Lionel Messi vs Diego Maradona: Juan Roman Riquelme responds to GOAT question as ex-Argentina star admits he was 'lucky' to play with both footballing icons

Juan Roman Riquelme was “lucky” enough to play alongside Diego Maradona and Lionel Messi, making it inevitable that he will be asked GOAT questions.

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Boca legend started out alongside 1986 World Cup winnerAlso played with eight-time Ballon d'Or winnerFinds it impossible to pick between two icons of the game

WHAT HAPPENED?

The former Argentina international stepped out of the famous youth system at Boca Juniors while 1986 World Cup winner Maradona was still on the club’s books. He would then go on to represent his country alongside eight-time Ballon d’Or winner Messi when a precocious young talent burst onto the senior scene.

AdvertisementGetty/GOALWHAT RIQUELME SAID

While forming part of an exclusive club of players that have been team-mates of both Maradona and Messi, Riquelme is reluctant to pick between the pair when it comes to the greatest of all-time title. He has told when presented with that poser: “Maradona? He’s the greatest I saw on a football pitch when I was a child. Now when I grew up, the greatest is Messi. I was lucky to play with both of them, for me it was a very big dream.”

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Maradona inspired his country to global glory on Mexican soil, delivering the famous ‘Hand of God’ goal and a remarkable individual strike against England along the way. Messi emulated the efforts of his illustrious countryman when inspiring the Albiceleste to a World Cup crown at Qatar 2022.

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GettyWHAT NEXT FOR MESSI?

Messi is still going strong at international level, while starring for MLS side Inter Miami domestically, with the iconic 36-year-old rewriting the history books with 180 caps and 106 goals to his name. He will form part of a Copa America title defence in 2024, but it is yet to be determined whether he will grace the 2026 World Cup finals that will be co-hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico.

Ten games, nine wins! Inside Arsenal's record-breaking Premier League start

The Gunners have opened up a four-point gap at the top of the table, with an unlikely title challenge now a real possibility

Ten games, nine wins, 27 points. Arsenal have enjoyed their best-ever start to a Premier League season.

Never before have the Gunners amassed this many points at this stage of a campaign. Even Arsene Wenger’s great sides couldn’t manage it.

Mikel Arteta’s team are now four points clear at the top of the table following Sunday’s 1-0 victory over Leeds United at Elland Road, coupled with Manchester City's loss at Liverpool later the same day.

So how have Arsenal done it? What are the reasons behind their record-breaking start? GOAL takes a look…

Getty ImagesJesus' arrival

It’s impossible to downplay the impact Gabriel Jesus has had on Arsenal. His arrival from Manchester City in the summer has completely transformed the way Mikel Arteta’s side attack.

It was clear last season that a new focal point was needed to spearhead the forward line. With Alexandre Lacazette in the centre, Arsenal lacked any sort of mobility or penalty-box threat. That left the Gunners almost totally reliant on Bukayo Saka and Emile Smith Rowe to get their goals.

But that has changed completely with Jesus in the side. The Brazilian has scored five goals in 10 Premier league games, more than Lacazette managed in the whole of last season, while he also has three assists.

But Jesus’ impact has not just been about goal contributions. His work rate and pressing ability sets the tone from the front. He is a constant handful for defences with his movement.

He has also brought a winning mentality to a young squad and has taken on a key leadership role along with captain Martin Odegaard and Granit Xhaka.

AdvertisementGettyThe vibrancy of youth

Arsenal have the second-youngest side in the Premier League this season, behind Southampton, and it is that youth has been a key driving force behind the Gunners’ success in the opening 10 games.

Bukayo Saka’s match winner at Leeds on Sunday was the 24th league goal Arsenal have scored this season, with nine of those having been scored by players aged 21 or under. 

It was also Arsenal’s 55th goal scored by a player 21 or under during Mikel Arteta’s time in charge; that’s 23 more than any other side during his tenure.

Having such a young team may have its drawbacks when you get to the business end of the season, as was evident towards the end of the 2021-22 campaign when Arsenal couldn’t manage to get themselves over the line in the race for the top four.

But for now, that youthful energy is playing a huge part in the Gunners’ superb start to the new season.

Getty ImagesArteta's leadership

The manager deserves a lot of credit for Arsenal’s start. He’s made a number of big calls and so far they are paying off.

The decision to name Martin Odegaard captain has worked well, as has unwavering backing of Granit Xhaka – who is now looking like a totally new player under the Spaniard.

Defensively, Arteta had to work out how to fit certain players into his system. He opted to pair William Saliba and Gabriel Magalhaes at centre-back and shift Ben White out to right-back instead of the reliable Takehiro Tomiyasu.

Many questioned whether White could perform that role, but so far he has been one of the stars of Arsenal’s season.

Arteta’s decision to start Tomiyasu at left-back in the win against Liverpool was another inspired piece of thinking. It was a call that looked questionable, with Kieran Tierney sitting on the bench, but the right footed Tomiyasu marked Mohamed Salah out of the game, so much so that the Egyptian star was hauled off with 20 minutes remaining.

Like his team, Arteta is still relatively young and inexperienced. He’s learning on the job, but so far this season, the majority of the decisions have proved to be correct ones.

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A perfect pre-season

This was a massive thing for Arsenal. Arteta was able to have a proper pre-season with his squad for the first time since he was appointed and he took full advantage.

New signings Gabriel Jesus and Oleksandr Zinchenko were bedded in early, as was William Saliba – who was finally integrated into the squad after three loan spells away for the club.

The pre-season tour to the United States was a major success, with Arsenal winning both games – including beating Chelsea 4-0 in Orlando.

Jesus was an instant hit and the team spirit was clearly strong, something that was highlighted by everyone who went away on the tour.

Arsenal ended pre-season by beating Sevilla 6-0 to win the Emirates Cup. That meant they had won every single one of their summer friendlies.

Arteta’s side looked ready to hit the ground running in the Premier League, which they duly did.

Explained: How Fantasy Premier League prices change

How do price changes work in Fantasy Football and why does a player's price rise or fall during the course of the season?

The Fantasy Premier League has become a household application throughout the world with multiple users across the globe being glued to their phones watching their favourite players battle it out on the field and them making predictions about it and choosing the best possible players to garner points for themselves.

The users turned managers get a real-life experience of fielding a combined eleven from all the teams featuring in England's Premier Division. The game has a price tag attached to every player and managers have to make a team of 15 players with an equal budget given to every user.

While the prices of a player could stay intact throughout the season, several players see their prices fluctuate with some witnessing an increase while some seeing a drop.

Here, GOAL explains why the price of a player changes during a season and what are the major reasons behind it and how a manager could make the most of these fluctuations to boost their points.

WHAT ARE PRICE CHANGES IN FANTASY PREMIER LEAGUE?

A player's price change in the Fantasy Premier League mostly occurs when the ownership of a player increases or decreases. When a vast majority of managers playing the game run behind a specific player owing to his great form or if he's tipped to have a thundering couple of matches, managers tend to acquire him to give themselves an advantage heading into the next game week.

This mass increase in the ownership of players sees the price of that specific player increase by £01.m every week. A player's price can increase or fall by £0.1m to £0.3m but it cannot cross that mark.

The key factor here is that not every player witnesses a price change. As a matter of fact, only a handful of players witness a change in their price between game weeks. When managers clinically assess these price changes they can get a massive edge over their competitors in the game because they not only help managers buy players but also sell them at the right time helping them garner profits every week strengthening their final scores.

AdvertisementGettyWHY DOES A PLAYER'S PRICE CHANGE IN FPL

FPL player's prices are somewhat equivalent to stocks and multiple comparisons can be drawn to illustrate the reasoning for changes in the prices of a player. Like in the stock market, the price of a stock skyrockets after multiple parties start buying and this is the same as with a player in the game.

If a player is bought by multiple managers playing the game, his price is touted to go up meaning a player's value will go up in accordance to the volume of its ownership.

Let's take an example, Manchester City's midfield maestro Kevin De Bruyne is valued at £12m. The players of FPL don't pick him up early on the season because of a tough set of fixtures or his price but by Gameweek 5 he manages to score 6 goals.

Now managers would want to bolster their side by picking the Belgian midfielder and the volume of his purchase in the game rises with every passing week. In this situation, De Bruyne's price will get an increment of £0.1m meaning his price tag would be £12.5m by the end of Gameweek 6.

But if owing to an injury or other circumstances, De Bruyne gets sidelined by Pep Guardiola in the next week and former Leeds United midfielder Kalvin Phillips finds a way into the eleven because he's going through a purple patch, the players would immediately swap the Belgian with the English midfielder which would see De Bruyne's price drop and could see the latter's price rise in the upcoming weeks.

There are multiple factors that could affect the changes in the price like form, fixtures, injury, or suspension to name a few that could see an alteration in a player's price.

Getty ImagesHOW DO THE PRICE CHANGES IN FPL WORK?

If the player's price rises a manager won't be able to earn the full amount if he decides to sell the player. After a player's purchase, the manager gets only a specific amount from the rise in price of the player if he decides to sell them in the future.

For every £0.2 price increase during the time the player is held by a manager, the owner can only garner a sum of £0.1m when the player is sold by them.

For example, Liverpool's swashbuckling winger Mohamed Salah is priced at £12.5m and managers bring him in the initial game weeks. Now the Egyptian goal machine produces some scintillating performances increasing his price to £13.1m.

For a manager who's buying Salah for the first time, the Liverpool goalscorer would cost them £13.1m, but he can be sold by an existing owner for just £12.8m. So for the £0.6m increase in Salah's price, the manager earned a value of £0.3m.

The sale would still sit at £12.8m if Salah's price increases and he's sold by his manager at a time when his price would be £13.2m. If Salah's price drops to £13m, the manager would be able to get only £12.7m for the sale of the Egyptian.

Managers have to be street-smart in deciding when to sell a player and when to acquire him. While a continuous increase in price could be a boon for managers to make money to use in the transfer of other big names, a sudden drop could see their plans get washed away.

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Getty ImagesWHAT HAPPENS TO PRICE CHANGES WHEN A MANAGER USES WILDCARD?

A Wildcard in Fantasy Premier League is a manager's way of reconstructing his side in the middle of the campaign and earning himself a boost before heading into the next game week.

Wildcards help a manager make unlimited transfers without getting a points hit and if utilised properly can be very useful keeping in mind the change in prices of players.

This helps you target any player whose price could increase in the near future and sell them when there's an increase.

For example, Manchester United's latest signing Mason Mount earns popularity after his initial days at Old Trafford and becomes a popular incoming transfer in the future. Now a manager can buy the former Chelsea graduate and wait for his price to rise and then sell him at the market value to earn themselves a profit.

Players can also sell the players who are going through a rough phase and then buy them back for cheaper prices using their wildcards in the upcoming weeks.

‘Like the Louvre losing the Mona Lisa!’ – Chelsea cursing ‘incredible loss’ of Jamal Musiala to Bayern Munich, says Golden Boy founder

The founder of the prestigious Golden Boy award says Chelsea seeing Jamal Musiala leave for Bayern Munich is “like the Louvre losing the Mona Lisa”.

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Youngster left west London in 2019Now starring in German footballIn contention for prestigious prizeWHAT HAPPENED?

Highly-rated midfielder Musiala spent eight years in the academy system at Stamford Bridge between 2011 and 2019. The Stuttgart-born starlet then returned to his homeland at Bayern and has gone on to become one of the most exciting talents in world football.

AdvertisementGettyTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Musiala has committed to Germany at international level, having previously represented England up to U21 level, and is a serious contender for the 2023 Golden Boy prize. Massimo Franchi, who brought that award to the world, has told of why he is such a big fan of Musiala: “I love him! I love his creative playing style. I really love this young man. The fact that FC Bayern grabbed him from Chelsea almost for free was incredibly clever. An incredible loss for the Londoners. It would be like the Louvre losing the Mona Lisa!”

WHAT THEY SAID

Musiala is up to 130 appearances for Bayern – claiming Bundesliga and Champions League honours along the way – and Franchi added on his battle with Real Madrid superstar Jude Bellingham to be recognised as the best player under the age of 21 on the planet: “Musiala is a fantastic player. He actually deserved a small statue for his decisive championship goal last season. But in the first part of the current season he couldn't show off his genius like that, he wasn't such a strong shining sun that can blind you with its light. Bayern were champions, Borussia Dortmund only second: it was absolutely correct that Jamal was in the lead at the start of the Golden Boy race in June. But then the ‘driver’ Bellingham – to use Formula 1 jargon – moved to the ‘Scuderia’ Real Madrid, where he worked magic and is still doing magic. So Jamal has to show something extraordinary – possibly also in the German national team – in order to catch Bellingham on the home straight.”

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GettyWHAT HAPPENS NEXT?

Bellingham’s bid for the Golden Boy award is said to have been aided by Taylor Swift fanatics, who have decided to back his cause, and the 20-year-old England international has enjoyed a stunning start to life at Real Madrid following his €103 million (£89m/$109m) summer transfer from Borussia Dortmund.

Valentin Barco: Why Man City and Liverpool are targeting the teenage Boca Juniors left-back who moonlights as an attacking playmaker

The 19-year-old helped inspire Boca to the Copa Libertadores final and is ready to take the plunge into European football

Manchester City pulled off one of the steals of the 21st century when they signed Julian Alvarez in January 2022. The striker was only just making a name for himself in Argentina when City struck a deal with River Plate for just £14 million ($17m), and 18 months later he had lifted every trophy imaginable, a World Cup winner with the Albiceleste and a crucial part of City's treble-winning team.

While Brazil has become a highly-competitive hunting ground for European clubs searching for young talent in the last few years, Argentina continues to be overlooked in comparison, meaning teams can get real value for money. And nearly two years after unearthing Alvarez, City are one of several clubs casting their eye over the next superstar to come out of Argentina.

Valentin Barco, 19, has emerged as one of the top players for Boca Juniors and, like Alvarez, has built his reputation in the Copa Libertadores, South America's answer to the Champions League. Barco helped the Xeneize reach the 2023 final, where they were narrowly beaten in extra-time by Fluminense at the Maracana, but is being tipped for far bigger things in the future.

In his first full year in the Buenos Aires' giants first team, the teenager has stood out in a side of veterans including Edinson Cavani, Marcos Rojo and Sergio Romero. He broke into the team as a marauding left-back but soon evolved into an attacking playmaker, showing versatility that will stand him in good stead when he eventually takes the next logical step and heads to Europe…

Boca Juniors oficialWhere it all began

Barco grew up in the town of 25 de Mayo in Buenos Aires province and shone for local side Club Atletico Sportivo as a striker. He attracted the attention of Boca's scouts and was signed by the club at the age of nine by highly-respected scout Ramon Maddoni, who discovered Carlos Tevez, Juan Roman Riquelme, Esteban Cambiasso and Fernando Redondo, among others.

Barco, though, decided to remain with his family and each day would embark on a 450-kilometre roundtrip each day from his hometown to Boca's La Candela training base in the capital. "I'd go to school in the morning and train in the afternoon and it was a three or four hour journey. I'd get home at 10 or 11 at night," he recalled.

"I'm so grateful to my family, they made huge sacrifices for me since a young age and that's why I matured quicker than normal. What they did was very difficult, they gave up everything for me. Their dream was to see me make my debut at the Bombonera and they said that once I'd done that, they could die happily."

Barco made his Boca debut in 2021 at the age of 16 against Union, becoming the fourth-youngest player in the club's history.

AdvertisementMarcelo Endelli/Getty ImagesThe big break

Barco consolidated his place in Jorge Almiron's side at the start of 2023, and he showed his quality and maturity in a Copa Libertadores group game at home to Deportivo Pereira. With their side trailing 1-0, Boca's vociferous fans were booing their side, who could barely string a pass together.

The one exception was Barco, who led the way in every statistical department, taking more touches, making more tackles, attempting more dribbles and drawing more fouls than any of his team-mates. Boca levelled in the 89th minute before Barco set up the winning goal deep in added-time with a pin-point cross for Alan Varela, who hailed his teenage team-mate as "a phenomenon".

Barco struck his first goal for Boca in another Libertadores game against Monagas, while he was the star of the show in 2-1 league win over Newell's Old Boys, scoring the first goal before setting up the second with a dinked cross for team-mate Cristian Medina.

Getty ImagesHow it's going

In the space of little more than six months, Barco went from being an impressionable teenager to Boca's most influential player and one of the spearheads of their charge to the Copa Libertadores final.

He began as a left-back, but as Almiron started to realise the true extent of his talent, he moulded him into an attacking midfield playmaker. Although he has continued to wear the number 19, Barco has taken on the prestigious role of Boca's No.10, following in the footsteps of Diego Maradona and Riquelme. He has two goals and eight assists in all competitions.

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Getty Biggest strengths

Barco is following in the fine Argentine tradition of dribbling, meaning he is frequently fouled. He is remarkably adept with both feet, as comfortable crossing with his left as he is shooting with his right. And he has developed his passing game, leading to him being used more as an attacking midfielder than a full-back, even if he prefers the latter.

"I feel comfortable in both roles and I'll play whether the coach or team needs me," he told . "A lot of people see me as a midfielder as my main quality is attacking play, but I love to play at left-back because I have the whole pitch in front of me."

The teenager also has proved to have nerves of steel in clutch moments, calmly converting decisive penalties in shootout wins over Nacional in the Libertadores and Talleres de Cordoba in the Copa Argentina.

Cristiano Ronaldo punishes Al-Fayha! CR7 pounces on terrible error to send Al-Nassr cruising into AFC Champions League quarter-finals

Cristiano Ronaldo scored late to fire Al-Nassr to a comfortable 2-0 win over Al-Fayha and seal a quarter-final berth in the AFC Champions League.

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Al-Nassr beat Al-Fayha 2-0 – 3-0 on aggregateRonaldo put in an impressive shift for the hostsScored late to cap off fine performanceGetty ImagesTELL ME MORE

It was one-way traffic right from the start at Al-Awwal Stadium as Al-Nassr dominated possession, with Marcelo Brozovic pulling the strings from a deep-lying position in midfield. And they did not have to wait for long to break the deadlock as Otavio headed home an inch-perfect cross from Al-Khaibari in the 17th minute.

Although Ronaldo took his time to make his presence felt, once he warmed up he was right in the thick of things in attack. He was clamouring for a penalty after he was brought down inside the box by two Al-Fayha players, before being denied by the woodwork having risen highest in the penalty area.

Al-Nassr pushed on in search of their second of the night following the break and Ronaldo did find the net, but he was flagged offside after he mistimed his run by a fraction of a second.

However, with just four minutes from regulation time, the prolific forward put the tie to bed by finally getting his name on the scoresheet. A half-baked clearance from goalkeeper Vladimir Stojkovic ricocheted and fell kindly for Ronaldo, who simply rolled the ball into a gaping goal to seal a 3-0 victory over the two legs for the Knights of Najd against their domestic rivals.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesTHE MVP

A late goal was the icing on the cake for Ronaldo,who came agonisingly close on a couple of occasions on the night. After emerging as the difference-maker in the first leg with an 81st-minute winner, the 39-year-old once again proved to be a handful for Al-Fayha defenders throughout the 90 minutes. Despite being denied by the frame of the goal and the offside flag, he kept asking questions and was finally rewarded for his perseverance late into the night.

Getty ImagesTHE BIG LOSER

Al-Fayha goalkeeper Stojkovic must shoulder his fair share of blame after his team were knocked out of the continental competition. He could have done better with his legs to save Otavio's header and was again indecisive with the clearance that led to Al-Nassr's second of the night. A performance to forget for the Serbian shot-stopper.

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WHAT COMES NEXT?

Al-Nassr will now shift focus on their domestic commitments as they are set to host Al-Shabab next in the Saudi Pro League on Sunday. They are chasing leaders Al-Hilal, who are seven points ahead of them in the title race and can hardly afford to slip up.

Australia on top after Voges' debut ton

Adam Voges became the oldest man to score a century on Test debut as Australia took control on the second day in Dominica

The Report by Brydon Coverdale04-Jun-2015
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsAdam Voges played patiently for his debut hundred•Getty ImagesAdam Voges became the oldest man to score a century on Test debut as Australia took control on the second day in Dominica. It was a day of frustration and missed opportunities for West Indies, who had the chance to run through Australia but allowed the tail to wag and found themselves facing a 170-run first-innings deficit. They then lost both their openers cheaply late in the afternoon.Smart stats

1 Australian batsmen who have scored a century on Test debut when batting at No. 5 – Adam Voges is the first.
35 Voges’ age (35y, 242d), making him the oldest batsmen to score a century on Test debut, going past Zimbabwe’s Dave Houghton (35y 117d), versus India in 1992.
6-80 Devendra Bishoo’s figures, the best ever by a West Indies legspinner in Tests, and the first five-for against Australia.
50 Test wickets for Bishoo, the second most by a West Indies legspinner, one behind David Holford who has 51.
201 Keeper dismissals effected by Denesh Ramdin, making him the third West Indies wicketkeeper to go past the 200-mark after Jeff Dujon (270) and Ridley Jacobs (219). Across countries, 16 keepers have achieved this feat.

Devendra Bishoo had given West Indies the perfect start by spinning out three batsmen before lunch and he finished with 6 for 80, but Voges remained a calm presence at the crease throughout Australia’s innings. The 97-run stand that he and Josh Hazlewood compiled for the last wicket could prove to be the difference, although Mitchell Johnson and Nathan Lyon also provided useful support.By stumps, West Indies were in an even bigger hole. Shai Hope edged Johnson to second slip and was sharply taken by Michael Clarke, and next ball Mitchell Starc swung one in to rattle the stumps of Kraigg Brathwaite. It left West Indies on 25 for 2 at stumps, still 145 runs behind, with Darren Bravo on 3 and Shane Dowrich on 1. A mountain of work remained for them on day three.For Australia, it was a day to celebrate the achievement of Voges, who at 35 replaced Zimbabwe’s David Houghton as Test cricket’s oldest debut centurion. Patience is no problem for Voges – he has had to wait 160 first-class matches for this opportunity – and he displayed impressive concentration throughout this innings, bringing up his hundred from his 187th delivery.Having made a brisk start on the first afternoon, Voges took a more steady approach on the second day, waiting for his opportunities to work runs through gaps and taking few risks. Rarely did he play a loose shot, although just after reaching his half-century he pulled Marlon Samuels and a diving Jermaine Blackwood at midwicket put down a tough chance.It was an example of the difference in fielding between the two sides: Australia grasped nearly everything in West Indies’ first innings, but West Indies let opportunities slip. Voges received another life on 104 when Hope dropped one at gully off Taylor, and Hazlewood was put down on 33 as the afternoon wore on.West Indies seemed unable to find the intensity they needed to finish the Australians off: the seventh-, ninth- and tenth-wicket partnerships were Australia’s best of the innings. They were six down when Voges nudged them past West Indies’ total of 148 but Johnson, Lyon and then Hazlewood all offered vital support to Voges, who never looked flustered as wickets fell.For a while it looked like Voges might be denied the chance to reach his hundred: he was on 77 when Hazlewood joined him at the wicket. But Hazlewood proved himself a worthy partner, defending capably as Voges kept the scoreboard ticking along and then moved to 98 with a six slammed down the ground off Jerome Taylor.Voges was still there on 130 when Hazlewood was bowled by Marlon Samuels for 39, completing Australia’s innings at 318. It was a wonderful recovery after Bishoo threatened to skittle them cheaply. During the morning, he turned the ball sharply but also varied his degree of spin, and found enough drift to deceive the batsmen.In the morning session, Bishoo claimed the three key wickets of Steven Smith, Shane Watson and Brad Haddin, and after the break he added Johnson and Starc. Smith (25) added eight to his overnight score before he was hoodwinked by Bishoo, advancing down the pitch only to see the ball drop short of him, spin past his edge and Denesh Ramdin complete the stumping.If it is rare for Smith to be outflighted by a spinner, it is not so uncommon for Watson, who on 11 drove hard and had his thick edge well caught at second slip by Jason Holder. Haddin showed some intent by launching a Bishoo wrong’un back over the bowler’s head for six, but Bishoo had his revenge by bowling Haddin for 8.It was a beautiful piece of legspin that fittingly came 22 years to the day after Shane Warne’s ball of the century tricked Mike Gatting. Bishoo similarly drifted the ball in and pitched it on leg stump, turning it perfectly past Haddin’s bat to clip the top of off stump.Johnson’s 52-run stand with Voges ended when Johnson top-edged a sweep and was caught at short fine leg for 20. Starc lasted only two balls, bowled for a duck when he tried to slog Bishoo, and a quick finish appeared possible. However, Bishoo had to go off for some treatment to his hand, and Lyon’s temperament was what Voges needed at the other end, quiet and unperturbed.Lyon managed 22 from 50 balls before he walked across his stumps and was trapped lbw by Shannon Gabriel, but Hazlewood was able to offer even greater support. Bishoo looked like having a seven-for when he trapped Voges lbw on 127, but a review suggested the ball would have turned past off stump and Voges was reprieved. It was just one more frustration on a disappointing day for West Indies.

Batshuayi, Laporte & 15 players who could transfer before the January window closes

The winter window closes on Wednesday evening, but there is still plenty of time left for clubs to make some final signings before the deadline

Arthur – Gremio to BarcelonaBarcelona have already signed defender Yerry Mina and attacker Philippe Coutinho during January, but could bring in at least one more new face before the window closes on Wednesday. Gremio midfielder Arthur has a release clause of €50 million, but Barca may be willing to initially loan the 21-year-old back to the Brazilian club to get him at a lower price.AdvertisementGettyPierre-Emerick Aubameyang – Borussia Dortmund to ArsenalGabon international striker Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang has long been linked with a transfer to the Premier League, but finally seems to be making the move with Arsenal set to break their transfer record to sign him before the deadline. The Gunners spent over a week negotiating with Dortmund for the 28-year-old who scored 31 Bundesliga goals last season to finish as top scorer ahead of Robert Lewandowski.Michy Batshuayi – Chelsea to Borussia Dortmund/Sevilla/RomaEven with Alvaro Morata misfiring at Stamford Bridge, Chelsea manager Antonio Conte has not given the Belgian a chance to make a claim for a starting role. The 24-year-old has been impressive in the FA Cup, but needs more game time ahead of the 2018 World Cup. He has been linked with numerous clubs during January and is likely to complete a loan move in the coming days.ENJOYED THIS STORY?

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Getty ImagesGerard Deulofeu – Barcelona to WatfordMany were surprised when Spain international Gerard Deulofeu was re-signed by Barcelona from Everton, but the winger's latest stay at Camp Nou could be coming to an abrupt end following the acquisition of Philippe Coutinho. He played 10 La Liga games this season but is now surplus to requirements with Coutinho joining and Ousmane Dembele back from injury.

The winners & losers of Frank Lampard's Chelsea return: From teacher's pet Mason Mount to struggling USMNT star Christian Pulisic

A club legend is back at Stamford Bridge, but while the fanbase revel in the appointment, some players have cause for concern…

In a plot twist that only the Premier League is capable of concocting, Frank Lampard SOMEHOW finds himself back in the Chelsea dugout – albeit on an interim basis.

Whether you think it's a brazen PR stunt from joint-owners Todd Boehly and Behdad Eghbali as they look to appease a disgruntled fanbase, or a shrewd move to see the Blues through to the end of the season, the club legend's return is sure to make for compelling viewing.

The squad Lampard inherits is in stark contrast to the one he left behind when he was dismissed in 2021; trusted regulars of his first stint in charge such as Tammy Abraham and Jorginho have moved on and Chelsea have spent BIG, with their bloated ranks contributing to predecessor Graham Potter's eventual downfall.

There is work to be done and points to prove on and off the pitch.

Here are GOAL's winners and losers of Lampard's return to Stamford Bridge…

Getty ImagesWINNER: Mason Mount

It is remarkable that Mason Mount has gone from Chelsea's best player and a fan favourite to a scapegoat who is highly likely to move on from the club in the summer.

Mount was unfairly labelled the 'teacher's pet' during Lampard's first spell in charge after they struck up a strong rapport during his loan at Derby County, but the England international was a first-team regular back at Chelsea based on merit.

The academy graduate enjoyed a breakout campaign under Lampard in 2019-20, and has been on an upward trajectory since, with his output steadily increasing.

However, things have not gone to plan this season. Though he still has nine goal contributions in all competitions, his form has reflected his team's overall struggles.

He's become a lightning rod for criticism amid uncertainty surrounding his future as he prepares to enter the final year of his contract, with Liverpool sniffing about.

Lampard's timely return coincides with Mount's comeback from an injury layoff, and that could well give him the fresh impetus he needs to rediscover his highest level.

Who knows, he may even be convinced to stay put…

AdvertisementGettyLOSER: Kepa Arrizabalaga

Poor old Kepa.

No sooner has he regained his starting place than the man who decided to replace him returns to the club.

It was Lampard who sought an alternative for the struggling Spaniard back in 2020, eventually plumping for Edouard Mendy – a shrewd move given he would go on to help the Blues on their way to winning the 2021 Champions League under his successor Thomas Tuchel.

Kepa reclaimed his first-team place under Potter earlier this season, keeping a solid 12 clean sheets in 29 appearances despite the odd characteristic lapse in concentration, but he will undoubtedly be looking over his shoulder now that Mendy is fit again and Lampard is back in the dugout.

Getty ImagesWINNER: Todd Boehly & Behdad Eghbali

This is a win-win for Chelsea's ownership.

It is difficult to understand exactly why co-owners Boehly and Eghbali have opted to bring Lampard back on a temporary basis, but one of their motivations is pretty transparent.

After what has been a farcical 11 months at the helm so far, reinstalling the club legend is an easy PR victory for a hierarchy that was supposedly stunned by the vociferous uproar in the latter days of Potter's reign.

Within the Chelsea fanbase there has been very little backlash to the appointment, which is perhaps an indictment of Potter's popularity more than anything else.

They have not committed to anything long-term, and they have bought themselves time to make the right appointment to take the club forward and recover their poor start.

Lampard can do no wrong in the fans' eyes, with his status as a club legend as secure as can be. If they are merely riding out the rest of the season, one of their favourite sons will be fully backed – whatever happens.

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GettyLOSER: Marc Cucurella

Marc Cucurella has already faced plenty of adversity in his brief time at Stamford Bridge, and Lampard's appointment will provide another test.

The defender had only just regained the faith of former Brighton boss Potter before he was unceremoniously ditched, and now he faces an uphill battle to convince the interim head coach of his pedigree.

Lampard was in charge when Chelsea signed Ben Chilwell in 2020 and the pair formed a strong bond, with the England international one of his best performers throughout his initial tenure.

A likely switch to the coach's preferred back-four system could well see Cucurella pushed to the periphery.

GOAL50 2021: The best female players in the world revealed after your vote

Your votes have been counted and we can now confirm the overall winner of the women's GOAL50 2021!

Check out the final standings, and the overall winner, of the women's GOAL50 2021!

GOAL1Alexia Putellas – Midfielder, Barcelona and SpainWith 25 goals in all competitions, most scored with the captain's armband on, the Spaniard was outstanding as Barcelona won the treble. Player of the Match as they lifted the Copa de la Reina, she also scored in the Women's Champions League final.AdvertisementGOAL2Irene Paredes – Defender, Barcelona and SpainThe Spaniard was PSG's leader in defence last season as they kept 19 clean sheets to win a maiden league title. Before switching to Barcelona, she also helped them reach the last four in Europe, where they'd narrowly fall short against the Catalans.GOAL3Asisat Oshoala – Forward, Barcelona and NigeriaThe Nigeria international scored 18 goals in 18 league starts last season as Barcelona won the treble. She also netted a further four in the Women's Champions League, including a crucial pair in the quarter-final win over Manchester City.ENJOYED THIS STORY?

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GOAL4Lieke Martens – Forward, Barcelona and the NetherlandsThe Dutch winger scored 20 goals in all competitions for Barcelona as they won the treble, shining in the latter stages of the Women's Champions League in particular. She then scored four goals in as many games at the Olympics for her country.

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