Author: admin

  • Chelsea want to sign ‘outstanding’ Crystal Palace player

     

    Chelsea also sent Ben Chilwell on loan to Selhurst Park on Deadline Day with the frozen out England international looking for game time. The Blues have also been linked with transfer interest in Marc Guehi.

     

    Chelsea transfer interest in Crystal Palace defender

    Newcastle United and Tottenham Hotspur are both also said to want Guehi, with the Magpies seeing a £60 million bid rejected last summer. Guehi is a product of the Chelsea academy and left Stamford Bridge in 2021, but is now an interest to Enzo Maresca.

     

    However, the priority might not be a move for Guehi or even Eberechi Eze, with whom Chelsea were linked a year ago. It could be for Munoz, who has taken to the Premier League with ease since arriving from Belgian side Genk in January 2024 for £6.8 million.

     

    The full-back role is one which Maresca could want more depth in next season. Munoz plays on the right flank and has the attacking qualities to slot into the Chelsea side. Reece James is first choice in that position at Stamford Bridge but has had injury struggles.

     

     

     

    Munoz will still have two years left on his Crystal Palace contract in June but that is not expected to stop Chelsea and Manchester City knocking at the doors at Selhurst Park. Should Chilwell’s loan stay in south London go well, the Blues could look to send the player back to Crystal Palace to sweeten any deal.

     

    Pep Guardiola is believed to view Munoz as a long-term replacement for Kyle Walker, who left Manchester City last month to join AC Milan. The defender is a product of the Envigado academy in Colombia, which has produced players including James Rodriguez, Freddy Guarin and Jhon Cordoba.

     

    Daniel Munoz praised for ‘outstanding mentality’

    Crystal Palace manager Oliver Glasner has praised Munoz since he arrived at the club. Speaking in April last year, the head coach said: “Daniel has an outstanding training mentality. Every training session he’s the guy who’s running most, who’s sprinting most. Although he had the games with Colombia in the international break, every game 100 minutes, [he plays] every game [with] the most intensity.

     

    “It’s the wish of all managers to have such players, and then he gets the reward [starting every game]. I don’t give him a gift. He deserves it and he performs and [gets] up and down.”

     

     

    Munoz has two goals and three assists in the Premier League this season. The defender has picked up two of those assists in his last two appearances, against Brentford and Manchester United, as he continues to turn heads.

     

    In other news, Tottenham Hotspur have been handed a huge boost ahead of their Carabao Cup semi-final second leg against Liverpool on Thursday night.

     

    National World encourages reader discussion on our stories. User feedback, insights and back-and-forth exchanges add a rich layer of context to reporting. Please review our Community Guidelines before commenting.

  • How good Unai Emery really believes Marcus Rashford is after signing him for Aston Villa

    How good Unai Emery really believes Marcus Rashford is after signing him for Aston Villa

     

    Marcus Rashford was perhaps the biggest name to make a move in the winter transfer window.

     

    Rashford wanted to leave Manchester United in January, and he got his wish as he joined Aston Villa on loan late in the day.

     

    Rashford has been tipped to succeed at Aston Villa after making this move to the Midlands, and Unai Emery apparently has high hopes for the player too.

     

    Indeed, according to David Ornstein, speaking on The Athletic FC Podcast, Emery is a huge fan of Rashford. In fact, according to the journalist, Emery believes Rashford is genuinely one of the top talents in world football and that he is the right coach to get him back to the top level.

     

    Unai Emery, Manager of Aston Villa, looks on during the UEFA Champions League 2024/25 League Phase MD7 match between AS Monaco and Aston Villa FC a…

     

    How Unai Emery views Marcus Rashford

    Ornstein shared what he knows about Rashford and how Emery views him.

     

    The journalist says that Emery really rates Rashford, so much so that he thinks he’s one of the best in world football.

     

    “Maybe their priorities lay elsewhere. Maybe for whatever reason, having seen him not playing at Manchester United, they didn’t immediately say, oh, come and play for Aston Villa. But Unai Emery loves Marcus Rashford as a player,” Ornstein said.

     

    He believes, whether we like it or not, that Rashford is one of the best in world football and that he is the perfect coach to bring him back to his top level. And therefore, they will see this being a successful partnership in the Premier League, in the Champions League, and maybe beyond, hence the 40 million pound buy option. With all of that in mind, I don’t think Manchester United envisage him being part of their future.”

     

    Unai Emery record of improving attackers

    Unai Emery has been criticised at times during his career after disappointing spells with the likes of PSG and Arsenal.

     

    However, even the biggest Emery detractor can’t knock his record for getting the best out of his attackers.

     

    Indeed, many top strikers have had the best periods of their careers under Unai Emery.

     

    Players with most goals under Unai Emery Goals per game under Unai Emery Career goals per game

     

    As the stats show, attacking players often play the best football of their careers under Unai Emery.

     

    Ollie Watkins has improved under Unai Emery, while Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang won a Golden Boot under the Spanish gaffer at Arsenal.

     

    Emery believes he’s the right manager to bring the best out of Rashford, and he may not be wrong.

     

    The Aston Villa boss is one of the best in the world at helping attacking players reach their potential, and his record attests to that.

     

     

  • Nottingham Forest’s strongest starting line-up amid double boost

    Nottingham Forest’s strongest starting line-up amid double boost

     

    Nottingham Forest might not have strengthened Nuno Espirito Santo’s squad on deadline day but that doesn’t mean the head coach’s selection dilemmas have got any easier.

     

    If anything, settling on the Reds’ strongest XI is more difficult than was the case a few weeks ago. After all, Nuno’s options have been bolstered – just not through any winter window signings.

     

    Young defender Tyler Bindon was the only new face to put pen to paper before Monday’s cut-off when he joined from Reading. However, the 20-year-old will have to wait a while to make his debut in the Garibaldi as he immediately returned to the Royals on loan.

     

    Nuno does have more players at his disposal than he did last month, though, thanks to midfielders Danilo and Ibrahim Sangare returning from injury. And winger Callum Hudson-Odoi should not be too far behind them.

     

    The centre of the pitch poses the greatest conundrum when it comes to picking Forest’s best line-up. Danilo and Sangare will both hope to have a big part to play in the remainder of the season.

     

    The duo made up Nuno’s first-choice pairing back on the opening day of the campaign, before injury intervened. Danilo suffered a broken ankle against Bournemouth that day and Sangare sustained a hamstring problem a few weeks later. The former made his first Premier League start since that day when he was in the XI for last weekend’s 7-0 obliteration of Brighton and Hove Albion, while his teammate made his comeback from off the bench.

     

     

    Midfield is an area where the Reds are particularly well stocked. So much so that it made sense for James Ward-Prowse to return to parent club West Ham United on deadline day as his chances of regular game time had only been further reduced.

     

    Each of Nuno’s midfielders offers something different. Ryan Yates, Elliot Anderson and Nicolas Dominguez have all played their part in getting Forest to where they are now while Danilo and Sangare have been sidelined.

     

    After a tricky first year, Sangare was actually starting to find his feet before he was ruled out of action. The 27-year-old should be one of the big beneficiaries from the week-long training camp in Dubai the team are currently on. It will help with his fitness and sharpness.

     

    Even when fully fit, though, he may well have his work cut out to pin down a starting spot. Yates and Dominguez might find the same, as the combination of Danilo and Anderson worked very well against the Seagulls.

     

    Nottingham Forest: Special reports

     

    To celebrate the success of Nottingham Forest this season, we are writing a series of features celebrating events at the City Ground.

     

    From the finances to the former managers. Looking at how the City is benefitting from what Nuno’s team are doing on the pitch.

     

    We take a deep dive into Evangelos Marinakis and his aspirations for the club – can the Reds match them?

     

    Nuno’s switch to a back three for that rout adds another variation when considering the Reds’ strongest XI. It came about in response to the 5-0 drubbing at Bournemouth as the Portuguese looked to put the focus back on being tight defensively.

     

    It worked a treat, and it might be something he considers for at least some of the remaining 14 games. When Hudson-Odoi is back fit, though, it is difficult to look past Nuno’s usual 4-2-3-1.

     

    The winger has been a big miss in the last two matches while out with a groin problem – even if his teammates coped pretty well without him against Brighton. He has been pictured joining in as the players have been put through their paces in Dubai, so Forest will hope he is fit again by the time they travel to face Fulham on February 15 (3pm kick-off) for their return to Premier League action.

     

     

  • Commanders trade for Myles Garrett, Browns pick QB late in Round 1

    Commanders trade for Myles Garrett, Browns pick QB late in Round 1

     

    From a team-building perspective, it actually makes perfect sense for the Browns to trade Myles Garrett.

     

    They’d have to do some nifty accounting work to even make it happen as Garrett would represent an enormous dead cap hit if traded, but at close to 30 years old, on the verge of wanting a justifiable top-of-market extension, the clearly rebuilding Browns should maximize the value they can get for the perennial All-Pro and trade him this offseason.

     

    That seismic move is baked into this mock draft.

     

    Garrett wants to go a serious contender. Of course he does. He should want to. I have an idea — how about the NFC runner-up Washington Commanders? Young, dynamic quarterback. Defensive-minded coach. Team with loads of cap space to accommodate Garrett’s financial desires. Clear need on the edge. It’s perfect.

     

    Here are the trade parameters:

     

    Commanders get: Myles Garrett, Cleveland’s 2025 fifth-round pick (No. 165)

     

    Browns get: Washington’s 2025 first-round pick (No. 29 overall), its second-round pick (No. 61), and a conditional 2026 third-round pick than can become a second-round pick based on likely-to-be-earned performance escalators.

     

    And after the trade, Cleveland gets creative with how it adds a young and reasonably talented quarterback to the roster.

     

    The draft order below was determined using the current 2025 NFL Draft order.

     

     

  • Hamilton suffers F1 test setback as world champion taken to hospital – GPFans Recap

    Hamilton suffers F1 test setback as world champion taken to hospital – GPFans Recap

     

    Hamilton suffers F1 test setback as world champion taken to hospital – GPFans Recap

     

    Lewis Hamilton was joined by Ferrari team-mate Charles Leclerc and McLaren’s Australian star Oscar Piastri as they conducted tyre testing duties for Pirelli in Barcelona.

     

    World champion sent to hospital after horror testing crash

     

    A world champion racer has been sent to hospital due to injuries sustained after a horror crash during pre-season testing.

     

    Newey gets Aston Martin BOOST as team announce new signing

     

    Newey is about to embark on his first Formula 1 campaign with the British outfit following his shock departure from Red Bull in 2024.

     

    Ferrari LEGEND questions Hamilton signing

     

    An ex-Ferrari chief has cast doubt over whether the arrival of seven-time Formula 1 champion Lewis Hamilton will be enough to end the team’s long wait for success.

     

    Hamilton replacement reveals INCREDIBLE tribute to F1 legend

     

    Following the seven-time world champion’s shock decision to swap the Silver Arrows for Ferrari, team boss Toto Wolff – after months of speculation – finally opted to select Kimi Antonelli as the man to join George Russell in 2025.

  • Steelers Could Sign RB With Superstar Potential

    Steelers Could Sign RB With Superstar Potential

     

     

    ; Dallas Cowboys running back Rico Dowdle (23) runs the ball against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the second half at AT&T Stadium.

    ; Dallas Cowboys running back Rico Dowdle (23) runs the ball against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the second half at AT&T Stadium.

    :

    PITTSBURGH — The Pittsburgh Steelers have a “job opening” at running back this offseason, with both Najee Harris and Jaylen Warren hitting the free agent market. Unless the plan is to keep Cordarrelle Patterson and make him their starter, the team will need to look for their next group of runners, and have an option who carries superstar potential.

     

    In a list of six free agents who can turn into superstars, Bleacher Report lists one name the Steelers will already be negotiating with – Justin Fields. But they may also have an opportunity to pair the quarterback with a running back who has the same upside.

     

    That’s former Dallas Cowboys runner Rico Dowdle.

     

    “Rico Dowdle could’ve been a breakout star running back this past season, but the Dallas Cowboys split his workload with Ezekiel Elliott for more than half of the campaign,” Bleacher Report writes.

     

    “Before Week 12, Dowdle logged 20-plus carries in one game. In four of the last six weeks, he recorded 20-plus rush attempts and racked up 104 or more rushing yards in three of those outings. …

     

    “Because of his versatile skill set, Dowdle could be one of the league’s top running backs in a featured role despite having only 331 NFL carries on his resume.”

     

    Dowdle, 26, went undrafted in the 2020 NFL Draft and has been with the Cowboys ever since. Without ever getting an opportunity to be a feature back, he hits free agency and a market that’s top two options may be Aaron Jones and Najee Harris. And while he likely won’t be RB1 in Pittsburgh, he may be intrigued by the job opening and the potential of the role.

     

    The Steelers’ top option this offseason is likely Jaylen Warren. As a restricted free agent, they can tender Warren, minimizing his cost as they look to build around him. The NFL Draft will be another place they’ll look, but adding a second veteran is definitely on the table.

     

    If they’re looking to clean house all together, moving on from Harris and Warren, Dowdle becomes a top name to watch. Pittsburgh won’t head into the draft without signing a running back. And if they are thinking young with potential, Dowdle probably sits at the top of their list.

     

    Options are key for any team looking to fill a position group. For the Steelers, there’s not many flashy names on the open market, but a few with potential. And Dowdle may have the most.

  • Gout Gout trains with Olympic champion Noah Lyles

    Gout Gout trains with Olympic champion Noah Lyles

     

     

    The world and Olympic champion sprinter sat opposite Gout Gout as the 17-year-old schoolboy from Queensland quietly but unabashedly told the American star he planned to beat him … this year.

     

    Gout was in Florida to train with Lyles. It was about learning from the world’s best, but similarly he wanted Lyles to know he was determined not to be intimidated. He might only be 17 at this year’s world championships in Tokyo in September, but he still wanted to beat the American champion 100-metre and 200m sprinter.

     

    “I am trying to show you what’s up. I am trying to come out with a bang,” Gout said of the worlds.

     

    “That’s what I love to hear,” Lyles laughed.

     

    “Whatever I’ve got to do to show Noah I am coming for that spot [I will do],” said Gout. “Obviously, it’s a learning experience but deep down I’m trying to get a medal for sure or even make that final and be running up Noah or trying to chase Noah down for sure.”

     

    Lyles’ eyes lit up. Gout was talking his language.

     

    “I want you to come up to me and say, ‘Yeah I am going to take your spot’. Because if I hear somebody [who] is like, ‘Well maybe one day …’ No! It’s not one day, it’s going to be today and if it’s not today it’s the next day. And I’ll be here every step of the way, like come on don’t be scared to tell me your dream. Shout it from the top of the mountains. Come after me.”

     

    The pair were talking on Beyond the Records, a podcast Lyles does weekly with fellow Olympic gold medal-winning track stars Grant Holloway and Rai Benjamin. The recording – which drops in full on Friday – came amid a two-week training block that Gout, his coach Di Sheppard, manager James Templeton and training partner Jonathon Kasiano (a talented 60m runner and long jumper) joined in Florida at the National Training Centre with Lyles and his coach Lance Brauman.

     

    The trip was facilitated by adidas with whom Gout signed a mammoth (for an Australian athlete, let alone a teenaged Australian athlete) sponsorship deal last year just ahead of breaking the men’s national 200m record when he ran 20.04 seconds as a 16-year-old at the Australian all schools championships in Queensland. That record-breaking run came a day after running 10.04s in the 100m.

     

    Gout was already a viral social media star, from some crazy runs a year ago. He was known before he was known as it were. Winning silver at the world juniors last year and then the performances at the all schools titles changed all that. His time of 20.04s was quicker even than the greatest sprinter of all time, Usain Bolt, ran as a 16-year-old. Now he was about more than an Insta feed. He was the real deal, not a reel.

     

    Gout, who turned 17 at Christmas, returned to school for year 12 this week. But his education started a few weeks ago in Florida, well before he went back to school. For those weeks he immersed himself with Lyles, Brauman and the training group.

     

    He didn’t learn to reinvent the wheel at training there, for you must be doing something right to run faster than any kid in the world at 16 and break a men’s national record, but the comfort was in knowing what you were doing was the same as the world’s best.

     

    The bigger picture lesson was about being up close and around not only the world’s fastest man but the sport’s biggest showman. It was rubbing shoulders with him and seeing how he trained and not being overawed by it. It was about being comfortable with adult athletes and having an adidas crew there for two days following around at training. It was also knowing you were with the biggest athlete in the world on their turf and on their terms – so no selfies and posts on Insta.

     

    Noah Lyles, of the United States, competes during the men’s 200-meter semifinal at the 2024 Summer Olympics.

    Noah Lyles, of the United States, competes during the men’s 200-meter semifinal at the 2024 Summer Olympics. CREDIT: AP

    “It wasn’t about learning new things in training, the education in just being immersed in this was next level,” Shepard said.

     

    He did learn one new thing.

     

    Gout currently is slow out of the blocks for a range of reasons tied into his age and incredibly tight Achilles tendons. Asked about it, Brauman smiled and reassured the schoolboy the improvements would come with time.

     

    “Man to start like a man you need to get a man’s ass,” Brauman laughed.

     

    Sheppard smiled. It was a message Gout had been given at home and echoed around the world. You can still win and run fast in the meantime, but hitting your peak will only come when your body peaks and that can’t be hurried. Gout’s body now is not going to handle the load that Lyles is doing, for Lyles himself wasn’t doing that sort of load at 17.

     

    “It wasn’t about sitting down and having those long one-on-one conversations. That was not what it was about. Noah gave him little hints here and there when they were training, but it was more about being in the environment,” Sheppard said.

     

    “I got Lance and one of his assistant coaches to look at his movement patterns when we were in the gym because I was a bit concerned at something I had seen, and it was more walking away with the reassurance that they saw what I saw and what we have done was on point.

     

    Gout Gout warms up for his Boys’ U18 100m final with his coach Di Sheppard during the 2024 Australian All Schools Athletics Championship at Queensland Sport and Athletics Centre on December 06, 2024 in Brisbane.

    Gout Gout warms up for his Boys’ U18 100m final with his coach Di Sheppard during the 2024 Australian All Schools Athletics Championship at Queensland Sport and Athletics Centre on December 06, 2024 in Brisbane.

    “The boys were respectful of their environment, but they were not intimidated by it. And that was comforting for me, to know they can go to the next level and feel comfortable in the company of the best in the world and not intimidated or like they don’t belong.

     

    “It was good because you go into this environment, and you think, ‘Am I going to be out of my depth?’ This is an environment we have not been in before so we are going to be a bit reserved and we sat back and observed at the start but when they asked them to join them the boys jumped into training and fitted right in and realised we are not doing much different. For me, it was positive knowing moving forward we are on the right path.”

     

    Gout also got the taste of what life will be like if he continues this trajectory. It was travelling across the world, training hard, seeing the attention that the biggest star in the sport receives and understanding how to deal with it. It was knowing, too, that there is a lot of downtime as an athlete.

     

     

    Returning to school this week was returning to earth. He is a prefect at Ipswich Grammar, but each morning there are queues of younger kids wanting selfies with him. His training time has been pushed back to try to have an emptier track but still people, parents picking up kids mainly, come wandering in wanting to take pics and video of him training. It’s a distraction.

     

    After a couple of weeks with Lyles, he better knows that some intrusions are unavoidable, and it’s how you deal with them.

     

    Lyles also knows something about Gout – he is coming for him. And Lyles loves it.

     

    News, results and expert analysis from the weekend of sport are sent every Monday. Sign up for our Sport newsletter.

     

     

  • Georgia Football Depth Chart – What Does the CB Room Look Like in 2025

    Georgia Football Depth Chart – What Does the CB Room Look Like in 2025

     

    Bulldogs defensie back Ellis Robinson IV (1) breaks up a pass for Clemson Tigers wide receiver Cole Turner (22) during the fourth quarter of the 2024 Aflac Kickoff Game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Ken Ruinard-Imagn Images

    Bulldogs defensie back Ellis Robinson IV (1) breaks up a pass for Clemson Tigers wide receiver Cole Turner (22) during the fourth quarter of the 2024 Aflac Kickoff Game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Ken Ruinard-Imagn Images / Ken Ruinard – Imagn Images

    Entering the 2025 Georgia Football season, as per usual, they will have plenty of talented options at the cornerback position. We preview the position battle here.

     

    Daylen Everette: The Defensive Playmaker

     

    Daylen Everette’s performance during the 2024 season was nothing short of remarkable. As one of the conference’s top cornerbacks, Everette showcased his ability to shut down opposing receivers, finishing with 9 pass deflections, 4 interceptions, and 45 solo tackles. His 9 pass deflections were a testament to his coverage skills and ability to break up passing plays, while his 4 interceptions demonstrate his keen awareness and ball-hawking instincts. In addition, Everette’s 45 solo tackles reflect his physicality and willingness to contribute in both pass coverage and run support.

     

    Everette’s ability to consistently disrupt the passing game was crucial for Georgia as they faced some high-powered offenses throughout the season. His interceptions were often momentum-changing plays, and his tenacity on the field provided leadership to the defense. Everette proved to be one of the most valuable members of the secondary, making him a key player for whom opposing offenses had to account at all times.

     

    Daniel Harris: Defending His Spot

     

    While Daylen Everette has emerged as a playmaking leader in the cornerback room, Daniel Harris has quietly established himself as a lengthy, physical cornerback in his own right. With 18 solo tackles and 3 pass deflections, Harris may not have the flashy numbers of his counterpart, but his consistency and ability to defend his spot on the field have been vital.

    His physical presence in the run game was a major asset, and his solid pass coverage kept opposing quarterbacks from looking his way too often. Harris’s contribution was especially valuable in tight games, where his ability to shut down key receiving threats helped secure victories for the team.

     

    In a crowded cornerback room, Harris’s ability to defend his spot and continue to perform at a high level speaks volumes about his skill and work ethic. He has got the experience now, so looking forward to seeing what 2025 holds for Daniel Harris, often tasked with taking on some of the toughest assignments in the defensive backfield, because they knew what Everette was on the other side they tried to find a weakness in our pass defense. Harris took on that challenge and held his ground this season, but one thing for sure we know he will put in a good off season workout and who knows maybe be one of the top cornerbacks in the nation.

     

    Ellis Robinson IV and Demello Jones: The Future at Cornerback

     

    While Everette and Harris have proven themselves as stalwarts in the secondary, the future of the cornerback position at Georgia is in good hands with the emergence of young talents like Ellis Robinson IV and Demello Jones. Both players have been turning heads with their skill sets and are expected to compete for starting roles as they continue to develop.

     

    Ellis Robinson IV is a highly touted recruit known for his elite coverage skills and athleticism. His ability to mirror receivers and disrupt passing lanes has made him one of the most exciting young cornerbacks in the game. Robinson’s talent has put him in direct competition with Everette and Harris for a starting role, and his potential to make an immediate impact cannot be understated.

     

    Demello Jones, meanwhile, has shown flashes of brilliance in his own right. Known for his speed and physicality, Jones brings a different dynamic to the cornerback position. His ability to match up against larger, more physical receivers has made him a potential game-changer on the outside. As Jones continues to gain experience, he will likely push for a significant role in the team’s secondary. Luckily, for this Georgia football team both these guys wanted to work for their spots and not enter the transfer portal.

     

    The Competition Heating Up

     

    With the combination of experienced players like Everette and Harris and the incoming talent of Robinson IV and Jones, the competition at cornerback is intensifying. This depth gives the coaching staff valuable options and allows them to deploy different strategies to handle opposing offenses. The battle for starting spots at cornerback is expected to be one of the most closely watched storylines in the offseason, with all four players capable of making significant contributions.

     

    In conclusion, the cornerback position at Georgia has been a stronghold this season, with Daylen Everette leading the charge with impressive stats and Daniel Harris proving his reliability in critical moments. Meanwhile, the potential of Ellis Robinson IV and Demello Jones adds an exciting layer to the team’s secondary. As the competition for starting spots intensifies, Georgia is in an position with a deep and talented group of cornerbacks that could shape the team’s defensive success for years to come.

     

     

     

     

  • Wisconsin football’s 2025 recruiting class: who enrolled early, who is no longer coming, how it stacks up nationally

    Wisconsin football’s 2025 recruiting class: who enrolled early, who is no longer coming, how it stacks up nationally

     

     

    Wed, Feb 5, 2025, 3:23 PM GMT·2 min read

    MADISON – Wednesday marked the first day of the final signing period for Division I and II football.

     

    Wisconsin isn’t expected to add any players from the high school ranks. The Badgers locked down their class in December when they signed 24 high school players during the early period.

     

    UW’s class ranks No. 21 nationally, according to Rivals. The Badgers are 25th on 247sports’ list, 27th according to On3 and No. 31 according to ESPN.

     

     

    More than half of that group is already on campus taking classes and preparing for spring ball. Here is a look at who is here, who is on the way and who is no longer coming.

     

    Wisconsin football commits enrolled and working out

    Emmett Bork, TE, 6-6, 240, Oconomowoc, Wis. – Oconomowoc HS

     

     

    Cooper Catalano, LB, 6-2, 215, Germantown, Wis – Germantown HS

     

    Nicolas Clayton, OLB, 6-5, 215, Gainesville, Fla. – Bucholz, HS

     

    Nolan Davenport, OL, 6-6, 290, Massillon, Ohio – Massillon HS

     

    Grant Dean, S, 6-1, 185, Neenah, Wis. – Neenah HS

     

    Luke Emmerich, S, 6-1, 190, Monticello, Minn. – Monticello HS

     

    Eugene Hilton Jr., WR, 6-1, 200, Zionsville, Ind. – Zionsville HS

     

    Remington Moss, S, 6-2, 190, Dumfies, Va. – St. Michael the Archangel

     

    Torin Pettaway, DL, 6-5, 290, Middleton, Wis. – Middleton HS

     

    Michael Roeske, OL, 6-8, 305, Wautoma, Wis. – Wautoma HS

     

    Jaimier Scott, S, 6-1, 185, Mount Healthy, Ohio – Mount Healthy HS

     

     

    Cairo Skanes, CB, 6-1, 180, Asheville, N.C. – Providence Day HS

     

    Carter Smith is a 6-foot-3, 190-pound quarterback who committed to the Wisconsin Badgers from Bishop Verot High School in Fort Myers, Florida.

    Carter Smith is a 6-foot-3, 190-pound quarterback who committed to the Wisconsin Badgers from Bishop Verot High School in Fort Myers, Florida. More

    Carter Smith, QB, 6-3, 190, Fort Myers, Fla – Bishop Verot HS

     

    Xavier Ukponu, DL, 6-3, 300, Denton, Tex. – Guyer HS

     

    Hardy Watts, OL, 6-6, 300, Boston – Dexter Southfield

     

    Wisconsin football commits who will arrive at the end of the school year

    Cam Clark, OL, 6-7, 295, Dexter, Mich. – Dexter HS

     

    Nizyi Davis, TE, 6-5, 215, Indianapolis – Lawrence Central HS

     

    Sam Lateju, OLB, 6-6, 225, Lagos, Nigeria – Lawrenceville HS (N.J.)

     

    Drayden Pavey, DL, 6-3, 295, Cincinnati – Taft HS

     

     

     

    Mason Posa, LB, 6-3, 220, Albuquerque – La Cueva HS

     

    Logan Powell, OL, 6-05, 290, Phoenix – Brophy Prep Jesuit HS

     

    Jahmare Washington, CB, 6-2, 170, Chicago – Morgan Park HS

     

     

  • Why Ipswich Town’s £24m spend might make them the real winners of the transfer window

    Why Ipswich Town’s £24m spend might make them the real winners of the transfer window

     

     

    Premier League sides spent over £370m on transfers this winter – but it’s Ipswich Town who’s business might be the most impressive.

    Sign up to our newsletter for the most distinctive football content delivered direct to your inbox

    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Notice and Terms of Service apply.

    There are plenty of problems with transfer windows these days, from spiralling agent fees to the lengthening tendrils of global ownership groups, but those are conversations for another day. Perhaps the most immediate problem for most fans is figuring out whether the business that’s been done was actually worthwhile. There are always ‘winners’ and ‘losers’ of every window, but it can take weeks, even months and years, for all those deals to bear fruit, even when it turns out to be rotten.

     

    Still, supporters understandably want immediate insight into whether their team’s chances have been improved by their new signings, especially when the stakes are high – fortunately, there are times when a team’s work is, on paper at least, plainly intelligent or wrong-headed. We’ve already raised our eyebrow at the decisions made by our shout for the biggest ‘loser’ of the January transfer window, so it’s only fair to praise the work done by the team we think made the smartest moves. That just happens to be Ipswich Town.

     

     

     

    To say that this was a crucial transfer window for Kieran McKenna’s team would be a fairly significant understatement. A recent 2-1 defeat to fellow promoted side Southampton has started to take the shine off some impressive performances earlier in the season, and they face an uphill battle to extend their stay in the top flight. The squad was pretty good, for a newly-promoted team, but there were clear flaws that had to be addressed – and they were.

     

    How Ipswich faced up to hard truths in the transfer window

    For starters, they have a new goalkeeper, perhaps the biggest single purchase they could have made. Aro Muric started the season as first choice but was responsible for a string of costly ricks, and Christian Walton, who replaced him, has a patchy track record as a starter – so the deadline-day signing of Alex Palmer from West Brom could be a huge boost.

     

    Palmer has never played in the Premier League, but his record in the second tier is highly impressive, and he won the Championship Golden Glove award for the 2023/24 season after keeping 18 clean sheets. He’s solid against the high ball, comfortable operating outside of his area and a strong shot stopper – for a fee of around £4m, Ipswich have likely upgraded their team in a key position without breaking the bank.

     

    The fact that the Tractor Boys seem to have avoided getting themselves stuck in denial about their weaknesses could be crucial. Other teams seem determined not to make hard decisions – just look at Arsenal’s half-hearted attempts to sign a new striker – but Ipswich have assessed an issue and made an attempt to fix it.

     

     

     

    Similarly, they needed more experience and solidity across the back line, and therefore snapped up former Everton defender Ben Godfrey on loan from Atalanta. Godfrey has had mixed results in the Premier League so far and may not be a transformational signing, but he reads the game well and is comfortable dealing with players running at him with the ball at their feet while also having the pace and anticipation to deal with deep balls over his head.

     

    The other major flaw Ipswich had to work on was their ability to break through opposing midiflelds. They have pace up top through Liam Delap and both guile and directness down the flanks – which will be further boosted by the £20m purchase of Jaden Philogene from Aston Villa – but were guilty of getting outmatched and bogged down in the middle of the park. They needed a player who can break the lines either with their passing or with the ball at their feet, and may have found that player in Julio Enciso.

     

    The 21-year-old Paraguayan, who arrives on loan from Brighton, looked dangerous when he started breaking through at the Amex Stadium, scoring four goals and assisting two more in the 2022/23 season despite only playing the equivalent of nine full matches’ worth of minutes – but he missed half of the 2023/24 campaign through a nasty knee injury, and has found his game time limited by Brighton’s many other deft attacking midfielders.

     

    If he can get back up to speed swiftly at Portman Road, they will get a potent ball carrier who knows how to beat a man with the ball at his feet and who is capable of playing killer balls in behind, while also posing a threat when getting into the box himself. There is no guarantee that he will hit his straps quickly enough, but he is a player who can offer some of the quick verticality through the centre that Ipswich need to make the most out of their pacy, dynamic forwards.

     

     

     

    Sammie Szmodics, the £11m summer signing who was bought to be the first-choice number ten, has yet to thrive in the Premier League because McKenna has tried to play him in behind Delap, having the play go through him rather than making him the last man getting on the end of chances, as he was at Blackburn Rovers. As a false nine who led the line last year, Szmodics was lethal.

     

    As a slightly more traditional number ten, he has simply not been as effective. He is a goalscorer, not a creator, but if Delap is going to be the focal point of the attack then it makes more sense to employ a player like Enciso in the pockets behind him. Some clubs would have insisted on trying to maximise their existing investment, but in this case it makes sense to look for a way to change things up rather than succumbing to the sunk cost fallacy.

     

    Why Ipswich’s transfer work sets them up for the long term

    Of course, plenty of transfer windows have looked good on paper and ended up as a damp squid – just look at the gulf between the praise West Ham’s summer transfer work received and the reality. Enciso may be rusty, Palmer may struggle at a higher level, Godfrey may not play as well as he did when he first moved to Goodison Park a few years ago. Ipswich have signed well, in theory, but may well still go down.

     

    But the beauty of their transfer work, both in the summer and now, is that if the worst does happen, they will be left with an extremely strong Championship side. Players like Jack Clarke, Szmodics, Palmer and Philogene have been exceptional in the second tier, and Ipswich should be able to maintain the core of a team that can bounce straight back if things do go wrong over the next three months.

     

     

    Plenty of newly-promoted teams splash out, get relegated, and then watch as most of their shiny new arrivals are immediately sold. Ipswich are less likely to have that problem, and more likely to have the long-term stability to take advantage of their remarkable achievement in getting promoted last season to stay competitive for years to come. Even if they do go down, their odds of bouncing back up are likely to be healthy.

     

    Ipswich have demonstrated both common sense and a clear-headed understanding of where they need to improve over the course of January – and even if it doesn’t work well enough to stay up come May, it’s likely to pay dividends down the line anyway. That’s what a smart transfer window should look like for a team in a relegation battle. Now all they need to do is start winning games again. Unfortunately, that’s the hard part…

     

     

    National World encourages reader discussion on our stories. User feedback, insights and back-and-forth exchanges add a rich layer of context to reporting. Please review our Community Guidelines before commenting.