Archie Gray: Why Tottenham want to sign Leeds’ teenage sensation | Football News

Archie Gray: Why Tottenham want to sign Leeds’ teenage sensation | Football News


On Saturday afternoon, it emerged that Archie Gray was set for a shock move to Brentford, after personal terms were agreed between the teenager and the West London club.

But, by Sunday morning, Tottenham had become frontrunners. He has now completed part of his medical and there is every expectation that he will head to North London instead.

Should all go to plan, Spurs will have completed the signing of one of the brightest young prospects in the country – and Leeds will be cut incredibly deep. This one will sting for a long time to come.

Sky Sports’ Tim Thornton provides an update on which club Leeds star Archie Gray could be heading to and why the Championship side are selling the 18-year-old

But why is Gray – who, due to safeguarding rules, had to use a separate dressing room from his team-mates before he turned 18 in March – being courted by Premier League clubs? Here, we take a look at the story of his fledgling career…

Continuing the Gray legacy at Leeds

First things first, the Gray name is royalty at Elland Road.

Archie’s grandad Frank and great-uncle Eddie made over 900 appearances for the club combined during the 1960s, 70s and 80s. Together, they were part of the 1973/74 First Division-winning squad, and the squad that finished as runners-up in the 1974/75 European Cup.

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Frank Gray played almost 400 times for Leeds

Eddie would later return to manage the squad during two spells; between 1982 and 1985 and then between 2003 and 2004, latterly as the caretaker who oversaw relegation out of the Premier League. Regardless, he is seen as a legendary figure at the club to this day.

It came as no surprise that, when Frank’s son Andy started his career in the 1990s, he did so at Leeds. However, he could only manage 38 appearances, with the best form of his career coming elsewhere in Yorkshire with Bradford, Sheffield United and Barnsley.

Eddie Gray played over 500 times for Leeds and managed the club across two separate spells
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Eddie Gray played over 500 times for Leeds and managed the club across two separate spells

And so it was the natural order when Andy’s son Archie joined Leeds’ academy a decade ago, aged eight. His younger brother Harry, 15, is also on the club’s books and already causing a stir at U18 level, but that is one to revisit another day…

Bielsa unearths a gem

The impact Marcelo Bielsa had during his time at Leeds went well beyond the pitch, but his ability to get the best out of players was second to none – Kalvin Phillips’ development is a prime example. But he can also take some credit for Gray’s accelerated rise to the first team.

Archie Gray was only 15 when he first appeared on Leeds' bench in December 2021
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Archie Gray was only 15 when he first appeared on Leeds’ bench in December 2021

Gray was still at school, preparing to take his GCSEs when the Argentinian started to bring him into the first team fold. Remarkably, during an interview with The Athletic earlier this year, Gray suggested he had little fear about making the step up.

Clearly convinced by his ability, Bielsa named him on the bench for the 4-1 defeat to Arsenal a week before Christmas in 2021 and again on January 16 for the 3-2 win at West Ham.

Marcelo Bielsa brought Gray into the first team fold
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Marcelo Bielsa brought Gray into the first team fold

That was it for the next four months. He had been given a glimpse, but with Bielsa’s departure in February and the very real threat of relegation lingering, experience was required to salvage Leeds’ place in the Premier League.

Bielsa’s replacement Jesse Marsch had been wooed by Gray’s talents, too, though, and named him as a substitute for the final four crucial matches, the last of which was a 2-1 win at Brentford, which secured survival in the most dramatic fashion.

A stellar breakout season

Archie Gray celebrates Leeds' second goal vs Leicester

After Leeds’ relegation from the Premier League at the end of 2022/23, there was an exodus of sorts; big-money signings on Premier League wages departed on loan.

While the 17-year-old Gray started the season alongside Ethan Ampadu in central midfield, Luke Ayling had continued at right-back, with little competition after the loan departure of Rasmus Kristensen to Roma.

Djed Spence had come in on loan himself, but was hampered by injury – and when he did play, he deputised at left-back throughout the Christmas period.

The 1-0 win at home to QPR on October 4 turned out to be the very last time Ayling started a game for Leeds. Three days later, Gray replaced him at right-back for the first time and made the spot his own.

Over the course of the next 36 games, Gray started 28 at right-back, four in midfield. There were two brief cameos and twice he was left on the bench, likely to give his legs some much-needed respite.

His assured, composed performances helped him to a place in the England U21 squad in March and he scored on his debut against Azerbaijan.

“I’m very proud of how he’s been doing so far,” said his great-uncle Eddie during an interview with Sky Sports ahead of Leeds’ play-off semi-final against Norwich.

“He’s been playing in a position that is not natural to him; he’s a midfield player and he’ll end up playing in the middle of the park. I can see him, in years to come, being a box-to-box midfielder because he’s a good athlete.

“But he’s still learning the game – and he’s keen to learn the game. Hopefully he goes onto good things with the football club.”

Premature new beginnings

It was plain to see how much the play-off defeat to Southampton at Wembley in affected Gray. Losing at Wembley always hurts, but more so when it is your boyhood club.

Given his tender age, the sobering experience will provide invaluable experience that will set him apart from his peers even more so.

Before the recent developments, there was no obvious reason to suggest trudging back down the stairs from the Royal Box with a runners-up medal in hand would be his final action in a Leeds shirt, particularly because Gray only signed a new four-and-a-half year deal in January.

“It’s just a dream come true,” he said after signing. “The club trust me and trust my family and hopefully I can repay it.”

In an interview with the Guardian, he had spoken about hopes of winning the Champions League with the club and captaining England.

The latter remains on the table – and it would be no surprise if he did so in years to come, given the way he has taken to the professional game like a duck to water.

For now, though, it seems the former will have to be put on pause. A fairy tale to revisit some day in the future.

Euro 2024 – England vs Switzerland: Gary Neville believes Three Lions will lose quarter-final if they do not improve | Football News

Euro 2024 – England vs Switzerland: Gary Neville believes Three Lions will lose quarter-final if they do not improve | Football News


Gary Neville believes England will be beaten by Switzerland in Saturday’s Euro 2024 quarter-final if Gareth Southgate’s side continue to play at their current level – with the Sky Sports pundit asking the Three Lions manager to “take more risks” in his selection.

England were 86 seconds away from a shock 1-0 elimination to Slovakia in the last 16 before Jude Bellingham’s sublime overhead kick forced extra-time, where Harry Kane scored the winning goal.

Next up for England is the challenge of Switzerland, who beat holders Italy in their last-16 clash on Saturday, and Neville believes Southgate’s side will not be so lucky this weekend if they do not improve.

“Four times this England team have played in this tournament where they’ve been below par,” he told Sky Sports News. “They will hope that this is the catalyst for what would be improved performance levels and a change of direction in performance.

Sky News reporter Rob Harris caught up with fans after England’s win over Slovakia – including one who left the game early and missed Jude Bellingham’s equaliser

“Winning is everything in tournaments, but performances matter because eventually there’s only so far you can go being the inferior team. Not playing as well and winning will eventually catch you out and I think it will catch England out on Saturday if they keep playing at the same level.

“Let’s be really clear. Three weeks ago, if you had handed this England squad, Gareth Southgate, the players, and us as fans, Switzerland in the quarter-finals, we would have bitten your hand off.

“But Switzerland are playing well, they’re a decent team. They are not to be disrespected and they won’t be by the players, but if we don’t raise the performance levels, we’re going out on Saturday.

“We were fortunate to get past Slovakia and rode our luck in the group where if Denmark scored one more goal, we would have played Germany. So we’ve rode our luck twice now, it could be written in the stars that we ride our luck all the way to the final, but my head is telling me we will hit a major obstacle if we carry on and we need to take risks to free ourselves up.

“We looked like England teams of the past where they looked frightened to death, like in the first half yesterday.”

Gary Neville admits that Jude Bellingham’s spectacular overhead kick against Slovakia saved England

Who would Neville start against Switzerland?

The “risks” Neville spoke about relate to Southgate’s team selection. In all four Euro 2024 matches so far, the England manager has picked the same 10 players, only rotating between Trent Alexander-Arnold, Conor Gallagher and Kobbie Mainoo for the central midfield spot.

Neville wants to see Alexander-Arnold start at right-back, with Kyle Walker moved over to left-back – plus see Cole Palmer and Anthony Gordon start in attack over Bukayo Saka and Phil Foden – but the former Manchester United and England defender believes widespread changes are unlikely.

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Cole Palmer impressed off the bench against Slovakia on Sunday

“We thought there would be more changes and greater interference, but Gareth’s not going to do that now,” Neville claimed. “I think it does need some type of change, but Gareth – in the first four games – has made as limited changes as he could possibly do.

“He will be forced into one with [Marc] Guehi being suspended but apart from that, he will go in with the players as he sees it and try and almost play them into form through consistency, and the fact they’re working together more and there’s resilience building in them.

“But it just feels like there is a different dynamic. You talk about imbalance, that imbalance will remain if we continue to pick the same players. There is a rebalance and reset needed, but I’m not sure we’re going to get it.”

Will Shaw be risked by England this weekend?

Luke Shaw, England training
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Luke Shaw (middle) has not played any football since the middle of February

One risk Southgate could take is starting Luke Shaw at left-back. The defender has been out with a hamstring injury and has not played since the middle of February – but Shaw did make the bench for the slender win over Slovakia.

“He was available to be used off the bench yesterday, he could have five days of training to put into his legs and his body before Saturday,” Neville said.

“It’s a big risk. A fit Luke Shaw is a big asset, and the reason why maybe the left-hand side is not working as it should be is the same reason why it wasn’t working at Manchester United due to Diogo Dalot, Aaron Wan-Bissaka or Victor Lindelof playing there.

“Marcus Rashford and Alejandro Garnacho struggled because Shaw wasn’t there linking with them and supporting them. It’s really important and England haven’t had that and suffered with it. Phil Foden has suffered with it. Shaw can overlap and underlap, but we haven’t got it.

“Is it too big a risk playing Shaw on Saturday? My gut feeling is yes. But also my absolute unequivocal position is England need to take risks, to do something and change something. If Southgate feels he can get a performance out of Shaw on Saturday, he will put him in, but it’s a massive risk.”

Dan Ashworth: Manchester United agree deal to hire Newcastle sporting director | Football News

Dan Ashworth: Manchester United agree deal to hire Newcastle sporting director | Football News


Manchester United have reached a deal with Newcastle to hire their sporting director Dan Ashworth.

The 53-year-old will commence his new role at Old Trafford with immediate effect.

Newcastle initially were demanding £20m compensation for the former FA Technical Director, with Man Utd looking to pay a fraction of that, but a compromise has been reached in the last few days.

The deal also helped Newcastle comply with Profitability and Sustainability Rules (PSR) this month. Ashworth has been on gardening leave at Newcastle since February.

The hiring of Ashworth is the latest hierarchical hire done by Sir Jim Ratcliffe and the new INEOS minority investors since they took over the club.

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Ashworth joins Omar Berrada (right) in Manchester United’s new hierarchical structure

Omar Berrada joined from Manchester City as United’s new chief executive, while Jason Wilcox arrived as new academy director from Southampton.

Why did Man Utd go for Dan Ashworth?

Sky Sports News senior reporter Melissa Reddy:

“It’s unsurprising that Man Utd have chosen him to take over at as sporting director under INEOS who are looking to reshape their football operations at the club.

“Ashworth’s pedigree and esteem are well-known in the game. He is widely regarded as one of the best operators in Europe and actually the best in England given his body of work.

“You stretch back to his time at West Brom. There he delivered two promotions and a top-half Premier League finish. His work was so promising that he got poached by the England FA.

“There for the national team, he introduced an element that is seen as one of the key factors of their continued success, even now, and that’s the England DNA. A defined way of playing across all age groups.

“We saw the impact of that at the 2018 World Cup and after that tournament, Ashworth left the FA and was poached by Brighton, who wanted him to be in charge of remodelling them and securing their status as a Premier League club.

Dan Ashworth has overseen recruitment teams at Brighton and Newcastle

“He did more than that – he helped them become one of the best-run clubs in the world. Their recruitment model is the envy of clubs the world over.

“That attracted the PIF-powered Newcastle. Even though they have spent a lot, they have spent quite smartly under his watch and he has modernised a lot of their operations.”

When does the summer transfer window open and close?

The 2024 summer transfer window in the Premier League and Scottish Premiership is officially open.

The window will close on August 30 at 11pm UK time in England and at 11.30pm in Scotland.

The Premier League and Scottish Premiership brought forward Deadline Day to link up with the other major leagues in Europe. The closing dates were set following discussions with the leagues in England, Germany, Italy, Spain and France.

Gary Neville insists ‘woeful’ England must make dramatic changes to progress beyond Euro 2024 quarter-finals | Football News

Gary Neville insists ‘woeful’ England must make dramatic changes to progress beyond Euro 2024 quarter-finals | Football News


Gary Neville claims there must be dramatic changes both to England’s system and personnel if they are to progress at Euro 2024 after a late, late show prevented a disastrous last-16 exit at the hands of Slovakia.

Jude Bellingham’s stoppage-time stunner saved Gareth Southgate’s England from an embarrassing loss as the Euro 2024 hopefuls fought back to win 2-1 after extra-time.

A summer that promised so much looked set to end in heartbreak and humiliation for a team that went within a penalty shoot-out of winning the last edition three years ago.

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Harry Kane put England in front in the first minute of extra-time

Ivan Schranz put wily, well-drilled Slovakia on course for their biggest win as an independent nation, only for Bellingham to leave jaws on the floor and disbelieving players on the deck in Gelsenkirchen.

The midfielder’s overhead kick five minutes into stoppage-time sent the match to extra-time, with captain Harry Kane’s header seeing Southgate’s side through this tricky last-16 clash.

Sam Allardyce says England have looked at “sixes and sevens” since the kick-off and need to recover from the “big big blow” of going a goal behind to Slovakia.

Speaking as a pundit on ITV, Neville said: “Sweet Caroline doesn’t sound very sweet. Relief is the word of the day. We’ve been very lucky and we should thank our lucky stars. We were woeful and we’ve been woeful now for four games.

“Not even in extra-time have we played particularly well. We drew Slovakia onto us and they were unlucky at the end.

Sam Allardyce says Gareth Southgate must take responsibility for England’s first half performance against Slovakia but the players are not showing their quality

“We’ve got to change something dramatically now. I’ve played with Gareth Southgate and I know him. He’s a great guy and he’s got massive integrity, but he will realise tonight that he was so close to the edge. Very close to the edge.

“Everyone in the country has been crying out for more change in every single match – from game one, two, three and I think the same clamour will happen again, for Palmer, Alexander-Arnold and for other players to come into the team to create more balance and excitement.

“Getting over the line and winning is all-important in tournaments, but if you think you can go through a month of a tournament playing like we are doing and get through it to the end, I think is unrealistic.”

Jude Bellingham scored a glorious overhead kick in the 95th minute to take England’s game against Slovakia into extra-time and spark scenes of celebration across the country

Switzerland await in the quarter-finals on Saturday and England will look to build on the spirit shown towards the end of a match that had looked set to end in a result akin to Iceland at Euro 2016.

Southgate has overseen vast improvements since taking over shortly after that tournament eight years ago, but the pressure and scrutiny will be as hot as ever after squeaking into the last eight and onto his 100th match at the helm.

Speaking alongside Neville on ITV, Roy Keane said: “It [the win] hasn’t really solved anything. You can talk about performances, but at this level it is about getting over the line and winning.

Sam Allardyce was full of praise for substitute Ivan Toney after his headed assist for Harry Kane’s goal which gave England a 2-1 lead over Slovakia

“Everyone wants a great performance, but if they keep getting results and going through… the next game will be tough but let’s see how they go.

“You have to give them praise as we were really critical at half-time but they found a way to win. The top players found a moment.

“God help us if Bellingham starts playing well. They had two huge moments and they got themselves over the line. Credit where it’s due.”

Bellingham: It’s a great feeling

Jude Bellingham reflects on England’s dramatic victory over Slovakia and his superb overhead kick that kept England in the competition

England midfielder Jude Bellingham speaking to UEFA:

“You’re 30 seconds away from going home, feeling like you’ve let your nation down, and one kick of the ball and everything’s great. It’s a feeling I don’t want to be in, but when it comes, it’s a great feeling.

“Playing for England is a great thing, but it’s a lot of pressure as well. Being on the pitch and scoring goals for me is a release, it’s a very happy moment.”

On his last-gasp equaliser: “It’s got to be up there. There’s a few nice ones, ones that mean a lot to me personally, but his one was so important, both for today and the mood change if it doesn’t happen. It’s right up there.

“It’s 20 or 30 seconds until we’re out of the European Championship and the mood now is a massive difference, and what it can do for the team going forward. It’s a massive moment, but it’s a long tournament and we’ll only know it if we go on to win the cup. We’ll decide in the next two weeks how important it is.”

Archie Gray: Brentford agree fee for Leeds’ 18-year-old midfielder in deal worth potential £40m | Football News

Archie Gray: Brentford agree fee for Leeds’ 18-year-old midfielder in deal worth potential £40m | Football News



Brentford are closing in on the signing of Leeds midfielder Archie Gray.

They have agreed an initial £35m fee for the 18-year-old, and he has been given permission to undergo a medical.

The deal could eventually be worth £40m if bonuses are met.

However, sources have indicated there is still work to do to finalise his arrival at Brentford, and other clubs remain interested in the player.

Gray has enjoyed a breakout season at Elland Road, making 52 appearances in all competitions as the Whites lost the Championship play-off final to Southampton – a game where he played the full 90 minutes.

He is the son of former Nottingham Forest, Leeds and Burnley striker Andy Gray, and first featured in a first-team squad three months before his 16th birthday, when he was named on the bench for a Premier League game with Arsenal in December 2021.

What does the data say Brentford need this summer?

Sky Sports statistician Paul Harrison:

Last season was Brentford’s lowest finish (16th) and points total of their three Premier League campaigns (39) – they won just five of their final 24 league games.

“For the first half of the season, they caught a glimpse of life without talisman Ivan Toney – something likely to become a permanent feature this summer with only one year left on his contract.

“Thomas Frank has acted fast with the signing of Brazilian striker Igor Thiago being confirmed in February. Only Kevin Denkey scored more league goals in Belgium’s top tier this season than Thiago, whose conversion rate was nearly three times that of his potential predecessor.”

The 2024 summer transfer window in the Premier League and Scottish Premiership is officially open.

The window will close on August 30 at 11pm UK time in England and at 11.30pm in Scotland.

The Premier League and Scottish Premiership brought forward Deadline Day to link up with the other major leagues in Europe. The closing dates were set following discussions with the leagues in England, Germany, Italy, Spain and France.

Follow the summer transfer window with Sky Sports

Keep up-to-date with all the latest transfer news and rumours in our dedicated Transfer Centre blog on Sky Sports’ digital platforms. You can also catch up with the ins, outs and analysis on Sky Sports News.

Gareth Southgate wary of England changes and ‘losing continuity’ ahead of Slovakia last-16 clash | Football News

Gareth Southgate wary of England changes and ‘losing continuity’ ahead of Slovakia last-16 clash | Football News


Gareth Southgate has warned against “throwing everything out the window” by making sweeping changes to his England line-up despite their poor Euro 2024 performances.

There had been suggestion Southgate may be tempted to bring in one or both of Anthony Gordon and Cole Palmer for Sunday’s last-16 clash with Slovakia after the pair’s bright impact from the bench against Slovenia – despite playing for a combined total of 30 minutes in that match.

Kobbie Mainoo is increasingly likely to start on Sunday, Sky Sports News understands, but the England manager is expected to resist the urge to make wholesale changes. Southgate has made only one alteration to his starting XI across the tournament so far despite England’s toils in Germany.

Southgate said: “A team is never quite as poor as people might think, and never quite as good as people might think.

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Anthony Gordon made his first appearance of the tournament as an 89th-minute substitute against Slovenia

“You’re probably about five per cent off where you’d like to be. Therefore you’ve got to be very careful not to throw everything out the window, lose things you’re doing well and lose continuity and the confidence that comes from players playing together and the understanding that comes with that.

“You have to ignore external advice and be assured in what you’re doing. Equally, we’ve had some players who have come in and had a big impact from the bench.

“Our substitutions in all of the matches have had a big impact, and we’re mindful people are pushing for places, there’s competition, we need that strength in depth.

“The squad are very together. they’re training well, that’s pushing the starting team that’s been in place. The other players have to be ready; you might need five or six changes tomorrow, that’s over half the team now.

“It’s important that when players come on, they perform as the guys did the other night.”

Southgate doubled down on that mindset by calling the Slovenia performance a “step in the right direction” despite his side failing to find the net, and managing only four shots on target against a side ranked 57th in the world.

He told reporters he had seen an increase in intensity on the training pitch ahead of the knock-out stages, and said morale was growing in the camp – including through celebrations for Jude Bellingham and Eberechi Eze’s birthdays on Saturday.

England stuttered to a boring 0-0 draw with Slovenia in final Group C game
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England stuttered to a boring 0-0 draw with Slovenia in final Group C game

“Confidence is growing, the players know a lot of the performance against Slovenia was a step in the right direction,” he said.

“We have to find more incisiveness in the final third and creativity, but we have the players to do that.

“The understanding of playing together, sticking to the plan and making sure we show the right level of composure to sustain attacks in that area of the pitch, all of those things will add to the performance.

“Of course, goals have a huge impact on individuals and teams. But it doesn’t necessarily have to be one moment, you keep having to show evidence of what you’re doing well and building on what you’re doing.”

Fitness has proven a nagging issue for England both ahead of and during the tournament.

Southgate mentioned fatigue issues following their last warm-up game with Iceland at Wembley, before the Three Lions looked leggy in their opening game with Serbia and struggled to cope with Denmark’s intensity in their second.

Jude Bellingham said he was “dead” after an underwhelming personal performance against Slovenia, having struggled in the final months of the campaign with club side Real Madrid during a gruelling first season at the Bernabeu.

Jude Bellingham's stats vs Slovenia

When asked about the 21-year-old’s fitness, Southgate said: “When you’ve walked off the pitch giving everything you’re going to feel physically in a certain way and perhaps emotionally too.

“He missed a period towards the end of the season with an ankle injury, and didn’t play every game because they were preparing for a Champions League final.

“He will have benefitted from the matches we’ve had and the recovery period in between, as have a number of players.

“But we always have to be mindful of the quality we have to be able to come into the game, the freshness and how that might make a difference in the latter stages of matches.

“That might make a difference, but I’m not concerned about where he’s at in terms of his condition. He’s obviously smiling a lot today, it’s a big day for him, and a reminder of his age and how well he deals with the expectation around him at a remarkably young age.

“I can think of few players who have had to live in that world. I can think that his world is different to most 21 year olds that I know. He’s dealing with that exceptionally well.”

Kieran Trippier injury: England left-back a doubt for Euro 2024 last-16 tie against Slovakia with Ezri Konsa lined up | Football News

Kieran Trippier injury: England left-back a doubt for Euro 2024 last-16 tie against Slovakia with Ezri Konsa lined up | Football News


Kieran Trippier is a doubt for England’s last-16 tie against Slovakia after the defender missed training again on Friday, Sky Sports News has been told.

Trippier is still nursing a calf injury that dogged the end of his domestic season with Newcastle, but he has managed to start each of England’s three matches in the tournament.

If Trippier doesn’t manage to prove his fitness before Sunday’s game, it’s thought Gareth Southgate will turn to Ezri Konsa as a makeshift left-back ahead of Liverpool’s versatile defender Joe Gomez.

Sky Sports News has been told England are still hopeful Trippier will be fit to start the match in Gelsenkirchen although much will depend on how he fares in the next 24 hours.

Trippier missed training on Tuesday and again when England conducted a full training session behind closed doors, as is routine in the tournament, on Friday.

Sky Sports News has been told Southgate is planning to resist the clamour from outside for wholesale changes, as England begin the knockout phase of the tournament.

Assuming Trippier is fit to play, Kobbie Mainoo in for Conor Gallagher may be the only change from the starting XI that disappointingly drew 0-0 with Slovenia in the final group game on Tuesday.

That would mean Chelsea’s Cole Palmer will have to bide his time on the bench again despite being praised by Southgate for the impact he made when he came on in the second half in Cologne.

Graphic

It’s thought Phil Foden took a full part in training on Friday in Blankenhain after returning to the camp following two days back home with his partner, following the birth of their third child. He is expected to be available for selection.

With the game against Slovakia still two days away, much could still change in Southgate’s mind over his team selection. But it’s understood his overall feeling is to resist the noise from outside to make changes, with the manager minded instead to tweak the team which he thinks is his strongest option.

Southgate’s left-back gamble and why Shaw’s return is crucial

Sky Sports feature writer Nick Wright:

England’s turgid displays at Euro 2024 have been criticised but there is one area in which they are excelling. Defensively, they have given very little away, conceding only once in three games and allowing fewer expected goals against than any other side.

Kieran Trippier has played his part in their stinginess, defending well, for the most part, as a makeshift left-back. The problem, both for him and the team more broadly, is that any positives, defensively, have been outweighed by glaring issues in possession.

graphic

Trippier, a right-footer naturally inclined to look inside from the left-back position and unable to offer a genuine threat on the overlap, encapsulates those issues. It is why news of Luke Shaw’s availability against Slovakia, even if only as a substitute, comes as such a boost.

His absence with a hamstring injury has proved a major headache for Gareth Southgate, who has had to delay his return to the fold despite initial hopes he might recover in time to feature during the group stage. Without a natural alternative in the left-back position – more on that later – the side’s attack has been stymied.

The impact is clear when comparing England’s attacking locations at the tournament so far to those at the 2022 World Cup, when Shaw started all five games. In his absence in Germany, the side’s attacks down the left flank have become fewer and less effective.

England's average positions show the difference between Luke Shaw and Kieran Trippier
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England’s average positions show the difference between Luke Shaw and Kieran Trippier

It is no coincidence that their only goals so far, scored by Jude Bellingham and Harry Kane and set up by Bukayo Saka and Kyle Walker respectively, have come from the right.

The lack of balance on the left has been striking.

Read why Luke Shaw’s return could be key and how Gareth Southgate’s Ben Chilwell gamble backfired

Saka: I’m not the answer at left-back

Bukayo Saka fires the ball into the net but his effort is ruled out for offside

Bukayo Saka insists he is not the solution to England’s left-back conundrum.

With Luke Shaw, the only recognised left-back in Southgate’s ranks, still working back to full fitness having been sidelined with a hamstring injury since February, the England manager may need someone else to step in.

Saka, 22, who has since gone on to become on of the top players in Europe on the right wing, does not see himself as the answer.

“I don’t think putting me out of position is the solution,” he said after a number of pundits had called for Southgate to make the change.

“At the end of the day, I think we can talk about this but it’s in Gareth’s hands so we will just have to trust whoever Gareth selects on the day.”

Alexander Isak transfer: Chelsea show further interest in signing Newcastle striker | Football News

Alexander Isak transfer: Chelsea show further interest in signing Newcastle striker | Football News


Chelsea have shown further interest in Newcastle United striker Alexander Isak.

New Blues boss Enzo Maresca is keen to add a proven Premier League goalscorer to his ranks and Isak fits the bill.

Newcastle need to sell a player to comply with Profitability and Sustainability Regulations (PSR) before July 1 and would be looking for over £100m to consider selling their star striker.

Newcastle do not want to sell any of their star players this window but are aware of the delicate situation and could incur a points deduction if they don’t sell.

Chelsea’s first enquiry landed earlier this week and Sky Sports News understands there has been further contact between the clubs on Friday.

Our pick of Alexander Isak’s best Premier League goals for Newcastle from the 2023/24 season

Isak scored 25 goals last season for Newcastle despite missing two parts of the season with a recurring groin injury.

Meanwhile, Newcastle’s Yankuba Minteh was close to a £35m move to Everton earlier this week but the deal fell through.

Sky Sports News’ James Savundra explains what the profit and sustainability rules (PSR) rules are and why it is so important Premier League clubs follow them.

Chelsea and Leicester in talks over Dewsbury-Hall

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Chelsea are yet to make a formal offer for Leicester’s Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall

Talks are ongoing between Chelsea and Leicester over a deal for Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall.

Chelsea made their approach on Thursday but are yet to make a formal offer.

Sky Sports News understands some of the discussions are around the potential for a player to move in the opposite direction to Leicester.

Leicester are among the clubs under pressure to sell one or more players before Sunday to comply with PSR.

Brighton have also been very interested in Dewsbury-Hall and Leicester, in turn, have an interest in signing Brighton midfielder Jakub Moder.

Aston Villa sign Maatsen from Chelsea

Chelsea would rather sell Ian Maatsen outright
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Ian Maatsen impressed on loan at Borussia Dortmund this season

Aston Villa have completed the signing of left-back Ian Maatsen from Chelsea.

The 22-year-old has signed a six-year deal and moves to Villa Park for a fee of £37.5m.

Maatsen had a £35m release clause which expired earlier this month, allowing Chelsea to negotiate the higher price they agreed with Villa.

Borussia Dortmund were keen on signing the defender on a permanent deal after his successful loan spell with them last season. They made offers but fell short of the original release clause.

Ziyech joins Galatasaray on permanent deal

Hakim Ziyech playing for Galatasaray
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Hakim Ziyech joined Galatasaray on a season-long loan last August

Chelsea winger Hakim Ziyech has completed a permanent transfer to Galatasaray.

The 31-year-old joined the Super Lig side on a season-long loan last August and scored six league goals in 18 league appearances, producing three assists.

Ziyech leaves Chelsea after four years at Stamford Bridge, where he won the Champions League, UEFA Super Cup and Club World Cup.

He scored 14 goals and provided 13 assists in 107 appearances after joining in a £33.3m deal from Ajax.

When does the summer transfer window open and close?

The 2024 summer transfer window in the Premier League and Scottish Premiership is officially open.

The window will close on August 30 at 11pm UK time in England and at 11.30pm in Scotland.

The Premier League and Scottish Premiership brought forward Deadline Day to link up with the other major leagues in Europe. The closing dates were set following discussions with the leagues in England, Germany, Italy, Spain and France.

Ian Maatsen: Aston Villa complete signing of left-back from Chelsea | Football News

Ian Maatsen: Aston Villa complete signing of left-back from Chelsea | Football News



Aston Villa have completed the signing of left-back Ian Maatsen from Chelsea.

The 22-year-old has signed a six-year-deal and moves to Villa Park for a fee of £37.5m.

Maatsen had a £35m release clause which expired earlier this month, allowing Chelsea to negotiate the higher price they agreed with Villa.

Borussia Dortmund were keen on signing the defender on a permanent deal after his successful loan spell with them last season. They made offers but fell short of the original release clause.

Ian Maatsen made a big impression in the Bundesliga during his short spell on loan at Borussia Dortmund

He made 16 Bundesliga appearances for Dortmund, scoring two goals, and featured seven times in the Champions League, scoring once.

‘He wants to play in CL’ | How Villa beat Dortmund to Maatsen…

Sky Sports New chief reporter Kaveh Solhekol:

“Maatsen had a release clause in his contract, which Dortmund could have activated.

“That release clause has expired, which meant Aston Villa could make their move and that is exactly what they’ve done.

“It’s crucial that Villa are in the Champions League. The player himself wants to carry on playing in the Champions League.

“It’s a very good deal for Unai Emery’s side. He played so well for Dortmund, helping them reach the Champions League final.”

When does the summer transfer window open and close?

The 2024 summer transfer window in the Premier League and Scottish Premiership is officially open.

The window will close on August 30 at 11pm UK time in England and at 11.30pm in Scotland.

The Premier League and Scottish Premiership brought forward Deadline Day to link up with the other major leagues in Europe. The closing dates were set following discussions with the leagues in England, Germany, Italy, Spain and France.

Euro 2024 Last-16 Predictions: Switzerland can take Italy the distance | Football News

Euro 2024 Last-16 Predictions: Switzerland can take Italy the distance | Football News


It’s knockout football from now on at Euro 2024 and our football betting expert Jones Knows unleashes his insight and predictions on the action.

Switzerland vs Italy, Saturday, 5pm

Don’t fear backing the draw is my advice when it comes to European Championship knockout matches. Since Euro 1996, those backing matches to end all square in this competition will have bagged a very healthy stakes level profit. A staggering 45 per cent of knockout matches have in that period ended as a draw. It’s a 19/10 shot with Sky Bet for this one to head to extra-time and that looks a fair shout.

Those looking for a stronger betting angle into the game should focus on Italy corners, where the line looks favourable.

Luciano Spalletti is likely to use the 3-5-2 formation he employed against Croatia which does suit key players like Nicolo Barella and Alessandro Bastoni, who play so well in this system at Inter Milan.

It’s a style of play that encourages the wide players to roam forward into deep crossing positions and this increases the chance of corners being won. The two wing-backs here in Federico Dimarco and Giovanni Di Lorenzo were responsible for winning 70 corners between them in Serie A last season with Dimarco’s average of 1.65 corners won per game only bettered by two other players in the league.

Italy won 11 against Croatia in the 3-5-2 system so the six or more line at 11/8 with Sky Bet looks a cracker.

SCORE PREDICTION: 1-1 (Italy to win on penalties) | BETTING ANGLE: Italy to win six or more corners (11/8 with Sky Bet – Bet Here!)

Germany vs Denmark, Saturday, 8pm

This looks a great draw for Germany. They remain a team I’m wary about in terms of going all the way as they will be vulnerable to a team that play with quick transitions and speed in wide areas. But Denmark aren’t that team. It’s an ageing squad, lacking imagination in forward areas especially. I’d be surprised if this vibrant Germany don’t deliver in 90 minutes.

Antonio Rudiger is certainly revelling in the home nation vibes playing for this attack-minded Julian Nagelsmann team.

He’s a bit of a showman isn’t he? And twice already at the tournament he’s gone for the spectacular strike from range.

Antonio Rudiger is 100/1 to score from outside the box
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Antonio Rudiger is 100/1 to score from outside the box

He’s not immune to taking aim from distance. In his last season with Chelsea he had 20 shots from outside the box with six of them hitting the target. You can get 15/2 with Sky Bet on him hitting the target from outside the box – a bet that landed in Germany’s win over Scotland. And the 100/1 on him scoring from outside the box is one for the dreamers.

SCORE PREDICTION: 3-1 | BETTING ANGLE: Antonio Rudiger to have a shot on target from outside the area (15/2 with Sky Bet – Bet Here!) & Rudiger to score from outside the area (100/1 with Sky Bet – Bet Here!)

England vs Slovakia, Sunday, 5pm

England vs Slovakia

Expect much of the same from England against a similar opponent to the ones they faced in their group. It will be safe, it will be tough to watch but Gareth Southgate’s side will probably find a way in a turgid, low-scoring encounter.

A penalty to be scored looks a runner to me here at 5/2 with Sky Bet as England are the best team at the tournament at winning penalties, by some distance, yet one hasn’t dropped their way yet.

England have been awarded 35 penalties in just 97 games since Gareth Southgate took the job. That sort of ratio is super high.

Take for example last year’s Premier League campaign. The highest ratio of penalties won per 90 minutes was set by Chelsea, who won 12 penalties in 38 games working out at a 0.32 per 90 ratio. England are working at a 0.35 per 90 ratio for penalties won under Southgate and that’s from a bigger sample size of matches. It’s a skill.

And it’s one of England’s most potent weapons under this manager as they have a tricky forward line, capable of winning fouls.

Meanwhile, Slovakia, who will defend deep, have already conceded a penalty at this tournament vs Romania and conceded two penalties in qualifying.

The numbers are screaming of a strong likelihood of a penalty being scored yet, the Sky Bet odds surrounding don’t mirror that. With Harry Kane’s record from the spot in mind, I’d have this bet closer to 7/4 than 5/2. And of course you have the insurance of a Slovakia penalty being scored in your favour too.

SCORE PREDICTION: 1-0 | BETTING ANGLE: A penalty to be scored (5/2 with Sky Bet – Bet Here!)

Spain vs Georgia, Sunday, 8pm

Spain vs Georgia

What odds would you have given for this game to be a last-16 fixture at this tournament when the full-time whistle blew after Spain’s 7-1 win over Georgia in qualifying? A million to one, maybe?

On aggregate Spain beat the Georgians 10-2 over those two matches, registering 53 shots to Georgia’s 13.

It’s no wonder Spain are 1/7 with Sky Bet to win in 90 minutes.

Although I’ve got no interest in taking Spain on, it’s hard to ignore just how much of a free-swing this really is for Georgia, who play with such spark and fluency in attack. That does make them a runner here to add to the scoring.

They have scored in 13 of their last 15 games, including in both of those meetings with Spain and in Khvicha Kvaratskhelia and Georges Mikautadze they carry genuine quality. Both teams to score is overpriced at 6/4 with Sky Bet.

SCORE PREDICTION: 4-1 | BETTING ANGLE: Both teams to score (6/4 with Sky Bet – Bet Here!)

France vs Belgium, Monday, 5pm

France vs Belgium

I’ve been disappointed with both teams so far but the tournament could just start here for both. They are hard to read.

What is glaringly obvious though is that Belgium’s back four, especially Wout Faes and Jan Vertonghen, are going to struggle to handle Kylian Mbappe. That could be the decisive factor.

If somehow Belgium are going to progress then they’ll have to rely on some variance with France’s finishing and hope that Kevin De Bruyne remains in the form we’ve seen from him in this tournament.

He’s been the heartbeat, playing as a roaming no.10. This type of big occasion is made for players of his ilk and it’s his shot on target prices that standout here. The 10/11 with Sky Bet for him to register an effort on target looks big considering how involved he is in the final third and that he’s already had five shots on target at the tournament.

SCORE PREDICTION: 2-1 | BETTING ANGLE: Kevin de Bruyne to have a shot on target (10/11 with Sky Bet – Bet Here!)

Portugal vs Slovenia, Monday, 8pm

Portugal vs Slovenia

Forget Cristiano Ronaldo. The main man for Portugal is Bruno Fernandes.

Once Roberto Martinez figures that out, the better Portugal will be for it. Ronaldo has now scored just one non-penalty goal in his last 11 matches for Portugal at major international tournaments and his presence is becoming a problem and a sideshow.

Meanwhile, Fernandes is in the prime of his career now and showed in qualifying that he’s the key to Portugal delivering on the big stage. He grabbed 14 goal contributions and found the net in one of his two starts in the group stages. I’m expecting him to kick on in the knockout stages, starting with what looks a real one-sided contest with Slovenia. The 11/4 with Sky Bet for Fernandes to score in a Portugal win looks a nice price.

SCORE PREDICTION: 2-0 | BETTING ANGLE: Bruno Fernandes to score in a Portugal win (11/4 with Sky Bet – Bet Here!)

Romania vs Netherlands, Tuesday, 5pm

Romania vs Netherlands

For someone who has got 11 assists in his last 22 starts for his country, Denzel Dumfries is being grossly underrated by the Sky Bet markets.

When you factor in how heavily fancied Netherlands are and their expected goals return is to score over two goals, the 9/2 on Dumfries assisting a goal really does appeal. Those odds imply a probability of about 18 per cent, I’d have it closer to 30 per cent based on the data and how dangerous Dumfries is down the Netherlands’ right flank.

SCORE PREDICTION: 0-2 | BETTING ANGLE: Denziel Dumfries to register an assist (9/2 with Sky Bet – Bet Here!)

Austria vs Turkey, Tuesday, 8pm

Austria vs Turkey

The next two weeks should be an exciting ride for punters like me who backed Austria pre-tournament. The 80/1 shots are now 16/1. Not only have Ralf Rangnick’s side showed themselves to be a force, they’ve also landed in the weaker half of the draw after playing no-fear football that saw them top the group.

A collision course with Turkey here could just be the game of tournament. It’s shaping up to be beautiful chaos.

Austria will press hard and fast while Turkey are full of outstanding and exciting individual players in attack that are allowed to express themselves. To the backdrop of this there are two defences that are liable to make mistakes. It just screams goals and cards.

Keeping the over cards lines on your side should prove a profitable call in the knockout rounds. Since Euro 1996 in the knockouts, the average cards per 90-minute stands at a whopping 4.76 and in last 16 matches of the last two Euros, 13 of 16 games saw over 3.5 cards land. If you combine over 2.5 goals here with 40+ booking points using the Bet Builder, you can conjure up a 6/4 shot with Sky Bet.

SCORE PREDICTION: 2-2 (Austria to win on penalties) | BETTING ANGLE: Over 2.5 goals & 40+ booking points (6/4 with Sky Bet – Bet Here!)