Eddie Howe tactical masterstroke, Alexander Isak magic keep Newcastle United’s Champions League charge on course

Newcastle United’s Bruno Guimaraes celebrates with head coach Graeme Jones after the match. (Action Images via Reuters)
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Updated 08 April 2023
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Eddie Howe tactical masterstroke, Alexander Isak magic keep Newcastle United’s Champions League charge on course

  • Magpies dig deep to cement 3rd place on Premier League ladder with 2-1 victory over spirited Brentford

LONDON: Risk-taker Eddie Howe admits he “threw caution to the wind” in search of three points at Brentford after his half-time masterstroke ensured Newcastle United maintained their Champions League charge.

An Ivan Toney penalty, having seen one saved by Nick Pope earlier, gave the Bees the lead before Newcastle blew their rivals away in the second period thanks to a Joelinton-created David Raya own goal, followed by a moment of absolute magic by Alexander Isak.

The game, however, was very much defined by Newcastle’s head coach and his introduction of Wilson at the midway point. Victory sees the Magpies further cement their spot right in the European mix — and this run of five wins on the bounce in the Premier League has many in the fanbase already dusting off their passports.

Newcastle remain third in the table, jumping back ahead of Manchester United after their 2-0 win over Everton earlier in the day.

Howe said: “It was a very tough game. It was very physical, as we knew it would be. We suffered in the first half. But second half, what a response from a group of players that have played three games in six days. They were asked to dig really deep for the result, but responded really well.

“We changed things tactically [in the second half]. Sometimes that can give you a lift in itself. We knew we were desperate for the result and threw caution to the wind a little bit. The players responded well physically, even though we were a little bit fatigued from the week we have had. That is down to the characters we have.”

Howe made two changes to the side who hammered West Ham in midweek, one of which was enforced. Isak and Joe Willock were both recalled with the injured Allan Saint-Maximin missing out and Callum Wilson starting this one from the bench, despite his two goals at the London Stadium on Wednesday evening.

While the Magpies were dominant on the east side of the capital, they were anything but in the west in the opening 45.

Pope started off what would turn out to be a man-of-the-match performance when he somehow managed to get a glove on a goal-bound Pontus Jansson header, only for Toney to turn in the rebound. VAR may have its doubters but it 100 percent got the first big call of the afternoon correct when it deemed the England forward offside before beating Pope to the ball.

Having already rode their luck, Newcastle’s goal continued to live a charmed life as this time two horrific defensive errors gave Toney a chance to redeem himself from 12 yards.

Fabian Schar seemed to lose the flight of the ball in the low London sun and Kevin Schade took full advantage, running the Swiss down the line before being clattered by Sven Botman in the area. No need for VAR on this one, penalty.

Having never missed a spot kick in the top flight, and only failed once from the spot in 28 attempts in senior football, few expected anything other than a Toney goal.

However, Pope had other ideas.

The keeper picked the right direction and made the save look easy.

The scenario, though, was to be played out again 20 minutes later, right on the stroke of half time.

As Rico Henry stretched to head a ball in the area, Isak stretched out a boot to clear.

Nothing was given at first, but the referee was told to have a look at the monitors. On second viewing he changed his mind and Toney this time made no mistake from the spot.

While it felt like a harsh blow, you could make a more than fair case for the hosts to be ahead at the break.

Having seen his side look a clear second best, Howe produced a bit of magic of his own at half time, switching from his usual 4-3-3 to a 4-2-3-1 and bringing Anthony Gordon on to the field, as well as Wednesday’s hero Wilson.

The change had an almost instantaneous impact, wrestling control away from the hosts and United looked rampant, much like midweek.

They were level when Joelinton, dropped into a deeper role in the new shape, went marauding forward, turning Ben Mee inside out on the right, before firing a low cross into the danger area, which diverted into the net via the back of Raya’s leg.

From behind, the Magpies were soon in front and Swede Isak lit up the Gtech Community Stadium with a finish right from the top drawer.

Wilson worked himself into space on the right and tucked into Isak, who with one sweep of his lengthy right lever, guided round Raya and into the top corner in front of the jubilant Newcastle support.

No player in the Premier League, well outside of the other-worldly Erling Haaland, has a better goals-per-minute ratio than the former Real Sociedad man.

Wilson thought he had added another of his own when he had the ball in the net, converting a set-piece from the right. However, the ball struck his arm before he guided past Raya — and while it was again harsh, to the letter of the law, it was the right call by the officials back at Stockley Park.

In the final 15, Howe’s men had to withstand a bit of a storm, but did so thanks to the dominant, commanding actions of Pope, who made one excellent stop from a Toney flicked header.

On the break, Newcastle looked to seal the deal but Bruno Guimaraes and Elliot Anderson wasted opportunities to make this look more handsome on paper than the reality deserved.

So could Wilson and Isak playing together be an option moving forward?

Howe said: “I think they can play together in the right circumstances for the team. Do I see it long-term? Probably not. We don’t want to force it and the team suffers; we want it to be to the benefit of the team. Today was the right time and they caused them no end of problems.”


Sinner thrashes Vukic to roar into Wimbledon third round

Updated 03 July 2025
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Sinner thrashes Vukic to roar into Wimbledon third round

LONDON: World number one Jannik Sinner demolished Australia’s Aleksandar Vukic 6-1 6-1 6-3 in a Center Court masterclass to move ominously into the third round of Wimbledon on Thursday.
The Italian was streets ahead of the 93rd-ranked Vukic who barely laid a glove on the top seed in the opening two sets before saving some face with a bit of third-set resistance.
Sinner, bidding to win the title for the first time, never loosened his grip on a one-sided contest although he did need six match points to finish off Vukic in a prolonged final game, banging down his 12th ace.
The 23-year-old has yet to drop serve and has conceded only 12 games in the six sets he has played so far and will now train his sights on unseeded Spaniard Pedro Martinez.


Cilic sends fourth seed Draper crashing out of Wimbledon

Updated 03 July 2025
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Cilic sends fourth seed Draper crashing out of Wimbledon

LONDON: Jack Draper admitted he needs to overhaul his grass-court game after the British fourth seed suffered a shock Wimbledon exit as former finalist Marin Cilic rolled back the years to reach the third round.
Cilic, the Croatian world number 83, blasted 53 winners in a 6-4, 6-3, 1-6, 6-4 victory that stunned the partisan British fans on Court One on Thursday.
Draper is the new figurehead of British tennis after taking on a role filled for a generation by the now-retired former Wimbledon winner Andy Murray.
But the 23-year-old has a poor record at his home Grand Slam.
He is yet to make it past the second round in four appearances at the grass-court tournament.
“It’s probably one of my toughest losses. Pretty frustrated and upset. It hurts badly,” Draper said.
“I’ve been disappointed with my game on grass this year. I felt great on clay and hard courts but as soon as I came on grass I felt a big difference.
“It highlighted a lot of weaknesses in my game, especially against a player as good as him on grass. I can take a lot of lessons from it.”
Draper is the latest highly-ranked star to endure a surprise exit from Wimbledon this year, with German men’s third seed Alexander Zverev and four of the top five women’s seeds all eliminated.
Draper made his breakthrough last season with a run to the US Open semifinals, yet he has failed to make the last eight at any of this year’s three Grand Slams.
“It makes me think that Andy Murray’s achievement of winning here twice is just unbelievable,” Draper said.
“Obviously you guys mention the pressure all the time but the main reason is I wasn’t good enough today.
“Even though I’ve had an amazing progression in the last 12 months, this shows the work I need to do. I thought I was further ahead than I am.”
In contrast to Draper’s woes in south-west London, Cilic has an impressive record at Wimbledon, finishing as runner-up in 2017, when he lost in the final against Roger Federer.
The former world number three has not played at the All England Club since 2021 and has slipped down the rankings after battling a knee injury that required surgery.
“My emotions are just incredible. Where I was two years ago, I can’t even describe. It has been a long journey but I never lost any faith,” Cilic said.
“It was a long and testing period, plus a huge challenge for me in this part of my career to come back and play at this level.
“To play in front of this crowd is incredible. I’m just feeling great and hoping I can continue to play well.”
Cilic has reached three Grand Slam finals, winning his sole major title at the 2014 US Open and losing to Federer at Wimbledon in 2017 and the Australian Open in 2018.
Now 36, the big-serving Cilic is firmly in the twilight of his career.
He had lost in the opening round at the Australian and French Opens this year, but his superb display against Draper underlined his enduring quality on grass.
He returned to the top 100 by winning the second-tier Challenger event in Nottingham last month.
Dedicating the win to his children, Cilic added: “They are one of the reasons that I kept such a great passion for this sport.
“Also always running after them keeps me in great shape! I’m so pleased they are here supporting me.”


England in Deep trouble after India captain Gill’s superb double century

Updated 03 July 2025
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England in Deep trouble after India captain Gill’s superb double century

  • Gill: “I worked on a few things before the series as well, that I thought might be important for me going into Test cricket”

BIRMINGHAM, UK: India captain Shubman Gill scored a superb maiden, record-breaking Test double-century before stand-in fast bowler Akash Deep took England in consecutive balls at Edgbaston on Thursday.
Gill’s commanding 269 was the cornerstone of India’s first-innings 587 on the second day of the second Test. England were 77-3 at stumps — a huge deficit of 510 runs.
Deep only played because India rested Jasprit Bumrah, the world’s top-ranked Test bowler who is only due to play in three games in this five-match series to minimize the effects of a back injury.
The 28-year-old Deep conceded 12 runs in his first over, but his second was a double-wicket maiden that left England faltering at 13-2.
He had Ben Duckett, fresh from a superb 149 in England’s five-wicket win in the first Test at Headingley, edging to third slip. Gill capped his already brilliant day by holding a fine catch.
Next ball Ollie Pope fell for a golden duck when he nicked Deep to second slip, with KL Rahul clinging on at the second attempt.
Joe Root survived the hat-trick delivery.
India, made to pay for dropping several catches in the cordon at Headingley, then held another when Mohammed Siraj had Crawley edging to Karun Nair at first slip. England were 25-3.
Root  and Yorkshire team-mate Harry Brook  prevented further collapse with an unbroken fourth-wicket stand of 52.
But the day belonged to India and above all Gill, who in just his second Test as skipper broke records previously held by India batting greats Virat Kohli, Sachin Tendulkar and Sunil Gavaskar.
Gill’s innings surpassed the recently retired Kohli’s 254 against South Africa at Pune in 2019 as the highest score by an India Test captain, and replaced Tendulkar’s 241 against Australia at Sydney as the highest score by an India batsman in a Test outside Asia.
It also topped Gavaskar’s celebrated 221 at the Oval in 1979 as the largest score by an India batsman in a Test in England.
“I worked on a few things before the series as well, that I thought might be important for me going into Test cricket,” Gill, who made 147 at Headingley, told Sky Sports.
“Looking at the results, they are working for me,” added Gill, who was equally delighted by India’s much improved out-cricket.
“Fielding was definitely one of those things we spoke about as a team, and it’s great to see that come off so far,” said Gill.
England assistant coach Jeetan Patel accepted the hosts had endured a gruelling time.
“One hundred and fifty overs in the dirt in any scenario is pretty tough,” Patel told reporters.
“Credit must be given to Shubman with the way he’s batted over two days. It was a masterclass in how to bat on a good wicket,” the former New Zealand off-spinner added.
Earlier, the 25-year-old Gill received excellent support from spin-bowling all-rounders Ravindra Jadeja  and Washington Sundar  in partnerships of 203 and 144 for the sixth and seventh wickets.
Until he got out, Gill batted in near flawless fashion.
He was especially severe on Shoaib Bashir, cover-driving the off-spinner for four and lofting him for six, with the bowler largely unthreatening against frontline batsmen in a return of 3-167 in 45 overs.
A hooked single off fast bowler Josh Tongue, whose two wickets cost 119 runs, took Gill to 200, with the elated skipper bowing to a capacity crowd in celebration.
Gill’s marathon innings of 387 balls, including 30 fours and three sixes, spanned some eight-and-a-half hours. It finally ended with a rare false shot when a tired pull off Tongue found Pope at square leg.
England players shook Gill’s hand as he walked off with India now 574-8.
India, again sent into bat by England captain Ben Stokes, had resumed on 310-5, with Gill 114 not out and Jadeja 41 not out.
But India, batting in ideal sunny conditions on Thursday, wanted even more runs from Gill and Jadeja after collapses of 7-41 and 6-31 at Headingley proved costly — and the increasingly ruthless duo got them.


Chelsea agree deal to sign English winger Gittens from Dortmund

Updated 03 July 2025
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Chelsea agree deal to sign English winger Gittens from Dortmund

  • The agreement was made at Fort Lauderdale, with contractual details still to be settled
  • “Jamie Gittens’s career is an example of the development of top talents at Borussia,” Dortmund managing director Lars Ricken said

LONDON: Chelsea have agreed a deal to sign English winger Jamie Gittens from Borussia Dortmund, the Bundesliga club said on Thursday, with the 20-year-old set to sign a seven-year contract in a move reportedly worth 55 million pounds ($75.02 million).
The clubs are currently in the United States for the Club World Cup, where they have both reached the quarter-final stage, and the agreement was made at Fort Lauderdale, with contractual details still to be settled.


Gittens joined Dortmund as a youth player in 2020 from Manchester City, making his senior debut in 2022, and has made 107 appearances for the German side in all competitions, scoring 17 goals.
“Jamie Gittens’s career is an example of the development of top talents at Borussia,” Dortmund managing director Lars Ricken said in a club statement.
“We discovered Jamie very early, practically signed him for free, continuously developed him in our youth performance center, and also offered him playing time at the very highest level with the first team.
“Jamie has repaid the trust placed in him with commitment, performance, and goals.”
Chelsea are looking to strengthen their left wing after they opted not to make Jadon Sancho’s loan deal from Manchester United permanent.


Verstappen refuses to be drawn on future ahead of British GP

Updated 03 July 2025
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Verstappen refuses to be drawn on future ahead of British GP

  • “I am happy where I am,” Verstappen said
  • “There are always rumors, but only one who decides and that is me and the team“

SILVERSTONE, UK: Max Verstappen on Thursday refused to be drawn on questions about discussions with Mercedes and exit clauses in his Red Bull contract when he spoke to reporters ahead of this weekend’s British Grand Prix.

Facing a succession of questions about his future, following reports in Italy that he had agreed to join Mercedes next year, the Dutchman was polite, but evasive in his answers, stressing that for him it would be ideal to complete his career with one team — Red Bull.

“I am happy where I am,” he said. “There are always rumors, but only one who decides and that is me and the team. I control my own destiny and I am happy and in control of where I’m at.”

Sky Sport Italia on Wednesday reported that he had agreed to join Mercedes, sparking speculation that he was set to replace arch-rival George Russell, but the Briton earlier stated he was confident of keeping his seat.

He said he expected to confirm his new contract with Mercedes — the team believed to be best prepared for the regulation changes next year — within a few weeks.

“I’ve nothing to add to last week,” said Verstappen. “Of course, other people write stuff and that’s great but it’s not me... Happy with my team? In life, you can always see other things and think, as they say, the grass is greener on the other side.

“But I think it is best to stay calm and up to now we have had success except for some time this season and this can happen and you have to accept it.

“I know what I have and what we can do and that’s fine, but, to be honest, I have nothing to add to last week. I am focussed on the team and to improve.”

Asked if he felt he needed to be in the fastest car to win races and titles, Verstappen said it is “difficult in F1 to be in the fastest car... Who would know that two years ago who will be fastest?

“I don’t focus much on it, I just try to improve my own situation and where we want to be next year. If you chase the fastest car now it may not be the fastest car next year. Sometimes you can luck in and then win four, or five or six titles...”

The 27-year-old shared that being a one-team man was an interesting prospect for him, while stating that he had never been tempted to leave Austrian constructor Red Bull.

“I’m going to say no...” he said on the questioning of ever having felt tempted to take a seat elsewhere in the paddock.

“I don’t want more headlines. It would be ideal to finish my career at Red Bull with one team. That would be something amazing and I am still trying to achieve that.

“We are fighting for podiums now and that’s not too bad!“

Reports suggested Verstappen’s contract contained exit clauses that could be activated if he is not in the top three in the drivers championship at the end of July.

But the four-time world champion bluntly refused to reveal any details about his deal with Red Bull.

“To be honest, I am not speaking about my contract. It’s easier like that,” he said.