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The Independent
10 minutes ago
- The Independent
Monday's briefing: Tottenham worry over Maddison injury and Chelsea sign Hato
Tottenham midfielder James Maddison sustained a 'bad' injury before manager Thomas Frank bolstered his squad with the arrival of Joao Palhinha. Chelsea signed Netherlands defender Jorrel Hato, while Newcastle boss Eddie Howe is unsure what the future holds for wantaway striker Alexander Isak. Elsewhere, Scottish Premiership champions Celtic scraped past St Mirren. Maddison suffers fresh injury setback James Maddison sustained a serious-looking knee injury as Tottenham's pre-season tour of Asia concluded with a 1-1 draw against Newcastle in Seoul. The England international, who missed the closing stages of last season with a knee problem, was carried off on a stretcher after going down unchallenged late in the game. Manager Thomas Frank said the issue appeared to be a 'bad injury' before Spurs later announced the signing of Portugal midfielder Joao Palhinha on loan from Bayern Munich. Sunday's friendly was otherwise notable for the emotional reception departing South Korea forward Son Heung-min received from fans in his home city. Teenage Dutch defender moves to Stamford Bridge Chelsea completed the signing of Netherlands defender Jorrel Hato from Ajax in a deal worth a reported £37million. The 19-year-old, who has been capped six times by his country, signed a seven-year contract at Stamford Bridge. He became the Blues' eighth signing of the summer transfer window. Hato, who can operate in central defence or at left-back, said: 'I thought a lot about my future and wanted to take the next step in my career. Chelsea is the best place for me to do that.' Howe leaves door open for Isak Newcastle manager Eddie Howe is hoping to see striker Alexander Isak back in training in the coming days. Isak, who has been the subject of interest from Liverpool, missed the Magpies' pre-season tour of Asia amid speculation over his future. Newcastle are returning home after their trip concluded against Spurs on and Howe hopes the Sweden international will report back as normal. Howe told The Chronicle after the game: 'Of course I'd like him to but whether or not he will, I don't know at this moment in time. Other people have been dealing with that situation back at home.' Late deflected strike secures narrow win for Celtic William Hill Premiership champions Celtic left it late before beginning their title defence with a 1-0 victory over St Mirren at Parkhead. Luke McCowan's deflected strike three minutes from time finally broke the visitors' resistance. The substitute collected Daizen Maeda's square pass on the edge of a crowded penalty box and fired a shot which appeared to spin off Mark O'Hara's leg and nestle into the bottom corner of the net. Celtic had earlier hit the frame of the goal through Benjamin Nygren, Reo Hatate and Adam Idah, while Callum McGregor had a goal disallowed following VAR intervention. What's on today? Hearts host Aberdeen at Tynecastle in the final match of the opening round of fixtures of the new Scottish Premiership season.


Telegraph
41 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Bruno Fernandes blames laziness for Manchester United draw with Everton
Bruno Fernandes accused Manchester United of being 'lazy' off the ball against Everton as the club's captain called for more signings before the close of the transfer window. Bryan Mbeumo made his first appearance for United since signing from Brentford in a £71 million deal and looked lively during a 45-minute run-out. But United twice threw ahead the lead, as Everton claimed a 2-2 draw in the teams' final match of the Premier League Summer Series and Fernandes was unhappy with elements of their display. 'Our performance wasn't the best off the ball, we were a little bit lazy, and we have to avoid that because the laziness you can pay at any moment,' the Portugal midfielder told NBC. United manager Ruben Amorim backed Fernandes' criticism by saying he was happy to see his players call out any drop in standards. 'I think I'm happy for the players to have that feeling,' said Amorim, whose side beat West Ham and Bournemouth in their first two games of their US pre-season tour. 'It's saying that they understand the situation. So it's a good feeling. I think the momentum of the tour was perfect. 'We had the weeks to work with a good environment, good feeling and then we go back to Carrington and we are near to start the season. We are going with the feeling that we need to do a lot of things [better].' Omar Berrada, the United chief executive, said the director of football Jason Wilcox and his recruitment team were working 'around the clock' to make further additions to the squad. United are competing with Newcastle for RB Leipzig striker Benjamin Sesko although Amorim would also like reinforcements in central midfielder and goalkeeper. 'We have a team back home led by Jason - the recruitment team - that is working around the clock to ensure that we continue to find opportunities to strengthen our squad. There are lots of late calls and early morning meetings to make sure that we stay on top of it.' United have spent £140m this summer on Mbeumo, fellow forward Matheus Cunha and left back Diego Leon, but Fernandes believes more arrivals are needed. 'It's improving, it's not where we want it to be,' he said. 'I don't want to have a dig at anyone but I think the club is doing the best they can in terms of all the financial situations they talk about. 'I don't know about it, I'm not involved in that, but obviously it was crystal clear we needed more competition for the players that were here. 'We needed more quality to get everyone to step up a bit more to have more to do to get into the starting XI and I think that's what the club and the manager are trying to do and hopefully we can get one or two players more to help with that.' Fernandes said United's players had a duty to atone for last season, when they finished 15th in the Premier League, and that the standards had to be higher. 'It's every detail, every small detail matters,' said the Portuguese, who is one of a new six-strong leadership group. 'At this football club you can't do anything wrong on the pitch and off the pitch because it's too big worldwide and you get punished by that. 'You get the attention of the media and your fans and you have to be aware of that. At this club the culture here was winning and we need to bring that back. 'Not only the winning mentality that we need, and I think that's always been there, but obviously if you don't win you don't show it. 'The club is trying to improve other things, the facilities have improved, we tried to improve the team, the staff, a lot of things. 'A lot of people have suffered from this, a lot of people who had been working at the club for many many years had to go. The fans are paying more for tickets and we appreciate all the effort they put in for us so now it's up to us to pay it back on the pitch.' United in urgent need of defensive midfielder United may be competing with Newcastle to sign Benjamin Sesko, but the need to recruit a mobile defensive midfielder is arguably as pressing, if not more pressing, than a new centre-forward. The Everton game merely reaffirmed that. Mbeumo impressed on his first appearance for United and dovetailed well with Cunha, Fernandes and Amad Diallo before the Cameroon international was substituted at half-time. Yet this was a bruising run-out for Manuel Ugarte, who was responsible for losing the ball cheaply in the lead up to Everton's first equaliser and generally looked short of what United require. The Uruguay midfielder was excellent in the 2-1 win over West Ham in New Jersey a week earlier, but many of his familiar flaws were back on show against Everton in Atlanta. Amorim's 3-4-2-1 system demands his two holding midfielders to cover a lot of ground, but Kobbie Mainoo, for all his talent on the ball, is not the quickest of players and Ugarte has struggled with the pace and physicality of the Premier League as well as being error prone and sometimes careless in possession. Fernandes' criticism of United's work-rate off the ball told its own story. Ugarte was at fault for Everton's first goal trying to run out with the ball only to be dispossessed by Vitalii Mykolenko, before Idrissa Gueye whipped a delicious inswinging ball to the far post that was coolly dispatched by Iliman Ndiaye. A poor headed clearance in the second half almost resulted in another Everton goal, but Michael Keane was offside as he received the ball from James Tarkowski after Ugarte's fumble. When Ugarte slipped and lost possession in another moment, he briefly paused on the ground before realising he had better get up and run back. No one needed a repeat of that scene against West Ham in May when Ugarte fell weakly to the ground after losing possession cheaply under nominal pressure from Aaron Wan-Bissaka and then made no attempt to race back to atone. Fernandes dropped from No. 10 into a deeper midfield role in the second half against Everton, and Amorim may find he has no choice but to play the Portuguese there if United fail to strengthen in the position.


Daily Mail
41 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Bruno Fernandes slams 'lazy' Manchester United and wants more signings after Everton draw
Bruno Fernandes criticised Manchester United for being 'lazy' in their draw with Everton in Atlanta, and claimed that it underlined the need for the club to bring in more new signings this summer. United ended their US tour by winning the Premier League Summer Series and remaining unbeaten in pre-season, but were twice pegged back at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Although Fernandes scored from the penalty spot and got an assist for Mason Mount 's second goal to take away the man-of-the-match award, the United captain was unhappy with the team's display in Georgia. 'Our performance wasn't the best off the ball,' he said. 'We were a little bit lazy and we have to avoid that because the laziness you can pay at any moment. 'It's improving. It's not where we want it to be. I don't want to have a dig at anyone, but I think the club is doing the best they can in terms of all the financial situations they talk about. 'I don't know about it, I'm not involved in that. But obviously it was crystal clear we needed more competition for the players that were here. We needed more quality to get everyone to step up a bit more, to have to do more to get into the starting XI. I think that's what the club and the manager are trying to do, and hopefully we can get one or two players more to help with that. 'Every small detail matters. At this football club you can't do anything wrong on the pitch and off the pitch because it's too big worldwide and you get punished by that. 'You get the attention of the media and your fans and you have to be aware of that. At this club the culture here was winning and we need to bring that back. Not only the winning mentality that we need, and I think that's always been there, but obviously if you don't win you don't show it. 'The club is trying to improve other things. The facilities have improved, we tried to improve the team, the staff, a lot of things. 'A lot of people have suffered from this, a lot of people who had been working at the club for many many years had to go. The fans are paying more for tickets, and we appreciate all the effort they put in for us, so now it's up to us to pay it back on the pitch.'