Premier League top scorers 2022-23: Erling Haaland wins the Golden Boot

GOAL brings you all this season's leading marksmen from England's top division – who will come out on top?

The race is once again on for a coveted Premier League Golden Boot, with established superstars being joined by big-money summer signings in a battle to be crowned the English top-flight's leading goal scorer.

Erling Haaland and Darwin Nunez, fresh from moves to Manchester City and Liverpool respectively, are among those to have added their particular skill sets to a collection of world-class forwards that already includes the likes of Tottenham striker Harry Kane and Anfield talisman Mohamed Salah.

With nets set to bulge on a regular basis throughout the 2022-23 campaign, GOAL is on hand to monitor the exploits of the most prolific marksmen around.

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    1Erling Haaland | Manchester City | 36 goals

    A move to England for Erling Haaland always felt like being a matter of time, and Manchester City won that particular transfer lottery in 2022. The prolific Norwegian could be the bargain of the season at £51 million, with his track record suggesting that he will have rival defenders running scared.

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    2Harry Kane | Tottenham | 30 goals

    A man that already has three Golden Boots to his name, Tottenham frontman Harry Kane certainly knows his way to the back of the net. The England captain has a World Cup to think about this season, but he will not allow anything to distract him from the pursuit of more goals at club level.

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    3Ivan Toney | Brentford | 20 goals

    Having hit 33 goals when helping Brentford to promotion into the Premier League, Ivan Toney backed that return up with 14 efforts last season. The powerful Bees striker is a handful for any defender in the air and on the deck, while he is also more than useful at penalties.

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    4Mohamed Salah | Liverpool | 19 goals

    Liverpool superstar Mohamed Salah secured himself a third Golden Boot last season – a second that has been shared with others – and more of the same is expected from him this term. With a new contract under his belt, the Egyptian forward appears set to remain the King of Anfield.

Supporters push for their favourites

Voting has begun for Australia’s best commentator and to help you judge here are the leading tributes to the men and their microphones

27-Mar-2007


Michael Slater has been “a breath of fresh air” since entering the commentary box
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Voting has begun for Australia’s best commentator and to help you judge here are the leading tributes. Channel 9 and ABC members polled highly in the nomination stage and there are 26 mouthpieces to consider. You only get one vote, so make it count. To choose go here and more reader praise is here.Ian Healy
Ian is an intelligent cricketer who demystifies the game for his audience. Cricket commentary is changing from the more descriptive to an insightful style. In doing this, Heals exposes the best of any situation, bringing to life the challenges and psychology the players face during battle. As a recent retiree of the game, he knows it and has played with and against many of the current players. Heals is competitive and passionate and his love for the game resonates with me. Cricket is much richer for his commentary. Jason Limnios
Mark Taylor
Ever since the introduction of new blood and youthful verve into what was becoming a stale team at Nine, Mark Taylor has shown to have a fine combination of flair for the dramatic and real-life knowledge of the intricacies of the game. I can still hear his voice as Cyclone Gilchrist peppered the Barmy Army during that fabulous knock in the third Test in Perth. “That sounds magnificent … and it IS magnificent!!!” as the camera shows Andrew Flintoff’s eyes upwards and backwards. And as much as they tried to manufacture Bill Lawry’s presence during that moment when Shane Warne reached the 700 mark, time ran out and we were not let down as Taylor captured the moment with all the drama it deserved. “He’s got it, he’s got 700.” It makes the hairs stand up. Andrew McGlynn
Ian Chappell
Ian Chappell has the best mix of knowledge of the modern game combined with a real presence with the microphone. He is controversial and opinionated, and his aggressive nature as a captain shines through in his commentating. Jake Robertston
Richie Benaud
I was introduced to the game through marriage to a cricket tragic. I’ve become a complete and utter tragic myself! My appreciation and thanks go to Richie Benaud. His careful analytical commentary of cricket has educated me to the nuances of the game. Richie has found the balance. He doesn’t need to speak every moment the game is in play, he is measured, careful, unbiased and a pleasure to listen to. He refrains from talking about his own experience (ad nauseum) and this sets him apart. Thank you Richie, you are a legend. Lilli Parsons
Tony Greig
Tony Greig is ahead of the rest by miles. Tony manages to capture the excitement out in the centre at a level that makes you want to watch cricket on TV. Dominic Goonawardena
Bill Lawry
Yes he’s got him! The crowd, the atmosphere, the excitement! It’s all happening! And now coming to the crease is a fantastic young Victorian, Cameron White. He’s young, athletic, fantastic in the field, a big hitter and quick between the wickets. He’ll do all of Victoria proud if he can win it from here for Australia. Should be more Victorians in the side but it’s hard to get in front of Symonds, Gilchrist, Clarke, Hussey, all wonderful cricketers. The crowd are on the edge of their seats, it’s 30 off 30, four wickets in hand. It has to be Bill. Matt Renwick
Mark Nicholas
Nicholas has it all. He’s as intelligent and as insightful as Benaud, but has the ability to get you fired up in the big moments in the same way Ray Warren can during the NRL or the swimming. Nicholas’ short monologue to finish the day-five covering of the miracle that was Adelaide left me counting the minutes to Perth. Evocative, intelligent, articulate, and obviously a cricket-tragic in the Michael Hussey mould, he’s been an absolute pleasure to listen to over the summer. I hope he returns next year. James Williamson
Michael Slater
Michael Slater is a breath of fresh air in the commentary box. His enthusiasm for the game makes his commentating entertaining, easy listening and he is a great “commentary coach” for us armchair players at home. In Slats Channel Nine has found the perfect balance between a recent player and a player who has been out of the game too long. He has played in the modern era, yet has been out enough not to be too closely connected to the players – he has bias but not too much! Joshua Habel


Jim Maxwell “moves with the rhythm”
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Jim Maxwell
Blues legend B.B. King once said “it ain’t the notes, it’s the space in-between”. When Jim Maxwell levitates over the sound of the bubbling crowd and announces the bowler running in, he times his sweet timbre with the delicate panache of Don Bradman. Never too forceful or too bland, the audience feels the love of the game in his voice. “Caught,” we’ll suddenly hear, or “down to the boundary for four”. Then just the sound of the crowd, Jim lowers his voice, signalling to his commentary partner, it is his turn. Seamlessly, Jim listens to their expertise and never have I heard him answer without respect and intelligence. Rather, like an old blues master, he simply moves with the rhythm. Stephen Kanaris
Kerry O’Keeffe
He is insightful, warm, engaging and to put it simply he adds real flavour to the game. He is a far better commentator than he ever was a player. There has always been humour in sport and Kerry never takes either the action or himself too seriously. What really sets him apart from everyone is that he offers opinion before the event rather than after the fact. His eye, much like Ian Chappell’s, is always looking to inform, challenge and offer something different for the punter. He is a rare talent indeed. An afternoon listening to Kerry is as pure a joy as there is. Brett Kajar
Peter Roebuck
Peter Roebuck is unparalleled in his incisive, evocative and knowledgeable commentary of cricket, both on radio and in the press. Even the faster one-day form of the game cannot survive mere description of the on-field action. From a field including some very pedestrian pundits, Peter shines in his wisdom, his wit and his palpable love of cricket. He is able to give commentary a sense of occasion, to highlight the ebb and flow of the game, and to do so without resorting to unnecessary hyperbole or bias. Roebuck is a commentator for those who live and breathe cricket. Paul Carrington
Glenn Mitchell
Glenn Mitchell can make a dull game sound like a million dollars and what he doesn’t know doesn’t matter anyway. Peter Hart
Keith Stackpole
He has an easy-on-the-ears voice, uses precise and compact sentences and has second-to-none cricket knowledge. Stackpole is modest but has a complete understanding of his role as a cricket commentator. He realises that the viewers/listeners want to know what is happening at any given time. He is the sort of cricket commentator you would like to have a cup of tea with during a Test match. Billy Ibadulla
Mark Waugh
He is not in the Channel Nine camp, which reduces his exposure to listeners. However, he always commentates in an impartial and professional manner. He is not afraid to say what he thinks, but does so in an unemotional and forthright manner. His comments on batting techniques are always enlightening. The fact that he has played both forms of the game until quite recently means he can provide constructive opinions on up-and-coming players, which is refreshing. The commentator of the future. Bill Chesterman

A stronghold for South Africa and Kallis

Stats preview to the third Test between South Africa and West Indies in Durban

Cricinfo staff09-Jan-2008With the series level at 1-1 and everything to play for, South Africa will be pleased with the venue for the decider. Of the 31 Tests they have played here, the South Africans have won 12 and lost nine, but it’s their recent record which will give them more confidence: seven victories and two defeats since their readmission into international cricket in 1992. The last time they lost to a side other than Australia in a Test here was almost ten years ago, when Pakistan beat them by 29 runs in February 1998.West Indies’ two trips here have hardly been memorable. In the Boxing Day Test in 1998 they went down by nine wickets, while five years later the hammering was even more severe, by an innings and 65 runs.



South Africa in Durban
Tests Wins Losses Draws
Overall 32 12 9 12
Since 1992 15 7 2 6
versus West Indies 2 2 0 0

Jacques Kallis has, as usual, been the leading batsman for South Africa at this ground: he needs just 143 more to get to 1000 runs here, but for the rest it’s been a mixed bag. Shaun Pollock has enjoyed himself with the bat, with three half-centuries in 11 Tests, but some of the bigger names have struggled. It hasn’t been a happy venue for the captain, but for Hashim Amla Durban will conjure up miserable memories: in four innings he has scores of 1, 0, 1, 0.



South African batsmen in Durban
Batsman Tests Runs Average 100s/ 50s
Jacques Kallis 10 857 57.13 4/ 2
AB de Villiers 3 218 43.60 0/ 2
Shaun Pollock 11 491 40.91 0/ 3
Herschelle Gibbs 9 619 38.68 2/ 2
Ashwell Prince 3 209 34.83 1/ 0
Mark Boucher 9 395 30.38 1/ 4
Graeme Smith 6 203 20.30 0/ 1
Hashim Amla 2 2 0.50 0/ 0

Graeme Smith got some form back with his 85 in the second innings in Cape Town, but in ten innings in Durban, he has only scored one half-century. His average of 20.30 is his worst among home venues where he has played at least three Tests.



Graeme Smith at each home venue (at least three Tests)
Venue Tests Runs Average 100s/ 50s
Cape Town 10 904 53.17 2/ 6
Johannesburg 6 501 50.10 1/ 4
Centurion 7 332 30.18 1/ 0
Port Elizabeth 3 132 22.00 0/ 1
Durban 6 203 20.30 0/ 1

The absence of Chris Gayle will seriously weaken the West Indian batting. Among the batsmen in their squad, only two have played at this ground before. Shivnarine Chanderpaul has a healthy average here, but Daren Ganga, who will take the mantle of senior opener in the absence of Gayle, has struggled, scoring just 51 in four innings.



West Indies batsmen in Durban
Batsman Tests Runs Average 100s/ 50s
Shivnarine Chanderpaul 2 188 47.00 1/ 1
Daren Ganga 2 51 12.75 0/ 0

Not only has Pollock enjoyed batting here, he has also been among the wickets, taking 39 at an average of less than 23. Makhaya Ntini has averaged more than five wickets per Test here, but in his only Test he played here, against England in 2004, Dale Steyn only managed match figures 3 for 148.



South African bowlers in Durban
Bowler Tests Wickets Average 5WI/ 10WM
Shaun Pollock 11 39 22.41 2/ 0
Makhaya Ntini 7 37 23.24 2/ 0
Andre Nel 3 14 26.35 0/ 0
Jacques Kallis 10 15 36.60 0/ 0
Dale Steyn 1 3 49.33 0/ 0

Alexia Putellas is on her way back! Barcelona and Spain sensation says there is 'little time left' until return from injury

Alexia Putellas has confirmed that she is nearing a return after being included in Spain's squad for their Nations League final against France.

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  • Putellas included in squad
  • Recovering from ACL injury
  • Did not get on the pitch
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Putellas is recovering from an ACL injury but was included in Spain's squad for their Nations League final against France, which they won 2-0. Putellas did not get on the pitch but she confirmed after the game that she is very close to returning to action.

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  • WHAT PUTELLAS SAID

    The Barcelona star told reporters: "Very good, I'm super happy, goal accomplished, let's go to the Olympic Games as champions.

    "I feel good, looking forward to playing, there isn't much time left."

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    Putellas has been absent since November, when she was injured in Barcelona's Champions League clash with Benfica. She subsequently underwent surgery, but now looks poised to make a return. She won the Ballon d'Or back-to-back in 2021 and 2022.

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    WHAT NEXT?

    Barcelona Femeni are next in action Athletic Bilbao in the Copa de la Reine, before returning to league action next weekend against Real Sociedad.

Pujara and Rahane put India on top

India held the advantage at stumps on the third day in Bengaluru, where they led by 126 runs with six wickets in hand

The Report by Brydon Coverdale06-Mar-2017
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details5:01

Manjrekar: KL Rahul has come of age

Four years ago, in the second Test of the series in Hyderabad, Cheteshwar Pujara was part of a match-winning stand against Australia, a massive 370-run partnership with M Vijay. It was so colossal an achievement that the partnership alone beat Australia, who failed to make 370 in both innings combined. The events of Pune last week prove that things are different this year, yet once again Australia have found Pujara a major obstacle in the second Test of the series.This time, his significant partnership was with Ajinkya Rahane, and by stumps on the third day in Bengaluru, it was not even worth a hundred runs. But a price could not be put on its value. It is the partnership that turned this match firmly in India’s favour, and may yet keep alive their hopes of regaining the Border-Gavaskar Trophy. On a difficult, dry, cracking pitch, this partnership spanned the entire final session and lifted India’s lead to 126 runs.And it is not over yet. As the players walked off at the close of play, Pujara was undefeated on 79 and Rahane was unbeaten on 40. Their partnership stood at 93, and India’s total was 213 for 4. And Australia knew that this Test, a wrestling match which they dominated on the first day but which India fought back into on days two and three, was at risk of slipping away from them. A chase of 150 would be no gimme; a chase of 250 would give them nightmares.It was a day that could easily be broken down into session victories. India won the first session, in which Ravindra Jadeja ran through Australia’s tail to complete a six-wicket haul and keep Australia’s lead to 87, and then India’s openers reached 38 without loss. Australia won the second session by snaring four key wickets. But India prevailed in the last session, adding 91 without losing a wicket, and thus unquestionably won the day.Perhaps it has been surprising, given the nature of the pitch, that only six wickets fell on the second day of this Test and eight on the third day. There continued to be variable bounce, some deliveries skidding through at ankle height and others bouncing truly. The cracks opened up further, the spinners found turn, the fast men jagged some deliveries sideways. And yet Pujara, Rahane and, earlier, KL Rahul, showed that the pitch could be tamed.They played straight and watched carefully for the low bounce, but when given anything short or wide they took their scoring opportunities. Rahul was important in setting India away on a positive note, especially after his opening partner Abhinav Mukund was bowled by Josh Hazlewood for 16. Rahul played outstandingly for his 51, before he drove hard at Steve O’Keefe and was brilliantly caught by first slip Steven Smith, diving quickly to his right to the vacant second slip position.Cheteshwar Pujara was unbeaten on 79 at stumps•AFP

It was one of two moments in the middle session that could have derailed India’s progress. The other came when Virat Kohli was adjudged lbw to a delivery from Hazlewood that stayed a touch low. Kohli immediately asked for a review, confident that his edge would be detected, but after a series of closely-inspected replays, the third umpire Richard Kettleborough could not be sure whether the ball had hit pad or bat first, and the on-field decision stood.That left India at 112 for 3, which soon became 120 for 4 when Jadeja, promoted to No.5, drove lustily at Hazlewood shortly before tea and was bowled. India’s lead was only 33 runs, and Australia knew that if they could quickly find a way into the lower order they could set themselves on the path to victory. But Pujara and Rahane had other ideas. Calmly, they compiled a stand that frustrated Australia while also building a precious advantage.Certainly, Pujara made Smith pay for dropping him on 4, failing to cling on to a sharp chance off the bowling of Nathan Lyon. Pujara went on to bring up his fifty off 125 balls, and by stumps had survived for 173 deliveries. At the other end, Rahane had safely negotiated 105 deliveries, and Australia needed to regroup before the start of play on day four to fight back into the match. They know that more batting – Karun Nair and Wriddhiman Saha – is still to come.But they also know that wickets can fall quickly in the morning, for that is what happened to Australia themselves on the third day. They began with a lead of 48 and added only 39 for the loss of their last four wickets. R Ashwin had Mitchell Starc caught slogging to deep midwicket, before Jadeja ran through the remaining three wickets to finish with 6 for 63, the second-best figures of his Test career.At one point, Jadeja was on a hat-trick, having trapped Matthew Wade and Lyon lbw with successive deliveries. Hazlewood survived the hat-trick ball, but not much longer than that. Australia had lasted less than 17 overs from their overnight position. Perhaps only a similarly swift resolution to the India innings on the fourth morning will keep Australia in this match.

VIDEO: ‘Is that Neymar?!’ – Fans urge Brazil superstar to ‘retire’ & slam him for being ‘overweight’ as he joins up with Al-Hilal training for first time since ACL injury lay-off

Fans have slammed Neymar for appearing to be overweight and say that he should "retire" after returning to Al-Hilal training following his ACL injury.

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  • Neymar out with ACL injury
  • Brazilian back training at Al-Hilal
  • Fans criticise his physique again
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    WHAT HAPPENED?

    The 32-year-old hit back at football supporters who criticised his physique last month as he recovers from hisanterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tear he suffered while on national duty with Brazilin October. Now the former Barcelona star is doing individual training work at the Saudi Pro League side, his detractors are once again lambasting the Brazilian.

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  • WHAT THE FANS ARE SAYING

    NBA Memes wrote: "Neymar is on that (basketball player) James Harden diet."

    Agurama JnR commented: "What happened to Neymar??"

    ReecyTM tweeted: "Neymar should just retire from playing football and focus on riding horses."

    UncleKeyz added: "Neymar looks like a blesser now," while Iconic Blanco did a side by side photo of Neymar at 32 versus a ripped Cristiano Ronaldo at 36.

    S.J.O put: "What is happening to all Brazil legends?" and showed a side by side of ex-forward Ronaldo and Neymar.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Former Paris Saint-Germain man Neymar, who left the Ligue 1 outfit for Al-Hilal last summer in a £77.2million ($98.3m) move, is in a race against time to play some part in the Saudi Pro League season – with ACL ruptures or tears typically taking eight to 10 months to recover from. The campaign ends in late May and there is no guarantee the ex-Barcelona ace will kick a ball again this term.

Namibia's racism complaint against Afghanistan resolved

The ICC has revealed that it undertook a successful confidential conciliatory process to resolve a complaint made by Cricket Namibia under the anti-racism code during Namibia’s Intercontinental Cup match against Afghanistan in Noida earlier this year

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Jun-2016The ICC has revealed that a confidential conciliatory process was used to resolve a complaint made by Cricket Namibia under the anti-racism code during Namibia’s Intercontinental Cup match against Afghanistan in India earlier this year. The ICC made a statement about the issue through a press release on Tuesday.Following discussions with an ICC-appointed conciliator, all parties agreed that “some of the offence caused by words used by some of the Afghanistan players resulted from cultural differences, a lack of sensitivity and misunderstanding. The Afghanistan Cricket Board accepted that certain words spoken by some of their players in the presence of a Namibian player could reasonably have been expected to cause offence.” Both the board and the Afghanistan players in question offered an apology to the Namibian cricketer involved and stressed “that there was no intention to cause offence on the basis of race, or act in a way that would constitute a breach of the ICC Anti-Racism Code”.The Afghanistan board also agreed that its national squad shall attend an education and training course organised by the ICC, which focuses on “the responsibilities of international cricketers in relation to issues of race, language and cultural sensitivity.”The conciliator appointed in this instance was an “accredited mediator with extensive experience in race relations issues and sports disciplinary matters,” the ICC said. The process also involved relevant parties from both teams in Edinburgh, where the ICC’s annual conference is presently underway.In September 2006, the ICC adopted an amended anti-racism code, which extends to player, personnel and spectator behaviour. In terms of spectator behaviour, the code allowed member countries to impose punishments ranging from ejection from the venue to a life ban if the spectator was found guilty of racial abuse.The process of mediation as a method to amicably resolve such conflicts among cricketers was introduced in October 2009, more than a year after the controversial incident between Harbhajan Singh and Andrew Symonds in Australia that nearly led to India pulling out of the tour. The code included a conciliation procedure to prevent “confusion, misunderstanding, ignorance or language and translation barriers” that could lead to such disputes.David Richardson, the ICC’s CEO, stressed the ICC’s commitment to tackling the issue of racism. “I would like to thank all parties involved for their cooperation in and commitment to the conciliation process,” he said. “I am also extremely grateful to the conciliator for his professional approach. The ICC would like to stress that there is no place for racism within the sport; we are proud of the diversity of the global cricket community and accordingly place the utmost importance on every participant according respect to their fellow players.”The ICC also specified that since all parties agreed that the conciliation process had reached a consensual resolution, the matter was closed and no further comment will be made.

Misbah and Akmal stand tall

Stats highlights from the third day of the India-Pakistan Test in Kolkata

Cricinfo staff02-Dec-2007


Kamran Akmal has struggled behind the stumps, but has been in superb form with the bat
© AFP
  • The 207-run stand between Misbah-ul-Haq and Kamran Akmal equals Pakistan’s record for the sixth wicket in Tests against India. Saleem Malik and Imran Khan had added 207 in Faisalabad in 1982-83. It’s also the highest sixth-wicket stand at Eden Gardens.
  • Akmal has been struggling behind the stumps, but with the bat he has done little wrong in the last couple of months. This was his third 50-plus score in his last five Test innings. His 119 is his fifth Test century, and his second-highest, next to the 154 he scored against England in Lahore in 2005-06.
  • Akmal has has scored five Test hundreds, which is a record for a Pakistan wicketkeeper. Moin Khan is next in line with four.
  • This was Akmal’s fourth century versus India, against whom he averages 47.64 in ten Tests. No other wicketkeeper has scored as many hundreds against India; Andy Flower has three.
  • Misbah-ul-Haq has been on a roll as well. Since returning to the Test team in October, Misbah has notched up scores of 23, 23, 41, 82, 45, and 108 not out – 322 runs in five completed innings at an average of 64.40.
  • This is only the third time that five centuries have been scored in a Test in Kolkata. The India-South Africa Test in 1996-97 and the India-West Indies match in 2002-03 had also seen as many hundreds.
  • Harry Maguire defends Man Utd team-mate Marcus Rashford after forward drops another woeful performance against Newcastle

    Harry Maguire defended team-mate Marcus Rashford after the striker's woeful show against Newcastle United.

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    • Maguire defends Rashford after woeful performance
    • Made '11 mistakes' against Newcastle United
    • Newcastle beat Man Utd 1-0
    • WHAT HAPPENED?

      The English forward had a night to forget against Newcastle United as he made as many as 11 mistakes – which were listed down by a frustrated fan after the match – as United suffered yet another defeat in the Premier League on Saturday.

      Despite a poor show at St. James' Park, former club captain Maguire came to the defence of his colleague as he claimed that Rashford is just experiencing a rough patch of form after a terrific 2022/23 campaign with the team.

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    • WHAT HARRY MAGUIRE SAID

      Speaking to reporters after the match, the defender said, "Marcus had an unbelievable season last season. This season, it hasn't clicked for him. He's working hard. Everyone in that dressing room knows what he's about."

      He added, "It's been a tough week with three away days in six days. To be fair, in the first half, we looked like we'd played our third away day in six days.

      "The tempo wasn't there, the intensity wasn't there. They were a lot better than us. We grew into the game, but we didn't have enough in the end."

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      THE BIGGER PICTURE

      Manager Erik ten Hag refused to speak about his striker's performance in public as he stated after the match that he would prefer to speak to the player directly in private.

      After a stellar performance last season where he scored 17 Premier League goals and played a crucial role in his team finishing in the top four, the 26-year-old has struggled to find form in the ongoing campaign having scored just twice across all competitions.

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      WHAT NEXT FOR MANCHESTE UNITED?

      Erik ten Hag's side are scheduled to play four matches in their next 14 days which include fixtures against Chelsea, Liverpool and Bayern Munich.

    Wrexham star Jacob Mendy has a moment to forget as he marks AFCON debut with horrible mistake which sees Gambia all but eliminated following defeat to Guinea

    Wrexham star Jacob Mendy marked his African Cup of Nations debut with a dismal error which proved costly in a 1-0 defeat to Guinea on Friday.

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    • Mendy missed an interception before the goal
    • Gambia can only qualify as a best third-placed team
    • Hopes of progression hanging by a thread
    • WHAT HAPPENED?

      Mendy made his first appearance in the tournament for Gambia on Friday night, in a game that his country really needed to win. Having lost to Senegal in their opening match, Gambia needed a victory to have any chance of progressing as either group winners or runners-up.

      However, Mendy missed an interception in the build-up to Aguibou Camara's goal in the 69th minute that gave Guinea all three points.

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      The AFCON does allow third-placed teams to qualify for the knockout stages, with the four best third-placed teams progressing. Gambia can still qualify through that path, but they would need to beat Cameroon on the final matchday of the group stage, on Tuesday, and hope that three points is enough for progression.

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    • DID YOU KNOW?

      Mendy has been a key player for Wrexham this season, playing as a right-back and a left-back, and has made 19 appearances in League Two. He has scored two goals and registered five assists in that time.