Chelsea could ditch Koulibaly for Skriniar

Chelsea could make a move for Inter Milan centre-back Milan Skriniar this month, in a shock transfer bid for a centre-back which may potentially jeopardise Kalidou Koulibaly’s position in Graham Potter’s team.

With Chelsea languishing in tenth place in the Premier League and having succumbed to defeat in seven of their past 11 games across all competitions, it has not been the buoyant beginning that the script depicted following Todd Boehly’s takeover of the club last year.

Indeed, Chelsea have spent a reported £377m since the beginning of last summer’s transfer window, with the £52.7m release clause of Christopher Nkunku also met several months ago ahead of a summer arrival, but the Blues’ American owner appears poised to delve into the market once again to combat the woes which have blighted the season at Stamford Bridge.

Skriniar is indeed the name being touted to bolster the backline at present, with Spanish media recently relaying reports from Italian outlet Calciomercato that the 27-year-old is destined for the San Siro exit following a conclusive breakdown in negotiations.

Regarded as one of the standout centre-backs in Italian football, the Slovakia defender has made 240 appearances for Inter since arriving from Sampdoria in 2017, and he now boasts a Transfermarkt value of €60m (£53m).

With Chelsea looking to pounce, Potter could could look to shuffle the pack within the Stamford Bridge ranks, with summer signing Koulibaly potentially being ousted from his position.

Having made 20 appearances since his £33m move from Napoli six months ago, the 31-year-old has perhaps been one of the main scapegoats for Chelsea’s woes, with WhoScored recording his average rating in the Premier League this season at 6.75.

It was only last week that Ian Wright accused the Senegal defender of looking “anxious” and “nervy” in the Blues 2-1 defeat at Fulham.

Skriniar is four years younger than his positional peer, and with the possibility of him being snapped up on a cut-price deal of only €9m (£8m) this month before the end of his contract in the summer, it could be a very shrewd acquisition indeed for an ambitious Chelsea outfit looking to reassert their authority in the Premier League.

As such, it would not be a major surprise to see Boehly plunge back into the transfer market again over the coming weeks in order to a “monster” – as Skriniar was lauded by journalist Siavoush Fallahi – who could represent an improvement on Koulibaly and a turning of the tide after a worrying few months in west London.

Michael Beale may change goalkeeper

Jon McLaughlin may have replaced Alan McGregor as the Rangers number one goalkeeper, Sky Sports contributor Alan Hutton has claimed.

What’s the word?

McGregor has been the Rangers number one since returning to the club in 2018, but the 40-year-old has spent some time on the bench with McLaughlin starting, and was on the bench for the Gers’ 2-0 win away at Dundee United.

McLaughlin, 35, received a 6/10 rating as Rangers kept a clean sheet, and Hutton believes that Michael Beale may prefer him for his style.

Speaking to Football Insider, Hutton claimed that the Rangers manager may start to pick McLaughlin going forward.

“Normally when you look at teams in general, I know it is slightly changing now, the back four and goalkeeper used to stay the same” Hutton claimed.

“You build up those partnerships, you know when the keeper is coming out, what he is going to do with the ball.

“I did listen to Beale and his explanation. He obviously thinks McLaughlin is slightly better at coming for cross balls, he thought that was going to be a target for Dundee United to get the ball into the box.

“You have to take him at his word. We will soon find out in upcoming weeks if he has decided to change his mind long-term but he did give and explanation for it.“

A long-term solution needed?

Given that the two goalkeepers have a combined age of 75, it is likely that neither will be the first choice over the coming years, and the club will have to find a solution.

McGregor is out of contract at the end of the season, and if he is replaced as the number one by McLaughlin, then the club will have a tough decision to make on whether to keep him on or let him leave.

Beale should target a keeper who he can rely on for the next few seasons, as he looks to make his mark on the squad.

Sunderland: Diallo starred vs Wigan

Sunderland moved into the Championship playoff spots as they earned an emphatic 4-1 win over Wigan Athletic in their final game of 2022.

Ellis Simms handed Tony Mowbray’s side the lead with 19 minutes on the clock but the Black Cats were pegged back by Will Keane’s equaliser just before half time.

However, Mowbray made the necessary changes and substitute Ross Stewart converted from the penalty spot to make it 2-1 after Patrick Roberts was fouled, before the former Manchester City man and Amad Diallo scored late on to give the scoreline a far more convincing look.

While there were a number of impressive performances from Sunderland players at the DW Stadium, it was arguably Diallo who was the star man on Thursday evening.

The Manchester United loanee continued his fine goalscoring form with a beautifully taken finish late on, taking his tally to six for the season in the Championship.

 

As per Sofascore, the 20-year-old winger would earn an impressive 7.4/10 rating for his performance in Lancashire, with only Dan Neil (7.9), Trai Hume (7.9) and Roberts (7.5) rated higher.

During the 90 minutes, Diallo would have 75 touches of the ball, completing 38 passes with an accuracy rate of 90%, representing a significant upgrade on his 28.2 average passes and 83% average success rate in the Championship so far this season.

He would also contribute four shots at the DW Stadium, one of which would hit the woodwork and one of which would beat Jamie Jones for Sunderland’s fourth, which again is an increase on the 1.6 shots per game he has averaged in the second tier.

Journalist Josh Bunting was full of praise for the youngster on Twitter even before he rounded off Sunderland’s victory, writing:

“The way Amad Diallo gets on the ball and drives from midfield is just beautiful to watch, what a player we have, just has so much confidence at the moment. Different level for the Championship, outstanding at dropping back in and starting counterattacks.”

Mackems everywhere will be desperate for Manchester United not to recall Diallo in January as he continues to impress in Mowbray’s side, with the young winger once again showing how important he is at Sunderland in their final game of the year.

Man Utd target Pulisic wants Chelsea stay

Rumoured Manchester United transfer target Christian Pulisic wants to stay at Chelsea beyond January, according to Sky Sport journalist Florian Plettenberg.

The Lowdown: Man United linked with Pulisic

In recent days, the American has been linked with a move to Old Trafford as Erik ten Tag looks to fill the void left by the departed Cristiano Ronaldo.

Pulisic is out of contract at Chelsea at the end of next season and his lack of regular starts could potentially leave him looking for a new challenge elsewhere.

While the 24-year-old could move on at some point soon, it doesn’t look as though it will be during this season.

The Latest: Pulisic not keen to move

Taking to Twitter, Plettenberg claimed that Pulisic wants to stay at Chelsea beyond January instead of leaving in the next transfer window.

The reporter tweeted:

“News #Pulisic: Rumors about Dortmund, United & Newcastle not hot. Been told that he wants to stay at #CFC in winter! He really tends to this plan. But: Talks could take place if he would receive a great and interesting offer after the World Cup. But it’s unlikely.”

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The Verdict: Summer move instead?

While this news may come as a disappointment to United – a January switch isn’t impossible – they should still look at making the move happen once this season reaches its conclusion.

At that point, Pulisic will only have a year remaining on his contract and Chelsea may be looking to cash in on the winger, who has scored 26 goals in 133 appearances for the west London club.

At 24, the USA star is at a good age to come in and be a new hero for United – compatriot Tyler Adams has described him as ‘unbelievable’ – providing competition for places and adding more pace to an attack which has often lacked that quality in recent years.

Man Utd must unleash Fernandes once more

Manchester United manager Erik ten Hag has observed a host of his players’ endeavours during the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, with none more impressive than Bruno Fernandes as the group phase approaches the conclusive fixture. 

Fernandes has reminded the world of his prowess on the biggest stage after a decline of direct contributions for United across the past few seasons.

Indeed, in the 2020/21 term, the Portuguese magician completed a stunning return of 28 goals and 17 assists across 58 fixtures, and striking ten goals and 14 assists during the previous campaign. 

This year, he yields just three goals and assists apiece following 20 matches across all competitions for the Red Devils. 

But with two goals and two assists in just two games in Qatar, Fernandes has rekindled his clinical touch and staked a big claim for the player of the tournament so far. 

The 51-cap international has been immense, with Sofascore rating his performance against Ghana at 8.4, with his destructive display against Uruguay achieving 8.8, ranking him the best performer on the pitch on both occasions.

The return to such sublime form comes at the perfect time for Manchester United, with teammate and compatriot Cristiano Ronaldo mutually terminating his contract with the club.

The void left by his departure should not be detrimental to United’s endeavours, with the forward only scoring three times for the club this season, but it does open the door for the £64.6m-rated phenom to take the reins once more and return to his previous role as the offensive focal point. 

Despite his dip in goals and assists, FBref still illustrates the presence he holds on the field, ranking him in the top 6% for passes attempted and the top 9% for progressive passes, whilst also highlighting his defensive aptitude and alert nature by placing him in the top 2% for clearances, when compared to positional peers across Europe’s big five leagues. 

Hailed as a “magnifico” by Squawka after the Uruguay victory, the 28-year-old is earning lavish praise indeed, and justifiably so, with Statman Dave also praising the offensive midfielder for his “crucial contribution” against Ghana in the opening match, where he served two assists. 

With the goals starting to rain down once again for the maestro, it feels as if it is a question of when, not if, that the £240k-per-week earner will entwine his international efforts with those at club level, and provide Old Trafford, and indeed Portugal, with the spark needed to reignite the fire, and guide the club back to gilt-covered success. 

Leeds: Predicted XI, team & injury news

Leeds United head into Saturday afternoon’s Premier League meeting against AFC Bournemouth in high spirits, with Jesse Marsch’s side having finally ended their eight-match winless streak with a shock 2-1 victory over Liverpool last time out.

However, with the Whites having lost a key player to injury in the week, coupled with a number of Marsch’s regular starters currently enduring something of a dip from their usual performance levels, the 48-year-old has a number of decisions to make regarding his starting XI for the visit of the Cherries this afternoon.

Will the American make any changes to the side which lined up in the win at Anfield last weekend?

Here’s how we at Football FanCast think Leeds’ starting XI could look against Bournemouth, along with the latest team and injury news…

Predicted Leeds XI – Meslier; Kristensen, Koch, Cooper, Struijk; Adams, Roca; Summerville, Aaronson, Gnonto; Bamford.

With Marsch revealing in his pre-match press conference that Luis Sinisterra is likely to be out of action until after the World Cup due to a foot injury, while also stating that both Stuart Dallas and Adam Forshaw remain sidelined with knocks, we predict that the 48-year-old will make two changes to the side which started the 2-1 victory over Liverpool last weekend.

The back five remains intact, with Illan Meslier – who enjoyed quite possibly his best performance in a Leeds shirt at Anfield – starting between the sticks, while right-back Rasmus Kristensen, centre-back pairing Robin Koch and Liam Cooper and left-back Pascal Struijk make up the Whites’ defensive unit.

In the middle of the park, Marsch’s tried-and-tested duo of Marc Roca and Tyler Adams once again get the nod, with the summer signings having highly impressed since their respective moves to Elland Road – currently ranking as the club’s second and fourth-best performers in the top flight respectively.

The first change comes in the three behind the striker, with the distinctly out-of-form Jack Harrison – who was linked with a £60m move to Newcastle United in the summer – dropping out of the XI. That switch sees Crysencio Summerville move over to his preferred right-wing role and 18-year-old “wonderkid” Wilfried Gnonto come in on the left flank.

This means that Brenden Aaronson is once again unleashed in the number 10 role just behind Patrick Bamford. Despite the 29-year-old striker being without a goal this season, he has looked quite lively in both the defeat to Arsenal and win at Liverpool win, and he replaces Rodrigo in leading the line for Leeds against the Cherries.

How Greece made football’s biggest upset happen at Euro 2004

The 2004 European Championship saw Greece perform arguably the biggest upset in football history. Here was a nation with little expectation – and essentially zero hype – going into an international tournament with some incredibly strong sides.

They overcame them all, however, lifting the trophy and making history. How exactly did that happen, though? How did they achieve what Portugal's home heroes, England's golden generation, Italy's soon-to-be World Cup winners, a France team with Zinedine Zidane & Thierry Henry, and an enormously impressive Czech Republic team couldn't?

Honestly, it makes little sense even after explaining it, but Football FanCast has given it a go, anyway.

How Denmark won Euro 1992

How Greece qualified for Euro 2004

Qualifying record: Played 8, Won 6, Drew 0, Lost 2

In hindsight, Greece's qualification campaign was a sign of things to come. They topped Group 6, finishing above Spain, Ukraine, Armenia and Northern Ireland.

Now, your first thought is likely 'hang on, they finished above Spain? Surely they were a great team?' but Spain of 2004 were not the team that would end the decade. They're now known for technical, passing football, of course, but back then was the time of La Furia Roja (Red Fury, as you may have guessed). Spain were about intensity and aggression – it just didn't really work, hence the big change in years to come.

It wasn't an enormous shock that Spain didn't qualify automatically, then, even if they still should have finished above Greece. What was perhaps even more telling, however, was the fact that Greece only conceded four goals in their eight games – and all came in their first two fixtures.

In other words, they went into the tournament on the back of six consecutive competitive wins, all with clean sheets. This was a team that knew how to defend resolutely and to say that it stood them in good stead for Euro 2004 is an understatement.

The favourites at Euro 2004

Sven's men flattered to deceive once more…

We're not sure there has ever been a tournament with this many amazing squads that underperformed. There are some scary teams in this one and yet, somehow, they all failed.

Multiple teams were in the middle of a 'golden generation' era, for one. Portugal, as hosts, perhaps had the best chance as they also boasted several players from Josè Mourinho's Champions League-winning Porto team. On top of that, a young Cristiano Ronaldo was starting to shine and they still had former World Player of the Year Luis Figo.

Then there's England. This legitimately might be the strongest England team in history, yet they somehow didn't win anything. Gary Neville, John Terry, Sol Campbell and Ashley Cole made up the back four. David Beckham, Frank Lampard, Steven Gerrard and Paul Scholes were all in midfield. Michael Owen and Wayne Rooney were up top! Not exactly a team that screams 'quarter-final exit'.

Every England performance at the European Championship

Italy's squad was littered with world-class players who would put it all together and win the World Cup two years later. Gianluigi Buffon, Alessandro Nesta, Fabio Cannavaro, Andrea Pirlo, Alessandro del Piero, Christian Vieri, Franceso Totti – all in their prime but Italy didn't make it out of the group stages.

France? Claude Makélélé, Zinedine Zidane and Patrick Vieira in midfield should be good enough – let alone when Thierry Henry and David Trezeguet are forward options. The quarter-finals would see them exit.

The Czech Republic were seen as dark horses. They were led by reigning Ballon d'Or winner Pavel Nedved and laid claim to a young Tomas Rosicky. They'd impress, too – Liverpool striker Milan Baros would win the Golden Boot.

Greece's manager at Euro 2004

Otto Rehhagel had history in the upsets department

Greece's manager was Otto Rehhagel. The German had been in place since 2001 on the back of a sensational spell with Kaiserslautern.

Rehhagel had coached Werder Bremen to two Bundesliga titles at the start of the '90s, earning him the job at Bayern Munich. He failed to win the title in his single season there, however, and lost his job in 1996. That saw him join Kaiserslautern – a team that had just won the DFB-Pokal, but also been relegated from the top flight.

What Rehhagel achieved there was extraordinary. Not only did he win immediate promotion with Kaiserslautern but he then led them to the Bundesliga title in their first season back. It's the only time in the history of German football that a team has managed this.

In other words, Greece had a manager who knew how to win – and how to upset the odds. Still, no one thought it remotely possible that he could achieve something similar at Euro 2004.

Greece's group at Euro 2004

Group A: Portugal, Greece, Spain, Russia

Greece had, on the face of it, a very difficult group. Hosts Portugal – with their star-studded squad – were the standout side. Then there was Spain, out for revenge against Greece from the qualifying campaign. The fourth team was Russia – far from a bad side, though the clear underdogs in this group.

Greece essentially played this group backwards, though. They started with a shock opening-day win over Portugal, narrowly overcoming the hosts 2-1. That was a harbinger of what was to come.

Ranking the biggest upsets at the European Championship

A 1-1 draw with Spain followed, before they lost 2-1 to Russia. Two things were of note, here: firstly, Greece conceded as many goals in these three games as they did in their entire qualifying campaign. They also survived purely on Spain not being able to score goals. The two nations finished level on points and goal difference, but the Greeks had four goals to Spain's two.

That was good enough for second-place behind Portugal and it was onto the Quarter-finals.

How Greece beat France at Euro 2004

25th June 2004: France 0-1 Greece

Greece were getting a tough fixture here no matter what – Portugal, the group winners, had to play England. Second-place in Group A led to a clash with France, another of the favourites and a team that went unbeaten in the group. They were also reigning European champions, no less.

But they just couldn't find a way past Greece. There's little doubt that France outplayed their opponents, with 10 shots to Greece's five, but none of Zinedine Zidane, Robert Pires, Thierry Henry or David Trezeguet could find a goal.

Angelos Charisteas, however, could. He'd scored in the group against Spain and found another here to win the match 1-0. It wouldn't be the last time he did that.

Greece scored the only ever silver-goal winner

1st July 2004: Greece 1-0 Czech Republic (AET)

Greece had to play the Czech Republic in the semi-finals – a team most had down as the dark horse for an upset champion. What transpired is one of the most unique wins in football history.

This one, like all of Greece's games, was a defensive affair where little happened. It finished 0-0 after 90 minutes, sending the game to extra-time.

UEFA had introduced a new rule two years prior. It was called the silver goal, with the idea being that if a team led after the first half of extra time, they'd win the game. This differed from the golden goal, where the first team to score in extra-time won.

Greece vs Czech Republic at Euro 2004 was the only major competition match to be settled by a Silver Goal. It had been announced in February of that year that both silver and golden goals would be removed as laws of the game after this tournament – but there was still time to see one.

Traianos Dellas got the goal, scoring from a corner with mere seconds remaining in the first half of extra-time. This was, quite remarkably, the only international goal of his career and one of the absolute biggest in Greece's history – and one of the more unique in football, full-stop.

The Euro 2004 final

4th July 2004: Portugal 0-1 Greece

It was all setup perfectly. Portugal, the hosts and in the final tournament for their golden generation, were into the final and ready to take home the trophy. Even better, they could do so by getting revenge on the team that upset them in the competition's opener.

They'd managed to overcome both England and the Netherlands en route to the final, with Maniche's screamer helping them over the line in the latter. Now a minnow with zero success to their name was all that remained in the way.

The greatest goals in European Championship history (ranked)

Of course, things did not play out the way Portugal thought they would. They dominated the final – as everyone expected – but struggled to find any way to Greece's goal. Like France and the Czech Republic before them, the defending was just too solid.

And this was the most 'Greece' display of the entire tournament. Not only did they have just one quarter of Portugal's shots in this one, but they scored with their only shot on target. It doesn't get more 'underdog win' than that.

It was Angelos Charisteas again who found the goal, much as he did against France. His third of the tournament remains Greece's biggest-ever goal – and it'll likely never be beaten.

With that, Greece had their first major trophy and you can't understate how remarkable that is. Before Euro 2004, they'd only ever competed in two international tournaments and never won a final-tournament match – they've still only ever qualified for seven.

Greece have also only managed to get out of the group stage on three occasions in their history. The fact that one of those ended up with them as champions makes this arguably the most sensational underdog win ever seen.

Aston Villa: Gerrard interested in Kamara

Aston Villa are interested in a deal to bring Glen Kamara to Villa Park in the January transfer window.

What’s the talk?

That’s according to TEAMtalk, who claim that, following recent reports suggesting that Glasgow Rangers would be willing to part with the central midfielder for a figure in the region of £10m this winter, Steven Gerrard’s side are currently one of the most interested clubs in a move for the 25-year-old – alongside French outfit OGC Nice.

The report goes on to state that, with Morgan Sanson looking likely to depart Villa Park in January, coupled with Douglas Luiz appearing set to leave the club on a free transfer at the end of his contract next summer, Johan Lange has work to do in strengthening Gerrard’s midfield – with Kamara seemingly a very attainable target.

Dream Luiz heir

While it is true that the loss of Luiz would come as a blow to Gerrard and his side, especially on a free, should Lange manage to bring in Kamara as the Brazil international’s replacement in the middle of the park, it would certainly help to soften the blow of waving goodbye to the 24-year-old.

Indeed, the £6.75m-rated talent was a key part of Gerrard’s title-winning Rangers side back in 2020/21, with the midfielder making an average of 60.1 passes – at a success rate of 91% – 0.9 interceptions, 1.1 tackles and winning 4.1 duels – at a success rate of 59% – per game over his 33 league appearances, with these returns seeing the Finland international average a SofaScore match rating of 6.99.

Furthermore, the £30k-per-week earner also impressed over his 14 appearances in Gers’ run to the Europa League final last time out, scoring one goal and registering two assists, in addition to making an average of 1.2 interceptions, 0.9 tackles, 0.6 key passes and winning 4.2 duels – at a success rate of 56% – per fixture.

It was this kind of performance level that saw Kamara become a firm favourite of the 42-year-old manager during his time in Glasgow, with the Liverpudlian stating of the midfielder back in 2019:

“He’s a terrific footballer in possession, always playing with his head up and looking to connect defence and attack. But what pleased me most is what I spoke about when we signed him in terms of how he’ll be out of possession.

“Will he hunt the ball back, be aggressive, work hard for the team and be a monster in the middle of the park? He showed signs of that against Kilmarnock and potentially he can become a top midfielder.”

As such, while Luiz – who has averaged SofaScore match ratings of 6.77, 6.87, 6.89 and 6.83 over his four Premier League campaigns at Villa Park – will not be an easy man to replace, Kamara would very much appear to be something of a dream heir to the Brazilian, especially for an extremely affordable fee of just £10m.

Newcastle dodged a bullet with Coutinho

Newcastle United appear to have dodged a bullet regarding their failure to sign Brazil international Philippe Coutinho, with the 30-year-old having endured an underwhelming start to the new season at current side Aston Villa.

The former Barcelona playmaker had previously been heavily linked with a move to St James’ Park prior to the winter window, with it looking as if the 69-cap gem would be the first high-profile addition of the new PIF era.

While no January move came to fruition, there were further reports towards the tail end of last season that suggested that the Magpies could try and hijack Villa’s permanent deal for the one-time Liverpool man, albeit with the player ultimately opting to join the Midlands side for a fee of around £17m.

That switch looked like a real coup for Steven Gerrard and co at the time, although the early signs are that it could well prove to be something of a mistake for the former European champions, with those back on Tyneside perhaps thankful that they failed to strike an agreement.

While the new campaign is still in its infancy, the £18m-rated man has failed to score nor register a single assist in the Premier League thus far, having previously scored five goals and laid on three assists in just 19 games in the second half of last season after joining on loan.

Amid the current collective struggles at Villa Park, one issue has been just how to get the Brazilian into the starting lineup, with the creative midfielder seemingly vying for a regular berth alongside Emi Buendia.

Having such a marquee name resigned to the bench – with just three top-flight starts to his name so far – is not an ideal situation for Gerrard and co, although it represents just how disappointing the former Anfield hero has been of late.

Coutinho’s average match rating of 6.60, as per SofaScore, is currently only the 17th best in the Villans squad, with it hard to see how he is justifying his reported £125k-per-week salary.

Pundit Kevin Phillips had previously suggested that dishing out such a hefty wage could well cause a “problem” in the Villa dressing room, with such a disparity between him and the rest potentially a source of disruption.

Those at Newcastle having seemingly been careful not to cause their own problems by astutely walking away from deals due to exorbitant wage demands, with Coutinho’s arrival likely to have unbalanced what appears to be a harmonious squad at Howe’s disposal.

It may seem bizarre to say of a player who was previously dubbed a “creative genius” by Sky Sports pundit Phil Thompson and once cost a reported £142m following his move to the Camp Nou, yet it could well have been a bullet dodged for Newcastle by not signing the seemingly fading force.

Spurs could eye Trevoh Chalobah

Tottenham Hotspur could eye Trevoh Chalobah as a replacement for Japhet Tanganga…

What’s the word?

According to Standard Sport, Spurs are one of the several teams showing an interest in the Chelsea centre-back ahead of deadline day on September 1st.

And transfer insider Dean Jones believes that the north Londoners aren’t afraid to sign a player from their rivals as there are some concerns over squad depth at Hotspur Way.

He told GIVEMESPORT:

“They are in for a defender if Tanganga leaves and they see no real problem whose door they have to knock on. There is a small concern here over depth.”

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Bye-bye Tanganga?

The 23-year-old centre-back proved his credentials last season when he emerged as an important player for Blues boss Thomas Tuchel.

Thiago Silva (7.08) was the only defender graded with a better average WhoScored rating than Chalobah (7.03) last term after he made 30 appearances in all competitions, including starts in the FA Cup and Carabao Cup final.

Once described as a “monster” by scout Jacek Kulig, the £20k-per-week Chelsea academy graduate averaged two tackles per game, which was more than any other centre-back and was second to Silva once again in terms of passing accuracy (90.6%). Evidently, he has the intelligence to read the match well.

And he could be the perfect stop-gap replacement for Tanganga, who is currently a valuable member of the squad as he is a homegrown talent – something that Spurs lack right now.

Despite being lauded as “really special”, the fellow England U21 international has struggled to break into the first-team under manager Antonio Conte, having been restricted to 11 appearances since his arrival back in November.

As such, the 23-year-old could be expendable with Chalobah being viewed as his likely replacement, though time is running out to set these deals in motion with less than a week to go until deadline day.

AND in other news, Spurs receive Ruslan Malinovskyi transfer boost…

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