season miracle to avoid the same fate last season.

In this time period, only Wolves and Brentford have both earned promotion and remained in the Premier League without at least one relegation scare. Brentford hasn't been up for very long.

You almost can't blame Forest owner Evangelos Marinakis for opening up the checkbook, then. Forest attempted to spend its way off of the relegation bubble, laying down more than $175 million in transfer fees for 21 new signings. Thus far, 59% of their Premier League minutes have gone to newcomers, and that number could rise considering that many of the acquisitions only recently arrived. They were always going to have to bring in a large number of players simply because of the number of loanees that were involved in last season's promotion push.

But they added more than expected and aimed high from a quality standpoint. They spent $32 million to sign Wolves' attacking midfielder Morgan Gibbs-White, $22 million on Union Berlin forward Taiwo Awoniyi and $22 million on Liverpool fullback Neco Williams, and they brought in proven players like Watford forward Emmanuel Dennis, Atletico Madrid fullback Renan Lodi (on loan) and others.

In terms of pure talent, this looks like a midtable Premier League team. But they're thus far played like a team that still has to wear name tags in practice. Forest have no established identity. They have low possession numbers (44% thus far, 14th in the league) but don't counterattack effectively. They attempt the fifth-most long balls but are completing them at the second-worst rate. In attack, they rank 15th in shots per possession and 17th in xG per shot; in defense, they rank 20th and 15th, respectively. There is no cohesive style, which ... makes sense, really. Whether or not they had a choice, there's generally a reason why teams don't sign 20-plus players in a single summer.

This is basically a race against time. How many points will the Reds drop before Steve Cooper is able to actually craft a cohesive team with an identifiable style? They bought time with a 1-0 win over West Ham in their home debut, and they drew at Everton, too. But they've been outscored 11-2 in their past three matches, and in pushing for a winner after blowing a 2-0 lead against relegation rival Bournemouth last Saturday, they instead allowed a game-winner in the 87th minute.

Can they rally before too much damage has been done?

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1:33

Why Laurens wants Diego Costa back in the Premier League

Gab and Juls react to Diego Costa's potential return to the Premier League with Wolves.


Wolves: Spending big to stay the same

You know things have taken an odd turn when you're appealing to sign Diego Costa.

Wolves have long been one of England's most fearless and active zipper clubs, constantly going up and down from one level of the pyramid to another. But they've put together a remarkable run since returning to the Premier League in 2018. They finished seventh in both 2018-19 and 2019-20 and reached the Europa League quarterfinals in 2020 before slipping a hair to 13th and 10th in the last two seasons.

When former Benfica manager Bruno Lage took over Nuno Espirito Santo last season, he took Wolves' two most identifiable characteristics -- stingy defense and minimal attack -- and exaggerated them. Wolves allowed just 43 goals (fewest outside of the league's top four finishers) but scored just 38 (fewest among teams not relegated). They neither allowed nor created anything easy.

Through six matches this season, they're on pace to allow just 25 goals ... and score 19. They play in a defiantly analytics-unfriendly way, attempting plenty of shots (eighth in shots per possession) but attempting almost no high-value shots. They rank 19th in xG per shot, and only 3% of their shot attempts have been worth 0.3 xG or more (20th). Their defensive stats are good again, but while both Wolves and opponents have unsustainably strong save percentages at the moment, opponents are attempting more high-value chances. That will probably make regression to the mean a bit harsher on Wolverhampton; with just one win in six matches, any regression could come with harsh repercussions.

In vacuum, this makes sense -- a zipper club finding something effective, then watching it slowly lose effectiveness over time. But when you lay down the seventh-highest transfer expenditures in the league, and you make big-money deals like paying Sporting Lisbon nearly $50 million to sign midfielder Matheus Nunes and spending $36 million to bring in Valencia winger Goncalo Guedes, you expect to improve.

Guedes draws contact well, and Nunes pressures the ball and forces the issue in the dribbling department, but neither creates high-quality shots. Adama Traore, back from Barcelona loan, doesn't either. The only two players who have averaged at least 0.45 xG+xA per 90 minutes for the team this year -- not a particularly ambitious average, by the way -- are either hurt (new addition Sasa Kalajdzic) or gone (new Nottingham Forest member Morgan Gibbs-White).

Wolves need finishing, and when they finally landed Stuttgart's Kalajdzic late in the transfer window, he almost immediately tore his ACL. They tried to sneak veteran Diego Costa in, and he was initially denied a work permit before Wolves successfully appealed. He scored four goals in 15 matches last season for Brazil's Atletico Mineiro and hasn't scored double-digit goals since he was with Chelsea six seasons ago. But he's now the new hope.

While the scoring averages, for and against, should increase simply because of how unsustainably low they are at the moment, there's no immediate reason to think that Wolves will land in the top half of the league again.


West Ham: When adding talent subtracts cohesion

  • Step 1: Qualify for European competition for two straight years by giving opponents lots of the ball and allowing them to take whatever long-range shots they want but dominating specific areas of the pitch, playing more direct ball than most good teams and taking all the good shots

  • Step 2: Spend $200 million (third most in the league), including $110 million on attackers -- Lyon attacking midfielder Lucas Paqueta, Sassuolo forward Gianluca Scamacca, Burnley winger Maxwel Cornet

  • Step 3: Stop producing any attacking quality

David Moyes' West Ham plays even more directly than before in 2022-23, but they appear stuck between their old attackers and new attackers, and no one's performing. Pacqueta, Scamacca and Cornet have combined for zero league goals on four shots worth 0.46 in 279 minutes of play thus far, and last year's creative trio of Jarrod Bowen, Michail Antonio and Pablo Fornals have all seen both their creation and scoring averages decrease. West Ham currently ranks 13th in shots per possession and 13th in xG per shot, and their opponents are producing more quality and quantity at the moment.

Throw in a massive gap in the finishing department -- West Ham is averaging 0.3 post-shot expected goals for shots on target (xGOT) per shot on target, ninth-highest in the league, and opponents are averaging 0.38, third-most -- and you've got a recipe for early-season disaster. The Hammers are currently 18th in the table with a league-low three goals in six matches.

It's potentially gotten better of late. After three straight losses to start the season (combined score: opponents 5, WHU 0), West Ham beat Aston Villa, drew with Tottenham Hotspur and were unlucky in a 2-1 loss to Chelsea. Including a pair of Europa Conference League wins (one in qualification, one in group play), they've scored nine goals in their last five matches, even if they have yet to score more than one goal in an EPL match.

In last week's Conference League win over FCSB, Cornet created four chances, Scamacca attempted five shots worth 0.42 xG (not great but better) and Bowen and Antonio came off the bench to combine for two goals and an assist in just 44 minutes. The energy and creativity were both where they need to be, even if West Ham also allowed shots worth 1.3 combined xG to a team that EloFootball.com ranks 146th in Europe.

Maybe things are gelling for Moyes, but even in their improving state, they pulled just one point from Spurs and Chelsea, two teams that will be obstructing their path back toward another spot in Europe.

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Why Liverpool's loss to Napoli is a 'new low' for the Reds

Steve Nicol and Craig Burley react to Liverpool's 4-1 defeat to Napoli in the UEFA Champions League.


Liverpool: Spending big without addressing your biggest issue

By comparison, Jurgen Klopp's Liverpool was almost fiscally responsible this offseason. While half the Premier League spent at least $50 million more than what they brought in in terms of transfer fees, Liverpool brought in $89 million from transfer departures and spent only -- only -- $99 million, mostly on 23-year old centre-forward Darwin Nunez. Essentially, they traded Sadio Mane (now at Bayern) for Nunez, fullback Neco Williams (Forest) for 18-year old Calvin Ramsey and backup winger Takumi Minamino (Monaco) for 19-year old attacking midfielder Fabio Carvalho.

Those "trades" could all work out in Liverpool's favor over the next couple of seasons. Carvalho has already scored twice in 150 minutes and snared a game-winner against Newcastle, and while Nunez's start has been volatile -- he was suspended for head-butting an opponent and hasn't scored since August 6 -- he's taking lots of shots and getting plenty of touches in the box. He'll probably do just fine at Anfield.

Liverpool, however, is not doing fine. The "trades" did little to alleviate what age is doing to their overall roster -- of the 15 players who have logged more than 150 minutes in all competitions, seven are at least 30, and only three are under 25 -- and did little to address what was already becoming a concern last season: midfield depth. Injuries have meant heavier-than-expected usage for both 36-year old James Milner and 19-year old Harvey Elliott, and both are pretty one-dimensional players at this point (Milner in intervention, Elliott in attack).

As a result, Liverpool is currently a team that looks mostly like Liverpool -- lots of possession, lots of pressing, far more shot attempts than most opponents -- but is completely lacking in both creativity and pace. Only 5.1% of their shots have been worth at least 0.3 xG in league play (12th in the Premier League), compared to 11.3% for their opponents (18th). They're taking more shots, but opponents are attempting most of the good ones, and those averages, of course, don't include what Napoli did to them last week in Champions League play.

Napoli 4, Liverpool 1 (Sept. 7)

  • Shot: Napoli 18, Liverpool 15

  • xG per shot: Napoli 0.23, Liverpool 0.07

  • Total xG: Napoli 4.1, Liverpool 1.0

  • Total post-shot xG for shots on target: Napoli 6.2, Liverpool 1.8

Liverpool did a lot of things Klopp tends to want to do. They enjoyed 61% possession, they both started and ended more than twice as many possessions as Napoli in the attacking third, they attempted just 36% of their passes in their own half (Napoli: 72%), and they created four shots on target from set pieces. But Napoli frustrated Liverpool's attack while carving up both their midfield and defense and creating high-level chances at will.

And all this says nothing, of course, about the sprints.

(I never quite know what to make of running stats, but in this case it can't really say anything good.)

This is currently an older, slower and thinner Liverpool squad. If the Reds peak in the spring and make another Champions League run, then so be it. But evidently $99 million doesn't get you what it used to.


Chelsea: Why you don't ask your manager to serve as sporting director (and then hire another manager to manage)

Long term, new owner Todd Boehly's stewardship of Chelsea Football Club could work out just fine. He's been at least partially responsible for the juggernaut that the Los Angeles Dodgers have become in recent years, and he knows what a well-run franchise looks like. But he's taken some short-term lumps.

Boehly's decision to basically serve as his own director of football, with manager Thomas Tuchel as his primary scout and adviser, blew up in his face pretty quickly. To be sure, the summer acquisitions of players like not only defender Wesley Fofana (21) and wingback Marc Cucurella (24), but also teenagers like midfielder Carney Chukwuemeka (18) and goalkeeper Gabriel Slonina (18), could end up paying off for quite a while down the line. But they paid inflated price tags on both Fofana ($88 million) and Cucurella ($72 million), and they also paid a combined $75 million on attackers Raheem Sterling (justifiable) and Tuchel favorite Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang (less so), all because Tuchel had given up on extremely recent attacker signings. Timo Werner was sent back to RB Leipzig for a fraction of what Chelsea paid for him two years ago, and last year's star signing, Romelu Lukaku, was sent back to Inter on loan and at another potential (and potentially massive) loss.

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Will Potter be able to handle Chelsea's superstars?

Craig Burley debates how Graham Potter will handle Chelsea's senior players.

And after trying so hard to give Tuchel what he said he needed -- despite the fact that Tuchel seems to conclude that he can't work with a given player within a year or two -- Chelsea inched toward September with a team that was thinner in attack, poor in defense and as reliant as ever on 31-year old defensive midfielder N'Golo Kante, who's been hurt since mid-August. And Boehly fired Tuchel last week following a Champions League loss to Dinamo Zagreb.

I can somewhat justify the Tuchel firing for one simple reason: The well was poisoned. Tuchel was miserable (as tends to happen once he's been in the same place for a couple of seasons), and the team seemed to be miserably tuning him out. And while giving him such control over personnel acquisitions was a mistake, you shouldn't necessarily make a new mistake in service of an old one.

This weekend's match postponements gave new manager Graham Potter (formerly of Brighton) a bit of extra practice time with his new team, which can't be a bad thing. And while attacking was the primary issue in Zagreb, defense is the first thing he needs to fix. After losing two primary defenders, bringing in Fofana and Napoli's Kalidou Koulibaly and then losing Kante to injury, there's been no cohesion at the back.

Chelsea ranks 19th in xG allowed per shot (only Leicester is worse), and 60% of opponents' shots have come from inside the defensive box, the most in the league. Nearly half of these shots (48%, also the most) have been on target, putting far too much pressure on keeper Edouard Mendy. Potter's Brighton was a proper possession team, and they were excellent in transition defense. We'll see how long it takes -- and again, how many points Chelsea drops in the interim -- before he gets them on track.

Somerset 182 for 8 (Gregory 60*, Khan 31*, Siraj 4-54) vs Warwickshire

Lewis Gregory's defiant half-century underpinned Somerset's dogged fightback on a weather-affected opening day of their LV=Insurance County Championship relegation battle with Warwickshire at Edgbaston.

After choosing to bat on a slow, turning pitch, the visitors closed on 182 for 8 with Gregory unbeaten on 60 from 93 balls, having supervised an impressive recovery from a parlous 82 for 7.

Somerset were in deep trouble after India fast bowler Mohammed Siraj got among the wickets in style on his Warwickshire debut, claiming 4 for 54. But Gregory batted with great determination and nous to add 58 with Josh Davey for the eighth wicket and an unbroken 42 with Sajid Khan for the ninth.

His work meant that this crucial match between the two sides currently straddling the Division One relegation line ended a truncated first day, in which 40 overs were lost to rain and bad light, pretty much even.

The game opened with a compelling tussle as Siraj bowled to Imam-ul-Haq, who edged a waft to wicketkeeper Michael Burgess. Olly Hannon-Dalby then hit Tom Abell's off stump with the second ball after a rain-enforced early lunch.

Tom Lammonby and George Bartlett took Somerset to 46 for 2 before three wickets fell in six balls to leave them 46 for 5. Lammonby's ill-advised charge at debutant Jayant Nadav saw him comfortably stumped, then Bartlett gloved a pull at Siraj and James Rew fell lbw first ball.

After Siraj went off to graze with figures of 13-5-25-3, Henry Brookes maintained the pressure with two wickets in his first four overs as Lewis Goldsworthy and Kasey Aldridge were lbw to rapid inswingers.

Somerset were in deep trouble at 82 for 7 but Gregory played with great vigilance, interspersed with one spectacular burst of aggression when he lifted Danny Briggs for three successive sixes just before tea.

In the final session, Gregory and Davey added 58 in 14 overs before Siraj won another lbw decision to oust Davey. Warwickshire's hopes of briskly lopping off the tail were foiled by Gregory's continued doggedness with assertive support from Khan, who was 31 not out from 33 balls at the close.

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