‘Drop the gimmick’ – Michael Olise labelled a ‘miserable f*cker’ after refusing to sing Jingle Bells in Bayern Munich singalong

Michael Olise has been labelled a "miserable f*cker" after he refused to sing Jingle Bells in a Bayern Munich singalong.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

Bayern players sing Christmas songsMusiala, Kane & others sing Jingle BellsEx-Palace star Olise remains tight-lipped Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

The £50 million signing from Crystal Palace was part of a festive club event where the squad posed for holiday photos and sang the classic 'Jingle Bells'. While his team-mates, including England captain Harry Kane, enthusiastically participated, Olise stood out for his lack of engagement.

AdvertisementTHE BIGGER PICTURE

In footage shared widely on social media, Olise appeared disconnected, staring blankly at the camera as his fellow players sang with festive cheer. The moment quickly went viral, prompting mixed reactions online.

WHAT THE FANS ARE SAYING

An X user, @lxnchossard, wrote: "Olise is deadass corny man drop the gimmick you're not a vibe."

An angry @DMarsti wrote: "Miserable f*cker."

While another, @7headking, wrote: "He’s begging it now. Just smile and sing along. You’re not too cool for this. You were at Crystal Palace a few months ago."

Meanwhile, @Kumar0Akshay, wrote: "This Olise nonchalant/disinterested gimmick is so lame."

@tonjomes1 wrote: "Getting boring now, just like Zlatan."

"Why's he trying to act hard lmao it's just jingle bells bro you do not have any opps," wrote @thfcm14.

Whereas, @JoeAfc1, suggested: "Someone tell him it’s not illegal to smile."

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR OLISE?

Despite the social media drama, Olise’s performances on the pitch have been nothing short of extraordinary. Since joining Bayern Munich five months ago, the 23-year-old winger has adapted seamlessly to life in the Bundesliga. The French international has contributed nine goals and nine assists in 23 appearances across all competitions. His stellar form saw him earn the Bundesliga's 'Rookie of the Month' accolade for October, cementing his reputation as one of the league’s brightest talents. He will return to action on January 11 when Bayern faces Borussia Monchengladbach.

Virat Kohli vs Kane Williamson, two all-star line-ups, and the Ultimate Test

Big picture

Imagine that the guardians of Test cricket, in a bid to assess the future health of the grand old game, dispatch a delegate from its golden age through time and space to watch the inaugural World Test Championship final of 2021.You can take your pick as to when that golden era might exactly have been, but whatever their year of origin, any time-traveller alighting on Southampton this week might assume Test cricket was in a pretty moribund state. Here, after all, is the sport’s brand-new showpiece occasion, more than a decade in the making after endless false starts – ones that screamed, more than anything else, of a fundamental lack of faith in the product.And instead of taking its rightful place at Lord’s, Eden Gardens or the MCG, the contest has been shunted out to a souped-up service station on the lesser-travelled east-bound carriageway of the M27, where for the next five days (or six) India and New Zealand are braced for weather as torrential as the abuse that the WTC format has attracted in the past two years – not least from the new ICC chairman, Greg Barclay, who declared on the day of his investiture last autumn that it was “not fit for purpose”.

Watch cricket on ESPN+

The WTC final is available in the US on ESPN+. Subscribe to ESPN+ and tune in to the match.

A maximum of 4000 people a day will be permitted to witness the spectacle – 25% capacity, in keeping with the UK’s current lockdown restrictions. That figure might have been more come day four, and the government’s so-called Freedom Day of June 21, but that date is a can that has been kicked on down the road for another day.So there’s a fair amount conspiring to dampen the mood, you might say.There is, however, an alternative narrative, one that, with an iota of heft from those who profess to love and nurture the sport, could be resonating high above this current air of mild apathy.The WTC final will be taking place in spite of a once-in-a-generation global pandemic at the now-famous Ageas Bowl, cricket’s original bio-secure venue, the existence of which unequivocally saved the ECB’s bacon in the summer of 2020, and showed the wider cricketing world how to ensure that the show can go on in these times.Related

  • Five things India must keep in mind in the WTC final

  • Ajaz Patel primed to add new chapter to 'a hell of a story'

  • Bowlers promise the familiar as well as the unknown

  • How New Zealand have transformed into world beaters

The contest will also feature, indisputably and thankfully, the two best Test teams in the world.There’s been nothing pretty about the permutations on the WTC table. The pandemic caused such havoc to the Future Tours Programme that a points average had to be introduced to mitigate the rash of cancelled series. But after flirtations from two flawed outfits, England and Australia, it is India and New Zealand who have surged to the top of the tree, and irrespective of how the coming days pan out, it would be difficult to wish for two better representatives for Test cricket in 2021, both as a statement of its current health, and as an expression of its future hopes.First and foremost, India’s presence is sacrosanct. They are here because they are an outstanding, well-rounded outfit, unbeatable at home and now indomitable overseas, as their stunning, bare-bones triumph in Australia last winter testifies. But the presence of their vast market also gives the format hope of long-term traction – of TV viewership, sponsorship interest, administrative buy-in. All the things that we wish did not matter so much in elite-level sport, but which we know to be key to the cause.The prospective absence of India from such a showpiece had, after all, been the main sticking point in the broadcast negotiations for the format’s abortive first attempts. And now, as it happens, the near converse status applies. Following last month’s postponement of the IPL, the void in India’s daily sporting diet is so gaping that this one-off contest has an even greater opportunity to seize the limelight and the narrative – if the weather can give it half a chance, of course.Shubman Gill and Virat Kohli take part in a fielding drill on the eve of the WTC final•ICC via Getty

But then there’s New Zealand – the David to India’s Goliath, the stones in their shoe, as Thomas Tuchel said of Chelsea’s Champions League victory over Manchester City. They are a team that has become used to being patronised as plucky underdogs, but they have shown some seriously sharp teeth in their six-year journey to the uppermost echelons of the sport – via Brendon McCullum’s heavy-metal cricket at the 2015 World Cup, to Kane Williamson’s more sanguine but no less intense leadership in more recent years.Back at the 2019 World Cup, it was quietly suggested that New Zealand had pooped the Big Three party by knocking India out in their semi-final clash at Old Trafford. However, the extraordinary events of that subsequent final against England proved beyond all question their right to be considered among cricket’s on-field elite.As model of what cricket can be when it looks beyond the self-interest of its big boys, New Zealand’s achievements in recent years have been little short of heroic. Who, apart from 1.2 billion-odd Indians, would begrudge them a taste of silverware after such agonising near-misses in recent ICC campaigns?Most fundamentally, the WTC final is the start of something new for an ancient format. It’s taken nigh on 150 years for the sport to reach this point: a willingness to cap Test cricket’s eternal quest for with a true coronation event.There have been title fights in the recent past, but usually only of a dynastic nature – perhaps most famously, Australia’s epic series victory in the Caribbean in 1994-95, the moment at which West Indies’ two-decade hegemony was finally ended. The world rankings have added an extra frisson in recent years, especially since the introduction of the ICC’s Test mace in 2003, but all too often the handover moments have been lacklustre and debatable, more Duckworth-Lewis recalculation than heavyweight knock-out.Finally, however, the sport has got its moment, and two sides to savour. New Zealand have warmed up, if that is the right word, with a significant achievement in their own right – a first series win in England since 1999, courtesy a complete squad performance across two Tests at Lord’s and Edgbaston. From the form of Devon Conway on debut at Lord’s to Tim Southee’s ageless display of swing bowling in the same game, they have shown a cohesion that transcends mere experience, and Williamson’s elbow niggles aside, could not hope to be better placed for their shot at glory.5:13

Fire and Ice: The Kohli-Williamson story

India, by contrast, have had only an intra-squad practice to wet their whistle since arriving in England. Yet they have the depth of quality within their ranks to rehearse for most contingencies, and they have been acclimatising in Southampton throughout their build-up period, so could not be better attuned to the ground’s vagaries – not least the Australian-style acreage of its vast outfield.In spite of everything that has conspired against this concept, the moment has finally arrived for Test cricket to reach its pinnacle. Better late than never.

Form guide

India: WWWLW
New Zealand: WDWWW

In the spotlight

There were times during India’s recent home series against England in which Rohit Sharma was simply outstanding. His 161 on the first day in Chennai was more than his opponents managed in four of their next six completed innings, while his mastery of the ultra-spinning conditions in Ahmedabad provided an even more stark gulf in class. And yet, he arrives in England with a significant point to prove, given the gulf in his home and away averages is threatening to become every bit as much of a chasm. In 18 Tests in India, he averages a staggering 79.52 with seven hundreds and six fifties; elsewhere in the world that slumps to 27.00 from 20 matches, with his highest score outside of Asia coming in Auckland seven years ago, when he made 72 from No. 5. The challenge of the swinging ball, in particular Trent Boult’s arc back into the right-hander, will be a significant one for the whole Indian line-up, but the man at the top of the order has the form and the stature to set the tone for his team, so long as he heeds VVS Laxman’s advice, and focuses on the whereabouts of his off stump.It’s often said of Kane Williamson’s long-standing elbow injury that he is suffering “irritation” in the joint, which is arguably the only time such a mealy-mouthed emotion manifests itself in New Zealand’s extraordinarily chilled-out captain. Williamson missed the Edgbaston victory to give himself every chance of full fitness for this, the culmination of his five-year stint as Test captain, and whatever the long-term prognosis, he has done the needful to reclaim his place at No. 3, taking a cortisone injection in the lead-up to the match that he described, with typical under-statement, as “nice”. Like McCullum before him, Williamson’s personality is imprinted on his team – likeable, tougher than anyone gives them credit for, and perfectly content to be considered a touch dull if it affords them to space to extend their repertoire to its fullest. This week he’s been usurped by Steven Smith as the ICC’s No. 1-ranked batter, but this is a week, at long last, when such rankings can take second place to tangible rewards. If Williamson bats long, his team has a greater chance to slot into their roles around him.Kane Williamson and Tom Latham will be key to New Zealand’s batting effort•ICC via Getty

Team news

New Zealand made six changes for their series-sealing victory at Edgbaston last week, and they stitched together a perfect match-winning outfit from the outer extremities of their squad. From Will Young at No. 3 to Matt Henry with his player-of-the-match-winning haul, through to Ajaz Patel, who has now officially leap-frogged Mitchell Santner as the team’s premier spinner, every man in the XI did his duty to give the team management a serious dilemma. Ross Taylor’s mind-over-matter 80 will have done enough to reassert his hold at No. 4, while – fitness permitting – BJ Watling will return behind the stumps for the final appearance of his career. The real dilemmas centre on the fast bowling. Sentiment demands that the old guard – Southee, Trent Boult and Neil Wagner – get the chance to finish the job that they have started, but Henry’s form is hard to ignore, as is Kyle Jamieson’s point-of-difference lankiness. Might they copy England’s approach, and bench Patel in favour of an all-seam attack? Wagner’s thirst for exhausting spinner-length spells, allied to Colin de Grandhomme’s canny swingers, would mitigate such an approach – even if England’s recent experience would caution against it.New Zealand (possible): 1 Tom Latham, 2 Devon Conway, 3 Kane Williamson (capt), 4 Ross Taylor, 5 Henry Nicholls, 6 BJ Watling (wk), 7 Colin de Grandhomme, 8 Tim Southee, 9 Ajaz Patel/Kyle Jamieson, 10 Neil Wagner, 11 Trent Boult.The beauty of a one-off Test such as this is that both teams can, to a greater or lesser degree, sack off any over-riding concerns about the conditions and the team balance, or the need to prioritise certain players at certain venues, and just unleash the very best XI that they can muster. And to that end, India have chosen – notwithstanding a week of rain in the offing – to back their twin spinners, Ravindra Jadeja and R Ashwin to bring their A games in the first instance, and balance the batting in the second, in what on paper looks a devastatingly complete team. There’s a fire and ice mixture in the top six, where Rishabh Pant’s last Test innings in England gives no reason to doubt that he’s ready to kick on from a breakthrough start to his year. Had India felt they needed the extra batter, Hanuma Vihari would have been the back-up option. Jasprit Bumrah is the nailed-on new-ball option with Kohli opting for Mohammed Shami and Ishant Sharma as other pace options as the BCCI announced the team on the eve of the final. Shami was desperately unlucky on the last tour of England in 2018 – more so than his 16 wickets at 38.87 suggest – but Ishant has been averaging 23 in all conditions since 2015. The experience he’s gleaned in a 14-year career probably deserves to be trusted.India 1 Rohit Sharma, 2 Shubman Gill, 3 Cheteshwar Pujara, 4 Virat Kohli (capt), 5 Ajinkya Rahane, 6 Rishabh Pant (wk), 7 Ravindra Jadeja, 8 R Ashwin, 9 Ishant Sharma, 10 Mohammed Shami, 11 Jasprit Bumrah.The WTC final will be taking place in spite of a once-in-a-generation global pandemic at the now-famous Ageas Bowl, cricket’s original bio-secure venue•ICC via Getty

Pitch and conditions

Gadzooks! The long-range weather forecast clearly has a sick sense of humour. The week began with the hottest day of the year in many parts of the UK, the mercury pushing a sweaty 30 degrees, but all it took was the suspicion of a final trim for Simon Lee’s lovingly prepared pitch for the heavens to open and all hell to break loose. Assuming the flood warnings subside sufficiently for play to get underway on Friday, Lee has promised a surface with “pace, bounce and carry”, which will please the seamers in both squads, and doubtless give Ashwin and Co. plenty to work with too. But if this weather persists, you can expect a nice fuzz of live grass too, many even an entire rainforest beneath the covers.

Stats and trivia

  • India have lost both of their previous Tests in Southampton – by 266 runs in 2014, and by 60 runs in 2018.
  • However, India did emerge victorious in all three of their previous ICC tournament fixtures at the venue, beating Kenya by 98 runs in the 2004 Champions Trophy, before overcoming South Africa and Afghanistan at the 2019 World Cup.
  • New Zealand have won both of their previous completed fixtures at Ageas Bowl, two ODIs against England in 2013 and 2015.
  • Williamson needs 44 runs to overtake Stephen Fleming’s aggregate of 7172 in Tests, and become New Zealand’s second-highest run-scorer of all time, behind Ross Taylor.
  • Jadeja needs 46 runs to complete the 2000-run, 200-wicket double, a feat previously achieved by four Indians in Test cricket – Kapil Dev, Anil Kumble, Harbhajan Singh and Ashwin.
  • India have beaten New Zealand just once in five previous ICC events – at the 2003 World Cup in South Africa. They also lost in the final of New Zealand’s only trophy-winning campaign, the ICC knockout in Nairobi in 2000.

Quotes

“Every team has their challenges, and some people see ours as being a slightly smaller population. But we are just looking forward to the challenge that lies ahead, and committing to the sort of cricket that is important to us.”
“This is not one-day cricket, this is not a T20 game that finishes in a few hours. This a hard-brand of cricket, that we take a lot of pride in. And a great example of that was what you saw in Australia.”

Man Utd's plan to help PSR problems! Red Devils plotting tour of Malaysia to raise much-needed funds in fight against financial woe

Manchester United have figured out a potential solution to their PSR troubles as they look to stay compliant with Premier League’s regulations.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

  • Premier League giants looking to raise funds
  • Have spent big in the transfer market
  • Need to comply with financial regulations
Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Manchester United spent big in the summer of 2024, splashing out £180 million ($229m) as they brought in the likes of Matthijs de Ligt, Leny Yoro, Manuel Ugarte, Joshua Zirkzee and Noussair Mazraoui. However, that elaborate recruitment is not enough for new boss Ruben Amorim and the Red Devils are looking to make further additions.

  • Advertisement

  • AFP

    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Manchester United are struggling with their compliance in regards to the Premier League’s Profit and Sustainability Rules (PSR). The Red Devils are now looking at ways of bringing in more revenue and, as per , are reportedly planning to visit Malaysia for a post-season tour.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    The Athletic’s report has suggested that Manchester United could earn over $10 million (£8m) in revenue. This could potentially aid the Red Devils' efforts to comply with the PSR guidelines and the move would help Amorim’s side have better capital for the summer transfer window of 2025.

  • ENJOYED THIS STORY?

    Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

  • Getty Images Sport

    WHAT NEXT FOR MAN UTD?

    Amorim’s Red Devils are unlikely to have a bottomless pot of cash in January and the Portuguese coach may be stuck with Erik ten Hag’s curated squad through to the end of the current campaign.

England name unchanged 16-player squad for Pakistan ODIs

Tom Banton retained in squad after standing in for Dawid Malan during Sri Lanka ODIs

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Jul-2021England have named an unchanged 16-player squad for the three-match ODI series against Pakistan, which gets underway in Cardiff on July 8.England are already 2-0 up in their ODI series against Sri Lanka, with the final match taking place in Bristol on Sunday. Tom Banton was a late call-up for that series, after Dawid Malan withdrew for family reasons, and he retains his place in the squad to face Pakistan.Speaking in the wake of England’s eight-wicket win in the second ODI against Sri Lanka, at The Kia Oval on Thursday, Graham Thorpe indicated that changes could be afoot for the Bristol fixture, as England seek to test their bench strength ahead of the Pakistan series, which he admitted was likely to be a stiffer test of their credentials than Sri Lanka have managed to offer.”Potentially the Pakistan series could push us further,” Thorpe said. “We’ve been pleased with our own performances. We didn’t want any complacency to creep in. And because of the competition we have, the players want to put in good performances.”ESPNcricinfo Ltd”Sri Lanka have a decent group of players, there’s no doubt about that. I think they’ve been weakened more on their batting side than their bowling unit but I believe Pakistan will be a team that’s further ahead in terms of experience and how they’ll be able to challenge. It’ll probably be a tougher contest.”One player who could come into the mix for the Bristol match is George Garton, the Sussex left-arm fast bowler. If selected, he will be making his England debut, three years after he was drafted into the Test squad as a replacement in the 2017-18 Ashes.Liam Dawson, Hampshire’s left-arm-spinning allrounder, is another player who has yet to feature in either match so far, and could be set for his first England appearance since 2018, having been a non-playing reserve in the 2019 World Cup-winning squad.England will name their squad for the T20I leg of the Pakistan series later this month, a series which will serve as an important pointer ahead of the T20 World Cup in the UAE and Oman this winter.”I think it will be a very good series,” Moeen Ali said. “Pakistan are normally a very good side, they give us good games, and I think they’ll be a stronger opposition than Sri Lanka, which means you get more of a chance to bat and bowl as a player who’s down the order, for example, and hasn’t been bowling much.”Definitely, they are one of the best [T20I] teams in the world, along with West Indies, India, Australia,’ he said. “I think Pakistan are our bogey-team in World Cups, they always seem to do really well against us, so we can’t take them lightly at all, they are a fantastic team with quality players.”England ODI series vs Pakistan
1st ODI, Cardiff, July 8
2nd ODI, Lord’s, July 10
3rd ODI, Edgbaston, July 13

West Ham pushing for £20m talent who could be Lingard 2.0

West Ham United needed a reset after David Moyes' reign came to an end before the summer. Julen Lopetegui was welcomed in his place as the London club's first head coach – as opposed to manager – emphasising the structural shift that is in line with much of modern football.

Technical director Tim Steidten has certainly succeeded in a show of ambition, with over £120m paid for a list of new first-teamers: Niclas Fullkrug has joined as the side's new centre-forward; last year's Championship MVP Crysencio Summerville adds electricity to the left flank; Max Kilman and Jean-Clair Todibo have signed to shore up the leaky backline.

West Ham head coach Julen Lopetegui

That's not an exhaustive list but the east Londoners still need a bit more fizz in attack; after losing their Premier League opener 2-1 on home turf against Aston Villa, such concerns have been heightened, and an exciting addition is being targetted.

Who West Ham could still sign

Lopetegui is keen on landing a new midfielder to improve the fluency and attacking impetus. According to a recent report from The Guardian, Paris Saint-Germain's Carlos Soler has been earmarked as the perfect addition.

Given that Soler, a fine playmaker with an eye for goal, would join on a loan spell with an obligation to buy, there could be shades of Jesse Lingard about the potential deal, with the former England international enjoying a cult-status spell of success at the club.

Before such exciting thoughts can be realised, though, Steidten needs to engineer a couple of departures, and failure to do so would end the pursuit.

Who West Ham could sell

The most obvious player to free from the books would be Danny Ings, who is one of the highest earners while having scored only four goals across 53 appearances.

1.

Jarrod Bowen

£150k-per-week

2.

Lucas Paqueta

£150k-per-week

3.

Danny Ings

£125k-per-week

3.

Kurt Zouma

£125k-per-week

5.

Alphonse Areola

£120k-per-week

Ings, who is 32 years old, has entered the final year of his Irons contract and is being pushed toward the exit. The transfer window invariably heats up at the final stage and he could definitely be plying his trade elsewhere come September.

James Ward-Prowse has also been linked with a surprise exit, one year on from his £30m transfer from Southampton. The Times have named the free-kick specialist one of the most likely to be sold, and Soler would be a more dynamic and fully-packaged replacement.

Why West Ham have to get the deal done

Ward-Prowse enjoyed a decent campaign with West Ham, scoring seven goals and supplying 12 assists across all competitions, but while his set-piece ability is top-notch, he has faced criticism for his overall performances.

Soler, conversely, has been described as the "complete midfielder" by former Valencia player Curro Torres in the past, for his influence across the park speaks of a skillset that would survive the rigours of the Premier League.

Goals scored

0.17

Top 13%

Assists made

0.17

Top 19%

Passes attempted

63.51

Top 19%

Progressive passes

6.10

Top 24%

Touches (att pen)

2.59

Top 7%

Despite only starting 12 Ligue 1 matches last season, the Spaniard maintained a good rate of goals and assists, and with a more important role at the London Stadium, he might even prove to be Lopetegui's own version of the aforementioned Lingard.

Lingard's career form has definitely ebbed and flowed, with the 31-year-old enjoying significant moments of success at Manchester United but also spending plenty of time on the periphery, but inarguably his most potent period came when he joined Moyes' West Ham side on loan.

A deal was struck in January 2021. Moyes reunited with Lingard following his Red Devils days and optimism was perhaps tentative after a protracted period of inactivity under Ole Gunnar Solskjær. Few envisaged what was to come.

Pundit Trevor Sinclair hailed his "outstanding" resurgence as he found his Midas touch and wreaked havoc for the fast-improving Hammers, with his haul crucial for the side's sixth-place Premier League finish and consequent Europa League qualification.

As per Sofascore, Lingard's sojourn in the capital reaped prolific rewards, having bagged nine goals and provided four more across only 16 matches.

Alternating between central striking and wide-flanking roles, the dynamo also completed 84% of his passes and averaged 1.1 key passes per game.

It's for this reason that West Ham might be interested in striking a deal that would repeat the feat. Soler is itching for a chance to restore his status and he will have every confidence that he has the requisite skills to grow into his skin as one of the Premier League club's main men.

Soler, for example, plundered 11 goals and supplied five more assists across the 2021/22 campaign in La Liga, his last before signing for PSG.

george-earthy-jesse-lingard-west-ham-opinion

Valencia's creative star also averaged 1.7 key passes per game and won 54% of his ground duels, backing up Torres' earlier-mentioned claims that he is indeed the 'complete midfielder'.

He would be unlikely to perform in the same kind of advanced position. The 27-year-old is dynamic and positionally pliable, but Lopetegui could recreate the success that his predecessor found – perhaps this time succeeding in tying down the talent in question to a permanent deal.

Therefore, it would appear crucial that Lopetegui gets his wish and lands Soler to add impetus to the midfield. While the squad is well-stocked with talents such as Ward-Prowse, he's seemingly considered expendable and his sale would allow the club to turn a profit while further shaping Lopetegui's design.

West Ham can land instant Summerville competition with £25m signing

West Ham could sign yet another exciting attacker

ByConnor Holden Aug 22, 2024

Fewer touches than Raya: Arteta must drop 3/10 Arsenal ace after Atalanta

Well, the positives from last night’s game were that Arsenal picked up a point away from home in their Champions League opener and maintained a clean sheet in the process.

The negative, however, was the game itself, as Mikel Arteta’s side and Atalanta played out what might just have been the most mind-numbingly boring game of the season thus far, with David Raya’s double save the only saving grace.

Now, a large part of why it was so dull was the incredible defending from the North Londoners, and on that front, there can be no complaints, but in other areas of the pitch, there were some big underperformers, including one who took fewer touches than Raya and was just as bad as Thomas Partey.

Partey's game in numbers

After starting in the North London Derby on Sunday and putting in what can only be described as an adequate performance, Partey was tasked with starting last night’s clash alongside Declan Rice and Kai Havertz.

Now, a match away to the Europa League champions and Coppa Italia runners-up from last season is no small task.

However, even with that caveat, the Ghanaian looked totally off the pace and struggled to have a steady impact on the match, and when he did do something impactful, he gave away a penalty, for which Raya bailed him out.

It might sound harsh, but it’s an opinion shared by GOAL’s Tom Manston, who gave him just a 5/10 at full-time, writing that the experienced international was ‘overrun at times’ and ‘clumsy.’

This appraisal of the 31-year-old’s performance is backed up by his statistics, as in his 58 minutes of action, he racked up a combined expected goal and assists figure of just 0.09, took just 39 touches, maintained a passing accuracy of only 79%, didn’t play any key passes, missed one big chance lost three of five duels, lost the ball eight times, made one tackle, was dribbled past once and gave away the penalty.

Partey’ game in numbers

Minutes

58′

Expected Goals

0.06

Expected Assists

0.03

Touches

39

Passing Accuracy

27/34 (79%)

Key Passes

0

Big Chances Missed

1

Lost Possession

8

Duels (Won)

5 (2)

Tackles

1

Dribbled Past

1

Penalties Conceded

1

All Stats via Sofascore

In all, it was a fairly terrible showing from Partey, and as he replaced him in the second half, we wouldn’t be surprised to see Jorginho start ahead of him at the weekend. Yet, one of his teammates was at least equally poor on the night.

Gabriel Jesus' game in numbers

Yes, unfortunately for the Brazilian forward, it was Gabriel Jesus who was one of the other notably poor performers last night.

The former Manchester City ace made his first start this season in Bergamo, potentially looking to make a statement ahead of the top-of-the-table clash on the weekend, and while he did, it probably wasn’t the one he was hoping to make.

Chances were hard to come by for the 27-year-old, but he didn’t help the situation either by looking uncomfortable on the ball, taking heavy touches and failing to fasten his own goalscoring chances.

Unsurprisingly, Manston wasn’t impressed with the São Paulo-born ace either, describing him as ‘rusty’ and giving him a 3/10 on the night, and while that sounds harsh, it’s an opinion once again backed up by the forward’s statistics.

For example, in his 58 minutes on the pitch, he didn’t even register an expected goals number as he didn’t take a single shot, his expected assists figure was just 0.09, he failed in his only dribble attempt, took just 32 touches – 14 fewer than Raya – lost five of seven duels and was offside three times.

Jesus’ game in numbers

Minutes

58′

Goals

0

Assists

0

Expected Goals

0.00

Expected Assist

0.09

Shots

0

Touches

32

Dribbles (Successful)

1 (0)

Duels (Won)

7 (2)

Offside

3

All Stats via Sofascore

Ultimately, while most of the midfield and forward line put in underwhelming performances last night, Partey and Jesus were particularly disappointing and, as such, should be nowhere near the starting lineup on Sunday.

Wilshere thought Arsenal ace was the next Saka, then he left for £0

The incredible talent might have made an impact this season.

1 ByJack Salveson Holmes Sep 18, 2024

"Tireless" £40m striker "most likely" to join West Ham or Crystal Palace

A £40 million striker has now been described as “most likely” to join one of West Ham United or Crystal Palace in 2025, despite links to other elite Premier League sides, as Tim Steidten considers replacements for Danny Ings and Michail Antonio.

Ings rescues West Ham with 95th minute equaliser against Fulham

Manager Julen Lopetegui was minutes away from tasting his third defeat in four league games, and the Spaniard cut a frustrated figure on the touchline after Raul Jimenez’s opening goal for Fulham just past the 20-minute mark.

West Ham may be set for new talks to sign "fantastic" £7m-rated free agent

He’s readily available if the Hammers make their move.

1 ByEmilio Galantini Sep 12, 2024

West Ham were often outplayed on a tough afternoon at Craven Cottage, and Marco Silva was adamant the home side also should’ve been awarded a penalty, following Max Kilman’s collision with Adama Traore.

The Irons did force Fulham to defend admirably in the second half, though, and they eventually found a last-gasp breakthrough. Silva’s men failed to deal with a 95th minute Jarrod Bowen cut-back, which fell to substitute Ings, who squeezed a clinical, low finish past goalkeeper Bernd Leno at the near post to salvage a dramatic draw.

“The belief and the effort was good, but it was a tough match today, and we could have done certain things better,” said Lopetegui after West Ham’s 1-1 draw with Fulham.

“I know playing Fulham at their home ground is always hard, and they were good today. But at the same time, we can do better, and we will work on a lot of things ahead of the next game.

“The second goal in a match is so important so often, because it can kill or close a game. I think we had spells in the first half, but they were better despite not having too many clear-cut chances. But it’s true that in the second half we were better, and the changes we made balanced things.

“We pushed forward and the players kept fighting and believing, and thankfully we got the goal we wanted when it mattered.”

Ings was heavily linked with a West Ham exit all summer, but it was the Englishman who ultimately spared their blushes in west London on Saturday. The 32-year-old is out of contract next summer though, as is Michail Antonio, with an update coming to light on the pair and a potential new striker next year.

Omar Marmoush "most likely" to join West Ham or Crystal Palace

It is believed Ings and Antonio remain firm contenders to leave West Ham in the next 12 months, with TEAMtalk suggesting that technical director Steidten and his recruitment team could look towards Eintracht Frankfurt star Omar Marmoush.

The Egypt striker, who could cost around £40 million to sign in 2025, dreams of making a move to the Premier League after scoring 17 goals in all competitions for the Bundesliga side last term.

Stats (per 90 mins)

Antonio

Fullkrug

Ings

Goals

0.31

0.40

0.11

Assists

0.09

0.25

0.00

Progressive Carries

2.37

0.76

1.38

Progressive Passes

1.29

2.28

1.85

Total Shots

1.56

2.34

2.18

Shots on Target

0.71

0.93

0.69

xG

0.29

0.48

0.28

Shot-Creating Actions

1.83

2.52

4.00

Aerials Won

1.88

3.49

0.62

Stats taken from FBref

Marmoush is “most likely” to join West Ham or Crystal Palace, as per TT, with the Hammers considering replacements for both Ings and Antonio. Eintracht boss Dino Toppmöller, speaking to the press earlier this year, described the 25-year-old as a striker who possesses a “tireless” work rate.

The African attacker has also been linked with Arsenal and Liverpool, but it is Lopetegui and Oliver Glasner in the driving seat for his signature right now.

Donald Tiripano disappointed Zimbabwe let early advantage slip

“When we get into such good positions, we have to get them by the throat and we have to finish them off”

Mohammad Isam11-Jul-2021Donald Tiripano has said that he is ready to take up the challenge of batting higher up the order, after he frustrated Bangladesh with a 144-ball 52 coming in at No.5 in the one-off Test.While Bangladesh were always on course for victory, Tiripano managed to stall the visitors for most of the final day, and it was eventually a poor umpiring decision that ended his stay at the crease. Ebadot Hossain got the ball to jag back enough, but the replays clearly showed that there was daylight between bat and ball, before Liton Das collected the ball. Tiripano, however, felt the game swung decisively on the first day when Zimbabwe failed to get their opponents “by the throat and finish them off”.Related

Mominul Haque admits Bangladesh 'got away' thanks to long batting line-up

The strange silence on Mahmudullah's last day of Test cricket

Mahmudullah shines in Test swansong as Taskin, Miraz hand Bangladesh big win in Harare

“It is a challenge that I am willing to take. I am happy to embrace it if given the chance to bat up the order. I like being challenged. I enjoy pressure,” he said.The pressure on the fifth day was unrelenting for Zimbabwe, particularly after they lost four wickets in 19 balls just after the first drinks break. Dion Myers, Timycen Maruma, Roy Kaia and Regis Chakabva all departed, leaving Tiripano alone with a long tail.He managed the pressure quite well though, ensuring Bangladesh needed more than 30 overs to dislodge the last three wickets. Tiripano struck six fours during his stay, couple of them driven through the covers and midwicket, and one from a reverse sweep. This was his second Test fifty, both coming this year.Tiripano, however, was disappointed Zimbabwe couldn’t put up a higher score in the first innings.”It is unfortunate that we couldn’t get a good total in the first innings. There are a lot of positives that came out from this game. Guys tried to score some runs and build partnerships by putting their head down. But we should work hard on our batting and make sure that we don’t play catch up cricket in a Test match.”He also rued Zimbabwe letting Bangladesh off the hook on the first afternoon when the visitors were 132 for 6 at one stage.”We started well in the first morning. The wicket was doing a bit. After taking six wickets, we let them off. Mahmudullah and Liton Das put together a partnership.”I think we have to make sure that when we get into such positions, we have to get them by the throat and we have to finish them off.”Tiripano was all praise for the two debutants Kaitano and Myers.”They are exciting guys. Kaitano is very talented. Everyone has seen what he can do. Dion also showed glimpses of how great a batter he is going to be for Zimbabwe. The future looks bright with these guys.”

Arsenal's new No. 9: Gunners join race to sign PSG striker Randal Kolo Muani as Ligue 1 giants reveal demands for potential loan deal

Arsenal could reportedly join the race to sign PSG striker Randal Kolo Muani as the Ligue 1 giants are potentially looking to send him out on loan.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

  • Arsenal looking to strengthen their attack
  • Are considered frontrunners to sign Kolo Muani
  • PSG will be happy to sanction a loan or a permanent deal
Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    With Bukayo Saka sidelined due to injury, the Gunners are actively seeking reinforcements to compensate for the absence of their star winger. The club had previously shown interest in Kolo Muani, but their pursuit now appears to be gaining momentum as Mikel Arteta is said to be an admirer of the 26-year-old forward, according to

  • Advertisement

  • Getty Images

    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Despite interest from several clubs, including Juventus and AC Milan, Arsenal is believed to be leading the race to secure Kolo Muani’s signature. The Gunners’ proactive approach and Premier League allure give them a potential edge over their European competitors. However, Paris Saint-Germain are open to either a loan or permanent transfer for the French international with no specific preference for whether he stays in Ligue 1, moves to Serie A, or joins a Premier League side.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    However, if Arsenal do secure a loan deal, they will be required to cover the entirety of Kolo Muani’s salary, which amounts to €4 million per year. The Parisian giants are eager to avoid further losses after their hefty outlay on the player and allowing him to move on, either temporarily or permanently, aligns with the club’s broader objective of recalibrating their squad and resources.

  • ENJOYED THIS STORY?

    Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

  • Getty Images Sport

    WHAT NEXT?

    As the January transfer window rumbles, it will be interesting to find out if Arsenal will continue their pursuit of Kolo Muani or if they will choose to focus on alternative targets. They are in action next on Saturday in the Premier League against Brighton.

India start as favourites against unsettled Sri Lanka

Big Picture

And now, some cricket.Since last year, scheduling has become a challenge unlike any other period. It rubbed off on this series too, which was to begin much earlier this week, and the players will be relieved to take the field. None more so than the Sri Lankan players, who have not only had to deal with the pressure of bubbles and positive tests, but also the additional burden of off-field drama. Questions of player compensation, continuity, leadership, communication, administration – even the idea that the existence of this series is an insult – have combined to form a vicious dark cloud that will hang over their heads throughout the duration of India’s tour. Most of that will fade once they step onto the field, hopefully, and it is an escape Sri Lanka will be craving.On the flipside is a team that will give them something else to think about. India’s second-string side is more experienced, more settled, and has names that are desperate to impress inside a system that has produced India’s deepest roster ever. There are many sub-plots waiting to be played out within this team – openers knocking on the first team’s door, wicketkeepers who are battling for backup spots, spinners looking to prove they aren’t done, and others eager to show they are capable beyond the IPL.The one thing in Sri Lanka’s favour is recent game time, but India start as favourites.

Form guide

Sri Lanka LLWLL (last five completed matches, most recent first)
India WLWWL

In the spotlight

Dasun Shanaka was a key figure during the contracts standoff in Sri Lanka; more precisely, he is believed to be among those players who precipitated the end of the standoff, by agreeing to sign the tour contracts to play against India. The man he replaces as captain, Kusal Perera, was at the opposite end of that standoff, and Shanaka’s emergence is understood to have created disunity in the team. That will make his new job as captain substantially harder, and there will be eyes on him.It is no secret that the Indian management is desperate to make Prithvi Shaw a central figure across formats for the decade to come. Despite his prodigious talent and a bright start to his international career, Shaw’s time with India has been a wobbly series of ins and outs. With the relative calm and distance away from the main team, Shaw will be looking to capitalise on his recent form – remember, he made four centuries in eight Vijay Hazare Trophy matches this year – and use the certainty of a spot to erase some doubts.Shikhar Dhawan is 23 away from 6000 ODI runs•SLC

Team news

With Kusal Perera out injured, the immediate hole Sri Lanka have to fill is in their opening slot. Minod Bhanuka is expected to fill in as wicketkeeper, and Bhanuka Rajapaksa is likely to slot in alongside Dhananjaya de Silva and Dasun Shanaka in the middle order. Fast bowler Kasun Rajitha is back in the squad after injury, and should make it to an XI that will likely have spinners of all varieties.Sri Lanka: (possible) 1 Avishka Fernando, 2 Pathum Nissanka, 3 Minod Bhanuka (wk), 4 Dhananjaya de Silva, 5 Bhanuka Rajapaksa, 6 Dasun Shanaka (capt.), 7 Wanindu Hasaranga, 8 Isuru Udana, 9 Lakshan Sandakan, 10 Dushmantha Chameera, 11 Kasun Rajitha.As had been the case since Hardik Pandya’s emergence as India’s foremost allrounder, the composition will depend largely on his ability to bowl. The word from within the camp is that he has been bowling, and with him as a third seaming option, India will be tempted to play three spinners. Bhuvneshwar Kumar will lead the attack and Yuzvendra Chahal is all but confirmed to play after being told he is the senior spinner on this tour.India: (possible) 1 Shikhar Dhawan (capt.), 2 Prithvi Shaw, 3 Suryakumar Yadav, 4 Manish Pandey, 5 Ishan Kishan (wk), 6 Hardik Pandya, 7 Krunal Pandya, 8 Bhuvneshwar Kumar, 9 Navdeep Saini/Deepak Chahar, 10 Kuldeep Yadav/Varun Chakravarthy/Rahul Chahar, 11 Yuzvendra Chahal.

Pitch and conditions

The R Premadasa Stadium last hosted ODIs in 2019, and was a characteristically high scoring ground. That should stay as it is, at least for the first few games on this tour. The temperatures aren’t expected to get high, but the humidity will be prevalent and there is a reasonable chance of rain.

Stats and trivia

  • India last played an ODI in Sri Lanka in 2017 and haven’t lost an ODI there since July 24, 2012.
  • On India’s last tour to Sri Lanka, Akila Dananjaya took his career-best figures of 6 for 29.
  • Shikhar Dhawan is 23 away from 6000 ODI runs.

Quotes

“These are talented youngsters, who’ve done well for their respective IPL teams. I don’t think they need much guidance. I talk to them if they need something. We never try to complicate things. We have Rahul Dravid [head coach] with us here and he’s guiding them well. Being a senior player, talking to them is not rocket science.”

Game
Register
Service
Bonus