WHO Poll
Q: 2023/24 Hopes & aspirations for this season
a. As Champions of Europe there's no reason we shouldn't be pushing for a top 7 spot & a run in the Cups
24%
  
b. Last season was a trophy winning one and there's only one way to go after that, I expect a dull mid table bore fest of a season
17%
  
c. Buy some f***ing players or we're in a battle to stay up & that's as good as it gets
18%
  
d. Moyes out
37%
  
e. New season you say, woohoo time to get the new kit and wear it it to the pub for all the big games, the wags down there call me Mr West Ham
3%
  



Alan 12:43 Thu Dec 28
Thursday news (includes West Ham)
BBC

Newcastle United are confident they can agree a deal to sign England midfielder Kalvin Phillips from Manchester City but face competition from Juventus, Everton and Crystal Palace for the 28-year-old. (Telegraph - subscription required)

The Glazer family will have to pay Sir Jim Ratcliffe up to $66m (£52m) if they terminate the deal for his Ineos Group to buy a 25% stake in Manchester United. (Independent)

As part of the deal, Ineos also have to be consulted about any moves by Manchester United in the January transfer window and manager Erik ten Hag cannot be sacked without Ratcliffe's involvement. (Standard)

Ratcliffe has outlined an eight-year plan to improve the club's Old Trafford home. (Football Insider)

Portugal midfielder Joao Neves, 19, who has been linked with a move to Manchester United, is in talks over a new contract at Benfica that could see his release clause increased from 120m euros (£104m) to 150m euros (£130m). (O Jogo - in Portuguese)

United are also being linked with 25-year-old Sweden striker Viktor Gyokeres from Benfica's rivals Sporting Lisbon. (Correio da Manha, via Express)

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta says the club are open to bolstering his squad in January "because we want to be stronger". (Guardian)

The Gunners admire Bayern Munich central defender Matthijs de Ligt but a move for the Dutch 24-year-old is unlikely in January. (Athletic - subscription required)

Liverpool have asked Fulham about the availability of United States international Antonee Robinson, 26, as they look to sign a left-back in the January transfer window. (90 Min)

Tottenham have told 29-year-old England defender Eric Dier, Denmark midfielder Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg, 28, and French keeper Hugo Lloris, 37, they can leave the club in January. (Football Insider)

A move for Hojbjerg is a priority for Juventus as the Italian giants aim to strengthen their midfield.(Calciomercato - in Italian)

Sevilla and Tottenham Hotspur are both set to bid for Ajax's Belgian midfielder Stanis Idumbo Muzambo, 18, who has turned down a new offer from the Dutch club.(Fabrizio Romano)

France forward Antoine Griezmann, 32, says Atletico Madrid will be his last club in Europe and he would be interested in finishing his career in the United States. (AS - in Spanish)

AC Milan are set to recall 24-year-old Italian centre-back Matteo Gabbia from his loan with Villarreal next week. (Fabrizio Romano)

Roma are trying to agree a deal to sign former Juventus defender Leonardo Bonucci, with German side Union Berlin prepared to let the 36-year-old Italy international leave for free. (Gazzetta dello Sport, via Football Italia)





Sky Paper Talk

DAILY TELEGRAPH

Newcastle United are going to step up their interest in Manchester City's Kalvin Phillips and hope a loan deal can be agreed swiftly once the January transfer window opens. The midfielder is viewed as a top priority for Eddie Howe's team.

The Glazer family will have pocketed more than £1.3bn from share sales and dividend payments at Manchester United once Sir Jim Ratcliffe's deal for a 25 per cent stake in the club is formally completed.

World Athletics have promised not to "strangle innovation" after forming a special evaluation team to work with companies like Nike and Adidas whose new 'super shoes' have transformed endurance running.

THE TIMES

Ineos and the Glazer family have agreed to avoid criticising each other in public as part of the deal that is set to culminate in the billionaire Sir Jim Ratcliffe, the Ineos chairman and chief executive, taking control of 25 per cent of Manchester United.

UEFA has demanded the European Court of Justice amends its press statement on the European Super League decision with senior figures believing the release was enhanced to make the ruling sound more titillating.

THE INDEPENDENT

Manchester United and the Glazer family will have to pay Sir Jim Ratcliffe up to $66m (£51.6m) if they terminate the agreement for him to take a minority share in the club.

THE SUN

Conor Gallagher could be one of five players who are shown the exit door at Stamford Bridge in January.

Former Premier League star Salomon Rondon has allegedly given up a huge chunk of money in order to quit River Plate.

Nottingham Forest and Wales defender Neco Williams hopes Amazon Prime were watching his social media after expressing his displeasure at being labelled as English on graphics as he came on during their live broadcast of the win at Newcastle.

Seb Coe hopes a "warts and all" documentary about the world of athletics ahead of the Olympic Games in Paris next summer will provide the same boost as a similar series did for Formula One.

DAILY MAIL

UEFA has reportedly demanded the European Court of Justice amends its press statement on the European Super League decision as some within the organisation believe the 'inaccurate' release was drafted to make the ruling appear more riveting.

Bayern Munich are reportedly ready to make an opening offer for Manchester United defender Raphael Varane.

Karim Benzema has appeared to delete his Instagram account which has a staggering 76 million followers.

Jesse Lingard has been offered to several clubs in France, but any move could reportedly be scuppered by Brexit rules.

Andre Onana's bizarre feud with Cameroon legends Samuel Eto'o and current international head coach Rigobert Song is showing no sign of healing and there remain doubts whether he will return to international duty for AFCON even if selected in Song's squad.

Liverpool's pre-Christmas clash with Arsenal provided record-breaking viewership in the United States, with 2.28m people watching the game across NBC, streaming platform Peacock and Spanish-speaking outlet Telemundo.

John Terry has tipped 20-year-old defender Alfie Gilchrist to be the next academy star to impact the Chelsea first-team.

Fulham goalkeeper Bernd Leno will escape any punishment from the Football Association following his altercation with a ballboy during the defeat at Bournemouth.

Guinea star Morlaye Sylla has been omitted from their AFCON squad in the aftermath of a row with team-mates and manager Kaba Diawara, who he accused of stealing a shirt given to him by Vinicius Jr after the nation played Brazil over the summer.

DAILY MIRROR

Former Liverpool midfielder Xabi Alonso will not be doing his old club any favours as he has ruled out allowing Reds defensive target Piero Hincapie to leave Bayer Leverkusen in January.

Liverpool will not be pursuing a January move for Fulham full-back Antonee Robinson amid reports they wanted the US international to provide cover for injured pair Andrew Robertson and Kostas Tsimikas.

THE ATHLETIC

Everton are not expecting a busy transfer window as they continue to prioritise "financial prudence".

Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola hopes striker Erling Haaland will return next month from a "stress" injury in his foot.

RB Leipzig have confirmed the signing of midfielder Eljif Elmas from Napoli.

Barcelona captain and two-time Ballon d'Or winner Alexia Putellas has undergone surgery on her knee, her club has confirmed.

DAILY EXPRESS

Manchester City are reportedly considering a move for Bayern Munich star Joshua Kimmich in the January transfer window.

SCOTTISH SUN

Harry Kewell is edging closer to being appointed as the new Yokohama F Marinos boss.

DAILY RECORD

Celtic full-back Greg Taylor says the first-team squad will get a massive boost when Reo Hatete and Liel Abada are able to return to action, which should happen soon.






The Athletic

The making of West Ham’s Edson Alvarez: ‘Fans call him Machin – he’s tough and never backs down’

Roshane Thomas and Jack Lang

As far as Edson Alvarez was concerned, he was living the dream — playing for his boyhood club and on track to becoming a professional footballer. But there was one issue.

Each morning when he left his family home in Tlalnepantla, Mexico, it took the midfielder two to three hours to travel the 24 miles (39 kilometres) to Club America’s training ground in Tlalpan. Alvarez was an academy prospect and did not drive. His coaches knew he had great potential and urged the club’s hierarchy to intervene.

“He’d never complain, but he had to travel so far to get to training and it must’ve taken a toll on him,” says ex-Club America forward Oribe Peralta. “Edson had to take a train, a bus and a taxi. I have no idea how much he spent getting to training, but it must’ve been a lot. He had to wake up so early just to make it in time.

“When things started to get serious, me and some of the older guys told him he had to live closer to the training ground. The club knew they had a great prospect in Edson so they helped him find an apartment.

“The coaches knew they couldn’t let a talented player like Edson slip away from the academy. When he started making money he bought a car so he could drive to training.

“He no longer lived with his parents and, before my eyes, I saw him go from a boy to a man.

“In Mexico, a large percentage of footballers come from low-income families. They always have to make sacrifices if they have the will and desire to become professional footballers. Edson commuting for almost three hours to get to training tells you how much he wanted to make it. He put the effort in and that’s what set him apart. Even when he could, he never once complained about feeling tired. I have so much respect for him.”

Club America is the alma mater to Raul Jimenez, the Fulham forward, and Christian Benitez, the former Birmingham City striker who died in 2013. Alvarez, who made 86 league appearances from 2016 to 2019, is widely considered one of their best academy graduates.

This is the story of how he honed his skills at Club America to become Mexico’s most important player, and why West Ham United missing out on other midfield targets last summer proved to be a blessing.

It has been four months since Alvarez joined West Ham from Ajax for €40million (£34.4m; $44.1m). The 26-year-old was their first summer signing and his deal extends to the summer of 2028.

When Declan Rice, West Ham’s former captain, joined Arsenal for £105million in July, manager David Moyes and his recruitment team looked at midfielders who could play the No 6 role. Their list included Joao Palhinha of Fulham, Scott McTominay of Manchester United, Chelsea midfielder Conor Gallagher, Sofyan Amrabat, who subsequently joined Manchester United from Fiorentina on loan, as well as Alvarez.

Palhinha was identified as the first choice for the role because of his Premier League experience, but Fulham rejected an offer in the region of £45m. A £40m bid for Gallagher was knocked back, along with a £30m approach for McTominay. The recruitment team suggested Amrabat, but Moyes felt there were better options elsewhere.

Alvarez had been on West Ham’s radar for a few seasons but, with Rice and Tomas Soucek on the books, a deal was never pursued. Moyes’ scouts would often travel to watch Alvarez, and the feedback was consistently positive. Securing the midfielder, who attracted interest from Bayern Munich in the summer, quickly became the priority. The deal that was struck feels like a coup.

The Mexico international has adapted seamlessly to life in London, a city he had visited in his teens as a tourist, and has established himself as one of Moyes’ most important players.

He is their only recognisable defensive midfielder in the first-team setup. He has scored once and registered two assists across 22 appearances. In his absence, and that of Mohammed Kudus, who joined Alvarez at West Ham, Ajax have laboured. They are fifth, 23 points behind leaders PSV Eindhoven. The nadir of a miserable campaign so far came last week with elimination from the KNVB Cup by fourth-tier Dutch club USV Hercules. Their loss has been West Ham’s gain.

The midfielder’s transition from Amsterdam to London has been smoother — if still a far cry from his roots back in Mexico.

Alvarez grew up in the northern suburbs of Tlalnepantla de Baz, which has a population of 750,000. As a youngster, he worked for his father, Evaristo, who ran a business which produced football shirts for local teams. Alvarez grew up idolising Ronaldinho and Rafa Marquez, both formerly of Barcelona. He was initially a striker himself, clad in the No 19 once worn by his father in the Mexican lower leagues — he seized the chance to adopt that number at West Ham last summer — and was prolific.

But when thrust into a more competitive environment away from home, the youngster’s progress stalled. Indeed, having been moved back into defence, he almost gave up his pursuit of a professional career in the game after the setbacks endured at his first club, Pachuca.

“I had left my house at the age of nine to follow my dream when a club came in for me,” he said. “That was a very difficult decision for my parents and for me because I was just a kid. I was there for four years and had some amazing moments but, after four years, they released me because I was still very, very small.

“I said to my parents (Evaristo and Adriana): ‘I don’t want to play football any more’.”

Alvarez was unattached for a year before, having enjoyed a growth spurt, he joined Club America after a trial. He duly impressed in the youth setup and made his senior debut in 2016 against Santos Laguna a week after his 18th birthday — and never looked back.

There were 28 appearances in all competitions in that debut season, with two goals scored en route. It was Ricardo La Volpe, Club America’s manager at the time, who gave Alvarez his big break. He recognised the youngster’s potential, and was prepared to forgive him his occasional errors.

“In Mexico, we say that a player at 18 has to learn, and where you learn is on the field,” Alvarez told ESPN. “You make mistakes. I did back then. When I started I made a lot of mistakes; I gave away a penalty against Chivas, and scored an own goal against Pachuca. But La Volpe never dropped me from the team. He always supported me.”

Peralta, too, recognised his team-mate’s talent and took the midfielder under his wing at Club America. He remembers being in awe of his qualities.

“He was a player we kept hearing about in the academy,” says Peralta. “Then, when he trained with us, he impressed everyone. That’s when I realised how talented Edson was. He always asked questions. He was keen to improve his positioning, and I liked how determined he was. Over time we forged a close bond.

“I’ll never forget this: I was preparing for the Confederations Cup in 2017 and the Under-20s World Cup was approaching. Edson asked me if I thought he would be considered for the tournament. I had such high hopes for him I initially thought he was talking about the 2018 World Cup in Russia, but he was talking about the Under-20s World Cup.

“That motivated Edson even more.”

Alvarez, who made his senior debut against Iceland in 2017, ended up earning his place at the senior tournament in Russia five years ago, as Peralta had envisaged. The midfielder, who has since won 74 caps, was the youngest player in Mexico’s 23-man squad. He played in every match leading up to their loss to Brazil in the round of 16.

“When Edson played for the national team, I said, ‘I told you you’d be here’,” says Peralta. “Now he’s become a very important player for Mexico. We’ve lacked leaders in the squad over the years, but Edson is a great leader for us. He could be a great captain for the team right now.

“In Mexico many of the players have nicknames. I’ve also called him ‘Flaco’ because he’s slim and tall, but fans call him ‘Machin’, which is a guy that is strong, tough and doesn’t back down.”

William da Silva, who played for Club America from 2016 to 2018, believes Alvarez’s mindset from an early age marked him out.

“The coach, Ricardo La Volpe, loved him,” says da Silva. “I spoke to Edson quite a lot. He would get annoyed when he followed a good game with a bad one. It would weigh on him. I told him to stay calm and look for consistency, because if he could find that, he was going to have a brilliant career. I told him he would captain America one day.

“He travelled a long way to training sessions but you never would have known it from the way he trained. He gave everything. So yes, that was a challenge for him, but he never used it as an excuse. On the contrary, it motivated him. It was extra gas to get him where he wanted to go. He cleared every hurdle because he had this goal.”

Alvarez won the Liga MX and Copa MX at Club America. It was in the 2018-19 season that Alvarez’s importance to the team was most significant, as Peralta explains.

“We won the Liguilla in 2018, but our manager Miguel Herrera and Edson had their differences,” Peralta says. “Edson was losing patience and started to get desperate at times. He told the manager how he felt and the boss said something along the lines of, ‘I respect you a lot because this tells me you really believe in yourself’. Edson ended up scoring the two goals (against Cruz Azul) that gave the club the title.

“I’m not surprised by his success because he’s worked for it. He hasn’t even reached his full potential yet. Edson has a higher ceiling.”

Da Silva concurs.

“I told him he was on the right path, that he was planting seeds for the future every day in training,” he adds. “He was a great signing for West Ham and he will make a name for himself there and in England. West Ham will receive offers for him because his game is so perfect for the modern game.

“I hope that he has a very happy career.”




Sport Witness

Fulham and West Ham make contact to sign same player – Agent confirms PL interest, January move desired

Fulham and West Ham United are in the picture to sign Wolverhampton Wanderers’ Saša Kalajdžić, according to Sport1.

The striker arrived at Molineux from VfB Stuttgart in 2022 and suffered a serious knee injury on his debut for Wolves, forcing him to spend most of the previous season on the sidelines.

He regained full fitness but has struggled to have a prominent role under Gary O’Neil’s orders. The 26-year-old has been restricted to 282 minutes of action from 13 games this season.

Sport1 state Wolves are thinking about sending the Austria international out on loan next month and this seems to have caught the attention of Fulham and West Ham.

It’s claimed several Bundesliga and Premier League sides have already made contact about the frontman. The report doesn’t specify if the contact was made with his camp, Wolves or both.
Eintracht Frankfurt are in the market for a new striker and Sport1 suggest Kalajdžić could be an option for them. Stuttgart may also consider him, if Serhou Guirassy were to leave them in January.

The Wolves player is looking for a club that can offer him more game time, to improve his chances of representing Austria at the Euros next summer.

Kalajdžić’s agent Sasa Empacher has told Peter Linden that clubs in England and Germany have approached him.

“He didn’t play much, but his two goals brought six points, without which Wolverhampton would be just above the relegation zone,” he said.

“He has worked hard, is fitter than ever before, there are people interested in him. Both in the Premier League and in the Bundesliga!”

Empacher hasn’t provided details of the Premier League sides and with Sport1 mentioning Fulham and West Ham, it may be the two London clubs who have expressed interest in the Wolves attacker.



Replies - Newest Posts First (Show In Chronological Order)

Coffee 1:32 Thu Dec 28
Re: Thursday news (includes West Ham)
The final bastion of paper news gives way.

Thanks, Alan.

With Kind Regards 1:23 Thu Dec 28
Re: Thursday news (includes West Ham)
Thanks Alan 12:43 Thu Dec 28

Thanks Alan 12:43 Thu Dec 28
Re: Thursday news (includes West Ham)
Thanks Alan





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