Arteta says Arsenal star is now set for 'earlier than expected' return from injury

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta has given an encouraging injury update prior to the Gunners’ mouth-watering Champions League tie against Bayern Munich.

Arsenal prepare for Bayern Munich amid injury doubts

Arteta’s side welcome Bayern to the Emirates Stadium on Wednesday in what promises to be a defining European encounter, with the Premier League title favourites riding high following their dominant 4-1 North London derby victory over Tottenham last weekend.

Arsenal delivered a masterclass against their bitter rivals, showcasing the attacking fluidity and defensive solidity that has characterised their strongest displays this season.

That emphatic win not only reinforced Arsenal’s credentials as top title contenders domestically, but also provided the perfect psychological boost ahead of this crucial European test.

Arsenal’s unbeaten run in all competitions since defeat to Liverpool

Arsenal 3-0 Nottingham Forest

Athletic Bilbao 0-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 1-1 Man City

Port Vale 0-2 Arsenal

Newcastle 1-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 2-0 Olympiacos

Arsenal 2-0 West Ham

Fulham 0-1 Arsenal

Arsenal 4-0 Atlético Madrid

Arsenal 1-0 Crystal Palace

Arsenal 2-0 Brighton

Burnley 0-2 Arsenal

Slavia Prague 0-3 Arsenal

Sunderland 2-2 Arsenal

Arsenal 4-1 Tottenham

Arsenal’s preparation has been complicated by several injury concerns, with captain Martin Odegaard still touch and go after failing to make the matchday squad for Spurs.

Arsenal star makes transfer admission and says club "want" to sign him

He’s responded to the speculation around his future.

ByEmilio Galantini Nov 14, 2025

Gabriel Martinelli and Noni Madueke returned to the side on Sunday following their respective injuries with both men ready to play a part tonight, as did Riccardo Calafiori, but Odegaard, Viktor Gyokeres, Kai Havertz, Gabriel Magalhaes and Gabriel Jesus were all nowhere to be seen.

Arteta may well be forced to play Mikel Merino as a makeshift number nine once again, a challenge the Spaniard has relished throughout 2025, with this game still coming too soon for Jesus.

That being said, Arteta has some good news about the Brazil international.

Gabriel Jesus in line for 'earlier than expected' Arsenal injury return

According to Arsenal’s manager, speaking in his pre-Bayern press conference, the 28-year-old’s recovery is actually further along than expected, and he’s about to be knocking on the door.

Jesus hasn’t played a single minute since rupturing his ACL during Arsenal’s FA Cup defeat to Man United in January, so it is approaching a year since he was last able to take part.

The former Man City star is on record stating this is the worst injury he’s ever had, and Jesus was repeatedly linked with a winter window exit following the arrival of Gyokeres in the summer.

Jesus, though, has poured cold water over the possibility of a transfer multiple times recently, even though he confirmed his intention to one day return to Palmeiras.

Arteta, meanwhile, has also said that he’s looking forward to welcoming Arsenal’s ‘unpredictable’ weapon back into the fold.

Sunderland make decision on selling Granit Xhaka as Juventus eye January move

Sunderland have now made a decision on Granit Xhaka’s future, amid interest from Juventus ahead of the January transfer window.

The Black Cats have surpassed all expectations so far this season, currently sitting fourth in the Premier League table after collecting 19 points from their opening 11 games, and Regis Le Bris & co deserve major credit for the work they did in the transfer window.

It was a summer of change for the Championship play-off final winners, bringing in new additions all over the pitch, including at centre-forward, with Brian Brobbey getting off the mark courtesy of a dramatic late equaliser against Arsenal before the international break.

However, arguably Le Bris’ best addition has been Xhaka, with the central midfielder’s importance underlined by the fact he has played every minute in the Premier League so far this season, receiving plaudits from former defender Micky Gray after impressing against West Ham United.

Gray described the Swiss maestro as “absolutely incredible”, before going on to add: “You could see him trying to speak to everybody and calm everybody down. And when the ball came to his feet, he wasn’t rushing his passes. He was slowing everything down. So that experience is absolutely huge.”

Juventus eyeing January move for Sunderland star Granit Xhaka

As such, it will come as no surprise to learn that the 33-year-old is attracting attention ahead of the January transfer window, with a report from TuttoSport (via Sport Witness), revealing Juventus are now eyeing a shock winter transfer.

The 142-time Switzerland international’s agents are said to be seeking a move, given that their client has made a fantastic start to the campaign, with the report bizarrely also claiming the Black Cats are willing to sanction a January move if he asks to leave.

Sunderland have done extremely well to be competing at the top end of the Premier League table, and they are already nearly half-way to the magic 40-point mark, but they are not out of the woods just yet, so it would, of course, be a mistake to cash-in this winter.

The Basel-born midfielder has contributed one goal and three assists in the Premier League this term, with Wayne Rooney suggesting he could be the signing of the season, given his experience and leadership qualities.

The former Arsenal man has also impressed at international level during the current break, scoring a penalty and making a number of other key contributions as Switzerland ran out emphatic 4-1 winners against Sweden on Saturday.

Granit Xhaka’s statistics against Sweden

Number completed

Accurate passes

65/77 (84%)

Ground duels (won)

4 (3)

Aerials duels (won)

2 (2)

Accurate long balls

5

In all honesty, it was a major coup for Sunderland to even sign Xhaka in the first place, and given that he remains under contract until 2028, there is no need to cash-in this January or in the summer.

Sunderland "diamond" could be Regis Le Bris' captain after Granit Xhaka Move over Xhaka: Sunderland "diamond" is Regis Le Bris' future captain

Regis Le Bris has a future Sunderland captain on his hands in this battling star.

ByKelan Sarson Nov 17, 2025

'I'm impressed' – Harry Kane says 'fearless' Vincent Kompany is helping Bayern Munich stars 'understand' football

Bayern Munich striker Harry Kane has heaped praise on head coach Vincent Kompany ahead of their Champions League clash against Arsenal on Wednesday. The English lynchpin is highly impressed with Kompany's coaching standards and has highlighted that the Belgian's "fearless" approach is assisting the players to develop a better understanding of the game.

  • A 'top of the table' continental clash

    After humbling Freiburg 6-2 in the Bundesliga last Saturday, Kompany's Bayern are all set to face Premier League heavyweights Arsenal in their fifth Champions League tie on Wednesday evening. The Bavarians have been in sensational form this season, losing just once across all competitions, while maintaining a 15-game winning record at the start of the season, a first for any European club. As they travel to the Emirates Stadium, they will be eager to conjure some magic to emerge as a strong obstacle against Mikel Arteta's army.

    The Gunners have not conceded a goal in the Champions League so far and sit level on points and goal difference with the German giants at the top of the Champions League table. However, Kane believes his side are in the right "mindset" heading into the clash with his former north London derby rivals thanks to the impressive methods of their Belgian coach.

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    Kane impressed with Kompany's approach

    The former Tottenham striker said at a press conference: "The way we play, the way we train, the way he treats the team, the way he goes forward, the way you should behave. These are qualities. He is fearless. We press, stand high, that's the mindset. He gives everyone a lot of self-confidence. Not only me, but also others have improved under him, understand the game better now. I'm impressed." 

    In the 2025-26 season, Arteta and his coaching staff have focused on utilising the set-pieces by turning them into a dangerous goal-scoring threat. As of late October, they had already scored 11 goals from such movements. "Football is developing. Arsenal are very strong at set-pieces. As always, we have prepared, looked at where they are strong and how we can prevent that. We simply have to avoid set pieces. If they do surrender, we have to defend well," opined the Englishman.

  • Kompany claims facing Arsenal is the hardest task

    While Arsenal have not won much silverware in recent times, their prosperity under Arteta's mentorship has already stunned opposition teams. For Kompany, Arsenal are a hard nut to crack. He said: "It's probably the hardest task at the moment to play against Arsenal. But we're happy about that, that's why we're here." 

    While the Belgian tactician might be happy to arrive at the Emirates as the table toppers, they are a side who have struggled in set-pieces, and will take on a side adept at such actions. He claimed: "We haven't shown our normal strength in the last few games. That doesn't mean that you're not good, but you have to do better in these situations now. We have analysed this. I don't like to think too much about defence, but how we can play our game. It will be difficult to score our goals. We have to be better defensively at set-pieces, just as we are offensively. At some point, the defenders simply have to head the thing away."

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    Kane's record against Arsenal

    Before shifting base to Munich, Kane was a key player at Tottenham. To date, he has faced the Gunners 21 times, emerging victorious on eight occasions, losing seven, and drawing the remaining six. He notably has 15 goals against Arteta's side and will teammates like Lennart Karl and Michael Olise he will aim to add to that tally on Wednesday.

    "I've won and scored many goals here. Hopefully [on Wednesday] too," he said. "Arsenal has more experience than when we last met. They're harder to break down defensively now. They've improved. This will be a good test for us."

Chris Sutton slams "odd" moment he spotted from £50k-p/w Leeds star in Man City defeat

Chris Sutton took aim at one Leeds United star after spotting an “odd” moment in the Whites’ dramatic 3-2 defeat at the hands of Manchester City.

Leeds lose late on at Man City

It was very nearly an unforgettable afternoon for Leeds, who came from behind to level things up at 2-2 in the second-half, courtesy of Lukas Nmecha’s reactions to rebound from his own penalty.

As so many have experienced at the Etihad over the years, however, it simply wasn’t to be for Daniel Farke’s men. The Citizens’ simply had too much quality and, for a split second, Phil Foden had too much time. The England international fired home his second goal of the day in the 91st minute to break Leeds’ hearts.

Upon reflection, Farke will be wishing that he started with Dominic Calvert-Lewin rather than setting up to frustrate Man City. It took just 59 seconds for Foden to give the hosts the lead, before Josko Gvardiol’s goal looked to be the beginning of a thrashing.

Farke soon changed things at the break, though, and Calvert-Lewin’s effort from the bench set the tone for Nmecha to then go and convert the rebound of his own spotkick.

The Yorkshire side certainly deserved at least a point, but simply felt the harsh reality of the Premier League in its full extent instead. From here, they must pick themselves up and go again against Chelsea at Elland Road.

Things won’t be getting any easier for a Leeds side who could be three points adrift of safety if other results go against them this weekend.

Chris Sutton, covering the game for BBC Sport, was particularly critical of Pascal Struijk in the first-half after spotting an “odd” moment from the Leeds defender.

Sutton slams "odd" Pascal Struijk moment

Taking aim, Sutton slammed Struijk for how he was “content” with entering the break at 2-0 down, wasting time at the end of the first-half. The defender’s aim was damage control and, to his credit, it worked in his favour as Leeds soon came from behind.

The moment, which sparked Sutton’s frustration, may well have helped Leeds stay in the game. It was an absolute onslaught from Man City in the first period and Farke desperately needed to get his side back into the game without letting the hosts out of sight. And the £50,000-a-week defender was well aware of that.

The visitors can take a lot of positives, despite their defeat. It’s very rare that sides come to the Etihad, find themselves 2-0 down and don’t find themselves on the end of a battering. Leeds, however, showed plenty of fight.

Leeds eyeing move for 4-3-3 Farke successor who has admirers at Elland Road

Will Bryce Harper Ever Be Elite Again? Phillies President Had Surprising Answer

With the Phillies' 2025 season wrapping up after a loss to the Dodgers in the National League Division Series last week, the seventh season of Bryce Harper's tenure in Philadelphia also came to a close.

Though Harper, who turns 33 on Thursday, has been among the top players in MLB for much of his career, this past not season was not one of his best. Phillies president Dave Dombrowski acknowledged this during his end of season press conference, even admitting he's not sure whether Harper will become an "elite" player again.

"In Bryce's case, of course he's still a quality player. He's still an All-Star caliber player. He didn't have an elite season like he has had in the past," Dombrowski said Thursday. "I guess we only find out if he becomes elite [again] or he continues to be good. You look around the league, you try to think Freddie Freeman. He's a really good player, he still is a good player. Is he elite like he was before? Probably not to the same extent so that's nothing negative. Freddie's still a tremendous player. That to me is Bryce."

"Can he rise to the next level again? I don't really know that answer. He's the one that will dictate that more than anything else," Dombrowski continued. "… I don't think he's content with the year that he had. Again, it wasn't a bad year. But when I think of Bryce Harper, you think an elite, you think one of the top 10 players in baseball and I don't think it fit into that category. Again, very good player. I have no idea. I have seen guys at his age—he's not old— that level off. I've seen guys rise again. We'll see what happens."

Phillies manager Rob Thompson said of Harper, “I think he is highly motivated to have the best season of his career next year. That's what the plan's gonna be for him. He played in 132 games and hit 27 home runs, that's pretty good. … It was down a little bit, but still, over an .840 OPS, that's pretty good."

Over the 2025 season, Harper slashed .261/.357/.487 with 27 home runs, 75 RBIs and a .844 OPS across 132 games. Harper's batting average marked his lowest since '19, his first season in Philly, and his OPS was his worst since '16, when he was still part of the Nationals.

Though Harper is a Gold Glove finalist and was an All-Star last year, Dombrowski questions whether he can return to being an elite player going forward. Either way, the Phillies remain tied to Harper for the long-term, as Harper still has six years remaining on the 13-year, $330 million deal he signed with the team in 2019.

أوريلي: هدفي ضد ريال مدريد سيبقى محفورًا في الذاكرة

تحدث نيكو أوريلي لاعب مانشستر سيتي بعد مساهمته في فوز فريقه على ريال مدريد بهدفين لهدف واحد ضمن منافسات مرحلة الدوري بدوري أبطال أوروبا.

وقال نيكو أوريلي في تصريحات نشرتها “سيتي إكسترا”: “شعور رائع، ياله من جو رائع، ياله من ملعب، من الصعب اللعب هنا لكننا حصدنا الثلاث نقاط وهذا هو الأهم”.

وأضاف حول هدفه الأول في دوري أبطال أوروبا على ملعب سانتياجو برنابيو: “هدف مميز للغاية، أنا في غاية السعادة وسيبقى هدفًا محفورًا في ذاكرتي ولكن كما قلت الأهم هو النقاط الثلاث وهذا ما حققناه”.

اقرأ أيضاً.. فرص مانشستر سيتي في التأهل لدور الـ16 من دوري أبطال أوروبا بعد الفوز على ريال مدريد

وواصل عن دوره مع مانشستر سيتي هذا الموسم: “أستمتع بذلك، أتعامل مع كل شيء بهدوء، كل مباراة على حدة وأعمل بجد في كل جلسة تدريبية وأنا أستمتع بذلك وأحبه”.

واختتم: “اللعب ضد ريال مدريد والفوز عليهم يظهر مدى جودة أدائنا حالياً ومستوانا المميز”.

Trey Yesavage Admits to Doing the Most Relatable Thing on His Phone Before Game 5 Gem

The Blue Jays are headed back to Toronto with a 3-2 lead over the Dodgers in what has been an excellent World Series thus far. Game 5's hero was unexpected, too.

Rookie pitcher Trey Yesavage got the starting nod for the pivotal Game 5 on Wednesday night and was spectacular. The 22-year-old righty struck out 12 batters in seven innings to set a new World Series record and gave up only one run. The legendary outing led to a critical Blue Jays win and will go down in the history books no matter what happens next. On top of it all, the young pitcher had a funny and relatable admission after the game that gave fans everywhere a good laugh.

About an hour before his start, Yesavage was captured staring intently at his phone with headphones on during the Fox Sports pregame broadcast. The clip apparently made the rounds on social media as an example of how "locked in" Yesavage was before he dominated the Dodgers.

It turns out he saw that and admitted he was not actually locked in on anything. Instead, he was just scrolling TikTok and Instagram.

"I saw something on Instagram that someone took a video of me on my phone saying I was locked in," Yesavage said, via ESPN. "But I was just doomscrolling on TikTok and Instagram reels. I just keep it as chill as possible. I don't change anything I say to myself, but I'm also just here to go to work. I try not to think about anything."

In today's modern society, the blank stare Yesavage had on his face means he's either completely focused on something or he's just swiping through videos. In this instance, it was the latter.

Boy, did it work out. Yesavage came up huge for his team, an unlikely hero amidst the sea of extremely well-paid stars who dot both rosters in this Fall Classic. His work is probably done this season but he can scroll easy knowing he delivered.

KKR CEO Venky Mysore: 'Russell agonised over leaving KKR'

Venky Mysore reveals why the franchise decided to release Russell before he announced his IPL retirement and took over as KKR’s power coach

Interview by Nagraj Gollapudi05-Dec-20258:03

Will KKR go all-out to for Cameron Green?

Was releasing Andre Russell, or ‘Muscle Russell’ as Shah Rukh Khan called him, a last-minute decision? Can you now disclose why you decided to release him?
Venky Mysore: I wish there was no auction every year because this just becomes very nerve-wracking many times, and some things that you don’t want to do, you end up having to do. But no, it wasn’t like a last, last-minute thing, but we were grappling with all combinations, ideas, what to do and all that. Finally, we said, okay, this [release] is what we have to do.But some people missed the fundamental point, which is the [purse] deduction for us was 18 crore, not 12 crore by releasing Dre. So, although his contract value was 12 crore, the deduction from our purse was 18 crore in 2025. A lot of people missed that and said, oh, why would KKR not see value in a person who is at 12 crores? 18 crores, which would be deducted from our purse if we had reattained him, is a lot of money in the context of an auction. That was the trigger.And in mini-auctions, you want to go with as much as you can to have the flexibility to look at options that might come your way. So from that perspective, if it was 12 crore, I think the decision would’ve been very different.If the deduction was 12 crore, would you have retained him?
Mysore: I mean it would have made a huge difference. Although 12 cr is still a lot, but could we get a player of his quality for 12 cr in the auction? It’s very unlikely in a mini auction (if you release him at that price). But releasing 18 cr, from the auction purse, it’s a fair amount of money. Therefore it was not a last-minute decision. It was a last-minute announcement.You are also trying to figure out what the alternatives would be. When you put someone in an auction, you have to go with an assumption you may not be able to get a player back. So if that’s the case, then what are your options? How do you resolve it? What’s your structure? All those discussions happen. So yes, in the days leading up to the retention deadline, we made the call.What was Russell’s reaction?
Mysore: Although we have never had to put him [Russell] in the auction, these discussions happen every time there’s a retention opportunity and it happened even ahead of a mega-auction. Particularly last year because the whole fee structure was very different and very, very punitive. If you retained more than three players, then you were penalised literally because fourth player retention slab was 18 crore, like Dre.So you are trying to do the math and say, can I get this player for 18 crore or less in the auction? We don’t want to obviously let any of our players go. Therefore I had the discussion this time with Dre and said, we may have to do this (release). And he said, “wow, never been in an auction since 2014.” Because before that he was with Delhi [Daredevils]. Then we picked him and since then he’s never been been in an auction. So it’s a strange feeling for both of us. And he’s always a very sensible and sensitive guy, easy to communicate with. Very emotional, but not clinical, like a few players I have dealt with.It hit him after a couple of days after that conversation. He came back to me and said, “oh, I’ve really had a lot of sleepless nights wondering about where all of this could go. I’m so used to the purple and gold, Knight Riders and relationships I have built with the franchise, you and the owners.”We jokingly discussed, and many people know that over the last 11 years that he’s been with us, I’ve probably spoken with Dre more than I’ve spoken with my wife. We sent him to Dallas [to train with local NFL team] twice to help him become more fitter, more stronger. When he was handed the year-long anti-doping ban in 2017, I was very much in touch and sent our physio from TKR – Trinbago Knight Riders – to Jamaica to work with Dre and help him with his fitness and more importantly, just to keep him in the right spirits. It was a tough year for him when a cricketer can’t play. Imagine one year was a very long time, but then right after that was a retention year in 2018.Andre Russell has been a match-winner for KKR – both with bat and ball•BCCIWe didn’t know what form he was in, what fitness level he was in, but we retained him. But he always acknowledges that and always says, “I’ve tears in my eyes because I got a million-dollar contract and retention decision on him.”All that kind of hit him after about 48 hours of the initial conversation on releasing him. Then the auction discussions started in a way, to say, how do we handle it? What happens? And all that.At that point, he had not yet given up on coming to the auction? Your conversation was on him getting released – correct?
Mysore: Exactly. I’ve had a few of these types of conversations over the 15 years I’ve been running the franchise. Very rarely do players feel like they are done. They always feel like, oh yeah, I’ve got cricket left in me – one year, two years, three years…that’s where his [Russell’s] head was also. And he’s probably right, but he also realised by the time 2026 IPL comes around, he’ll be 38. And for someone who’s an allrounder like him, a pace bowler who comes in at death, has to smash, has to run a lot, field like he does, his instincts take over once he is on the field. He’s a natural athlete, but body and age do catch up.But somewhere that conversation [retiring from IPL] did come up as an option and he gave it more thought. For a variety of reasons, it appealed to him and said, yeah, why not? Let’s do this.Was it your suggestion or his?
Mysore: I could see he (Russell) was agonising over it, and, so when I shared this with SRK [Shah Rukh, KKR lead owner], it was actually SRK’s suggestion of offering Russell a coaching role. Because, see, a player is thinking somewhere at the back of his mind, what happens after I hang up my boots? But I don’t think they want to think about it also so much because professional athletes are like that. They believe I’m still good, and Dre still is – he is fantastic and playing other leagues.Yesterday (December 3, in the ILT20 match between Abu Dhabi Knight Riders and Sharjah Warriorz) also, he came in and straightaway smashed that six, which are trademark Dre sixes, which hits the sight screen and the ball comes back to the middle of the pitch literally. You start thinking, oh my God! And even with the ball, runs in first ball, clean bowled DK [Dinesh Karthik].It just felt like he was very free in his mind after making the retirement decision. Because the guy took a couple of catches, is sliding and diving and throwing. I sent him a note later, saying “what’s going on here, Dre? How you doing power coach?” I was kidding him. Everybody has started calling him power coach and I think he loves it. We’re very happy. I think he’s very happy. He’s completely accepted it, come to terms with it.Power coach – Russell said it was your idea. He has not coached anywhere, so how did that come about?
Mysore: It was almost a spur of the moment thought. We were talking what role he could best do and I said: what are you best known for? It is your ability to come in and finish games with very few balls left and go from ball one. With his bowling as well, he has always been one of these enforcer type of bowlers. Then fielding also, I’ve never seen somebody as athletic as him. I mean now it’s different, but when he was younger, if he was the guy on the boundary line, anyone who hit the ball to him wouldn’t venture to run a two because he used to be so quick and slide and pick up and throw and he was so powerful.The image of him when he walks in itself is like, oh my God, here he comes. There’s going to be some power hitting now. I said to him: “what can you help us, help the team the most with is all your experience and skills. When you bring them together, it’s all about power, every thing that you did.” So I said, “we will call you power coach.”Actually that put a smile on his face, and Dre said, “maan, that sounds really good.” And it’s probably the first of its kind that there’s such a terminology given to someone who can come in and help. So it’s more than coaching, it’s also a lot about communicating with certain types of players who are going to play that role, which Dre was playing so well, and basically talking about his experiences.KKR coaches used to always make him talk, and even when I used to have informal conversations, I used to say: “what do you think? You are sitting in the dugout, 16 runs needed an over and when you walk in, what are you thinking?” He says, “I back myself to get those 15-16 runs an over because I feel like I can clear the boundary at least twice an over, so I’m calculating how many sixes are needed in the remaining balls in the innings.” That is unique how many people can actually do that.Andre Russell finished with 223 sixes in the IPL•Getty ImagesYes, only a few have managed to walk in under pressure and succeed. Dre does that and now you have a Tim David performing similar role, hitting sixes at will.
Mysore: Correct. You can’t teach power, but you can at least help players with the mindset as long as they have the skillset. And then help them with how do you think to work through that.Dre also is a very sensible and a very practical guy because once he agreed to join the coaching staff, he was very quick to say, listen, I’m only going to be like a sponge coming there to absorb everything. He is aware there are highly experienced guys who are in the support staff now: Abhishek [Nayar] has been with us since 2018, [Dwayne] Bravo since 2015 in TKR and mentor since last year in KKR, [Shane] Watson has been head coach in MLC and other places, also assistant coach in IPL, Tim Southee brings amazing experience as a bowling coach. So there is a wealth of experience and knowledge in our support staff. So Dre told me: “I can learn a lot from all of these guys because I’m getting my feet wet, but at the same time, I’ll have a lot to offer wherever I can.”Can Russell play in T20 leagues where Knight Riders don’t have a franchise?
Mysore: We don’t want to restrict somebody from playing or earning more money. As long as it doesn’t conflict with what we are doing he’s perfectly at liberty to play those tournaments. His contract does say he’ll play for us full-time on all the three leagues – CPL, MLC and ILT20 – and he can do other stuff which doesn’t conflict with where we play.What was the reason for overhauling the coaching staff?
Mysore: Why the reset is because we were forced to, no? Last year [after 2024 IPL] our coaching cabinet was cleaned out. [Gautam Gambhir, Abhishek Nayar, Ryan ten Doeschate, the KKR mentor and assistant coaches, took over coaching roles with Indian men’s team]. But the learning really for me is, it’s not a perfect science in terms of players who transition into coaching, and whether they can be as good as they were as players.Another learning is: the game is changing so fast that ideally you want coaches who are contemporary cricketers. That’s what we have in Abhishek Nayar, Dwayne Bravo, Shane Watson, Tim Southee and now Dre, too. Because they have just been there, done that. In fact, yesterday [December 3 match between ADKR and Warriorz] was a funny moment when Dre was bowling to Southee – my power coach is bowling to my bowling coach and my mentor [Bravo, who is ADKR head coach] is in the dugout. It was a very comical moment.So the point I am making is their touchy-feely stuff around the game will be so strong because they were, [and are still] just playing it. And secondly, what happens is, the way they can relate to the players about what the players go through. So when you’re in team meetings, strategy planning etc. the players also realise when it comes from them, these are people who have just been there, who have done it recently.Andre Russell is one of two allrounders in IPL history to achieve the double of 2000 runs and 100 wickets•BCCIGoing into the mini-auction with a purse of INR 64.3 crore – enough money to buy whoever you want – do you see KKR in a pole position to build a strong squad?
Mysore: We are never usually the ones to go into the auction with the highest purse. But it just so happened two players [Venkatesh Iyer and Russell] accounted for 41.5 crore. So that is very, very unusual that something like that happens at KKR. So now we are sort of saying, okay, let’s see. But a lot of players have withdrawn from the auction, or not put their names in, which is also interesting.You released Venkatesh Iyer after buying him for 23.5 cr last year. Post the mega-auction, you’d mentioned that you don’t buy a player and release to buy him back cheap, as that’s not how you operate. What changed?
Mysore: As I said at the start of our conversation, auctions create this, call it confusion or whatever, at times. I mean if he had scored 500 runs, he would’ve said, “hey, price tag doesn’t matter at all.” Maybe it did (grins), and it weighed (on Venkatesh). He probably had his worst year by his standards with us since 2021. The thought process that goes through the franchise think-tank at the table is, what would you rather do? And I have as much money as possible and flexibility to engineer that whichever way you want, or just go in there and be at the mercy of whatever. And so last year, in many ways, it was a bit of a learning thing for us; it was purely very, very circumstantial. I mean this is probably the first time we have done something like that: picked a big player at price, that was quite exciting. Now, because of the mini-auction dynamics rather than anything else, we decided to release him.In a recent interview, Rajasthan Royals lead owner Manoj Badale said he enjoys the challenge and unpredictability the mega-auction presents. What is your view on the mega-auction?
Mysore: We have made our position very, very clear when last year we franchises had a big discussion with IPL around retention and various other significant topics. We said you cannot be punishing franchises who have worked very, very hard to build teams to identify talent, develop them and have had success. And suddenly you are saying that’s it, let’s do a mega auction every three years.After 18-19 years of the league, this shouldn’t be happening. I’m not a fan of the viewpoint around equalising and this surprise element and all that. It doesn’t make any sense, to be honest. It doesn’t help the league, it doesn’t help the whole fan community. I mean this is the reason why the retention rule got created. In the very first auction that I attended, in 2011, there was not supposed to be any retention, but it was introduced because there were some key players that certain franchises didn’t want to release.The original plan was every three years everybody goes into the auction. Not that I disagree with that, I agree with that retention principle, but the principle of it is really that you are rewarding teams for having developed players, built that team, built that franchise, and connected with the fan base and working through it.And imagine you go win a championship and then you get dismantled after that. Or what happens is that the punishment for having good players to retain is so high that you see teams coming in with huge purses to the auction. We all had equal opportunity. And how could that be good for the league, this type of churn? So I’m not in the camp which says auctions are exciting.Venky Mysore on KKR’s coaching overhaul: “Why the reset is because we were forced to, no?”•BCCISo maximum retention for you?
Mysore: There should not be a big auction at all in my opinion. What we recommended was, if you want, you have a mini-auction every year, which means that you have rights to hold onto the player. Of course, that comes with certain questions. Immediately people will say, oh, but what about the players? You pick somebody for 50 lakhs and in that three-year cycle they’ve done exceedingly well. But I said, that will not be the reason for you to have an auction.You should create a different system for that. The system should be that everybody’s spending the same salary cap. You allow the teams to renegotiate salaries if there was going to be a situation like that where you want to reward somebody who’s coming with a 50-lakhs player who has done exceedingly well for you. I mean Venkatesh Iyer was 20 lakhs when we picked him, but he takes us to the final in 2021, almost single-handedly. So then he gets rewarded when the retention thing came in, which is great. As long as you are within the salary cap, you renegotiate your salaries internally.How would you do that?
Mysore: I would be sitting with him and saying, boss, this is what I think we can do. You go to the auction, who knows what your auction price could be? If I’m allowed to do that, and if the player doesn’t agree, then there is a release discussion. Say we got a player at 18 crore at the previous auction, but we want to now negotiate that to 12 crore for the next season. If the player says fine, we can then take the extra money and redistribute the difference with other players who have performed exceedingly well and deserve a higher fee. In theory the auction does that, but what happens there is that the franchise loses its option because somebody else is waiting with more money.You can see how some of our players from the championship year ended up with other franchises at the last mega-auction. So if I’m allowed through this system, where I can renegotiate directly, as long as I stay within my overall salary cap and the subject to the players agreeing, why not?But let’s say the player doesn’t agree. Another franchise could influence him and say you get released. You think that will not happen en masse?
Mysore: Correct, that could happen, but not en masse. And that player actually will realise that if not too many teams are releasing, there may not be big money in the mini auction, right? I mean the players feel they can get more only because there are teams releasing players and coming with lot of money, like us this year. But if this system was implemented, many of the teams will probably work in such a way based on the relationships they have with the players and what the intangibles that the franchise has to offer in terms of the environment, how they are taking care of, and the success and things like that.But the system you are suggesting needs to be transparent and equitable for players.
Mysore: These are all solvable problems. For example, an uncapped Indian player’s fee increases automatically the moment he becomes capped. So there is a system to readjust that anyway already. We just need to apply our minds and solutions can be found.Should the auction purse then be increased accordingly?
Mysore: No. I’ve always maintained this, the player fees expands to meet the salary cap. And then when you look at the highest that somebody gets, everyone is flabbergasted and say, “oh my God, 23 cr, 24 cr!” I told them, “Listen, you go back to any auction, the highest that a player gets is typically 20-25% of the salary cap. If the salary cap 125 crore, they’re getting 25 crore. So don’t be surprised because it’s just the dynamics of competition.” People are all sitting on money and will be raising the paddle based on how much money they have left in their kitty. So raising salary cap is not changing anything. It is just increasing or inflating the player fees and skewing the upper end. So that’s not something that we would advocate at all.But the player will say ‘I am a key stakeholder, too. The IPL and franchises are profiting due to my performance.’ So why should the player not command a good price?
Mysore: Yeah, fair enough. The counter to that is to say, let’s pay for performance then. Let’s make the fixed fee a very low fee and have a performance incentive built in there so a player can say, “Listen, I’m performing and therefore I should get paid.” Fair enough. But by the same token, somebody right now is getting a high fee but the performance is well below par, it’s not like we are cutting the fees, we’re not. So it’s still at a nascent stage in that sense. But the idea is you shouldn’t kill the goose that’s laying the golden egg. Franchise sports has existed around the world for decades. So they’ve all done circles around this subject and come back with plans and ideas on how everything can be structured. So we can borrow a lot of these things so we don’t have to reinvent the wheel.

Liverpool join race to sign “aggressive” gem who’s been compared to Szoboszlai

Liverpool are now reportedly rivalling Newcastle United in the race to sign a young midfield star who’s been compared to Dominik Szoboszlai.

Slot: Liverpool don't have "Jacob Murphy profile" to unlock Isak

It’s been a tumultuous time for Liverpool and record signing Alexander Isak. The Reds are yet to unlock the Swede’s best form, despite splashing out £125m to break a British record and welcome their next star man from Newcastle in the summer.

Arne Slot, however, is remaining patient and recently pinpointed exactly why Isak is yet to replicate his Newcastle form at Anfield. The Dutchman told reporters: “With Jeremie Frimpong being injured and Conor Bradley being out it is not like we have so many options on the right-hand side, and it is a bit similar on the left.

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

The Reds could lose one of their star men.

ByTom Cunningham 7 days ago

“Alex could benefit maybe from a Conor or a Jeremie type of player who goes outside, instead of both wingers we have who come inside and full-backs who can come in with crosses.

“But the main difference for him is that we are facing a low block many times. It is not that it never happened at Newcastle but not as much, I think. This season the league has changed, we see so many more low blocks than last season.

“But I see this not only against us, I see this in many games. It makes it harder for him compared to his time at Newcastle but I think it is also him adjusting to his teammates and his teammates adjusting to him. But it is obvious and clear that we have not the profile of [Newcastle’s] Jacob Murphy, for example, available at this moment at this time.”

Whether Liverpool find their own version of Murphy in the January transfer window is now the big question. They’ve already been linked with Antoine Semenyo, who’d certainly offer the same quality, but he may not be the only one on his way.

Liverpool join race to sign Alex Toth

As reported by Football Insider’s Pete O’Rourke, Liverpool have now joined the race to sign Alex Toth from Ferencvaros in 2026. The 20-year-old midfielder has been watched closely by scouts across the Premier League, including both those at Anfield and at St James’ Park and now seems destined for a big move.

Dubbed an “aggressive presser” by Hungarian journalist Bence Bocsak, it’s clear to see where the Szoboszlai comparisons have come from.

Liverpool’s press is certainly something that needs addressing in midfield too, which makes Toth a viable option when 2026 arrives. The Reds have got one over on Newcastle before and could yet do so yet again next year.

Not Isak: £45m star is now Liverpool's most frustrating player since Nunez

Axar, Dube, Washington power India to 2-1 series lead

India impressively defended what had initially seemed a slightly light total on the Gold Coast

Andrew McGlashan06-Nov-2025

Axar Patel used angles to take his wickets and then to celebrate them•Getty Images

Led by their spinners and a vital pair of inroads from Shivam Dube, India impressively defended what had initially seemed a slightly light total to take an unassailable 2-1 lead in the T20I series on a Gold Coast surface that both sides agreed had shades of the subcontinent about it.From 121 for 2 after 14 overs, India were only able to post 167 largely due to the key breakthroughs provided by Adam Zampa, back in the side after the birth of his second child, and late-overs brilliance of Nathan Ellis.But Australia shed wickets at regular intervals in the first stage of their chase before collapsing in a heap to lose 7 for 28. Axar Patel conceded just 20 off his four overs, including 12 dot balls, while Dube claimed the key wicket of Tim David. Varun Chakravarthy’s final delivery of the evening all but sealed the contest when Glenn Maxwell, returning from his broken wrist, completely failed to pick a googly.The result left a large proportion of the 20,470 crowd delighted and meant that the best Australia could hope for is a share of the series in the final game at the Gabba on Saturday.Shivam Dube took over with his seemingly magical wicket-taking ability•Cricket Australia/Getty Images

Axar ties up Australia

Axar only had a limited role with the ball in the first three matches of the series; India didn’t bowl in Canberra, he wasn’t used at the MCG, then he returned 0 for 35 in Hobart. Here, however, he came to the fore, as his darting left-arm spin proved very difficult to combat.Matthew Short, back in his favoured opening role but one he has conceded is probably not realistic to have at the T20 World Cup, had dominated the early stages of the chase before falling lbw sweeping at Axar when India successfully reviewed the not out decision. Axar then defeated Josh Inglis, a player who looked rusty after a period on the sidelines, when he charged down the pitch.

Dube at the double

As in the previous match, Mitchell Marsh had not had a huge amount of strike early in the chase but was starting to move through the gears. Dube dropped a slower delivery in short, it was very much in Marsh’s wheelhouse, and the pull went flat towards deep square leg where Arshdeep Singh took an excellent running catch around the boundary. However, Dube’s big moment was to come.David launched him for a huge six over long-on – it wasn’t far from striking the overhanging roof – but Dube’s revenge only took one delivery. Banging the ball in short, David was hurried into a pull and top edged into the covers.When Josh Philippe spliced to short midwicket two overs later it was another game that needed Maxwell to salvage it but having not batted in the middle since mid-September, that was always a tall order. The dominance of the visiting spinners was perhaps a little warning to Australia ahead of the T20 World Cup in India and Sri Lanka early next year where the types of surfaces on offer could vary.Josh Inglis claims a catch off Tilak Varma•Getty Images

Zampa back with a bang

Abhishek Sharma had been dropped second ball of the match by Xavier Bartlett, a running chance at deep point where he may have been distracted by another fielder, and when Abhishek deposited Zampa’s second ball of the series straight down the ground for six India were a healthy 56 for 0 in the seventh over. However, two balls later Zampa evened the ledger when Abhishek tried to repeat the stroke against a googly and was safely held at long-on by David.Zampa was then held back until the second half of the innings and it threatened to be a rough night. In the 13th over Suryakumar took him for two sixes over deep midwicket as the India captain looked set to kick start a late surge for his team. However, Suryakumar picked out David in the deep – who held on his with fingertips – and when Zampa returned for his final over in the 17th of the innings he had an impact.Tilak Varma gloved a sweep which popped up for Inglis to gather, then three balls later Australia successfully reviewed for an lbw against Jitesh Sharma when he missed a sweep.

Ellis shines again

It is nothing unusual for Ellis to impress in this format, but this was another outstanding display of his T20 skills. The final figures of 4-0-21-3 were made even more noteworthy by the fact his first four deliveries cost 10 as Shubman Gill took him on the powerplay. That meant his 21 deliveries cost just 11, and he bowled three of the last nine overs.His first wicket ended Dube’s experimental innings at No. 3 when he played across a slightly slower delivery. Then at the start of the 15th over he finished Gill’s rather laboured stay, although which grew in value as the night wore on, with a back-of-the-hand slower ball. He closed out with the 19th over, homing in outside off with wide yorkers and changes of pace. Occasionally he got a little too wide and was called, but none of the batters could get him away. In the end, however, as the pitch continued to slow up, India still had more than enough.

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