Aston Villa Transfer Roundup: Nakamba news, Hepburn-Murphy talks, Dubravka interest

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Friday’s Aston Villa transfer roundup detailed a fee agreed for a Premier League player, interest in an England international and a bid accepted for an African Cup of Nations winger. Today’s edition consists of a target refusing to train, the potential loan departure of a youngster and eyes on a Slovakia international.

Nakamba refuses to train

Belgian outlet Nieuwsblad is reporting that Marvelous Nakamba is refusing to train with current side Club Brugge. Villa have reportedly already made a bid of €10m (£9m) for the 25-year-old, who wants to leave at all costs.

Hepburn-Murphy in Tranmere talks

Rushian Hepburn-Murphy is in advanced talks with League Two side Tranmere Rovers according to Football Insider. The 20-year-old looks set to join the Merseyside outfit on a loan deal, with the Villans feeling a short-term switch will boost his development.

Villa eye Dubravka

Aston Villa are interested in signing Newcastle’s Martin Dubravka according to the Daily Mail. Dean Smith and co are in the market for a new goalkeeper, with both Jack Butland and Tom Heaton being linked, and now the 30-year-old is on their radar.

'We don't play it safe' – Buttler, the confidence and the adrenaline, and bringing the hammer down

“Just keep imposing ourselves on the opposition is the way we’ve championed trying to play”

Andrew Miller31-Oct-2021Jos Buttler says he had been given the licence to “throw caution to the wind” during his exhilarating 71* from 32 balls against Australia on Saturday, as England’s batters seized on the opportunity to drive home their dominance after another outstanding bowling display.Buttler’s remarkable innings – featuring five fours, five sixes and innumerable bewildered head-shakes from his team-mates in the dugout – enabled England to cruise to victory with 50 balls to spare, and cement their standing at the top of Group 1 with their third crushing win in a row. It was an opportunity for Buttler to reaffirm the all-guns-blazing mentality that has transformed England into the pre-eminent white-ball team of the era, and lay down a marker for the rest of the tournament.Related

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  • 'Learning the art of spin is pretty cool' – Liam Livingstone's spin evolution paying dividends for England

  • Buttler's 'clinic of white-ball power hitting'

“It was a fantastic team performance,” Buttler said, after a bowling display led by Chris Woakes and Chris Jordan had limited Australia to a sub-par total of 125. “Early wickets in the powerplay really set us on our way and it was great fun to chase those runs down.”We didn’t have any scoreboard pressure. ‘Just keep imposing ourselves on the opposition’ is the way we’ve championed trying to play. We don’t try and play it safe. So if we talk that way, we have to go out and play that way as well.”To that end, Buttler credited his opening partner, Jason Roy, for setting England’s agenda, as he galloped to the pitch of his first ball from Josh Hazlewood, and slammed him through wide long-on for four – an important statement shot given Hazlewood’s ability to drum out an awkward length. Roy then repeated the dose with a big six in Pat Cummins’ first over, and when England reached 48 for 0 after five overs, Buttler knew it was time to put the hammer down.4:00

Jayawardene: Batting depth allows Buttler, Roy to go hard in the powerplay

“I think you get quite inspired by Jason at the other end when he is running down first ball against Hazlewood and running down against Cummins,” he said. “These are top bowlers and the way he can impose himself inspires at the other end. When you get to the last over of the powerplay none down, it felt like an over to really throw caution to the wind and just go for it.”Once you get in that hitting mode, it is [about] just allowing yourself to keep going. Sometimes you think ‘I’ll rein it back in a little bit’, but then you catch yourself half-hearted. So especially with the position we were in, in the game, it was more ‘I’m just gonna keep going’. And keep trying to take advantage of being in a good zone.”As Buttler’s innings progressed, so the shots became more outrageous – a brace of swings through the line for six off Mitchell Starc were followed by another heave over long-off as he failed to reach the pitch of an Adam Zampa legbreak, but trusted his eye to punish the ball high into the stands.”The mental side of things is something I try to work on a lot,” he said. “Some of the practice wickets have been a bit tricky but [on Friday] I managed to have some great practice. It’s nice to put your hands through a few again, have some fun and freedom.”If you practise it, the confidence stays. Your adrenaline is going but you’re trying to remain quite level in your brain and relaxed in the top half. When guys are bowling fast, you have that level of adrenaline.”Nor was there any respite for Australia in England’s running between the wickets. Buttler twice managed to turn pinpoint yorkers into threes with deft wristwork, including a firm drive off Hazlewood to the edge of the cover boundary, and his understanding with Roy was instrumental in keeping the score ticking throughout the powerplay.”We want to put the opposition under pressure in all facets of the game with bat, ball, in the field and the way we run as well,” Buttler said. “I think we’re an incredibly fit team. That gives us another dimension, especially on fields like this where there are bigger gaps at times and you can push twos. It’s another area that we can push to try and play at the level we want to play.”Buttler on Roy: “These are top bowlers and the way he can impose himself inspires at the other end”•Getty Images

Though Buttler is familiar with the Dubai stadium through his time in the IPL, this campaign is his first visit to the venue with England since the 2015-16 series against Pakistan, where he cracked a 46-ball century in the fourth ODI, England’s fastest of all time.”That’s obviously a while ago now but every time you come and play here, there are obviously great memories,” he said. “We were in the same dressing-room as well on that day. It just has a nice feel about it, remembering that sort of day. So absolutely that gives you confidence to know you are coming back to a ground where you have probably played your best innings at.”With three comprehensive wins from three, Buttler admitted that England could not be better placed in their push for a semi-final berth. And though they have had the advantage of chasing in each of their three games to date, he did not feel that the conditions – in particular the onset of dew in the second innings – had played an undue part in their success.”The format doesn’t allow much room for error so to be three from three – including wins against West Indies and Australia as well, no disrespect to Bangladesh – and to play as convincingly as we have has been awesome,” he said. “The games we have played, we’ve pegged back the opposition really early. We have restricted teams to under-par scores, so I wouldn’t say we’ve seen big benefits of batting second.”As the tournament goes on and the wickets become more tired, maybe the advantage will swap to batting first,” he added. “That is one challenge we are going to have to work out as a side. If we lose the toss or we choose to bat first, how are we going to approach our innings to get to a score that we think is defendable.”

Manchester United’s decision to forego Matthijs de Ligt move questioned by Alan Brazil

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This article is part of Football FanCast’s Pundit View series, which provides opinion and analysis on recent quotes from journalists, pundits, players and managers…

Speaking on talkSPORT, Alan Brazil has questioned why Manchester United failed to move for Matthijs de Ligt and instead opted to chase Leicester’s Harry Maguire.

What did he say?

Reports in recent months had suggested United were one of the sides interested in signing De Ligt this summer, but as rumours linking the club to the Dutchman cooled, talks of a move for Maguire intensified.

Be sure to check out the incredible story of the man who rose from a Tanzanian refugee camp to become one of Australia’s biggest football stars in the video below…

As the Red Devils continue to pursue a deal for Maguire, De Ligt has completed a £67.5m move to Serie A champions Juventus after leaving Ajax.

In response, Brazil said: “Manchester United, could they not have gone in there with £68m? This is nothing to do with Harry Maguire – I like him as a player – but they are talking about £80m for Harry who is 26 and De Ligt is 20 next month but he goes for just £67.5m.”

A baffling choice

When United signed Paul Pogba in the summer of 2016, the club had finished outside the Champions League places and thus were staring down the barrel at a season of Europa League football. And yet they still managed to pull off a club record deal and entice one of the game’s biggest names to Old Trafford.

So whilst it could be pointed out that De Ligt may not have wanted to play for a side not competing in European football’s elite competition, that necessarily isn’t the be all and end all. United’s stature as a club is that it can lure players of the highest calibre at any given time, regardless of how badly they may have performed the previous year.

Watch Manchester United Live Streams With StreamFootball.tv Below

Reports had even suggested De Ligt was insistent on getting first-team football at his new club. So by that logic, the Dutchman clearly fancied his chances of fending off competition from the likes of Giorgio Chiellini, Leonardo Bonucci and Andrea Barzagli as opposed to the supreme double act of Chris Smalling and Phil Jones.

Brazil is certainly right in suggesting United could have pushed the boat out a little to sign the 19-year-old, and are now having to pay an exorbitant amount to try and sign Maguire. Both centre-backs would surely improve United’s defence, but De Ligt’s arrival would have been a massive statement off the pitch too.

Elusive Sheffield Shield title the focus for Western Australia

Need to find a way to take 20 wickets more regularly to complement a strong batting unit

Alex Malcolm20-Sep-2021Captain Mitchell Marsh

Coach Adam Voges Fixtures

September 22: South Australia (Marsh Cup), Karen Rolton Oval

September 24-27: South Australia (Sheffield Shield), Karen Rolton Oval Winter moves
The bulk of the squad is unchanged from last year with only changes to the rookie contracts. Left-handed batter Jake Carder, who did play two matches at the end of last season, has moved to South Australia while young allrounder Brad Hope has joined Tasmania. Jayden Goodwin, son of former Zimbabwe and WA batter Murray Goodwin, has returned from his sabbatical last year but is still a development player. Squad

R=Rookie, CA=Australia contract
Ashton Agar (CA), Cameron Bancroft, Jason Behrendorff, Hilton Cartwright, Cooper Connolly (R), Sam Fanning (R), Cameron Gannon, Jayden Goodwin (R), Cameron Green (CA), Liam Guthrie, Aaron Hardie, Josh Inglis, Bryce Jackson, Matthew Kelly, Mitchell Marsh, Shaun Marsh, David Moody, Lance Morris, Joel Paris, Josh Philippe, Jhye Richardson (CA), Corey Rocchiccioli, D’Arcy Short, Marcus Stoinis, Ashton Turner, Sam Whiteman Last season
Western Australia only lost one match last season in the Shield but it was their last one against Tasmania which cost them a spot in the final. They only won two and had five draws. They batted superbly all season led by a sensational summer from Cameron Green (922 runs at 76.83). Green, Josh Inglis, Shaun Marsh, Cameron Bancroft, and Sam Whiteman each scored three centuries, but their bowling lacked penetration. They took 10 wickets in just six innings for the entire season and two of those innings cost more than 432. Cameron Gannon was the leading wicket-taker with 24 scalps but they came at 39.58 apiece with a strike-rate of 78.9, while Matt Kelly was the only other bowler to claim 20 wickets. WA made the final in the Marsh Cup but were unable to defend their title, collapsing in a chase of 252 against New South Wales. Their batting was hot and cold in the 50-over format with three scores over 300, with Green and Shaun Marsh scoring a century each, but they were twice bowled out for under 150, including in the final. Joel Paris was the star performer with the ball taking 10 wickets in just three games. Player to watch
Josh Inglis has bolted into the Australia T20 World Cup squad but his long-form ability will also have him sharply in focus with Australia Test wicketkeeper Tim Paine recovering from neck surgery and coming to the end of his career. Inglis scored 585 runs at 73.12 last season to put pressure on Alex Carey as Paine’s first-choice successor. Inglis’ batting ability against spin and his excellent glovework will certainly put him in the frame for Australia’s three scheduled tours of the subcontinent in 2022. Australia radar
With Green already in the Test team and Inglis becoming a player of interest, WA is aiming to add more players into the Test ranks having already provided a number of Australia limited-overs players over the past 12 months. Jhye Richardson has had an interrupted pre-season but at his best, he sits alongside James Pattinson and Michael Neser as Australia’s next crop of Test fast bowlers behind the big three of Pat Cummins, Josh Hazlewood, and Mitchell Starc. Mitchell Marsh has gone to a new level with his batting over the winter in the shortest form and newfound confidence won’t harm his Test chances if Australia wishes to take more allrounders to the subcontinent.

Pakistan to tour Bangladesh in November for three T20Is and two Tests

The series is set to begin five days after the T20 World Cup final, leaving little breathing room in case either side makes the knockouts

Mohammad Isam14-Sep-2021Pakistan’s men’s team will travel to Bangladesh in November for their first bilateral series in the country since 2015. The tour will consist of three T20Is and two Tests, which are part of the 2021-23 World Test Championship cycle.The tour is scheduled right after the T20 World Cup, which begs the question of what happens if either Bangladesh or Pakistan or both make the knockout stages of that tournament. If they do, there will be little time between events for even the customary three-day hotel quarantine for visiting teams.The T20 World Cup is scheduled to conclude on November 14. The three T20Is, which will be played at the Shere Bangla National Stadium in Dhaka, will be played on November 19, 20 and 22. The same venue will also host the second Test from December 4 to 8.The first Test is scheduled to be held at the Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium in Chattogram from November 26 to 30. This will only be the third international fixture hosted by Chattogram this year, after the ODI and Test against West Indies in January-February.The Covid-19 pandemic has forced the BCB to host the recent matches against Sri Lanka, Australia and New Zealand sides only in Dhaka, with visiting teams showing reluctance to travel outside the capital.The last meeting between Pakistan and Bangladesh took place in January 2020 when Bangladesh toured Pakistan to play three T20Is (one of which was abandoned due to rain) and a Test in Rawalpindi. The second Test of the series, which was supposed to be held in Karachi in April, was postponed due to the Covid-19 pandemic.During Pakistan’s last bilateral visit to Bangladesh, the hosts won the ODI series 3-0 and also the solitary T20I, while the visitors won the Test series 1-0.

Edouard Mendy eclipses Aston Villa’s other targets in a major way

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This article is part of Football FanCast’s Transfer Focus series, which provides opinion and analysis on recent transfer news…

According to French media outlet L’Equipe, Aston Villa are interested in signing Senegalese goalkeeper Edouard Mendy.

What’s the word?

Despite Jed Steer signing a new deal last week, it appears as though Villa are keen to add a new goalkeeper to their ranks.

The club have had a bid knocked back for Neil Etheridge, whilst they’ve also been attracted to Jack Butland and Tom Heaton.

However, now in their sights is Stade de Reims’ Mendy, according to L’Equipe.

They claim that his club have received phone calls from England with both the Villans and Norwich showing an interest in the stopper.

Mendy eclipses all other targets

Currently on international duty with Senegal at the Africa Cup of Nations, Mendy helped his side keep 14 clean sheets in Ligue 1 last term, featuring on 38 occasions.

But it’s not necessarily his shot stopping that catches the eye.

Standing at a colossal 6 ft 6, he is particularly outstanding when it comes to aerial duels. In the league last term he won on average 0.6 per game which ensured he came out on top in 23 duels in the air over the course of the season.

Given his height and presence inside the penalty area, this is a particular strength for the 27-year-old.

Butland is nearest to him in stature, measuring at 6 ft 5 but in seven more matches than Mendy, he only won 24 aerial duels at an average of 0.5 per game.

Etheridge and Heaton, on the other, are much smaller, both standing at just 6 ft 2. In comparison, they won the same number of aerial duels as each other but that was a measly 0.2 every 90 minutes in the Premier League.

During 2018/19, the former only won eight aerial duels as opposed to Heaton’s four.

That shows where their weakness lies and if Dean Smith is looking for a goalkeeper who offers something different to other targets, Mendy would be their man.

Despite not having the experience of playing in England’s top-flight, his ability to get up above defenders could prove vital if he signs for Villa this summer.

Luke Wright: 'We can't be losing our best players all the time'

Sussex captain laments talent drain from South Coast as side aims for Finals Day glory

Matt Roller17-Sep-2021Luke Wright has called upon Sussex’s hierarchy to ensure that players are offered extensions before entering the last year of their contracts and said that the loss of Phil Salt and Chris Jordan “hurts me to my core”.Salt and Jordan will play their final games for the club on T20 Finals Day in Birmingham on Saturday ahead of their departures to Lancashire and Surrey respectively, joining Danny Briggs, Laurie Evans, Chris Nash, Luke Wells and Michael Burgess on the list of first-team players to have left Sussex in recent seasons.And while the club have put together an impressive T20 side which has reached the quarter-finals of the Blast for four seasons in a row under Wright’s stewardship, they have implemented a youth policy for their four-day side which has seen results fall off a cliff, sitting bottom of Division Three of the County Championship ahead of next week’s final round.”I’m hugely disappointed to see those lads leave,” Wright said on Friday. “Any time you get lads going into their last year [of their contract], it’s going to be difficult – they are high-quality cricketers and there are always going to be counties that want them. Add in the Hundred now – whether it’s playing a part or not, who knows – but I’m sad to see them go.Related

  • Luke Wright looks the right fit as England selector after career on T20 front lines

  • Ross Whiteley to leave Worcestershire after declining white-ball contract

  • Chris Jordan, Phil Salt to leave Sussex for Surrey, Lancashire at end of season

“It’s something from the club’s point of view that we need to look at because we can’t be losing our best players all the time. Myself and Ravi [Bopara] are getting older and that’s the challenge they’ve got – our recruitment process has got to be really strong and it’s something that probably hasn’t been as good as it should be at this moment in time.”Wright admitted he was sceptical as to whether the Hundred was the only influence in Salt and Jordan’s departures and instead called upon the club’s management to ensure key players were offered attractive deals in order to keep them at the club – including Jofra Archer, who is centrally contracted by the ECB but whose Sussex deal runs out at the end of next season.”It’s got to be a fear, hasn’t it?” he said. “If the so-called smaller counties are losing their best players all the time then obviously it’s a worry, but we’ve had these issues before. When the first and second division [of the Championship started], everyone thought the smaller counties might go and lose all their players, and we’ve always been able to keep them.Luke Wright will captain Sussex on T20 Finals Day•Alex Davidson/Getty Images

“Only the lads themselves will know the reason why they’re leaving. Chris Jordan’s not gone to Hampshire [where Southern Brave are based], he’s gone to Surrey, but it’s something I’m sure the ECB and the PCA are going to look at to make sure that there is enough independence between the Hundred teams and the hosting counties. Is that a factor? Who knows.”All we can know from our side as a club is that we don’t want to be letting our best players go into their last year. It’s a challenge but it’s absolutely not impossible to keep your best players. We’ve got to work hard on trying to replace them as best we can going forward.”We don’t really see him [Archer] much anyway, but obviously we don’t want to lose him – just like we don’t want to lose any of our best players. I hate seeing any of our best players leave and it hurts me to my core to see them go. I was brought up at Sussex with a strong team that was competing in days like tomorrow all the time, winning trophies and Championships, and that’s certainly where I’d still like to see the club. Sussex have helped get Jof to where he is and we certainly hope he stays with us but ultimately that’s down to him.”Sussex have already made two signings ahead of next season in Fynn Hudson-Prentice and Steven Finn, and are expected to recruit further players with Stuart Meaker (retired) off the books and a handful of others out of contract. They appear to have missed out on the signing of Ross Whiteley, who looks set to move to Hampshire instead, and Wright encouraged the club to bring in some experienced players to help the young players in the Championship side in their development.”Are we happy with where we are right now? No, of course not,” he said. “It’s been a really tough season, which I suppose it was always going to be for that young squad. It’s the way that the club have gone – they want to go really young at the moment in four-day cricket, but that’s a process that’s going to be a hard road at some times.”I feel for some of those young lads. I couldn’t imagine playing when I started my career without having senior players around me, so for those guys it is tough and they are having some lessons – they had a tough loss at Grace Road this week. On the flip side, there is some real talent which is really exciting – it’s just making sure we can package it right and I’m sure that’s what the people above me are trying to do.”Sussex will welcome Bopara and David Wiese back into their squad for Finals Day after their involvement in the Caribbean Premier League but are without Rashid Khan who is in the UAE ahead of the IPL. Jack Carson replaces him in the squad, while Ollie Robinson has not been made available after a busy summer with England.Vitality Blast Finals Day 2021 is supporting the players’ charity: the Professional Cricketers’ Trust. Saturday 18 September will see a day of fundraising and awareness for the Trust on one of the biggest days of the domestic calendar at Edgbaston. Visit bit.ly/DonateFinalsDay to find out more and donate.

Bethuel's baby

The Wanderers head groundsman has had a long apprenticeship. Thursday will be his proudest day, when South Africa take on England on his pitch

Firdose Moonda12-Jan-2016Few South Africans will admit to admiring Shane Warne so much that he is their favourite cricketer but Bethuel Buthelezi is no ordinary South African. He is the head groundsman at the Wanderers and spent more than three decades as second in command to Chris Scott, the only known curator in cricket to be awarded a Man of the Match award.Scott achieved the feat after three out of five days of a Test between South Africa and New Zealand in 2000 were rained out. That play was possible on the other two days – and full days worth of play to boot – saw Scott and his staff (Buthulezi among them), not century-maker Boeta Dippenaar, take the honours.That match was also the first time not one but two black African cricketers were picked in a South African XI. Makhaya Ntini and Mfuneko Ngam were both in the side, in a historic moment for South Africa’s majority population who were marginalised during the apartheid era. Buthelezi had grown up in those times and knew how difficult life for people of his skin colour was.As an 18-year-old, he left his home in Msinga in Kwa-Zulu Natal for the bright lights of Johannesburg. It was 1984 and sparks of resistance that were ignited by the student uprisings in Soweto in 1976 were bursting into flame. A year later the government declared its first state of emergency. By then Buthelezi had settled into the job he had travelled in search for.”When I came to Johannesburg, one of my cousins was working at the hotel at the Wanderers Club and he said to me that if I went with him to work one day, maybe I would find a job,” Buthelezi said. “It was a Monday and I went there with three other people and when he didn’t find anything, someone suggested we go to see Chris Scott, the groundsman. And he told us he had work for us.”The job was cleaning the tennis courts and the swimming pools. For a black African in the South Africa of the time, this kind of employment was not unusual. The discriminatory policies denied black Africans the opportunity to advance and they were often subjected to working under white bosses for low wages with little chance of promotion.

The surface will be the way for Buthelezi to showcase his skills, and if the evidence of the first-class competition is anything to go by, it’s going to be a goodie

Buthelezi’s role involved also working on the adjoining cricket field, and in 1992, moving across the road to the Wanderers Stadium, where he helped Scott prepare the strip that for 22 years the Transvaal Mean Machine had made their own.Buthelezi loved cricket “more than any other game”, and he was particularly fond of Clive Rice, a surprising choice given Rice’s disapproval of transformation when it came about years later.Buthelezi became an expert in the art of pitch preparation. With Scott as mentor, he learnt everything there was to know about how to create a surface with spice or a pitch packed with runs. He became a fan of Hansie Cronje, Glenn McGrath and Warne. In May 2012, he was given a special award by the Gauteng Cricket Board for 20 years of service to the Wanderers.It is only now, though, that Buthelezi is preparing a Test pitch on his own for the first time. He succeeded Scott in October last year, to become the country’s second black African head groundsman. Wilson Ngobese, who is in charge at Kingsmead, is the first, and he and Buthelezi have formed a powerful friendship. “We phone each other, we talk a lot,” Buthelezi said. “He was happy for me when I got the job and happy for my first Test pitch.”The surface will be the way for Buthelezi to showcase his skills, and if the evidence of the first-class competition is anything to go by, it’s going to be a goodie. The two matches played at the Wanderers this season have gone the distance. Fast bowlers took 67 of the 76 wickets that fell (with Hardus Viljoen laying claim to 20 of them), there were two centuries, two innings scores over 300 and two others over 250. There has been something for everyone, which is what Buthelezi has promised for the Test, but there is something else he hopes to guarantee. “This is a result pitch,” he said. “It’s got bounce, pace, it will take turn, everything. This pitch is for five days and a first-innings score of 350 will be good.”The hot, dry weather in Johannesburg, recently broken up by some storms, has not hampered preparation. “The weather hasn’t given me any problems. For a few days, in the afternoon we’ve had some rain, so even the outfield now looks nice,” Buthelezi said.Nicer will the satisfaction he feels when the two teams step onto field for the first time, walk towards his pitch, and contest a (hopefully) competitive game of cricket on it. It will be a culmination of three decades of commitment, and for South African cricket more broadly, another step on their road to change.South African cricket is going through a metamorphosis like never before as it grapples with how to tap into the large previously disadvantaged population, both so that its talent pool is deeper and to right the wrongs of the past. Buthelezi knows what it’s like to be on both sides of the divide and has come out of it as an extraordinary South African.

Argentina player ratings vs Chile: Julian Alvarez and Alexis Mac Allister run the show in Lionel Messi's absence as La Albiceleste pick up World Cup Qualifying victory

The world champions dominated Thursday's game, with the Atletico Madrid new boy showing just why the Rojiblancos paid so much for him

Argentina avoided a Copa America hangover in their first match since claiming the 2024 trophy, defeating Chile 3-0 in World Cup qualifying on Thursday. Goals from Alexis Mac Allister, Julian Alvarez and Paulo Dybala sealed all three points in an emphatic victory.

Ahead of the contest, La Albiceleste, all the fans in attendance and those around the world watched as Argentina paid tribute and goodbye to legend Angel Di Maria. The dynamic winger announced his international retirement after winning the Copa, and with his family by his side, he gave a emotional speech in front of a sold-out crowd, with flashlights from cell phones beaming from the stands and cheers echoing from around the ground.

After a dynamic and contentious first 45 minutes, the two sides went into half-time scoreless. However, Argentina came out of the break with intensity, and just three minutes into the second half, Mac Allister fired home to give them a 1-0 lead off an Alvarez assist.

The story of the final 45 wasn't the Liverpool midfielder, rather it was Alvarez, who energised the big stage in the absence of the injured Lionel Messi. The Atletico Madrid striker looked comfortable in a front-two, and his moment arrived in the 84th minute. He received the ball on the edge of the box, hit a lovely turn and fired in a rocket of an effort that bounced in off the crossbar.

A third goal came in stoppage-time, with Roma star Dybala coming off the bench and launching a a strike into the back of the net.

With the victory, Lionel Scaloni's side stayed atop the CONMEBOL standings in World Cup qualifying, with 18 points out of 21. They hold a five-point lead over second place Uruguay, with Colombia – Argentina's next opponents on Tuesday – in third.

GOAL rates Argentina's players from Estadio Mas Monumental.

  • AFP

    Goalkeeper & Defence

    Emiliano Martinez (8/10):

    Made an outstanding save in the first half, and was a rock when called upon in the late stages. Another top display.

    Lisandro Martinez (7/10):

    Was a threat in attack from set-pieces, including one chance on target. A well-rounded performance from the Manchester United defender.

    Cristian Romero (7/10):

    Composed out of the back. A few dodgy moments, but he recovered well.

    Nicolas Otamendi (8/10):

    A passing clinic from the veteran of the defensive trio. Still brilliant at 36, completing 96 percent of his 84 total passes.

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    Midfield

    Nahuel Molina (7/10):

    Composed as a wing-back, operated down the right flank well.

    Rodrigo De Paul (8/10):

    Class as always in the middle of the park. Was composed on and off the ball and led as a veteran should with a youthful midfield around him.

    Alexis Mac Allister (8/10):

    Sensational in the middle of pitch, and scored the crucial opener. Linked with the striker tandem well.

    Enzo Fernandez (7/10):

    Not his most influential performance, but didn't put a foot wrong, either.

    Nico Gonzalez (6/10):

    Subbed off with an injury minutes into the second half. Employed as a wing-back, he kept Chile quiet when called upon, but didn't influence the attack much.

  • Getty Images Sport

    Attack

    Lautaro Martinez (6/10):

    Not his best evening. Struggled to find space, but did play a decent decoy to help Mac Allister bag his effort. No shots on the night.

    Julian Alvarez (9/10):

    A nice assist on Mac Allister's opener, but his moment came in the 84th minute, when he bagged his long-range stunner from 20 yards out. Brilliant showing.

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    Subs & Manager

    Giovani Lo Celso (8/10):

    Subbed on for an injured Gonzalez early in the second half and bagged an assist for Alvarez's stunner. Great cameo.

    Marcos Acuna (6/10):

    Subbed on with 11 minutes to spare. Helped close out match.

    Paulo Dybala (8/10):

    Subbed on in 79th minute and capitalised on the moment, scoring the third goal. Perfect performance off the bench.

    Alejandro Garnacho (7/10):

    Assisted on Dybala's third, was lively off the bench in his 11 minutes, plus stoppages.

    Valentin Castellanos (N/A):

    Subbed on in the 89th.

    Lionel Scaloni (8/10):

    A brilliant second half. Whatever he said at half-time inspired his players, and they turned up for the final 45 as a different team. The attack was blistering, and Alvarez looked the best he's been in a shirt for La Albiceleste. Should be thrilled.

MLS roundup: Columbus Crew's goalkeeper chaos hands Lionel Messi's Inter Miami Supporters' Shield boost, Christian Benteke keeps scoring

Wilfried Nancy's Crew were the victims of goalkeeper chaos, Christian Benteke took the lead in the Golden Boot race and more.

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  • Seattle thump Columbus 4-0
  • LAFC draw Houston 0-0
  • DC United defeat Chicago Fire 2-1, Benteke takes lead in Golden Boot race
  • USA Today Images

    Giroud and LAFC struggle vs. Houston…again

    In the race for first place in the Western Conference, LAFC still trail the LA Galaxy by four points after falling flat in a 0-0 draw on the road against the Houston Dynamo.

    Olivier Giroud, who got his first MLS start, still hasn't fully gelled with his new team. The DP had just 36 touches, completed 64.3 percent of his passes and had three shots — none on target.

    Once again, the Dynamo proved to have LAFC in their web, following a 2-0 win in Los Angeles on Matchday 30.

    LAFC still have two games in-hand over the Galaxy, so the West could still be in grasp, but Steve Cherundolo's men are winless in their four of their last five MLS appearances. They meet the Galaxy next weekend in another edition of – a contest that will likely settle the conference.

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  • Goalkeeper chaos for Columbus, Miami's boost

    The Seattle Sounders defeated the Columbus Crew 4-0 on Saturday, but the match was anything but normal.

    The Crew were down to their fourth-string goalkeeper due to international call-ups for Patrick Schulte and Nicholas Hagen and an injury to third-string keeper Evan Bush. Fourth-string goalkeeper Abraham Romero, recently acquired from LAFC, started but was sent off just before halftime for denying an obvious goal-scoring opportunity. With no other goalkeeper available, midfielder Sean Zawadzki was forced to play in net for the remainder of the game. It went as well as one would expect.

    The Sounders took full advantage, scoring four goals and effectively ending the Crew's hopes for the 2024 MLS Supporters' Shield. Despite having two games in hand before Saturday, the Crew’s slim chance of contending with Lionel Messi's Inter Miami was dashed. Inter Miami now holds a 10-point lead over the Crew, making it unlikely for anyone to catch up as the season nears its end.

  • USA Today Images

    Gillette Stadium stunner, RBNY teen star salvages point

    The New England Revolution nearly pulled off a remarkable home win over St. Louis CITY SC, but a late Simon Becher goal handed the hosts a second to secure a 2-2 draw. Record-signing Luca Langoni did, however, bag his first Gillette Stadium goal in front of the Revs faithful – a positive sign for a team looking to flip a switch in the Eastern Conference. The Argentine now has two goals and an assist in his first three MLS matches.

    South of Foxborough, MA in Harrison, NJ, the New York Red Bulls salvaged a point late against an Sporting Kansas City side fighting to keep their faint postseason hopes alive. Teen sensation Julian Hall, who has been linked with a move to Chelsea in Europe, scored an 89th minute equalizer in a 1-1 draw. It was the 16-year-old's second goal of the season.

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  • The strike of Saturday

    We love a GOLAZO from a defender. This one, from Chicago Fire's Andrew Gutman, is worthy of all the praise. The 27-year-old left back hit this volley so clean in a 2-1 loss to DC United.

    For the winning side, though, star forward and former Belgium international Christian Benteke stayed scoring. The ex-Liverpool man bagged his 18th goal of the season, taking the lead in the race for the 2024 MLS Golden Boot.

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