Caulkin drops Newcastle manager twist

The Athletic’s George Caulkin has seemingly delivered a twist in regards to Newcastle United’s pursuit of a new manager.

What’s the story?

Reports in recent weeks had suggested that former AS Roma boss Paulo Fonseca was the front-runner to be the man to replace Steve Bruce in the dugout at St James’ Park, but it appears that trail has stopped hotting up.

Writing on Twitter, Caulkin said: “Well, they’ve spoken to him a couple of times, we know that. But I was also told today that nothing is as far advanced as has been said. Let’s see.”

Fresh twist for Newcastle

While here on Football FanCast we’ve outlined why Fonseca would be a very promising appointment for Newcastle, the fact the Magpies haven’t pulled the trigger just yet on hiring him should be intriguing news for fans.

Whether it’s because the new owners have found a new man whom they’d like to appoint instead, or just a case of them doing their due diligence and truly putting in all the work and time to assess Fonseca, it’s reassuring that the Magpies aren’t just diving head-first into a hasty decision.

Naming Newcastle’s next permanent boss is the kind of massive call that could have ramifications not just for this season where relegation from the Premier League is still a very real and sobering possibility but also for the future.

It’s absolutely imperative they get this decision spot-on, and leave nothing to chance, and Caulkin’s reveal that things aren’t as “advanced” with Fonseca as they had been originally claimed should be looked at more positively.

Meanwhile, Newcastle could get St James’ Park rocking by hiring this man…

West Brom fans blast Snodgrass v Fulham

Some West Brom fans have been blasting the performance of Robert Snodgrass in their 3-0 loss at Fulham in the Championship on Saturday.

The Scotland international produced a slack back-pass which allowed Aleksandar Mitrovic to score his second goal of the game, and the striker eventually netted a hat-trick to give the home side all three points.

Snodgrass was also shown a yellow card with just under 15 minutes to go in the game, and some Baggies fans thought that he should have been sent off.

For such an experienced player, he seemed to lose his head on Saturday, as he lost out on four of his duels and failed to record a single shot on goal, dribble, interception. He also lost possession of the ball on 14 separate occasions in the match, the joint-fifth most out of any of his teammates (SofaScore).

West Brom fans on Snodgrass display

These West Brom fans on Twitter blasted the 34-year-old’s performance, with one Albion supporter even going as far as to claim that Snodgrass was ’embarrassing’:

“Particularly given his experience, Snodgrass has been disgraceful and embarrassing today”

Credit: @pennwba

“I’d have Sawyers back if it meant Snodgrass didn’t get a game again”

Credit: @electricelery1

“Snodgrass has had a mare there”

Credit: @Woz_gog

“Pathetic from Snodgrass!!! What was he even thinking about and why is he always so deep? Garbage Albion and virtually game over with our poor forward play.”

Credit: @Stevotop

“Snodgrass shocking. Ajayi shocking. The front three are ghosts. Not sure our wing-backs are playing either. Shocking.”

Credit: @wookiedacookie

“Horrible….horrible play by Snodgrass.”

Credit: @Kilrah01

In other news, find out whose display against Fulham was also slammed by numerous West Brom fans

Hossain takes three on rain-interrupted day

England Under-19 reached 124 for 5 in the 68 overs possible between rain interruptions on the first day of the youth Test against Bangladesh U-19 in Chittagong

Cricinfo staff16-Oct-2009
England Under-19 reached 124 for 5 in the 68 overs possible between rain interruptions on the first day of the youth Test against Bangladesh U-19 in Chittagong. Legspinner Nur Hossain picked up three wickets to give the home side the advantage at stumps.England had a steady start with openers Joe Root and Chris Dent adding 61 in 31.3 overs before Sabbir Rahman had Root caught for 21. Three overs later Dent was bowled by offspinner Mahmudul Hasan for a 111-ball 45. Hossain took the next three wickets with only 25 added to the total. Charlie Roebuck was stumped for 2, James Goodman caught for 8 and Ben Stocks caught behind for 11 and as England slipped to 97 for 5.Azeem Rafiq and Paul Best took them past 100 and were at the crease when play was called off due to rain.

Cook defends England batsmen

Loots Bosman fell one blow short of recording only the second century in Twenty20 internationals, and Graeme Smith made a statement of his own by hammering 88 from 44 balls, as South Africa responded to their defeat in Friday’s first T20I at the Wanderers

Cricinfo staff16-Nov-2009Alastair Cook defended the decision not to change England’s batting order in response to South Africa’s mammoth 241 for 6. England limped to an 84-run defeat with Cook, the stand-in captain, sharing an opening stand of 20 from 18 balls with Joe Denly.Given the success of Eoin Morgan and Jonathan Trott in the first match, alongside the return of Kevin Pietersen, England had attacking options for the top-order, but Cook preferred the original line-up.”There were thoughts of it, but we decided not to go with that,” he said. “We got 200 the other day playing with that order, so we decided to stick with it. Unfortunately the big hits, we didn’t hit them as cleanly as they did. In hindsight, we could have maybe changed it, but whether it would have changed the result I don’t know, because 240 is a lot of runs.”Cook praised his opposing batsmen and suggested England weren’t skilful enough to match them on the day. “It was not the result we wanted, they took the game away from us from the fourth or fifth over and from then on we were behind the eight-ball. I’m not sure if anyone has chased 240, we had the belief but we didn’t have the skills today.”It’s always tough when you go round the park like that, it was great hitting and you have to give credit to the way they played. You can set a field but if you don’t put the ball in the right place the margin on that wicket was very small.”Mickey Arthur, the South African coach, questioned England’s approach and argued his side can take more out of the shared series than the tourists can. “I must say I was very surprised they didn’t do that [change the order]. I thought they would certainly have used Eoin Morgan and Jonathan Trott at the top of the order with KP batting three.”I think the emphatic way in which we won, I guess we come out of the weekend I think far better than England have. That’s if it does count for anything down the line because we go into a different format [50-over one-day internationals]. But we probably do take a little more from it. I think we’re probably a little more settled and a little more unpredictable.”

Mo Faal could solve big issue at WBA

With 17 games played in their Championship campaign, West Brom are currently eight points behind league leaders AFC Bournemouth and six behind Fulham in second place with Valerien Ismael’s side having won nine, drawn five and lost three of their 17 matches.

In addition to the points difference, West Brom have also scored fewer goals than the two clubs currently above them in the league table, four fewer than Bournemouth (31) and 17 fewer than Fulham (44) and have failed to score on three occasions in the league this season in their games against Derby County, Stoke City and Fulham.

Looking ahead to the next stage of the season and beyond, we feel that one way Ismael could fix West Brom’s issue of not scoring as many goals is to freshen up his side’s attack. He may want to dip his toes into the winter market but we think he should hand youngster Mo Faal some first-team minutes instead.

Since joining West Brom’s U18 side back in November 2019, the 18-year-old striker has made 26 appearances for their U18 side in which he has managed to score eight goals and provide three assists in the process.

Additionally, Faal has managed to score four goals and provide two assists in 15 appearances for their U23 side, showing just how capable he is of finding the back of the net. With that in mind, he could become a useful figure for Ismael’s side going forward.

Faal has had a taste of first-team action for the Baggies having made one appearance for them which came during their 6-0 defeat against Arsenal in the Carabao Cup back in August where he replaced Kenneth Zohore in the second half but was unable to get on the scoresheet against the Premier League side.

Moving forward, with on-loan Baggies striker Jordan Hugill only managing to score one goal in 13 appearances in the Championship for West Brom so far this season, we feel that it could be a good opportunity for Ismael to shake up his side somewhat.

Faal, who has been described as a “physical presence” that “links the game up well, scores goals and is an aerial threat” by U18s manager Peter Gilbert must be handed an opportunity to prove himself in the first team ahead of Hugill. If he takes that chance and performs well, he could save Albion millions on potential transfer fees in the next market.

In other news: Big blow: West Brom suffer injury setback that will surely have fans worried – opinion

Hosts could enjoy home advantage in knockout games

The hosts of the 2011 World Cup will enjoy home advantage for the quarter-finals and semi-finals if a proposal to this effect is approved by the ICC board

Cricinfo staff01-Dec-2009ANZ Stadium granted ODI status

The ANZ Stadium in Sydney was also granted ODI status by the CEC. The 80,000-capacity stadium in Homebush, had hosted the 2000 Olympics and New South Wales chief executive Dave Gilbert had recently suggested that it could host next year’s Ashes Test, moving cricket from its traditional home at the SCG.

The hosts of the 2011 World Cup will enjoy home advantage for the quarter-finals and semi-finals if a proposal to this effect is approved by the ICC board. It means India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh will play at home if they make the knockout stage but, if two of them play each other, the higher-ranked side from the group stage will host the match.The chief executives’ committee (CEC), meeting in Dubai on Tuesday, supported a request from the World Cup’s central organising committee and has passed it on to the ICC board, which will take it up when it holds the first of its four meetings in February next year.At the announcement of the tournament’s match schedule last month, the venues for the knockout phase, and not the match-ups, were specified. While two of the quarter-finals will be played in Mirpur, Ahmedabad and Colombo will host the other two. Colombo will also be hosting a semi-final along with Mohali.As the immediate permutations stand, either India or Bangladesh, who have been placed in Group B, are likely to meet Sri Lanka, from Group A, in the final eight. The semi-finals may also throw up a likely scenario where all three are involved, if paired against non-hosts in the quarter-finals.Sharad Pawar, the ICC vice-president, is the chairman of the 2011 World Cup’s organising committee, while Ratnakar Shetty, the BCCI’s chief administrative officer, is the tournament director. The 43-day event comprises 49 games spread over three countries and 13 venues and will be a week shorter than the 2007 edition in the West Indies.The ten Full Member countries and four Associates have been divided into two groups of seven each, with the top four from each group qualifying for the quarter-finals. Group A includes Australia, Pakistan, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, Canada and Kenya. Group B comprises India, South Africa, England, West Indies, Bangladesh, Ireland and the Netherlands.The CEC also approved a recommendation from the women’s committee that the top four sides from the Women’s World Twenty20, to be held in West Indies next year, will earn direct qualification for the following edition in Sri Lanka, while the four remaining teams will have to go through a qualification process.

Journalist provides Man Utd managerial update

Manchester United could still appoint current Leicester City manager Brendan Rodgers as Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s successor this season, according to journalist Dean Jones.

What’s the story?

The Northern Irishman is believed to be high up on the United hierarchy’s wishlist as they line up possible replacements for Solskjaer following their disappointing start to the campaign.

Several reports have claimed that Rodgers is the leading candidate to take over the Old Trafford hot seat, but it seems as though the Glazers will keep faith with their Norwegian tactician for the time being.

However, transfer insider Jones has refused to rule out Solskjaer being replaced by the 48-year-old before the campaign comes to a close amid mounting pressure.

He told GIVEMESPORT: I wouldn’t rule it out later in the season somewhere if United can’t ride this out. It seems strange but it is definitely plausible from what I’m hearing.”

Man Utd fans will be excited

News that Rodgers could take the reins at United over the coming months will leave a large section of the club’s supporters feeling excited.

The former Celtic boss has cultivated an enviable reputation as one of British football’s most astute and innovative tacticians in recent years, guiding the Hoops to seven major trophies in just two-and-a-half years.

He then continued to prove his credentials at the King Power Stadium, guiding the Foxes to consecutive fifth-place finishes in the Premier League before claiming the FA Cup and Community Shield.

Solskjaer, on the other hand, is yet to find a piece of silverware during his tenure with the Red Devils, overseeing an agonising trophy drought for the 20-time English champions.

The Scandinavian’s good work should not be forgotten, though. Consecutive top-four finishes for the first time since Sir Alex Ferguson retired, a successful squad rebuild, and the blooding of several academy graduates have all marked his tenure.

However, concerns over whether Solskjaer is capable of taking United to the next step in their development and competing with the likes of Chelsea, Manchester City and Liverpool for major honours are ever-increasing.

A ceiling appears to have been reached under his tutelage, and therefore, Rodgers’ arrival would be welcomed by many in United’s fanbase.

And, in other news…Forget Diallo: Ole could unearth Man Utd gem in “hugely talented” rarely-seen 17 y/o

Nothing to separate the closest of rivals

The recently deposed No. 1 side in the world, and one of the many pretenders to the crown. This four-match series has the ingredients to be a cracking contest

Andrew McGlashan at Centurion15-Dec-2009The recently deposed No. 1 side in the world, and one of the many pretenders to the crown. This four-match series has the ingredients to be a cracking contest. Test cricket has enjoyed a mini-boost in recent weeks with West Indies’ vastly improved showing at Adelaide and an absorbing, if largely overlooked, series between New Zealand and Pakistan – not to mention Virender Sehwag’s bar-raising exploits in Mumbai. Although this forthcoming battle between South Africa and England is one match short of the ideal length for an ‘icon’ series, the history between the two teams suggests that there will be plenty of drama.Since South Africa’s re-admission, the two sides have gone head-to-head in seven Test series. South Africa have won three (including the most recent in 2008), England have won two, and there have been two drawn contests (both on English soil). Although South Africa’s home victories have given them the edge overall, there has never been more than a single result splitting the final scoreline.”I haven’t played a Test series against England that hasn’t been tough,” said South Africa’s captain, Graeme Smith. “Every series I’ve played against England has been hard-fought, and have always come down to little moments within each game. We’ve had the edge of late; we played the better cricket in the last series in England and deserved our victory there.”Not always, though, has the result reflected the superiority of the winning side. In 1999-2000, South Africa were far stronger and both their victories came by innings margins, while England’s consolation was all down to Hansie Cronje and a leather jacket. In 2004-05, meanwhile, the 2-1 margin didn’t do justice to England, who bossed four out of the five Tests and in the end Matthew Hoggard’s 12 wickets at the Wanderers proved to be the deciding factor.In the most recent meeting between the two teams it was another outstanding solo effort that regained the Basil D’Oliveira trophy. Smith played one of the finest captains’ innings seen in a run-chase – perhaps second only to Brian Lara’s effort against Australia in Barbados – as his unbeaten 154 guided South Africa home at Edgbaston. Smith’s innings came in the middle of South Africa’s golden run of results, which culminated in their away victory against Australia last year and the No. 1 Test ranking.However, that famous match in Melbourne, where Australia were finally conquered on home soil by a combination of JP Duminy and Dale Steyn, now feels a long time ago. South Africa lost the return series earlier this year and haven’t played a Test match since, while India have since usurped them at the top of the ladder. A little bit of the strut has disappeared from South Africa’s cricket (their one-day form in the last few months has been instructively poor) and this offers England a window of opportunity.In England’s last Test outing, they regained the Ashes at The Oval, a result that came despite, not because of, events during the past year. It’s a huge credit to Andrew Strauss and Andy Flower that they have gelled the team after those fractious days in January when Kevin Pietersen and Peter Moores lost their jobs on the same day. England genuinely look a happy team – to the extent that the BBC Sports Personality trophy that they picked up on Sunday night was aptly awarded.”I think we are all eager to return to Test cricket, it allows us to reconnect with what happened in the Ashes and think about what went well and what didn’t,” Strauss said. “That’s a healthy thing for us, but it’s a very different set of circumstances. We can’t afford to look back too much.”Their build-up hasn’t been ideal, but that is a common situation for touring teams these days. When the rain cleared in East London, all the batsmen made runs, with Pietersen showing significant improvement in his form, and the bowlers managed a few decent spells even though they would have liked more. Either way, it is still far in excess of what the South Africans have managed. During their three-day camp in Potchefstroom they tried to simulate match conditions but it’s never the same. England’s opposition may have been friendly, but at least they were an opposition.Normally, during a team’s home season, the lack of time the team spends together isn’t a major issue because players are immersed in domestic cricket. However, five of South Africa’s squad haven’t played first-class cricket since March. Ashwell Prince and Paul Harris have the most four-day practice under their belts after not being involved in the one-day squad. The one advantage South Africa have had was the chance to prepare at altitude while England were at sea level, but the visitors have spent considerable time in the Highveld over the last five weeks, so they know what to expect.For both teams, though, there have been a number of similarities in the issues facing them during the lead-up to this series. Injuries to key players have been a concern with James Anderson and Jacques Kallis top of the list, while the latter’s likely inability to bowl and the retirement of Andrew Flintoff has left both camps searching for balance.South Africa have opted to stick with their specialists, using Kallis as a batsman and putting the bowling workload in the hands of a four-man unit. This is an opportunity England need to seize before Kallis returns to full health and the hosts have all their options available to them again.England are keeping their cards close to their chest and it’s still tough to call which way they will go; Luke Wright as the uncapped allrounder, Ian Bell at No. 6, or Stuart Broad at No. 7. Whoever is named in England’s XI, the focus will be on the men at first- and second-drop. Smith has warned Pietersen to expect a tough reception (“I suppose Kevin’s carrying the burden for comments he’s made over a period of time,” he said), but Jonathan Trott has so far escaped fairly lightly. Nothing much has fazed Trott in the early days of his international career and a bit of booing won’t cause him to lose much sleep. Pietersen, meanwhile, loves nothing more than a baying audience.”KP found himself in quite an unfamiliar situation at the start of this tour,” Strauss said. “I think that has taken some adjusting to and you have to build up through the gears. I’m very happy with the way he’s been going about things and he looked better and better through the warm-up game. KP being the type of person he is, he will want to have a massive impact on this series. When you combine that motivation with his obvious skills, it’s a pretty good recipe.”If splitting the teams on paper is tough, the head-to-head at Centurion Park adds little to the picture. On the three occasions the teams have met here, rain has played a deciding part. In 1995-96 it ruined the event after tea on the second day; in 1999-2000 it prompted Cronje’s generosity, and in 2004-05 it helped England to a draw that secured a famous series win. A dry game is overdue and after all the recent rain the forecast is promising. If either side can break the run of stalemates they will have made a significant step towards the major prize. Still, don’t expect more than one game between them at the end.

Newcastle eyeing up deal for Camara

An update has emerged on Olympiacos midfielder Aguibou Camara, regarding Newcastle United’s interest in his services.

What’s the talk?

According to The Sun, the Magpies are eyeing up a potential January deal for the ex-Lille man, who is valued at £20m by the Greek giants.

The report claims that Premier League sides Leicester and Liverpool have also made contact with his agent following his impressive form this season.

ASM 2.0

Eddie Howe could land Allan Saint-Maximin 2.0 with a deal for Camara in January as he could be a new wildcard option to utilise in midfield.

The 20-year-old attacking midfielder has four goals and one assist in eight league matches for Olympiacos this season. He has also averaged a superb SofaScore rating of 7.25 and made 3.8 tackles per game in the Europa League, showing that he has the quality to shine on the European stage.

French manager Christian Larièpe once claimed that he has a ‘form of recklessness’ to his game. He said:

“I had seen him in Guinea, he was the best hope in the country and we called him for our detection in Morocco in 2019. But it was Luis (Campos) who validated it, it is him. who set this whole process in place.

“Camara was fast, was technical, and besides he had a very interesting personality. He was very alert, very open with a certain form of recklessness. There was also a lot of clubs on him.”

These comments suggest that he could be a wildcard on and off the pitch, which means that he has the potential to provide the club with a spark – much like Saint-Maximin. The French attacker was once called a “wildcard” by Liverpool legend Graeme Souness, who also admitted that the forward gets fans “excited”.

Saint-Maximin has nine goals and 11 assists in the Premier League since his move to the club in 2019, showing that he has the ability to be a match-winner with his telling contributions in the final third.

Camara could come in and have a similar impact with his vibrant personality and ruthless streak, with his form for Olympiacos suggesting that he could also have the quality to make the step over to the Premier League.

It is now down to Howe and PIF to ensure that they can get a deal over the line for the Guinea international in the next transfer window, as they could land their next Saint-Maximin…

AND in other news, PIF ready to pay £67m to complete stunning NUFC deal that’ll surely have fans buzzing…

Pakistan drop bundle after Ponting chance

So far the 14 fluffed chances in Australia have cost Pakistan over 550 runs

Osman Samiuddin at Bellerive Oval14-Jan-2010Pakistan have dropped 14 catches in this series. There are still a maximumof four days left and many batsmen to give lives to so thenumber could rise. In New Zealand before this affair they dropped,conservatively, 10 catches, in three matches which means that by the time this Test comesto an end, they will have missed on average four per match overthe course of their Australasian adventure.So far the 14 fluffed chances in Australia have cost them over 550 runs;what cost there has been in morale, mood and momentum nobody can put anumber on. All catches are crucial but some more than others. Of all thebatsmen in the world, the one not to drop when on 0, in uncertain formand at an advanced age, is Ricky Ponting. Pakistan were fully on top whenPonting pulled again, this time straight to Mohammad Aamer, only for him to drop oneof the simplest offerings likely to come his way. It changed the day.Intikhab Alam, Pakistan’s coach, was left to repeat the excuse thatPakistan’s camp has been using every day here. It is agrassroots problem and a serious one. “Yes that was a bad drop and thingswould have been different,” Intikhab said. “It was an easy catch but againthat was a very vital catch for us. Especially on a wicket like this wecan’t give chances.”When we arrived here I said we had a problem. It’s a grassroot problemback home, people don’t take fielding seriously when they play forassociations and departments and regions. This is where we have to workreally hard. It is a serious problem, we practice every day, we practiceall kinds of different drills but at the end of the day they have to do itthemselves.”What can be, or is being, done about it is not clear. Specialist fieldingcoaches have been talked about and their usefulness with the Pakistan sidecould be argued either way. Jonty Rhodes couldn’t do much in 2006, but hewas only with them for two weeks. Mohtashim Rasheed has been with the sideon and off over the last couple of years and when he has been around thecatching hasn’t been as poor as it has over these last few months.The current coaching team is adamant that as much as can be done is beingdone. Clearly it is not enough, but they feel no need for a specialistfielding coach. “Myself, Waqar [Younis] and Aaqib [Javed], the three ofus, work very hard and do different drills,” Intikhab said. “A specialistfielder can come and coach and won’t make much difference. At the end ofthe day these are the players and they have to have confidence in theirability. It is serious and we have to address it. It is a debatable pointactually. I don’t think he will come with new ideas. We have doneeverything and we do it every day. But it’s up to the Board now if theywant to have a specialist man for it.”Pakistan’s other major obstacle on this tour has been their own lack ofintent, which has been startling at times. It became apparent again here, immediatelyafter lunch. Pakistan were fully on top then, the pace bowlers had awicket each and Ponting was still struggling. Yet Mohammad Yousuf chose toopen the afternoon session with Danish Kaneria, disregarding both Pontingand Michael Clarke’s general command over spin. Aamer didn’t bowl throughthe entire session, by which time captain and vice-captain were firmlyentrenched.No clarity emerged as to why they did it, only further evidence – and itisn’t needed – that Pakistan still don’t think they can take Australia. “Idon’t think it was a mistake to not bowl him [Aamer],” Intikhab said. “Itwas very important to keep every bowler fresh. After lunch Kaneria bowled downwind and the idea was to give him a few overs and seeand seamers can bowl at the other end. But it didn’t work out that way. Wedid talk about it, but we thought if we bowled two seamers again one willget tired and we will have a problem.”They have a problem now anyway with Australia dominant and looking goodfor a fourth successive whitewash against Pakistan. Intikhab is confidentPakistan can score runs on this track as well, but it matters little now.”If you analyse the first two Tests, we say senior players are not gettingruns but actually it is the fielding,” Intikhab said. “Even though wehaven’t got runs, if we had taken those catches still we had a very goodchance of winning it.”

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