Own Kvaratskhelia: Spurs could see £50m bid accepted for PL "superstar"

Thomas Frank’s time in charge of Tottenham Hotspur may not be going exactly to plan at this moment in time, as his side have been in concerning form of late.

The Lilywhites have conceded 11 goals in their last three games in all competitions, losing 5-3 to PSG and 4-1 to Arsenal in their last two outings since returning from the international break.

Tottenham have won one of their last six games in all competitions, keeping one clean sheet in that time, and this shows that Frank and his staff have plenty of work to do to improve the team’s defensive record.

Spurs let in 65 goals in 38 Premier League games in the 2024/25 season under Ange Postecoglou, which shows that this is not a new issue, and it may take time for the problem to be solved.

Whilst there is plenty of attention on the defensive side of their game, and rightly so given recent results, there should also be attention given to where they need to improve at the other end of the pitch.

Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, with one assist, was one of the standout performers for PSG, as he moved to eight goal contributions for the season, but Spurs do not have similar quality in their wide areas.

Ranking Tottenham's wingers this season

The Lilywhites spent £55m to sign Mohammed Kudus from Premier League rivals West Ham to bolster their ranks out wide in the summer transfer window, and he has been arguably the best winger at the club this season.

In the 2025/26 campaign, the Ghana international has more assists (five) than any other player in the squad for Spurs, with one assist on top of all of that creativity, per Transfermarkt.

However, even then, there is plenty of room for him to improve because of a return of one goal in 17 appearances in all competitions is far from an exceptional return for a £55m signing.

On the flip side, Brennan Johnson has scored four goals in 18 matches in all competitions, per Sofascore, yet he has failed to provide a single assist for his teammates, which shows that he needs to improve on the creative side of the game.

Ranking Tottenham’s wingers this season

Rank

Player

1

Mohammed Kudus

2

Brennan Johnson

3

Wilson Odobert

4

Xavi Simons

5

Mathys Tel

As you can see in the table above, Wilson Odobert ranks just below the two of them, because he has one goal and two assists in just 751 minutes of football as a young player who is still learning and improving.

Xavi Simons, signed for £52m from Leipzig, and Mathys Tel, who have both played centrally and wide, have each registered just two goal contributions in all competitions, which is why they must rank fourth and fifth.

All of this shows that Frank does not have many amazing options in the wide areas, but that could change for the second half of the season if things go to plan.

Spurs told that £50m bid will be accepted for Premier League forward

According to former Aberdeen, Everton, and Aston Villa chief executive Keith Wyness, Tottenham Hotspur could sign Savinho from Manchester City in the January transfer window.

The ex-Premier League chief has told Spurs that a bid of £50m could be enough for them to tempt the Cityzens into cashing on the Brazil international, after the Lilywhites failed with a £60m approach for the forward in the summer.

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Speaking to Football Insider, Wyness said: “There are a lot of City fans complaining about him, et cetera, et cetera. But I do think he’s a quality player.

“I think a change of scenery would obviously do him the world of good. And I think it’ll give Spurs a chance to get a better deal with City. And I do expect something like this to happen in January. So I do expect probably a bit of not so much cut-price, but certainly lower than expected, maybe around a 50 million mark even with bonuses for a player of that quality.”

Savinho has only started four matches in the Premier League for Manchester City so far this season, with the likes of Rayan Cherki and Jeremy Doku ahead of him, and Wyness seemingly believes that his lack of game time could open the door for Spurs.

It is now down to Fabio Paratici and Frank, though, to do a deal with City and to convince the Brazilian star to make the move to North London, because he could be their own Kvaratskhelia.

Why Spurs should sign Savinho

Like Kudus, Savinho is not a winger who is likely to come in and score 20 or more goals a season like Mo Salah or Vinicius Jr, because he has only scored four goals in all competitions since the start of last season, per Sofascore.

However, the 21-year-old talent is an exceptional dribbler and creator who could provide an exciting presence for supporters to watch out wide in the second half of the season and beyond.

Kvaratskhelia, who is valued at £79m, is one of the best wingers in the world, having won Ligue 1 and the Champions League, scoring in the final, last season, so it would be unrealistic to expect Tottenham to sign a winger who is exactly like him in every area of the game.

However, as you can see in the chart above, Savinho is very much like the Georgian star when it comes to creating chances and dribbling past opposition players on the wing, based on their respective statistics over the last 365 days.

In fact, the Brazilian Spurs target was one of the most creative players in his position in all of the top five major European leagues in the 2024/25 campaign, as shown in the table below.

Most LW assists in Top 5 Leagues (24/25)

Player

Assists

Raphinha

12

Bradley Barcola

11

Vincenzo Grifo

11

Vinicius Jr

10

Rafa Leao

10

Moses Simon

10

Alex Baena

10

Heung-min Son

10

Savinho

10

Zuriko Davitashvili

8

Stats via Transfermarkt

Whilst he may not be in the best moment at Manchester City, with one goal and two assists in 15 appearances, his form last term shows that he is capable of being an elite creator and dribbler in the Premier League.

Savinho, who Paul Merson claimed could be a “superstar”, ranked in the top 6% of his positional peers for xAG (0.27) in the Champions League and the top 4% in the Premier League with 0.35 xAG, per FBref.

These statistics and his statistics in comparison to Kvaratskhelia suggest that Spurs would be signing an exceptional young creator on the wing if they snap him up in January.

That is why Paratici should hope that Wyness is right and that a deal could be done for £50m, because the Brazilian could arrive in North London as their own version of the PSG superstar because of his creative and dribbling skills.

Romero upgrade: Spurs "ready to make" £35m bid for "world-class" defender

Tottenham Hotspur look set to make a huge January move for a new centre-back.

1

By
Ethan Lamb

Nov 28, 2025

Jon Lewis returns to Gloucestershire as new director of cricket

Former England women’s head coach returns to home county in newly created role

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Oct-2025

Jon Lewis looks on during England Women’s training•ICC via Getty Images

Jon Lewis has joined his old county Gloucestershire in a newly-created director of cricket role which will cover both men’s and women’s cricket, after losing his job as England women’s head coach earlier this year.Lewis, who won 16 England caps across formats as a swing bowler, spent the vast majority of his playing career at Gloucestershire and has worked at the ECB in various coaching roles since, including as Under-19s head coach and fast-bowling coach in the men’s game. “It feels like I’m coming home,” he told the club’s YouTube channel.He took over as England women’s coach in late 2022 but paid the price for their disastrous 16-0 Ashes defeat in Australia last winter, which saw him replaced in the role by Charlotte Edwards. Lewis also spent three years at UP Warriorz in the WPL, and will oversee Gloucestershire’s push towards a fully professional women’s set-up in the years to come.Lewis will work closely with Mark Alleyne, Gloucestershire men’s head coach, who won the T20 Blast in his first season in charge but oversaw a disappointing 2024 campaign. His arrival will belatedly fill the vacancy left by Steve Snell’s removal as performance director midway through the 2023 summer.”It’s a big job. There’s a lot to do,” Lewis said. “I’m excited to be back at a place that has a really special meaning for me. It created a lot of opportunities for me to be better as a player, and hopefully I can give people opportunities to do the same things that I did here.”Ajeet Singh Dale is among several seamers leaving Gloucestershire•Dan Istitene/Getty Images

Lewis said that a long-term priority will be to bring through more players from the local area. “We haven’t had a really strong production line of cricketers coming from Gloucestershire and Bristol. That’s a high priority for us here at the club, to make sure that we put the processes in place that are able to produce Gloucestershire cricketers from Gloucestershire.”Gloucestershire’s men have already lost a swathe of seamers ahead of next season, with Archie Bailey (Durham), Ajeet Singh Dale (Lancashire), Zaman Akhter (Essex), Josh Shaw (Somerset), Dom Goodman and Tom Price (both Sussex) all leaving the club. Craig Miles (Warwickshire) and Will Williams (Lancashire) will both join, but Lewis wants further reinforcements.”It’s important that we try to work out how to replace those players, whether it’s from within the squad or also from outside, or from overseas,” he said. “We’ve got some real thinking to do in that space to make sure that the club becomes really competitive across all formats next year.”Gloucestershire’s women play in Tier Two of the ECB’s new domestic set-up, but Lewis hopes that will change in the long term: “That’d be a big goal for us here at the club… I’m hoping that this becomes a place where players become really fond of playing, and they feel like they’re able to grow, to learn, and to get a lot better at playing cricket.”Stevens returns to Kent for 2026Darren Stevens was a fan favourite in his playing career for Kent•Nathan Stirk/ECB/Getty Images

Meanwhile, Kent have announced that club legend Darren Stevens will work in Adam Hollioake’s coaching staff as a bowling consultant in 2026. Stevens left the county three years ago when, at 46, he was not offered a new contract and has since worked in coaching roles for South East Stars and Essex women.He will work alongside Kent’s newly-appointed bowling coach Sam Faulkner, who has progressed through the club’s backroom staff and will replace Robbie Joseph in the role. Jaahid Ali, a former Pakistan A player, has replaced Toby Radford as batting coach.”Stevo coming back to Kent to join our bowling coaching provision will undoubtedly by popular with our members and supporters,” Simon Cook, the club’s director of cricket, said. “His experience and coaching skills will be invaluable to our first-team bowlers as we head into a new season under Adam Hollioake.”With Sam and Jaahid, there will be clear guidance and mentoring for our young talent at first-team, Academy and Pathway level to make any transition to a higher level more seamless from a playing perspective. Both Sam and Jaahid have worked closely with our Talent Pathway for a number of years now and are both held in high regard by our Pathway players and staff.”

Dodgers Are About to Test Shohei Ohtani’s Seemingly Limitless Boundaries

TORONTO — He was one of the first ones dressed and out of the clubhouse. Outfitted in a loose-fitting pinstriped grey suit with a cream-colored silk T-shirt, Shohei Ohtani flung a soft black bag over his shoulder and wore a black baseball cap backward to complete the Paris runway look that fairly screamed . His jacket billowed behind him appropriately like a cape. He was out the door of the Dodgers’ clubhouse on Halloween night to prepare for yet another date with history, of which he has more already than David McCullough.

How much more effort can the Dodgers ask of him? How much more greatness can we demand from him? How much more history can one man write?

If there are boundaries to the wonder of Ohtani, we have not discovered them. But the greatest test of those limits likely will come in Game 7 of the 121st World Series Sunday night against the Blue Jays.

Los Angeles manager Dave Roberts wasn’t ready to announce specifics about his Game 7 pitching plan, but Ohtani, he said, “is certainly going to be a part” of it. Because the only way to assure Ohtani’s bat remains in the lineup is to use him as a starting pitcher, not a reliever, he could very well be Roberts’s Game 7 starting pitcher.

On three days of rest. After throwing 93 pitches in Game 4 just 17 hours after reaching base nine times and fighting through body cramps in an 18-inning marathon. After 65 innings pitched coming off a second elbow surgery while throwing more 100 mph pitches than every pitcher with at least 15 starts except Hunter Greene and Tarik Skubal. After taking 801 plate appearances, fifth most ever. After hitting 63 home runs and stealing 20 bases, the first 60-20 player in an extended season. After scoring 158 runs. Against 41-year-old Max Scherzer, who will be the oldest of the 90 pitchers to ever start a World Series Game 7 and who will have started more double-elimination games (six) than any pitcher in history.

If that doesn’t get your blood pumping, get thee to a cardiologist

“I mean, it doesn’t make sense,” said Dodgers lefthander Justin Wrobleski, who provided one of three scoreless but scary innings of relief by the Los Angeles bullpen to save a 3–1 win for Yoshinobu Yamamoto and set the stage for the greatest Game 7 matchup since Roger Clemens and Curt Schilling went at it in 2001. (Yes, even better than Scherzer vs. Zack Greinke in 2019).

Wrobleski is a guy who survived Tommy John surgery, a broken nose, getting cut from the first of three college teams, a season wiped out by COVID-19 and 28 days without pitching entering the World Series only to get meaningful outs with his team facing elimination. What doesn’t make sense even to a pitching survivor like himself, he said, is that a pitcher could be taking the ball for Game 7 after playing for 6 ½ hours Monday, throwing into the seventh inning Tuesday, going 0-for-4 Wednesday and scoring the winning run Friday after the Blue Jays didn’t have their ace, Kevin Gausman, dare pitch to him.

“Nothing makes sense with that guy,” Wrobleski said. “He's a … I'm not sure if he’s a robot or an alien or, or which one he is, but we will find out eventually. But no, it's crazy! He’s a special, special player. Special, special dude. So, I wouldn’t be surprised if he takes the ball tomorrow.

“I wouldn’t be surprised about whatever he does any time, whatever it is.”

After six innings of that Game 4 start, on a hot night after the most exhausting night of baserunning the World Series has ever seen, Ohtani, who almost never gets lengthy breaks the way most pitchers do because he must prepare for his next at-bat, was approached by pitching coach Mark Prior.

“Got one more inning?” Prior asked.

“I’ve got three,” Ohtani said with dead seriousness.

Says Roberts, when asked about his concerns handing the ball to Ohtani, “Zero. I mean, not zero, but it’s just watching him. He’s like, ‘Whenever I pitch, if I just pitch and I’m feeling good, I can keep going.’” I run a hypothetical past Roberts.“You know Shohei better than anyone,” I say to him.

“I do. I do.”

“If he’s got the ball in his hands, Game 7, to start …”

“He’s going to go.”

“…the confidence level is 100 percent?”

“One hundred percent.  I’m going to watch the game and I’m not going to … there's no pitch counts. Just watching how it looks.”

The Dodgers planned for this eventuality. The rest of the world just assumed Tyler Glasnow was starting Game 7. But Roberts texted Glasnow after Game 4.

“You’re not going to pitch tomorrow [Game 5] but be ready for Game 6.”

The Game 7 starter normally would be in the dugout for Game 6. Glasnow watched Game 6 with his spikes on from the bullpen, where he would be needed to play a huge part in one of the wilder endings to a World Series game.

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts is on the verge of winning back-to-back championships. / Erick W. Rasco/Sports Illustrated

The Dodgers made three third-inning runs stand up, barely. With two outs and a runner on second base in the third, Toronto manager John Schneider ordered Gausman to intentionally walk Ohtani, even though Ohtani was 0-for-8 with four strikeouts since his exhausting Game 3. Will Smith followed with an RBI double.

Gausman pitched too carefully to Freddie Freeman and walked him, perhaps knowing the ice-cold Mookie Betts (3-for-24) was up next. The Blue Jays throughout the series had blown away Betts with fastballs in the zone, a pitch diet he normally devours. He hit .339 on the season against in-zone heaters with an average launch angle of 17°. But in the World Series, Betts kept dipping underneath those pitches, getting his head and torso too far in front of his feet and falling across the plate on his follow-through after a boatload of pop-ups and routine flyballs. He was hitting .100 against Toronto’s in-zone fastballs with an absurdly high 41° launch angle.

With the count 1-and-1, Gausman threw a high fastball. Betts swung under it.

The next pitch was another high fastball. Betts swung under that one, too, fouling it back.

Now, Gausman had an almost unhittable splitter in Game 6. It is his favorite pitch to put hitters away. But the Blue Jays saw no reason not to keep pumping fastballs in the zone at Betts.

Gausman threw a third straight heater. Betts this time kept his swing plane flatter and drove the ball on a line through the left side for a two-strike, two-out, two-run dagger of a single. Launch angle: 6°.

“They were just reading the game,” said Dodgers hitting coach Robert Van Scoyoc. “In that spot they probably felt like they had done enough damage throughout the game with the split, and they thought they could get one by him.

“It was just a really good swing. He’s incredibly talented and he is in a good spot. He can do just about anything up there.”

The Dodgers in the ninth would need Glasnow and two high IQ baseball plays from Kiké Hernández to make the runs stand. With one on against Roki Sasaki, Addison Barger smashed a long fly ball to center. Improbably, the ball lodged between the ground and the padding of the wall. As center fielder Justin Dean raced after it, he turned and looked over his left shoulder. He saw and heard Hernández, the hustling left fielder, throwing his arms up and declaring “Dead ball!” Dean took his cue and immediately did likewise, thus rendering the play immediately dead, stopping the runners at second and third.

Roberts summoned Glasnow. Incredibly, the game was over three pitches later. Ernie Clement popped out on the first pitch. With Andrés Giménez batting, coach Dino Ebel, who positions the Dodgers outfielders, got the attention of Hernández and rubbed his hands up and down his chest, the signal to play shallow. The Dodgers all series have played Giménez shallow to the opposite field.

Two pitches later, Giménez drove a pitch to left field that initially looked like a run-scoring single. But Hernández’s shallow positioning made it easy for him to get there on the catch. An overeager Barger drifted too far, thinking the ball would not be caught and was doubled up on a quick throw from Hernández. 

It was a historically bad mistake. Barger needed to check the outfielders’ depth before the pitch and understand that even if that ball should have bounced in front of Hernández, he would not have scored. Eagerness and youth cost him. George Springer, one of the greatest sluggers in World Series history, would have been the next batter.

Having thrown only three pitches—though very high-leverage at that—Glasnow could well come back to start Game 7. But this is where the Ohtani Rules, which MLB designed specifically to accommodate his two-way uniqueness, hamstring Roberts and his pitching plans.

If Ohtani starts on the mound and DHs, per usual, he can remain in the game as the DH once removed from pitching. But if he starts as DH and enters the game as a relief pitcher, the Dodgers would lose the DH once Ohtani is removed as a pitcher.

There’s one more complication to using Ohtani in relief. According to Michael Hill, vice president of on-field operations for MLB: Upon the first mound visit to Ohtani as a reliever he must be moved to another position, such as outfield, to keep him in the game, in which case the new pitcher would take the batting spot of the fielder Ohtani replaced.

The Dodgers do not want to be without Ohtani’s bat in any circumstance. The only way to assure that is the case and to use him as a pitcher is to start him on the mound.

It’s been nine years since anyone started World Series Game 7 on three days of rest. That start did not go well for Corey Kluber of Cleveland against the Cubs (six innings, four runs, no strikeouts). The last pitcher to start and win on short rest was Chris Carpenter of St. Louis back in 2011, light years ago when it comes to how the workload for pitchers has changed.

Starting pitchers on three days of rest in the postseason since 2020 are 4–12. Ohtani has started once on three days of rest in MLB: April 21, 2023. But that was coming off a rain-shortened start of just two innings and 30 pitches. He last made a relief appearance in 2023 in the World Baseball Classic final, famously striking out then Angels teammate Mike Trout.

Ohtani is the single greatest engine to the growth of the game over the past few years. He, along with Yamamoto and Sasaki, and the Blue Jays, who are Canada’s team, have made this the most truly series ever.

Why not have the series and the season come down to one game: Ohtani, on short rest, against Scherzer, the 41-year-old legend. The best player in history in his prime against the most prolific ultimate game pitcher in his twilight.

Before Roberts huddled with his staff, the front office and eventually Ohtani himself, to nail down when Ohtani will pitch in Game 7, he said, “Right now, there’s no wrong answer.”

He is right about that assumption. It’s amazing when you stop and think about it. After taking 801 at-bats and playing in 174 games, 17 of them as a two-way player with a twice-repaired elbow, Ohtani is likely to be pitching the final game of the season on short rest after a start, something no Dodger has done this year. There is no wrong answer—not when the answer is Ohtani.

مواعيد مباريات اليوم الخميس 11-12-2025 والقنوات الناقلة.. السعودية تواجه فلسطين والمغرب أمام سوريا

يشهد اليوم الخميس الموافق 11 ديسمبر 2025 إقامة عدة مباريات قوية في بطولة الدوري الأوروبي إلى جانب مواجهات بارزة في كأس العرب وكأس الرابطة المصرية.

تقام اليوم مباراة مهمة في بطولة كأس العرب، حيث يواجه منتخب السعودية نظيره الفلسطيني في دور ربع النهائي، وكذلك يلتقي المغرب مع سوريا.

ويدخل منتخب السعودية مباراته أمام فلسطين بمعنويات مرتفعة بعد تصدره المجموعة الثانية برصيد 7 نقاط وحصوله على فوزين وتعادل واحد.

طالع | طاقم مصري يدير مباراة فلسطين والسعودية في ربع نهائي كأس العرب 2025

بينما يخوض منتخب فلسطين اللقاء بعد حصوله على المركز الثاني في مجموعته برصيد 5 نقاط، ويسعى للمفاجأة والعبور إلى نصف النهائي.

كما يشهد اليوم إقامة العديد من مباريات الدوري الأوروبي في الجولة السادسة من دور المجموعات، بمشاركة أندية أوروبية كبيرة، وكذلك منافسات الجولة الخامسة لـ بطولة دوري المؤتمر. مواعيد مباريات اليوم الخميس 11-12-2025 والقنوات الناقلةمواعيد مباريات كأس العرب 2025 اليوم

سوريا أمام المغرب، في تمام الساعة 04:30 مساءً بتوقيت مصر وفلسطين، 05:30 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قنوات الكأس 1، beIN Sports المفتوحة، أبو ظبي الرياضية، دبي الرياضية، الشارقة الرياضية 1، منصة شاشا.

السعودية ضد فلسطين، في تمام الساعة 7:30 مساءً بتوقيت مصر وفلسطين، 8:30 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قنوات الكأس 1، beIN Sports المفتوحة، أبو ظبي الرياضية، دبي الرياضية، الشارقة الرياضية 1، منصة شاشا. مواعيد مباريات كأس الرابطة المصرية اليوم

المصري ضد الاتحاد السكندري، في تمام الساعة 4:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 5:00 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة ON SPORT 1.

وادي دجلة أمام بتروجيت، في تمام الساعة 7:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 8:00 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة ON SPORT 1. مواعيد مباريات الدوري الأوروبي اليوم

أوتريخت أمام نوتنغهام فورست، في تمام الساعة 7:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 8:45 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 1.

ليل أمام يونغ بويز، في تمام الساعة 7:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 8:45 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 2.

نيس أمام سبورتينج براجا، في تمام الساعة 7:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 8:45 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 3.

دينامو زغرب أمام ريال بيتيس، في تمام الساعة 7:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 8:45 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 4.

رينجرز أمام فيرينتسفاروش، في تمام الساعة 7:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 8:45 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 5.

شتورم جراتس أمام سرفينا زفيزدا، في تمام الساعة 7:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 8:45 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 7.

آستون فيلا أمام بازل، في تمام الساعة 10:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 11:00 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 1.

روما أمام سيلتيك، في تمام الساعة 10:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 11:00 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 3.

ليون أمام غو أهيد إيغلز، في تمام الساعة 10:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 11:00 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 4.

بولونيا ضد سيلتا فيغو، في تمام الساعة 10:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 11:00 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 5.

سالزبورغ أمام فرايبورغ، في تمام الساعة 10:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 11:00 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 6.

فنربخشة ضد بران، في تمام الساعة 10:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 11:00 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 7.

بورتو ضد مالمو، في تمام الساعة 10:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 11:00 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 8.

فينورد أمام فيسبي، في تمام الساعة 10:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 11:00 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 9.

باثانايكوس أمام فيكتوريا بلزن، في تمام الساعة 10:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 11:00 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS XTRA 3. مواعيد مباريات دوري المؤتمر الأوروبي اليوم

فيورنتينا أمام دينامو كييف، في تمام الساعة 7:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 8:45 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 6.

دريتا ضد الكمار، في تمام الساعة 7:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 8:45 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 8.

باجيلونيا بياليستوك أمام رابيد فيينا، في تمام الساعة 7:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 8:45 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 9.

شكنديا ضد سلوان براتيسلافا، في تمام الساعة 7:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 8:45 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS XTRA 2.

شيلبورن أمام كريستال بالاس، في تمام الساعة 10:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 11:00 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 2.

إيرلندي ضد ستراسبورغ، في تمام الساعة 10:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 11:00 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS XTRA 1.

ليغ بوزنان أمام ماينز 05، في تمام الساعة 10:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 11:00 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS XTRA 2.

راپيد ضد أومونيا نيقوسيا، في تمام الساعة 10:00 مساءً بتوقيت مصر، 11:00 مساءً بتوقيت السعودية، عبر قناة beIN SPORTS 1 EN.

ويمكنكم مطالعة مواعيد ونتائج جميع المباريات لحظة بلحظة عبر مركز المباريات من هنا.

Nationals to Hire Blake Butera as MLB's Youngest Manager in Decades

In an offseason of outside-the-box managerial hires, the Nationals have reportedly hired the biggest wild card of all.

Washington is naming 33-year-old Blake Butera its next manager, according to a Thursday morning report from Jeff Passan of ESPN. Butera, 33, will be the youngest MLB manager since the Twins hired 33-year-old Frank Quilici in 1972.

Butera, a longtime minor league manager in the Rays' system, currently holds the title of senior director of player development for that team.

Born in Louisiana, Butera played collegiately for Boston College before Tampa Bay drafted him in the 35th round in 2015. After two professional years in the Appalachian and New York-Penn Leagues, Butera entered management.

In both 2021 and 2022, he won Manager of the Year awards at the minor league level with the Charleston RiverDogs of the Carolina League.

The Nationals fired manager Dave Martinez, the manager of their 2019 World Series team, on July 6 after eight years.

Muthusamy keeps South Africa and Pakistan in uneasy stalemate

Pakistan have the upper hand but the SA left-arm spinner has prevented them from making the most of it

Danyal Rasool14-Oct-2025When running late, there is always an instinct to rush, even if you cannot possibly make it to your destination on time. You might skip a long shower or an elaborate breakfast, or flirt with the top end of a speed limit on the way. There are wins to be had along the way, small gains that make no difference to the final outcome. But they’re worth pursuing anyway.And South Africa woke up late. Part of it, like the flip of the coin on Sunday morning, they could do as little about as if someone had turned off their alarm and drawn the curtains tighter to induce further sleep. But when Pakistan got the best of the batting conditions, South Africa’s spinners took over a session to find their lines, allowing Imam-ul-Haq and Shan Masood to gain an early, and what felt like a decisive, upper hand.It did not stop South Africa from scrambling to make up ground, even if the inherent disadvantage of batting last meant they were invariably treading water. That knotty sense of hopelessness was at its zenith at tea on Tuesday, a full two days after Imam and Masood pulled clear. But every time Pakistan’s position has veered into unassailability, Senuran Muthusamy has stood stubbornly in the way.Related

Azhar Mahmood blames shot selection for Pakistan's collapse

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Muthusamy has made a life out of ensuring innate disadvantages do not prove insurmountable. Growing up in South Africa as a specialist red-ball spinner around the same time as Keshav Maharaj is an accident of birth not conducive to a long Test career. Muthusamy made his first-class debut in 2013, and only got a shot at international cricket when South Africa toured India six years later. His Test match journey reads like a destination list even off-the-beat travel brochures would find too unusual to suggest: Visakhapatnam, Pune, Centurion, Chattogram, Bulawayo and now Lahore.With Pakistan 199 for 2 on Sunday afternoon, yet another one of those rare opportunities for impact appeared to have passed him by, but Muthusamy kept going. He spent the rest of the game showing everyone the value of a scrap to stay alive. Off the final two balls before tea that day, South Africa began to tug Pakistan back, and have held them in place in this uneasy stalemate. The hosts have the higher ground, but remain acutely aware that it is treacherous. Muthusamy accounted for 11 of the next 18 Pakistan wickets that fell, doubling his career Test haul over the past three days.On Tuesday, Masood’s men looked to make amends for leaving the door open. Abdullah Shafique scratched his way to 41, his highest Test score in over a year, and Babar Azam (42) and Saud Shakeel (38) both contributed with similar scores to swell Pakistan’s lead to 259 with six wickets still in the bag. Pakistan’s sense of comfort was illustrated by Shakeel – perhaps the team’s most conservative batter – stepping outside his crease to swipe Muthusamy over midwicket. He found the assured hands of Tristan Stubbs on the boundary, and South Africa began to claw their way back into plausibility once more.Shan Masood and Imam-ul-Haq had laid Pakistan’s groundwork on the first day in Lahore•AFP/Getty ImagesIt took a remarkable implosion from Pakistan, who lost their last six for 17 runs, to keep South Africa in contention. Muthusamy and Simon Harmer held their lines and nerve as the batters appeared to lose theirs; this was the third-steepest six-wicket collapse for Pakistan in a decade. By the time it was done, Muthusamy’s figures were the third-best in Gaddafi Stadium history, behind only Imran Khan and Abdul Qadir.By stumps, Ryan Rickelton and Tony de Zorzi were holding Pakistan at bay. The pair have complemented the tenacity of their spinners; it seems a long time ago but just this morning, de Zorzi had lifted Noman Ali over his head for six before bringing up the game’s only century off Pakistan’s most valuable spinner. Rickelton and de Zorzi have been responsible for exactly two-thirds of the runs South Africa have scored this Test, and will need to crank it up to an even more unlikely percentage if they are to fetch the remaining 226 to pull off a supremely unlikely heist.”A partnership on a wicket like this is gold,” de Zorzi said after play. “It’s tough to start and for a new guy to get rhythm. The beginning is the toughest but hopefully we can build a partnership and crack on.”Any reading of recent – or ancient – history suggests it remains an uphill challenge. Only one of the previous three completed Test matches in Lahore have resulted in a win for the chasing side, and never has a total anywhere near this magnitude been brought down. The advantage Pakistan built up by calling correctly at the toss and the three hours that followed still holds firm, but South Africa have refused to allow the hosts to stretch it further.At the end of the day, the PCB’s in-house website, in its report for the day, cautiously noted the game was “hanging in the balance”. This was around the same time as de Zorzi was beginning to talk up his side’s chances.”Ricks and I keep each other present,” he said. “We take it one ball at a time and remind each other of our options. The guys coming in are just as able, if not more talented. Hopefully they won’t [need to] but anyone in there, if they build a partnership, it’s on.”They may have woken up late, but Muthusamy and de Zorzi have ensured Pakistan are still on their toes three days after they were supposed to have pulled away.

UCL club now ready to launch offer to sign £21m-a-year Liverpool star

One European club is now ready to launch a move to sign a big-money Liverpool star in 2026, despite facing competition from the Saudi Pro League.

Slot expects "aggressive" Leeds vs Liverpool

Despite Wednesday night’s timid draw against Sunderland at Anfield, Arne Slot was in good spirits ahead of Liverpool’s next game against Leeds United this weekend. The Reds will be looking to stretch their mini-unbeaten run to three games in the same week, but must also get back to winning ways after Wednesday.

On paper, a trip to newly-promoted Leeds looks routine and once upon a time it was exactly that for the Reds. Those days, for the time being, are gone, however, and the Premier League champions are now set to square off against a side who could physically outmatch them once again.

Speaking in his pre-match press conference, Slot admitted that he expects to face an “aggressive” Leeds side: “Yesterday I looked at Leeds v Chelsea and I thought I saw a Liverpool game; Chelsea conceding a set-piece and for the third goal making a big, big error where they conceded a goal from. [It was] very difficult for them.

“Either Leeds went very aggressive to one-v-one or they went to a low block and it was really hard to create chances. It’s not only difficult for us, that playing style, it’s difficult for many teams – including us.”

It’s been the story of Liverpool’s season so far. Whenever they’ve encountered physicality, the Premier League champions have simply been bullied.

Something had to change and that has seen Mohamed Salah sacrificed. The struggling Egyptian has not started either of Liverpool’s last two games and reports suggest he could yet leave the club in 2026.

Galatasaray ready to launch Salah bid

According to reports in Spain, Galatasaray are now ready to launch their bid to sign Salah next year. The Turkish giants are looking to take full advantage of the winger’s situation and will reportedly aim to beat clubs in Saudi Arabia to his signature.

Whether Liverpool are willing to sell Salah remains to be seen, though. The Anfield icon only signed a new two-year deal last season, which is set to expire in 2027, but they must ask themselves if he is now past the peak of his powers.

Van Dijk raves over "world-class" Liverpool star who has been "really bad"

Liverpool have not been at the races of late.

By
FFC Staff

Dec 5, 2025

Former centre-back, turned Sky Sports pundit, Jamie Carragher certainly believes that’s the case, recently saying: “The catalyst for Liverpool at the very start of the run in 2018 with Jürgen Klopp was Alisson, Van Dijk and Salah.

“Alisson’s injured a lot now, he doesn’t play so much. But you watch Van Dijk now, not the same player, and Mo Salah looks like his legs have gone.”

The 33-year-old will be desperate to prove Carragher wrong and make his £21m-a-year contract worthwhile even if that is to be from the bench following Slot’s recent ruthlessness.

Huge Gakpo upgrade: £70m "superstar" now keen to join Liverpool in January

RR trade Samson to CSK for Jadeja and Curran

Mohammed Shami, Mayank Markande, Nitish Rana, Donovan Ferreira and Arjun Tendulkar will also play for new teams in IPL 2026

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Nov-2025Rajasthan Royals (RR) and Chennai Super Kings (CSK) have finalised the player trade that will see Sanju Samson headed to CSK in exchange for allrounders Ravindra Jadeja and Sam Curran, the IPL confirmed on Saturday morning.It is one of the most high-profile player trades in IPL history. Samson, who led RR from 2021 until the previous season, had been retained for INR 18 crore ahead of IPL 2025. CSK had also retained Jadeja for the same amount, while they had acquired Curran in the auction for INR 2.4 crore. Samson will go to CSK for the same fee, but Jadeja’s fee has been revised to INR 14 crore. Curran’s fee remains the same.”Rajasthan Royals gave me my first platform and my first taste of victory,” Jadeja said in a RR statement. “Coming back feels special – it’s not just a team for me, it’s home. Rajasthan Royals is where I won my first IPL, and I hope to win more with this current group of players.”Samson spent 11 years at RR, but had indicated after IPL 2025 that he was looking for a change and wanted to be released by RR.For Jadeja, it is a return to the franchise with whom he started his IPL career, in the inaugural season in 2008. Jadeja had been with CSK since 2012 barring the 2016 and 2017 seasons when the franchise was suspended, and was even appointed captain in 2022 but handed the captaincy back to MS Dhoni after a poor start to the season.For Curran, it will be a third IPL franchise, having shuttled between CSK and Punjab Kings between 2019 and 2025.”Jadeja coming back to the Royals is incredibly special for all of us. He understands the franchise and the fans, having been part of RR’s IPL-winning campaign,” Kumar Sangakkara, RR’s director of cricket, said. “Over the years he has grown into a player who can influence the game in every department. His experience, composure, and competitive edge will add immense value to our group.”Sam brings a different but equally important dimension. He’s fearless, adaptable, and thrives in pressure situations with both bat and ball. Together, Jadeja and Sam give us balance, leadership, and the kind of match-winning depth we want as we build for the future.”Letting go of Jadeja and Curran was done after consultations with the players, CSK managing director Kasi Viswanathan said. “The decision was taken with mutual understanding with both Jadeja and Curran. We are deeply grateful for Jadeja’s extraordinary contributions and the legacy he leaves behind. We wish both Jadeja and Curran the best for the future. We also welcome Sanju Samson, whose skill-set and achievements complement our ambitions. This decision has been made with great thought, respect, and a long-term vision.”Nitish Rana will now turn out for Delhi Capitals•BCCIShami, Nitish Rana, Ferreira, Tendulkar tradedAs reported by ESPNcricinfo on Friday, Mohammed Shami will turn out for Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) in IPL 2026 after being traded by Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH). Shami, the second-most expensive acquisition for SRH ahead of the IPL 2025 season at INR 10 crore, will move to LSG at his existing fee.Some of the other updates on the day were those involving Mayank Markande, Arjun Tendulkar, Nitish Rana and Donovan Ferreira.Rana, who has featured in over 100 IPL games and has even led Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR), moves from RR to Delhi Capitals (DC), and will continue at his existing fee of INR 4.2 crore.For Markande, it’s a return home of sorts, as he returns to his original team Mumbai Indians (MI) from KKR. He will also be at his existing fee of INR 30 lakh.Ferreira, the South African allrounder, returns to his first team, RR, after being traded out by DC, that too with a salary hike. His fee has been revised from INR 75 lakh to INR 1 crore.Tendulkar, meanwhile, travels from MI to LSG at his existing fee of INR 30 lakh.

Get rid: Rangers flop must never play a game under Danny Rohl

Glasgow Rangers head coach Danny Rohl is only a few weeks away from having the chance to make changes to his playing squad for the first time since he joined the club.

The German boss arrived after the summer transfer window, which was spearheaded by Russell Martin and Kevin Thelwell, which means that he does not have any of his own signings.

Whilst the former Sheffield Wednesday boss will want to make some signings of his own to bolster the squad, Rohl may also want to move some of the current players on in the January transfer window.

The Rangers players who should be let go in January

There are several current first-team duds who should be moved on ahead of the second half of the season because they do not look like key players for the new manager.

Chalkboard

Football FanCast’s Chalkboard series presents a tactical discussion from around the global game.

Clinton Nsiala, for example, is yet to play a single minute of football in the 2025/26 campaign, per Transfermarkt, and has only made the matchday squad on four occasions.

With John Souttar, Derek Cornelius, Nasser Djiga, and Emmanuel Fernandez ahead of him in the pecking order when fit, an exit in January could be the best move for his career.

Rabbi Matondo, per Transfermarkt, is another player who has not played a single minute of action this season and has not made any matchday squads, which suggests that he may be free to find a new club in January if he is not part of the manager’s plans.

Finally, Kieran Dowell should also be moved on in the winter amid reported interest from English Championship side Hull City, who are looking to sign him on loan.

Why Kieran Dowell should never play a minute under Danny Rohl

The English attacking midfielder, who spent the second half of last season on loan at Birmingham, played 384 minutes across six appearances in July and August under Martin and failed to score any goals before picking up an injury.

He was even described as “non-existent” by Heart & Hand content creator David Edgar in the 2-0 win over Panathinaikos in July, as he failed to create a single chance in 75 minutes on the pitch, per Sofascore.

Now back fit, having played for the U19s with Dujon Sterling last month, Dowell has not been involved in a single matchday squad for Rohl, per Sofascore, which suggests that he is not in the manager’s thoughts for the first-team.

With Hull said to be interested in signing him, Rangers appear to have the opportunity to move him on from Ibrox on loan for the second half of the season, before his contract expires in the summer, per Transfermarkt.

The Light Blues would, therefore, be allowing him to leave on a free transfer after his loan spell at Hull ends, which would give the Tigers a chance to assess whether or not they want to sign him permanently ahead of the 2026/27 campaign.

On top of having that option, Dowell should also not play a single minute for Rohl between now and January because Lyall Cameron would be a better player to bring in if the manager wants to change his attacking midfielder.

Appearances

12

33

Goals

0

9

Conversion rate

0%

17%

Key passes per game

0.7

1.6

Big chances created

3

6

Assists

0

5

The Scottish starlet, as shown in the table above, appears far more likely to make an impact in the Scottish Premiership as an attacking midfielder, after a return of 15 goal contributions last season.

Cameron, however, has been an unused substitute in seven of the last eight games in all competitions, and in all of the last four, per Transfermarkt, which shows how difficult it is to get a place in the team under the German head coach.

Therefore, given how far down the pecking order he is, it is hard to see a situation where Dowell ends up playing any minutes on the pitch for Rangers before he has the chance to join Hull on loan at the start of next month.

This is why the former Norwich City playmaker, who has registered zero goals and one assist in six games this season, should never play for Rohl, and why he should be allowed to leave on loan in January before being released on a free transfer next summer.

Bid already submitted: Rangers could sign a "very pacy" Gassama replacement

Rangers could replace Djeidi Gassama on the wing by signing this reported target in the January window.

ByDan Emery 3 days ago

The left-footed flop has only provided two goals and three assists in 38 appearances for Rangers, per Transfermarkt, since his move from the Canaries in 2023, which illustrates how little he has contributed as an attacking force on the pitch in his time at Ibrox.

‘Nobody can take that away from you’ – USMNT icon Jozy Altidore breaks silence on complicated legacy and life after soccer with the Buffalo Bills and Sogility

In an exclusive interview with GOAL, Jozy Altidore reflects on a legacy that still divides fans – and reveals how he's redefining himself after soccer.

A clip went viral recently, one featuring Michael Jordan explaining life after basketball. Despite his status as his sport's defining figure, Jordan acknowledged that, until a recent chance encounter, he hadn't picked up a basketball in years. Something about shooting that ball had become painful, like it was a reminder of an old life that he would never quite experience again.

"I wish I could take a magic pill, put on shorts and go out and play the game of basketball today," Jordan told NBC, "because that's who I am."

Jozy Altidore gets it. He can understand that feeling. Altidore tasted his dreams. He transcended what he thought was possible. He became peers with his heroes. He did everything he ever set out to do, and significantly more. He does, however, respond with one big caveat: "I'm no Michael Jordan, my friend." 

But now, still just 36 years of age, Altidore's time as a soccer player is past. It ended two years ago. There was no big goodbye, no emotional farewell; just an exit out the back door for a player that so often led from the front. It was a complicated end for a player whose legacy still divides fans – a figure who, to this day, remains one of the most discussed in U.S. Men's National Team history. 

So, where does Altidore fit in American soccer these days? Well, the discussions have raged on even after his retirement. So, too, has Altidore's passion for soccer. That passion, though, hasn't come with the ball at his feet.

"I don't really enjoy playing pickup or stuff like that," Altidore tells GOAL. "It's still a little bit difficult because you definitely would love to still be out there playing. It's a weird feeling. I don't play much soccer at all. I haven't in the past couple of years, but I do enjoy watching." 

When asked about his own legacy and where he thinks he stands with the game, Altidore uses that one big word himself: "Complicated." The world, of course, is eager to boil that down. Such is the nature of social media: everyone has their own thought or their own way to make a complex thing simple. 

Summing up any career or life, especially Altidore's, isn't an easy feat. He is, at his core, a complicated person, one who is now reflecting on the moments and memories that, in the end, really mattered. There's a part of him that wishes he were still out there, of course, and how couldn't there be? There are also memories of the past that comfort him, and a new way, a new path, that is allowing him to continue to impact the game in new ways.

"It's complicated, but I just try to focus on the fact that I got to fulfill my dream," Altidore says. "I got to play at this level, and nobody can take that away from you. I got to play against some of the very best players, and I see them now, and we can talk about the moments and memories we had. That, for me, is the biggest thing. I couldn't care less about the public stuff. The memories? That, to me, is everything."

For American soccer, more memories are on the way. Now a fan, Altidore is watching on like everyone else, living and dying with the USMNT’s every kick. He’ll be locked in for friendlies, training sessions, World Cup draws – anything tied to the national team. He still loves those moments, even if they're no longer his, in a sense.

This, then, is a look at Altidore’s fondest memories, how they shaped him, and how they continue to stay alive – even as his relationship with soccer continues to change.

Getty Images Sport'That's the biggest joy'

Despite all he accomplished, Altidore is aware of the negativity. It comes in spite of everything he achieved. Throughout his career, he played at the highest levels in the United States, Spain, England, Turkey, the Netherlands, Canada, and Mexico. Internationally, he played in two World Cups and, to this day, remains the USMNT's third-leading goalscorer with 42 goals in 115 caps.  It was the type of career any player would dream of, but it wasn't perfect. 

He can admit that. The 2018 World Cup qualifying mishap is on his resume, even if it is often unfairly pinned on him and several other teammates more than most. Throughout his career, there were criticisms about his style of play, and injuries derailed his World Cup dreams in 2014 when he was at the peak of his powers. All of that combined to make him a lightning rod, one with a more complex legacy than some of the teammates he battled alongside with the USMNT.

For many, he's a legendary USMNT goalscorer. He's behind only legendary teammates Clint Dempsey and Landon Donovan on those goalscoring charts, and both played significantly more games than him. There's a very real argument that Altidore is the best goalscorer the USMNT has ever seen. Dempsey, Donovan, Brian McBride – these are the only players that can hold a candle to Altidore, and there's a very real argument that, as a pure goalscorer, he was better than them all.

For others, though, he remains something of a question mark. Injuries robbed him at some of the worst possible moments. For every high on the club level, and there were many, there also seemed to be a corresponding low. Throughout his career, Altidore was often the subject of intense criticism, some deserved but most, ultimately, not. Those criticisms, too, are part of his legacy.

though, doesn't always represent real life. What fans and pundits say on social media doesn't always match up with the actual tangible interactions that occur beyond the screen. That's what Altidore's learned, anyway. His legacy isn't what fans say about him on social media; it's what they say to his face when they cross paths. 

"It's funny because, for me, that's been the biggest surprise: whether it's dropping off at school or walking to the grocery store, people approach you every now and then and just say, 'Hey, that goal you scored' about a game that, for me, is gone and forgotten. They'll say that their dad was going through something, and that was a moment they shared together. I didn't anticipate, and this may sound stupid, too, but being a part of so many people. I didn't anticipate it. That's not something that I ever thought about: how you make people feel. 

"The fact that you can make people feel and remember, that's the biggest joy. People can talk good or bad about me, that's fine, but I know that my real interactions are genuine. It's been cool to have those interactions because, when you're playing, that's the last thing you're thinking about. You think nobody's watching. Like, you know that people are watching the games, but you don't think it affects anybody like it does you or your mother or your close friend. That, to me, sometimes I get emotional because I get caught off guard, but the fact that I gave some people these moments means the world to me. That's more than enough. I don't care how people look at me as long as I've helped some people, brought them joy or maybe some good memories."

Altidore, too, has been reflecting on those memories a bit more recently, even as life has gotten busier. He often runs into old teammates or opponents throughout his various travels. In those interactions, he's free to reminisce and relive the best moments alongside those who were there for most of them.

"Playing soccer was a dream, and I got to do it and represent the United States National Team," he says. "There are millions of people, and you were one of the very best, and those are things nobody can take away. You played with some of the very best, and they know you. That's what matters most to me. Nobody can take those moments away. We had some amazing times."

Times are different now. While Altidore's best moments as a player came in a USMNT shirt, his best moments as a fan have come watching from afar as he keeps a close eye on a new generation that, to him, doesn't feel so new.

AdvertisementImagnMentor to USMNT's current stars: Pulisic, McKennie and Weah

Last November, the USMNT was gearing up for a big CONCACAF Nations League clash with Jamaica. In the days leading up to the game, Altidore was in town and stopped by training. One by one, players ran up to catch up and, in truth, to show respect. Christian Pulisic, Weston McKennie, Tim Weah – all ran over to greet a player who they acknowledge is one who helped pave the path they now walk on.

Six years after his last USMNT run, the team still features plenty of Altidore's old teammates. Pulisic and McKennie have become the faces of the modern generation, but six years ago, McKennie was actually captaining the USMNT in Altidore's final game. That camp also featured the likes of Tim Ream and Cristian Roldan, both of whom are still going strong after having their own career renaissance to get back into the picture. Ream is, funnily enough, two years older than Altidore, pushing for one last World Cup run.

That part of it is a little difficult, Altidore says. These aren't a new generation leading American soccer somewhere; these are his friends. 

"It's a little bit of mixed feelings because, even now, I watch and still feel like I can play," he says with a laugh. "There's always that feeling, and sometimes it's tough, especially because you got to play with them. I played with Christian and Weston early on, and we clicked right away, so I watch them now, and I can only imagine, man. I would have made this run or given it to Weston this way because I know how we played together. That part is difficult. 

"The other part is exciting because this is the same team that we've all played for, and these guys are pushing that team further now with what they're doing. Is it the way everybody likes? Maybe not, but to say that they're not pushing us forward would be a lie. It's tough because you want to be out there backing them up, fighting for them sometimes, but that's part of being an older player: sharing those feelings as time goes on but still supporting the team."

Altidore has moved gracefully into his role as an experienced veteran of the game. At a time when several of his ex-teammates have made headlines for taking shots at the new era, Altidore is hesitant to even compare. There's no point in turning this into a "U.S. vs them", in his eyes. The only thing he wants to do is support. It's not because he has to, but because he wants to. More than anything, he wants this team to be better, even if that means seeing players achieve more than he did.

"Is it perfect? No, but I'll be damned if I'm going to criticize those guys who do what I did in terms of challenging themselves and taking it all a step further," he says. "You can criticize them for a lot of things, but I can never criticize that. I only applaud them and cheer them on. I'm actually disappointed that I haven't been over to Europe yet. I need to get over there and start watching these guys play because I love to see it. 

"I love spending time with them. I love seeing how they've grown as people. That part interests me so much: to see them as people, how they've grown, and how they continue to do that."

Altidore is growing, too. He's found a new side of himself that is now blossoming during his life after soccer.

Getty Images EntertainmentLife after soccer

For years, Altidore's daily routine was pretty similar. From 2006-2023, he was a professional athlete and lived that life: wake up, train, eat right, travel, play. It was highly regimented and always busy. These days, though, life is a little different. These days, he wears a few more hats: ex-pro, father, husband, investor, fan. Mornings now are about phone calls and school runs. Life has changed, but it hasn't slowed down.

"When I got waived [by the New England Revolution], it was right around the fall, so I had time to prepare and decide what I wanted to do next," he says. "To be honest, right from the jump, I turned into dad mode. I wanted to be more present in my son's life and make sure that I'm around to be with him and take him places. That was my first thought: I'm going to be more available for him. I took that and ran with it. When you're playing and travelling, you miss a lot, and there's nothing you can really do about it. It's the nature of our work: we miss a lot of milestones. That was the easiest thing for me: just being like, 'Okay, now I have more time with my son'. That was a no-brainer.

"I've always been this type of way where I'm incredibly focused and motivated on what I'm doing, so, for me, ever since I've stopped playing, I've spent a lot of time in the investment world. I've wasted no time getting knee deep into that. Every morning is an assortment of calls and things I have to do."

Those calls take him across a variety of businesses. He's a part-owner of the Buffalo Bills, having joined the ownership group in 2024. He's involved in golf through TGL Golf and sailing through SailGP. He hasn't completely left soccer, either. He's an investor in Bay FC of the NWSL and spends plenty of time with his player development company, Sogility, as Chief Strategy Officer and co-owner.

"I love soccer," he says.  "I wanted to work in the youth soccer area, but didn't want to start a club where people are poaching players. Sogility, for me, fell in really nicely because I was able to train with kids and be a resource for young families and players. You help them improve, but you also send them back to their respective environments. 

"I want to find a way to affect the game at the grassroots level and change that retention number because I think at 14 or 15, we're seeing a lot of kids not take it as seriously or drop out of the game. At that age, I was playing and starting as a professional. How can I give back in a way where we're meeting kids where they're at in their development? How can I help them improve and have fun? That's the new challenge for me."

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AFPAchieving dreams

Despite all of the moments he lived during his career, Altidore can still pinpoint the exact one that mattered most. It came at the very beginning. Few reach the highest of highs at 20 years old, but Altidore did. By simply walking onto a field at the World Cup, he'd done everything he'd set out to do. 

It wasn't the event that made it special. It wasn't the spectacle in South Africa, the national anthems, or the game itself. It was who he locked eyes with as he was walking out of the tunnel.

"I had already gotten to do everything my dad and I had talked about," he said. "I already debuted, played in the Premier League, and was now going to be walking out and playing in a World Cup. That's how I got into soccer, and a big part of it was my dad. He had taped all of the 94 World Cup games. So, for me, that moment was really emotional: just walking out, finding them in the crowd, and living that moment in real life. I'm so happy I got to share that with them. I'm so happy my mom and dad got to be there.

"It was just a culmination for me. When I look at my dad and his story and what he'd gone through? He came here from Haiti and hustled his whole way. To do what he was able to do with the resources and continue elevating, it's one of those things where I'm always going to be his son. I have that mindset now in how I live my life and how I have to work."

Even all these years later, that moment, in some ways, defines Jozy Altidore. He is so much more than that split second, of course. There were higher highs and surely lower lows. He scored so many goals, broke so many records, and saw so many things in the years that followed it. But that moment, that one singular freeze frame, is what explains Altidore's own legacy to himself. Everything else is just noise. That moment is who he is.

"I just view myself as a part of my family," Altidore says. "This is our dream, and this is my way to piggyback off of that. That's how I saw myself, even in the moment: I was always just little Josmer Altidore, the son of Haitian immigrants. I didn't ever see myself as anything more."

What you see in Altidore, then, is left up to you. Soccer, in many ways, still defines him even as he continues to stay away from the ball, but this is a new version of Jozy Altidore, one that, the more he thinks about it, is a lot like the old one, too.

As this interview ends, Altidore has one last thing to say, one last message for those reading.

"When I see this World Cup opportunity, I think it falls on all of us: media, ex-players, all of us," he says. "There's plenty of time to be negative and miserable, but let's try and get behind this and really celebrate all that everybody's putting into this summer. Hopefully, we play inspiring soccer, and then we're all recipients of the boom that comes after the World Cup. 

"I just hope we can all sit around the campfire, enjoy the game, smile, and really celebrate. There's always so much negativity around things, but I'm just excited to celebrate."

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