£35k-p/w Leeds man picks up further injury on top of already damaged muscle

One member of the Leeds United squad has seen his availability for the upcoming Championship fixtures thrown into doubt after fresh injury concerns emerged over the international break, it has been reported.

Leeds stars off on international duty

11 members of Daniel Farke's squad are away with their respective nations over the international break. Three of them were a part of Wales' first win under Craig Bellamy's leadership, with Ethan Ampadu, Joe Rodon and Karl Darlow all starting in the 2-1 win over Montenegro on Monday evening.

Meanwhile, loan signing Manor Solomon was also in action at the same time, with his Israel side falling to a 2-1 defeat against Italy in Budapest, four days on from their 3-1 defeat to Belgium to leave them bottom of their Nations League group.

Farke could unearth Clarke 2.0 in Leeds teen who outscored Gnonto in 23/24

The Whites youngster appears to be a promising talent within the academy.

By
Dan Emery

Sep 10, 2024

Brenden Aaronson and Junior Firpo also featured for their respective countries, with Firpo playing as a striker for the Dominican Republic, though he is unlikely to be deployed their anytime soon by Farke. Finally, new signing Ao Tanaka came off the bench for Japan as they thrashed China 7-0.

At U21 level, exciting pair Mateo Joseph and Wilfried Gnonto were in action as Spain beat Scotland while Italy U21s thrashed San Marino 7-0 with Gnonto named captain. But despite the generally successful international break, Farke has been handed a new headache after yet another injury complication.

Leeds handed further injury blow

That comes as one outlet has offered a concerning assesment of Austrian centre-back Max Wober. The defender played out a 1-1 draw with Slovenia, but Ralf Rangnick later admitted that he was facing an issue, and he sat out of the Norway defeat on Monday night.

It had been thought that it was the same calf problem that has seen him without a single Championship minute to his name thus far this season, but Austrian outlet Krone instead suggest that the defender is "suffering from knee problems", which could further jeopardise his season.

Max Wober's Leeds career to date

Appearances

20

Goals

0

Assists

0

Yellow Cards

4

With knee injuries notoriously dangerous should it be diagnosed as either an ACL or MCL issue, all parties will undoubtedly be proceeding with caution from this point, which could see Wober continue to be absent from Leeds United starting XIs for the forseeable future should it prove to be in any way serious, though there is no further information provided.

max-wober-leeds-united-academy-transfer-loan-james-debayo-farke

The 26-year-old was heavily linked with a move away from the club this summer but no club would meet Leeds' valuation. Having shelled out £10m for the defender just 18 months ago, and with Wober still having three years left to run on his £35,000 a week deal at Elland Road, the Yorkshire outfit were in no rush to take a loss on the Austrian.

His undoubted ability could be crucial in Farke's side making it back to the Premier League at the end of the season, but they may have to wait a little longer in order to see it on show in front of the Elland Road faithful.

Hansi Flick reveals Gavi refused to come on as Barcelona substitute in 7-1 rout of Valencia as he hails 'fantastic' gesture from star midfielder

Hansi Flick heaped praise on Gavi for refusing to come on as a late substitute during Barcelona's 7-1 demolition of Valencia.

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  • Barcelona thrashed Valencia 7-1
  • Gavi refused to come on as a substitute
  • Flick heaped praise on the midfielder
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    Barcelona crossed the 100 goals tally in the 2024-25 campaign on Sunday as they blasted seven past Valencia to register a thumping win in La Liga. Fermin Lopez scored a brace, while Frenkie De Jong, Raphinha, Ferran Torres and Robert Lewandowski were also on target, as the Catalan giants reduced the gap to second-placed Atletico Madrid to three points.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Gavi, who has started in just four La Liga games since coming back from his ACL injury, was once again kept on the bench by manager Hansi Flick. The German coach was planning to introduce the midfielder in the final 15 minutes of the match, however, the Spain international refused to come on and instead recommended Pablo Torre, who has clocked only 373 minutes on the pitch this season.

  • WHAT HANSI FLICK SAID

    Praising the 20-year-old's gesture, the German manager told reporters after the match: "The situation I'm most impressed with is when I spoke with Gavi. Normally I bring him on with 15 minutes to go and he said no, bring Pablo Torre in. You can see the team how they are connected. It's fantastic to see as a coach. I love Gavi for this. You know he wants to play every match and to say this in this situation, it's top."

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    WHAT NEXT FOR BARCELONA?

    The Catalan side will be back in action on Wednesday as they take on Atalanta in their final league phase game of the Champions League at home.

Farke could ease Solomon injury blow by starting "electric" Leeds "weapon"

Leeds United are back in action this afternoon in the Championship as they travel away from Elland Road to take to the field against Cardiff City.

The Whites are looking to bounce back from their 1-0 defeat at the hands of Scott Parker’s Burnley last time out in West Yorkshire, thanks to a first-half strike from Luca Koleosho.

It was their first loss of the season in the Championship, having drawn two and won two of their opening four games, and Daniel Farke will be hoping that his team responds strongly.

The German head coach could be forced into making at least one change from the starting XI that was selected against the Clarets, though, due to injury.

Leeds United injury latest

In his pre-match press conference on Thursday, Farke revealed that Tottenham Hotspur loanee Manor Solomon is a ‘major doubt’ for the clash with Cardiff.

The winger has a back injury and may not be fit enough to be available for selection in Wales, which would leave the left wing position open for another player to come in.

He started the defeat to Burnley and was partially at fault for Koleosho’s goal after slipping up inside the opposition half and gifting the ball to the young winger.

Meanwhile, Joe Rodon, Junior Firpo, and Joe Rothwell are all expected to be in contention to feature despite dealing with their own respective injury issues.

Farke could, though, ease the blow of potentially losing Solomon to injury by finally unleashing Largie Ramazani from the start against Cardiff.

Why Largie Ramazani should be unleashed

The Whites swooped to sign the Belgian winger from Spanish side Almeria following on from the departure of Crysencio Summerville during the summer transfer window.

However, the former Manchester United academy prospect has yet to make his full debut for Leeds, having been used as a substitute against Hull and Burnley – completing 100% of his attempted passes in both matches.

Largie Ramazani

Solomon provided an assist, for Mateo Joseph, on his debut against the Tigers with a terrific near-post cross from the left wing and Ramazani has the potential to brilliantly replace the Israel international’s creativity on the flank.

The right-footed starlet, who was once described as “electric” and a counter-attacking “weapon” by talent scout Jacek Kulig, played in LaLiga for Almeria, as they were relegated from the division, and showed great promise as a creative threat.

23/24 LaLiga

Largie Ramazani

Appearances

29

Starts

16

Goals

3

Big chances created

10

Assists

5

Stats via Sofascore

As you can see in the table above, Ramazani created an eye-catching ten ‘big chances’ in just 16 starts in the Spanish top-flight, to go along with three goals.

The Leeds whiz was let down by his wasteful teammates, though, as they did not make the most of his creativity, scoring five goals from those chances.

These statistics suggest that the potential is there for the Belgian gem to unlock Cardiff this afternoon by creating high-quality opportunities for the likes of Brenden Aaronson, Joseph, Joel Piroe, and Wilfried Gnonto, which is why he could ease the blow of losing Solomon to injury.

Left for £7m: Orta struck gold by selling Leeds star who's now worth £843k

The Whites played a blinder by cashing in on the “bombastic” ace.

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By
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Sep 18, 2024

USMNT midfielder Jack McGlynn reportedly traded from Philadelphia Union to Houston Dynamo in a $2 million blockbuster

The Dynamo are set to pay straight cash for the U.S. international, with Philly retaining a sell-on clause for the midfielder

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  • Jack McGlynn reportedly traded from Philadelphia to Houston
  • 21-year-old made USMNT debut in January
  • Philly retains large sell-on clause
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    The Houston Dynamo have reportedly acquired U.S. international Jack McGlynn from the Philadelphia Union, with the Western Conference side paying a straight cash fee of $2M for his services. No allocation money is set to be involved, according tothe same report.

    McGlynn made his USMNT debut this past January under Mauricio Pochettino, with the 21-year-old having a breakout camp on the international stage, bagging a goal and an assist in a 3-2 victory over Venezuela.

    The report adds teams from Italy and the English Championship approached the Union, but Houston's fee was a higher valuation.

    was the first to report the trade.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    McGlynn is one of the U.S.' brightest midfield products at the moment and is being touted to have a big future for both club and country on the world's biggest stage. A move within MLS comes as a shock to many, but there is still an expectation that he moves to Europe sooner rather than later, considering the sell-on clause that the Union put on to the deal.

    With the Union, McGlynn made 135 appearances across four seasons. He was signed to a professional deal at age 17, becoming one of many young Union Homegrown players.

    If the deal is announced before Sporting Kansas City's reported transfer agreement for LA Galaxy striker Dejan Joveljic, it will be the first deal under MLS' new rule.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    McGlynn was nominated for the 2024 MLS Goal of the Year, after he scored against rivals D.C. United with a long-range effort that went into the top corner of the net.

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    WHAT NEXT FOR MCGLYNN?

    The 21-year-old looks set to travel to Texas to seal the deal with the Dynamo, just weeks before the 2024 MLS season kicks off.

    The Dynamo's campaign begins on Feb. 22 against cross-state rivals, FC Dallas. McGlynn will face his former club Philadelphia on Saturday, July 19.

Worth more than Szmodics: Ipswich star has seen value rise 260% since exit

Over the years, Ipswich Town have had some big names play for the club. Before Kieran McKenna took the Tractor Boys from League One to the Premier League in consecutive seasons, some current-day Premier League stars wore that famous blue shirt during their time in the football league.

The likes of Trevoh Chalobah spent a season on loan at Portman Road from boyhood club Chelsea, and Tyrone Mings, now part of Unai Emery’s successful Aston Villa side, played 63 times for the club before a move to Bournemouth. The likes of Chris Wood and Ainsley Maitland-Niles have also played for Ipswich.

Another of their former players, who has since gone on to play European football, turned out to be a genius piece of business from the club. That player is Adam Webster.

Adam Webster’s record at Ipswich

Brighton and Hove Albion centre-back Webster spent two seasons at Portman Road when they were in the Championship between 2016 and 2018. He was part of a side that managed to avoid relegation, finishing mid-table in both of his seasons at the club.

The Tractor Boys signed the centre-back in June 2016 from Portsmouth, the club where he first broke through. He cost the East Anglian outfit around £750k, according to BBC Sport, which, at the time was a record fee for Mick McCarthy as Ipswich boss.

The centre-back went on to make 53 appearances for the club over the two seasons, managing to get himself on the scoresheet once, against Birmingham City, and grab three assists along the way.

Frustratingly for the defender, injuries hampered his time at Portman Road. In his first season, he missed 259 days, and 44 games, with five separate cases of injury, before missing a further 94 games and 17 games with three different injury issues in his second campaign.

Eventually, the defender departed the club in 2018, joining Championship rivals Bristol City. His move to Ashton Gate cost £3.5m, although there were reports of clauses in the move increasing that to £8m.

Webster’s value in 2024

Nowadays, the defender is worth even more, as he continues to ply his trade on the South Coast at Brighton. He has become a key player at the Amex Stadium and was even praised by Jamie Carragher in 2022 for being “better than any other English central defender” at playing out from the back with both feet.

The Seagulls paid £20m to sign the defender in 2019, and he became their record signing at the time. He now ranks 10th on that list, alongside some superb players who have been signed by Brighton’s effective recruitment strategy.

Brighton most expensive signings of all time

Player

Signed from

Fee

Georginio Rutter

Leeds

£39.3m

Yankuba Minteh

Newcastle

£29.4m

Joao Pedro

Watford

£28.8m

Mats Weiffer

Feyenoord

£26.9m

Brajan Gruda

Mainz

£26.5m

Ferdi Kadioglu

Fenerbache

£25.2m

Matt O’Riley

Celtic

£24.8m

Moises Caicedo

Independiente

£23.7m

Carlos Baleba

Lille

£22.7m

Adam Webster

Bristol City

£20m

Stats from Transfermarkt

He has since gone on to make 142 appearances for the South Coast outfit, although he has sadly been hampered by injuries at the Amex, too. He has so far managed to amass eight goals, including the first of a 2-1 win away to Arsenal, and three assists.

Despite his injury problems, the defender has certainly put in some key contributions, skippering the side on six occasions, and even featuring in the Europa League, a five-minute cameo at home to Ajax.

Nowadays, the defender, who was described as “immaculate” in possession by former Portsmouth teammate Tom Craddock, has seen his value drop slightly. According to Transfermarkt, he is now worth £12.6m, although that still represents a 260% increase from the £3.5m upfront fee that the Tractor Boys received for him back in 2019.

That is also worth more than summer signing Sammie Szmodics, who cost £9m up front. The Ireland international is valued at around £8.4m according to Transfermarkt, following a superb 2023/24 campaign for Blackburn Rovers in which he scored 27 Championship goals.

The 29-year-old has also caught the eye early into his time at Ipswich, after netting in the defeat away to Manchester City, with the club having certainly progressed since the days in which Webster was plying his trade under the likes of McCarthy.

Market Movers

Football FanCast's Market Movers series explores the changing landscape of the modern transfer market. How much is your club's star player or biggest flop worth today?

There is certainly a strong argument to be made that Ipswich made a mistake selling Webster. Hindsight is a wonderful thing, and knowing the player he has become, the Tractor Boys may well wish he was in McKenna’s squad today, alongside Szmodics and co.

Ipswich must regret not signing £16m PL star who's better than Hutchinson

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Oct 3, 2024

Djordje Mihailovic’s journey to MLS: Family, frustration at AZ Alkmaar, resurgence at Colorado Rapids, USMNT hopes

One moment changed everything for Mihailovic, and since joining Colorado in MLS, he's got eyes on trophies and the USMNT

MIAMI – Djordje Mihailovic had spent just two and a half months at AZ Alkmaar when a phone call in 2023 changed everything.

It was his father, Aleksandar. His mother, Zivka, had been diagnosed with stage four ovarian cancer. At first, Mihailovic admitted he didn’t know how to react. He was numb from what he learned and tried to compartmentalize it.

“I tried my best to focus on playing,” Mihailovic told GOAL. “I just came to Europe finally, because it was a big goal of mine. I tried to kind of force it away for a little bit.”

Despite his best efforts, the raw emotion of knowing his mother was dealing with a life-threatening disease understandably affected him.

“When the summer came… that was in my head, every day, every training, every game, and it came to a point where I'm trying my best in training might not be enough,” he told GOAL at the MLS Media Day.

When Mihailovic went to play with the U.S. national team in the 2023 Gold Cup, his parents and family attended every match. It felt familiar. It felt like home. And most importantly, it was more fulfilling for him to be there for Zivka than anything happening on the pitch. That summer, Mihailovic was conflicted: Is this dream worth fighting for?

“That feeling, it kind of changed a lot, like coming back to the U.S. watching, or having my family watch me in person,” he said. “And I told myself, like, if I go into the new season and nothing really changes, because, well, their coach's decision, I'm not playing or whatever, this is something. I think it's time for me to just go.”

That summer changed everything for Mihailovic and ultimately paved the way for him to return to MLS as the leading catalyst for a resurgent Colorado Rapids side. Building on an impressive 2024 could be his ticket to even bigger things in 2025, including adding to his 11 caps with the U.S. national team. Mauricio Pochettino has expressed the desire to add more No. 10s to his squad, and Mihailovic had a record-breaking season for the Rapids in that role. He could be part of the solution for the Argentine.

Yet, his path to this resurgence wasn’t without challenges.

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    Struggles in Alkmaar

    Mihailovic’s frustrations at AZ went beyond personal struggles – trust, or a lack of it, played a major role. Before joining for $6 million, Mihailovic was one of MLS’s most coveted players, tallying 13 goals and 22 assists in 56 appearances under Wilfried Nancy at CF Montréal.

    AZ outmaneuvered German and Belgian clubs for his signature, and as a self-proclaimed soccer history buff, Mihailovic saw Jozy Altidore’s success there as a sign he was making the right move.

    “AZ have a history of developing young players, helping them reach levels they probably couldn’t imagine reaching,” Mihailovic said at the time. “I spoke with the sporting director and the coach, they have a similar philosophy to here. When I got there, I felt very comfortable. Speaking with the coach about where I fit in with the group, their plan – everything feels right.”

    And for the first few months, it did. Mihailovic arrived midseason, with AZ sporting director Max Huiberts and then-coach Pascal Jansen (now NYCFC’s head coach) selling him on a plan: he’d start as a substitute for the remainder of the 2022-23 season before stepping into a bigger role in year two. The adjustment phase went smoothly – he settled into Dutch football, learned Jansen’s system, and built chemistry with his teammates.

    Then came the summer break.

    “I was supposed to become an important player, and this is what the coach told me,” Mihailovic said. “This is kind of why the sporting director, the scouts, they brought me in, because they believed in me. And I came into preseason late because I played in the Gold Cup, and I felt like it was used against me.”

    Instead of the expanded role he expected, Mihailovic found himself in limbo – never sure if he’d start, how much he’d play, or what was expected of him. With his mother battling illness back home, the instability made it even harder to find joy in his time at AZ. And in his view, being American didn’t help.

    “I knew I was an outsider from the beginning, being an American – and like, it's a normal thing that Europeans kind of just look at Americans completely different than each other. So I knew going in, I had to deal with that,” he said. “It’s unfortunate, but it’s the reality.”

    Several U.S. internationals have voiced similar frustrations while playing in Europe. In his Paramount+ documentary, Christian Pulisic addressed the bias Americans face abroad.

    “It pisses me off, in a way 'cause I've seen it in front of my eyes,” he said. “It happens for sure, and you can feel it. If it comes down to me or them and it's a 50-50 for the call from the coach [on] who's going to play or something like that, I think it exists.”

    Between mid-August and late November that season, Mihailovic played just 207 minutes, making one start.

    “People don't really think about the mind part of being an athlete, you know, they just expect you to go out and perform the best and be the best player,” Mihailovic said. “It's very hard to do that.”

    Jansen gave him four starts in five matches late in the year, but the leash was short – he was subbed early in three. The breaking point came Dec. 17, when AZ hosted league-leading PSV.

    “I didn't know I was going to start until 45 minutes before,” he said. “But when you see a pattern of decisions made, and then I ended up getting subbed out in 35 minutes in that game. We're losing, I think 3-0 after 20 minutes, and he subs me out – and I'm subbed out at home. Yeah, I kind of knew that was from that moment. That was icing on the cake for me.”

    That was Mihailovic’s final appearance for AZ. The following month, he and the club agreed to part ways, with the Colorado Rapids securing his return to MLS for a $3M transfer fee.

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  • Djordje Mihailovic

    Family over everything

    Mihailovic had other opportunities to stay in Europe, but with his mother’s health top of mind, MLS was his priority. He wanted to be in the U.S., monitoring her progress and helping in any way he could. The North American top flight was his focus, even though he did get frustrated by hearing some of the assessments of his move.

    “I felt like coming back to MLS was the right decision,” he said. “And unfortunately, it seems like everybody you know in the media kind of looks down on [that] and has an opinion on other people's career choices. Like, ‘What are we doing? Here is my choice.’ “

    Yet, the moment Mihailovic landed in Denver to hear a pitch from the Rapids about joining them, he was sold. He got off his flight from Amsterdam and was immediately captivated by the scenic front range of the Rocky Mountains.

    “In Holland, there’s no sun, it’s always cloudy,” he said. “I land [in Denver] and there’s sunshine and no clouds. It was a breath of fresh air… From the very first second, I was extremely excited and I knew it was a challenge and a challenge I wanted.”

    The Rapids haven’t always been an easy sell. The year before, they won just five games – tying the franchise low. The team was reported to have the lowest payroll in MLS by a margin and its supporter groups staged multiple protests questioning the ambition of ownership. Mihailovic chose to look at the club’s actions that offseason, bringing Zack Steffen back to MLS and recruiting several former stars – like Cole Bassett – from Europe, and reflect on its history as a 2010 MLS Cup winner.

    “This club isn’t satisfied with just qualifying for the playoffs, given the conversation between me, the coach [Chris Armas] and president [Pádraig Smith],” Mihailovic emphasized. “I felt that ambition of the club, wanting to be at the top of the West, wanting to challenge for MLS Cup.”

    Mihailovic was also impressed, in particular, with the background of then-new head coach Armas in deciding to make his move. Armas is a former USMNT international who had the rare opportunity of coaching as an assistant at both Manchester United and Leeds United, as well as two head coaching MLS roles in the Red Bulls and Toronto FC. Mihailovic also remembers watching Armas as a kid in the early days of the Chicago Fire. 

    “He knows how to make every single person in the room feel like the most important person, and that's incredible,” Mihailovic said. “Especially for the players who might not be getting the minutes that they want.”

    And more important than his sporting fit, was his return home. It wasn’t the Chicago suburbs where he grew up, but he was able to make sure that he was a presence in his family’s life and make sure he was there for his mother through her treatments.

    “It’s been tough, but she’s good,” he said. “She’s had to change her types of treatments but she feels good.”

    Due to the nature of his mother's treatments, it would have been impossible for her to see games in Europe. In Colorado, Mihailovic’s parents are regulars at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park. Mihailovic and wife Isla also became parents last May, another defining moment. Armas tries to emphasize to the sometimes intense Mihailovic the importance of being there for family.

    “I’ll see his wife and I’ll say ‘Make sure he’s changing diapers and doing midnight feedings,’ ” Armas said with a laugh.

    All of these factors would lead to a resurgent 2024 for Mihailovic, one the midfielder hopes will mean bigger things this year – on both the club and potentially international level.

  • Imagn

    Fiery mentality, historic season

    Watching a Rapids game, Mihailovic is hard to miss. There’s a fierce intensity with each touch and menacing stares at opponents and referees when things go awry. MLS occasionally draws criticism for lulls of the season where the quality on the pitch dips due to the league’s lack of relegation being a threat and that more than half the league has a chance of playing in the postseason when the regular season wraps up. But taking off moments or plays isn’t a part of Mihailovic’s DNA. 

    Son of Serbian and Macedonian immigrants, both from the former Yugoslavia, there’s a fighter emotion even in just words, with Mihailovic saying, “If you look at that part of the world, people from that part of the world, they're very emotional people.” 

    He likened his intensity to tennis superstar Novak Djokovic, mentioning how often people criticize the 24-time Grand Slam champion for being emotional, but also noting that Djokovic needs that to win. When quizzed on whether he sees any similarities in another Serbian superstar Nikola Jokic, the Denver Nuggets’ MVP center, Mihailovic sees the connection.

    “I can tell that he uses his emotions to the best of his ability,” Mihailovic said. “There's also moments where you know he's gonna get thrown out of the game for hitting someone. It might not be helpful, but 99 percent of the time he's able to use his emotions [to help his team], and now he's the best player in the league for some time.”

    That mentality not only applies to games but in training. 

    “He's not here to just make friends and play some games,” Armas said of Mihailovic. “He’s tough on guys… He's not a guy that's going to wait to send a nice f*cking text message to the guy and say, ‘Hey, it's got to be better.' In training, he's going to say it right there.” 

    All of that came together in 2024 in a strong way for the Rapids, as Mihailovic put together an 11-goal, 14-assist season – breaking the club’s previous record of 24 goal contributions in a campaign. Prior to a slew of injuries for the team, the club at one point sat third in the Western Conference before slipping to seventh in the final few weeks of the season. 

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    Looking ahead to 2025

    The key for Mihailovic this season will be how he turns that intensity into becoming a leader on a still relatively young Rapids team. As competitive as the West was last season, it appears to be even more challenging this season.

    U.S. internationals Jesus Ferriera and Paul Arriola have joined the Seattle Sounders in two blockbuster moves. The Houston Dynamo added Jack McGlynn to a team that already features a potential MVP candidate in Ezequiel Ponce. Both Los Angeles teams, including the defending champions in the Galaxy and LAFC, have been quiet so far, but no one expects that to last. Then there’s a brand new team in San Diego, which features Hirving Lozano – arguably the best Mexican player to join the league in his prime since Carlos Vela. 

    “It just doesn't get easier in MLS with the ways teams are building rosters and ownerships are having some fun adding to rosters in the Western Conference,” Armas said. 

    The Rapids haven’t made any major additions this offseason, but Mihailovic believes he and his teammate can’t get fixated on what other teams are doing.

     “We can't look at what other teams are doing, what other types of signings that these teams are making, trades whatever,” he said. “There's no real kind of set thing that can get you to a trophy.”

    Armas mentioned some of the lack of major signings is by design, the team is counting on some of its young academy players and draft picks to take the next step this year. It’s a formula the club has seen success with in the past. Former No. 3 pick Moises Bombito was arguably the best defender in MLS last season before his transfer to OGC Nice and the club has similar hopes in some of the players it drafted. During this period, Mihailovic will be among those counted on to help bring the young players to speed. 

    Mihailovic is ready to embrace that role, with Armas also underscoring the urgency of the situation. 

    “It can't just always be him," Mihailovic said. "You know, last year, we ended the season five games losing. There's only so much a coach can say in that situation. The majority of the talk has to come from us players.” 

    If Mihailovic can help the Rapids take another step, it could bode well for his chances to represent the U.S. with the national team. He was called up to Mauricio Pochettino’s January camp, but had to pull out due to an ankle injury that he suffered at the end of last season. Mihailovic was disappointed he couldn’t play, but he appreciated the new Argentine’s commitment to giving players chances – especially those who are playing in MLS. He pointed to his own teammate Steffen as an example. 

    “Zack was injured a couple days into his first camp with him, and he's brought back to the next camp. So you can see that the consistency is there with him,” Mihailovic said. 

    Mihailovic is hoping he’ll get some consideration for the upcoming March Nations League camp, but he knows his play and the Rapids' success will be a big part of determining if he gets a chance. 

    “The expectation is to lift as many trophies as you can,” he said. “It's important as the team starts the season, every single player believes that we can achieve it. Not the type of names that we're signing or whatever. Every single person has to believe, that we can achieve those things, making deep runs in every single competition we're in.”

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Arsenal are looking at signing a Real Madrid target for manager Mikel Arteta, with a member of their squad expected to leave in January.

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The Premier League title hopefuls remain unbeaten in all competitions so far this campaign, partly highlighting the excellent job done by Edu Gaspar and his recruitment team over the last few windows.

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It could even be longer.

1

By
Emilio Galantini

Oct 8, 2024

Edu and Arteta, who work in tandem on the club’s transfer policy, have transformed Unai Emery’s previous squad from serial underachievers to real contenders for silverware – and they’re unlucky not to have more trophies in the cabinet from these last few seasons.

Pep Guardiola’s Man City have set the bar very high for teams hoping to win the Premier League, and Arsenal’s tally of 89 points last term would’ve been enough to clinch title glory in many of the previous campaigns.

Arsenal’s next five Premier League games

Date

Bournemouth (away)

October 19

Liverpool (home)

October 27

Newcastle United (away)

November 2

Chelsea (away)

November 10

Nottingham Forest (home)

November 23

Arteta has set a target of over 90 points for 2024/2025, according to some reports, with City’s loss of star player Rodri for the rest of this season potentially giving them a real chance of usurping the Sky Blues this time round.

In the background, Edu and his staff are working on plans to upgrade the squad, either in January or next summer. A lot of rumours have centered around a possible new striker, after Arsenal elected not to sign one in January.

Arsenal did attempt to sign Benjamin Sesko from RB Leipzig and were linked with a host of other centre-forwards, but the Gunners ended up keeping their faith in makeshift centre-forward Kai Havertz.

Arteta is said to be keen on a partner for Havertz, though, amid doubts surrounding the suitability of Gabriel Jesus. Meanwhile, it is believed that Arsenal are interested in Como midfielder Nico Paz, and they have eyes on upgrading their central defensive options too.

Arsenal are looking at signing Vitor Reis

Despite the addition of Riccardo Calafiori in January, reports have linked Arsenal with Palmeiras star Vitor Reis.

The Brazilian’s deal includes an £83 million release clause, but it is believed Edu and co could strike a deal for much cheaper than that. According to The Boot Room, Arsenal are looking at signing Reis alongside Real Madrid, who are also believed to be very keen on the South American.

This comes as 24-year-old defender Jakub Kiwior is expected to leave in the winter window, so Reis could act as a direct replacement for the Poland international.

The Brazil Under-17 international has also been praised by Football Analyst Ben Mattinson for his bravery and leadership traits.

“Vitor Reis’ rise to global recognition from elite clubs is massively down to his impressive mentality. When watching him, you can see that bravery in every action,” wrote Mattinson on X.

“He has a commanding, confident presence that’s rare in such a young defender. Many early leadership traits have been shown already and when I first saw him play for Brazil’s U17’s, his leadership shone amongst his peers.”

Aston Villa wanted to sign £54m star on a free but got Duran instead

Riding high still on their unbelievable success in the Champions League over Bayern Munich, Unai Emery’s Aston Villa had to settle for a share of the points against Manchester United last time out back in Premier League action.

Whilst Villa’s tie with Bayern was high-octane and fascinating to watch unfold, the goalless draw with Erik ten Hag’s Red Devils was a slog in contrast, as the hosts managed just one paltry shot on target.

Still, with the explosive nature of Jhon Duran at Emery’s disposal to call upon from off the substitutes bench, there are bound to be far more exciting contests to come.

Jhon Duran's form at Villa

Duran has been a man possessed for the West Midlands outfit this campaign so far, with the 20-year-old hotshot more than justifying his slender £18m fee in the here and now.

The entertaining Colombian centre-forward has registered a ridiculous six goals from ten games this campaign for Villa, with four of those coming in the Premier League despite making zero starts in the competition.

Of course, the standout pick from his glowing resume of strikes this season was against Vincent Kompany’s Bayern, as the super confident attacker amazingly caught out former World Cup winning goalkeeper Manuel Neuer with a smart finish late on to win his side the tight clash.

Duran has now been rightly rewarded with a new bumper contract at Villa Park, which now sees the breakout attacker stay put in England until 2030 to detract any onlookers interested in him, as the 20-year-old continues to be a clutch player for his side when it matters.

Jhon Duran

Yet, although Emery and Co will be overjoyed that they managed to get their hands on Duran when they did, the Premier League side will be left wondering whether they could have snapped up a different attacker last January.

Impressively, the player in question is actually outscoring the ex-Chicago Fire man.

One that got away

The transfers that nearly happened but never did. This article is part of Football FanCast's One That Got Away series.

Who Villa could have signed over Duran

As per various different reports, Villa were previously keen on adding French star Marcus Thuram to their ranks, with rumours circulating that he was going to relocate to England from then-employers Borussia Monchengladbach early last year.

Manchester United were also reportedly in the running to try and secure the deadly Frenchman’s services, but Thuram eventually made his way to Inter Milan in the summer instead, with the Serie A giants jubilant at the fact that they managed to pick up the lofty 6 foot 4 striker for free after his Gladbach contract had run its course.

Thuram vs Duran: 24/25 League Stats

Stat (* = per 90 mins)

Thuram

Duran

Games played

7

7

Goals scored

7

4

Assists

3

0

Shots

2.9

1.4

Expected goals (xG)

2.60

2.06

Scoring frequency

79 mins

46 mins

Goal conversion %

35%

40%

Stats by Sofascore

Interestingly, Thuram boasts more goals in the top Italian division than Duran has managed this campaign so far in the Premier League, with a stunning seven strikes from just seven games for Inter, which takes his total goal tally for the Serie A titans up to 22 goals from 54 appearances.

Far outperforming his xG too, it would have been a joy to watch if both Thuram and his theoretical Colombian teammate lined up with each other at Villa Park, giving Emery’s men some crazy firepower away from leading man Ollie Watkins.

As a result of his continued excellent performances donning the number nine jersey for Inter, the 27-year-old’s transfer value now stands at a hefty £54m according to Transfermarkt.

Yet, although Thuram has even been labelled as “special” by one of his Inter teammates Benjamin Pavard at the peak of his powers, Villa will be more than content with the fact they have Duran to call upon as he strives to continue taking the English game by storm when the international break is over.

After Duran: Aston Villa must hand a massive wage increase to amazing star

Aston Villa have various players who are now deserving of a better contract.

By
Kelan Sarson

Oct 9, 2024

Liverpool player ratings vs Everton: Mohamed Salah's heroics aren't enough to claim derby spoils as James Tarkowski snatches last-second draw in incredible scenes

Liverpool were denied with the last kick of the game in a fitting last-ever derby at Everton's famous home

Liverpool were denied victory in the last seconds of the final Merseyside derby at Goodison Park, with Everton snatching a 2-2 draw at the very death. Arne Slot's men moved seven points clear at the top of the Premier League, but this will feel like two dropped rather than one gained having been seconds from the win.

With little over ten minutes gone Everton went ahead. The Liverpool defence went to sleep from a quick Jarrad Branthwaite free-kick, allowing Beto to ghost in behind Ibrahima Konate and coolly finish beyond Alisson.

But the Reds weren't behind for long and were soon level through Alexis Mac Allister. The hosts failed to contend with the second ball from a set piece, allowing Mohamed Salah's cross to be nodded up and in by the Argentine.

After the break, Everton were incensed when the ball struck Konate's hand in the penalty area, with both referee and VAR dismissing calls for a spot-kick. Liverpool, meanwhile, were also denied a penalty when Dominik Szoboszlai went down on the edge of the box.

Everton thought they had gone back in front when Branthwaite smashed home a corner from close range, but the offside flag went up to deny him and quickly curtail the celebrations.

With just under 20 minutes remaining, Liverpool notched themselves ahead for the first time on the night. James Tarkowski's sliced clearance allowed the Reds another chance to force an opening, with Curtis Jones' blocked shot dropping to Salah to lash home.

David Moyes' men tried to conjure up one final twist, and boy did they leave it late. With 98 minutes on the clock, a deep cross bounced all the way to Tarkowski at the far post, and he unleashed one hell of a half-volley to claw back a point, sending the home crowd into delirium. The goal was allowed to stand after an extremely lengthy and nervy VAR check for offside.

There was more drama after full-time, with Curtis Jones, Arne Slot and Abdoulaye Doucoure all shown red cards following the whistle.

GOAL rates Liverpool's players from Goodison Park…

  • Getty Images Sport

    Goalkeeper & Defence

    Alisson (5/10):

    Had very little to do until the game's latter stages, with Everton unable to get meaningful shots away until they really needed to.

    Conor Bradley (5/10):

    The youngster felt the full effect of the derby, with the ferocious home crowd furious he wasn't sent off for a second bookable offence having tripped Doucoure in the second half. Slot took no further chances and hooked him for Alexander-Arnold.

    Ibrahima Konate (6/10):

    Could have done with a shout from to prevent Beto simply walking in behind for Everton's opener. Dealt with the occasion well from that point onwards.

    Virgil van Dijk (6/10):

    Didn't rise to Beto's ultimatum off the ball and was a joy to watch on it, effortlessly spreading play with a series of diagonal pings.

    Andy Robertson (6/10):

    For the most part untroubled in his battles with the swift Lindstrom, though was still replaced for fresher legs in Tsimikas regardless.

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    Midfield

    Ryan Gravenberch (6/10):

    Occasionally danced between trailing Everton bodies, but seldom enough to make a lasting impact. Taken off for Jones.

    Alexis Mac Allister (7/10):

    Hauled Liverpool off the canvas with an early equaliser, again coming from a header. Weaved his way through the midfield pack in similar fashion to partner Gravenberch.

    Dominik Szoboszlai (6/10):

    Thrust himself over every blade of grass, often leading the press himself. Came up with the odd half-volley pass to get the away section in the mood.

  • Getty Images Sport

    Attack

    Mohamed Salah (8/10):

    Typical Salah, picking and choosing his moments to make an impact. His cross for Mac Allister's leveller was exquisite, while his nose for goals led to him landing at the right place at the right time to put Liverpool ahead.

    Luis Diaz (5/10):

    The only survivor from the starting line-up which lost to Plymouth. Muzzled out of central zones by Everton's ginormous defenders and appeared far more at home when shifted back to the wing. Off for Jota for the last few minutes.

    Cody Gakpo (5/10):

    One of the Dutchman's quieter games over on the left flank, with the equally lanky Jake O'Brien proving his match. Withdrawn for Nunez.

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    Subs & Manager

    Trent Alexander-Arnold (6/10):

    Came off the bench after not being deemed fit enough to start. Provided a noticeable upgrade in technique and confidence.

    Curtis Jones (5/10):

    Replaced Gravenberch on the hour. It was his blocked shot which led to Salah's goal, though he didn't cover himself in glory trying to clear the ball before Tarkowski's strike. Sent off amid ugly scenes after full-time.

    Kostas Tsimikas (6/10):

    Powered his way down the left after coming on for Robertson. The finger of blame will naturally be pointed his way after Tarkowski came in down his side for the equaliser.

    Darwin Nunez (6/10):

    Liverpool found it much easier to progress the ball with a natural No.9 leading the line. Selflessly set the ball back for Jones leading to Salah's goal.

    Diogo Jota (N/A):

    On for Diaz for the closing stages.

    Arne Slot (5/10):

    This was far from a pretty Liverpool performance, and they oh so nearly got away with it. The draw will be difficult to stomach – reflected in his post-match red card – but at least a point was salvaged and they are now seven clear of Arsenal.

'Well deserved' – Zlatan Ibrahimovic accepts humiliating award after AC Milan knocked out of Champions League by Feyenoord

Zlatan Ibrahimovic accepted a humiliating award for the ninth time after AC Milan were knocked out of the Champions League by Feyenoord.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

  • AC Milan knocked out of UCL
  • Beaten by Feyenoord in play-offs
  • Zlatan accepts humiliating award
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Milan lost 2-1 on aggregate to Feyenoord on Tuesday to exit the competition in disappointing fashion. Following the defeat, actor Valerio Staffelli gave the senior Milan advisor The Tapiro d'Oro (Golden Tapir) – a prize delivered to celebrities who have been humiliated or defeated. This was the ninth time Ibrahimovic has received this award, with the ex-striker saying on this occasion it was "well deserved".

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    WHAT ZLATAN IBRAHIMOVIC SAID

    He said on : “We are disappointed and angry, the Tapiro is well deserved. It was not a positive moment. [Wednesday] there was a lack of maturity, but now the objective is to remain united as a group for the championship and the Coppa Italia.”

  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Milan are having a disappointing season as they sit seventh in Serie A and they are out of the Champions League before the last 16 stage. All they really have to play for is the Coppa Italia and qualifying for next season's Champions League.

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    WHAT NEXT?

    Ibrahimovic's old side will hope to bounce back from this setback when they take on Torino in the league this weekend.

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