WATCH: Gio Reyna strikes & Antonee Robinson scores stunner as USMNT late show sees them bag three goals in under eight minutes to see off Trinidad and Tobago

The USMNT bagged three late goals, including a long-distance banger from Antonee Robinson, to down Trinidad & Tobago Thursday.

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USMNT score three goals in seven minutesPepi, Robinson and Reyna on scoresheetU.S. in pole position for Copa America qualificationGettyWHAT HAPPENED?

The USMNT scored three times in seven minutes and 23 seconds to claim a vital CONCACAF Nations League win over 10-man Trinidad and Tobago Thursday evening. Pepi got things going for Gregg Berhalter's side, before Antonee Robinson followed up with a long-distance curling effort. Then, Reyna finally made his mark on the match, scoring the dagger in the 3-0 victory.

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With victory Thursday – which many were not convinced was coming prior to the late Rciardo Pepi opener – the U.S. have all but confirmed their spot at Copa America. For USA fans, it's bittersweet relief, because we all know their history on the island of Trinidad in matches where they need a result to qualify for a major world tournament.

The key to the evening, though, was showing that the USMNT can in fact find a result without starting star wingers Christian Pulisic and Tim Weah. The Soca Warriors were incredibly composed and should be applauded for their defensive showing. Ultimately, though, it was impressive how focused Berhalter's side stayed and how influential his substitutes were; Brenden Aaronson and Pepi changed the game.

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GettyWHAT NEXT FOR REYNA, ROBINSON AND THE USMNT?

The squad now hits the road for Monday's match in leg two of the series vs Trinidad in Port-of-Spain. Get over the line on Monday and the USMNT will qualify for the 2024 Copa America – a huge achievement for Berhalter's squad.

Could Brazil really miss out on the 2026 World Cup?! Where it's all gone wrong for the Selecao as Neymar and Vinicius Jr injuries pile on the pressure ahead of huge clash with old foes Argentina

The five-time champions have won just two of their opening five qualifiers ahead of Tuesday's clash with the defending champions at the Maracana

Outside of tournaments, Brazil don't play many big games. This is not a team that is familiar with the concept of desperation or having their fixture branded as 'must-win'. Things aren't supposed to get this intense, or this nervous, until the knockout stages of a World Cup or Copa America. But here we are, in mid-November, in a qualifying campaign for a World Cup that is just under three years away, and the Selecao are sweating.

CONMEBOL qualifying is widely regarded as the most competitive, even if the world rankings don't always bear that out. A three-year gauntlet with each team playing 18 matches, and at the end of it just four automatic spaces at the tournament. Things have changed ahead of 2026, though, with the expanded 48-team tournament now allowing for six South American sides to qualify, with a seventh heading to an intercontinental play-off.

Despite that, Brazil find themselves in a precarious position as the opening third of the campaign heads towards its close. Having won just two of their opening five games, they currently sit fifth in the standings ahead of Tuesday's crunch clash with old rivals Argentina. Defeat and results going a certain way elsewhere could see them end the international break out of the automatic qualification slots.

That would not be becoming of a Brazil squad that is full of stars from the European games, as well as a number of youngsters who will join that cohort in the not-too-distant future. And unlike recent Selecao sides, there are very few obvious holes in the starting XI.

It's hard to highlight where, exactly, things have gone so wrong for a team who are expected to win every single World Cup by their own fans, regardless of their own strengths or those of their opponents. Qualification isn't a prerequisite as much of an assumption. These games should effectively be a handful of friendlies to gear up for the real thing. So how have they got to this stage?

GettyIt starts in the dugout

Tite was always going to step down following the 2022 World Cup. The Brazil manager announced in February of that year that the tournament in Qatar would be his last act in charge of the Selecao. It was hardly a memorable send-off, though.

Brazil never really convinced, narrowly winning two of their group games, before losing a dead-rubber third to Cameroon. And although they made quick work of South Korea in the last 16, they couldn't feel hard done by in their quarter-final exit to Croatia — even though it took penalties to secure the loss.

Tite left his post immediately, as promised, leaving the national team without a permanent head coach. Under-20s boss Ramon Menezes took over on an interim basis, but after losing to Senegal on neutral ground, he was relieved of his duties. A subsequent poll of the Brazilian public revealed that most in the country wanted Real Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti to take the job. Instead, they hired Fernando Diniz, also on an interim basis, a manager who had bounced around Brazilian football, and never managed a side for more than two years. This was hardly a convincing appointment.

And so it has proved. Diniz has won two of his five matches in charge, while also juggling his day job with Fluminense, with whom he has admittedly won the Copa Libertadores. Diniz, a tough disciplinarian who believes in positional tiki-taka, always seemed an awkward fit. The result has been a side that has only scored eight goals in five games, despite being blessed with some of the world's best attacking talent.

Experience could be on the way. Football Federation president Ednaldo Rodrigues, formerly in the job in an interim nature himself, claimed in July that Ancelotti has already agreed to take over the side for the 2024 Copa America — something Ancelotti himself has refused to comment on. Continuity, a valuable thing in international management, is nowhere to be found.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesMisfiring attack

There is tactical complexity to assembling a winning team. Success is not so easily attained by simply throwing the best attacking talents on the pitch, and asking them to score goals. Still, Brazil's forward options should be the envy of world football.

At full fitness, they can turn to: Neymar, Vinicius Jr, Gabriel Martinelli, Rodrygo, Gabriel Jesus, Raphinha, Richarlison and Antony, plus rising stars Endrick and Vitor Roque. It is telling that Tite selected no less than nine forwards in his 2022 World Cup squad.

Having good players alone is not conducive to scoring a lot of goals, but that group should be able to manage more than eight in five games — regardless of how tricky some of these fixtures can be.

This is not necessarily a chance-creation problem. The Selecao have averaged over 10 shots per game over the course of the middling period. In big games, though, they have disappeared. They only registered two shots — both of which were off target — against Uruguay. Colombia comfortably created more chances than them. Against Venezuela, the Selecao were simply less clinical, and could have few complaints after conceding a late equaliser.

These are ominous stats ahead of an Argentina team that, in general, does not offer their opponents regular goalscoring opportunities.

Defence with an obvious weakness

Things aren't particularly smooth at the other end, either. Brazil's defence is a strange unit, strong through the middle, but alarmingly thin on the outside.

There is a stalwart at centre-back in Marquinhos, and a top-tier Premier League talent in Gabriel Magalhaes alongside him, while Eder Militao will work his way back into contention once he recovers from his serious knee injury. Behind them, Alisson Becker and Ederson – perhaps the world's two best goalkeepers – are vying for the No.1 spot.

But at full-back, the options are grim. Renan Lodi has failed to convince, while none of Emerson Royal, Carlos Augusto, Yan Couto or natural centre-back Bremer have seized their opportunity, either. Piece it all together, and the Selecao are easily exploitable down either side. They have, in fact, conceded the same goal numerous times.

Teams prefer to attack down Brazil's left flank, exploiting the defensive weakness of whomever is deployed in the position. A well-hit ball to the far post — to challenge Marquinhos — accounted for both of Colombia's goals. Two cut-backs from that area set up both of Uruguay's. A cross from a similar position facilitated Venzeuela's late equaliser.

Any smart manager would, of course, assemble a side to target an opponent's weaknesses. France were exploitable down their left at the World Cup. Liverpool, for some time, have been vulnerable down their right side. Arsenal, too, can be hit in the same space behind the left-back. Still, that no Brazil manager, interim or otherwise, has come up with a way to plug that hole is concerning.

Even more concerning is the fact that the Selecao have routinely conceded after taking the lead. They went ahead against Venezuela and Colombia, and also got on the board first in the 4-2 loss to Senegal in June that saw Menezes removed from his job.

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Getty ImagesInjuries haven't helped

There are, of course, mitigating factors here. Brazi have been routinely been hit by injuries across multiple positions. At various points, Neymar, Raphinha, Vinicius, Casemiro, Jesus, Militao, Richarlison and Ederson have been missing due to knocks of differing degrees.

These are players of contrasting importance. As the Selecao showed after Neymar went down with a serious knee injury against Uruguay, this is not a side that exactly thrives without the trickery of their star man. Militao's loss at the back, too, has been felt. His ability to fill in at full-back would certainly make this side a more stable unit. Richarlison, Antony, and others can be worked around.

But the really devastating one might be the winger who will miss Tuesday's game. Vinicius was supposed to be the star to take over from Neymar, and the Real Madrid forward has undoubtedly been among the world's best at club level for two years now — consistently finding the net himself and setting up team-mates for goals. But his Brazil statistics — three goals in 26 caps — have been horrific in comparison.

With Neymar out, this was his chance to amend things. But after picking up a hamstring injury against Colombia that will rule him out until early 2024, Brazil will be forced to look elsewhere for their attacking inspiration.

13 fun facts about Joshua Kimmich

Everything you need to know about Germany and Bayern Munich midfielder Joshua Kimmich.

Joshua Kimmich is a professional football player from Germany who is widely recognized for his versatility, technical ability, and tactical intelligence. Born on February 8, 1995, in Rottweil, Germany, Kimmich has established himself as one of the best midfielders in the world.

Kimmich began his youth career at VfB Bosingen before joining the youth academy of VfB Stuttgart. In 2013, he signed a contract with RB Leipzig, where he made his professional debut in the 2. Bundesliga. Kimmich's impressive performances attracted the attention of Bayern Munich, and in the summer of 2015, he joined the German giants.

At Bayern Munich, Kimmich quickly made a name for himself with his exceptional work rate, technical skills, and versatility. He initially played as a right-back but gradually transitioned into a central midfield role. Kimmich's ability to read the game and make precise passes earned him comparisons to former Bayern captain Philipp Lahm.

Kimmich's intelligence and adaptability have made him a key player for both Bayern Munich and the German national team. He has won numerous domestic and international titles throughout his career. With Bayern Munich, he has won multiple Bundesliga titles, DFB-Pokal trophies, and the UEFA Champions League. He was also instrumental in Germany's victory at the 2017 Confederations Cup.

Individually, Kimmich has received several accolades, including being named in the UEFA Champions League Squad of the Season and the FIFPro World XI. He has also been nominated for the FIFA FIFPro World XI and the UEFA Team of the Year. In addition, he has been recognized as the German Footballer of the Year.

Here are 13 fun facts about Joshua Kimmich you need to know.

Started his career with Gnabry and Werner

Kimmich was a part of VfB Stuttgart's highly renowned academy, where he spent a considerable amount of his youth career. At Stuttgart, he was teammates with future national side colleagues Timo Werner and Serge Gnabry.

While he never reunited with Werner at RB Leipzig, with the forward joining the club a year after Kimmich left, he met Gnabry again at Bayern Munich when the former Arsenal winger joined in 2018.

AdvertisementWas not considered good enough at Stuttgart

While he rose through the academy levels during his early years at Stuttgart, the senior staff did not consider him good enough to even make it to the club's reserves squad. "'You're not good enough, your body is not strong enough,' the coaches told me, adding that I needed another year with the youth team," said Kimmich in an interview regarding his early playing days.

However, he did not let their criticism get to him and used it as motivation to move on and excel elsewhere. Coincidentally, the coach who scouted him for VfB Stuttgart also happened to move to RB Leipzig, who wasted no time in signing Kimmich, and as they say, the rest is history.

Pep Guardiola chose him

While the coaches at VfB Stuttgart may not have recognised the 2020 Champions League winner's potential, one Pep Guardiola who was the manager of Bayern Munich in 2015 saw the talent stored within Kimmich.

Midway through Kimmich's first season in 2. Bundesliga, Guardiola, and the midfielder had a meeting where the Spanish coach immediately convinced him to join Bayern Munich. While the former Barcelona manager left for Manchester City in 2016, he still remains a great influence on the player.

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Has won the Bundesliga every season

Since making his Bundesliga debut for Bayern Munich in 2015-16, Kimmich has won the league title in each of his eight seasons so far, making him a legend in German football at the ripe age of 28.

The closest Kimmich's league streak came to being stopped was during the 2022-23 season when Bayern Munich almost lost the title to rivals Borrusia Dortmund until a last-minute winner from midfielder Jamal Musiala against FC Koln on the last matchday.

Azhar Ali named Pakistan ODI captain

The PCB has named Azhar Ali the new captain of Pakistan’s ODI side, and vice-captain of the Test side

Umar Farooq28-Mar-20153:58

Samiuddin: Azhar faces stern challenge

The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has named Azhar Ali Pakistan’s new ODI captain, and Test vice-captain. Misbah-ul-Haq will remain the Test captain while Shahid Afridi will continue to lead the Twenty20 side. There were changes in the selection committee as well, with former batsman Haroon Rasheed appointed the new chief selector. The PCB for the first time introduced a bona fide vice-captain for each format. The appointment, according to the PCB chairman Shaharyar Khan, is not a long-term prospect but for the “time-being.” Sarfraz Ahmed was named vice-captain for the limited-overs formats.”Using my constitutional right as chairman I have appointed Azhar Ali as Pakistan ODI captain,” Shaharyar said in a press conference in Lahore on Monday. “There were four to five recommendations for captaincy but I didn’t want to go back, and wanted to look ahead for young players. I know Azhar Ali was not in the team for the last two years, not even in the World Cup squad but his performance in the Pentangular Cup recently proved that he has the ability for the job.”We wanted to built a team based on unity, spirit, fitness and discipline rather than having people with personal agendas. So I have discussed it with every stakeholder involved in the board and considering all aspects I have decided to appoint Azhar. He has the character, leadership quality, team spirit and has proved himself. We can’t afford to have a young, 22-year-old captain in our system but we have inducted Sarfraz Ahmed as vice-captain [in ODIs] to groom him in the rebuilding process.”Rasheed’s appointment cut short Moin Khan’s contract, which was supposed to run till the 2016 World T20. The new four-member selection panel is made up of former internationals Kabir Khan, who was previously the coach of Afghanistan, Azhar Khan and Saleem Jaffar.Azhar has played only 14 ODIs and last played in January 2013, despite having an average of 41.09. The 30-year-old is a regular in the Test XI, providing a steadying influence at No. 3. His strike rate in limited-overs cricket had always restrained the chances of an ODI call, though in recent times he has improved in that aspect. He was the leading run-scorer in the Pentangular Cup with 302 runs at an average of 60.40 and strike rate of 86.28. In the President’s Gold Cup, he scored 234 runs with a strike rate of 86.98.”I know this [strike rate] has been a point of concern in the past but in last one-and-half year I have definitely got this issue covered and have improved as well,” Azhar said. “I have been working hard at NCA and my domestic record has already improved. So I am satisfied and when I get a chance I am going to prove it.”This is not the first time Azhar has been considered for the Pakistan captaincy. In 2010 he was seen as a potential candidate to take over after the spot-fixing saga, despite having made his debut only that year, but then chairman Ijaz Butt chose Misbah on the basis of experience. Azhar is understood to have smooth relationships with fellow players and the board. He has also captained at various levels in Pakistan, leading Lahore Eagles, Lahore Lions, Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited, Khan Research Laboratories and Baluchistan Warriors. Azhar also captained Wahab Riaz and Nasir Jamshed, members of Pakistan’s World Cup squad, at the Under-19 level.ESPNcricinfo understands that both captain and coach have no voting rights in the selection matters. According to the PCB policy, the captain is consulted but he holds no power to vote in selection, though he, along with the coach, can select the playing XI.Following every poor series, the Pakistan captain was seen complaining about the selected pool of players and Misbah had recently asked for the captain to have a bigger say in selecting the squads. Shaharyar struck down the appeal and said this is the practice being adopted by most of the boards and the PCB will also continue the same way.”The captain and coach hold no right to vote in selection,” he said. “Their inputs will definitely be considered but the selection committee will ultimately take the final call. This practice has been adopted by most of the boards around the world apart from New Zealand and a few others.”Azhar appeared to be “comfortable” with the policy as he said the PCB chairman and Rasheed have assured him full support. “I am fine with it as I am already assured full cooperation by the board and I am thankful to them for choosing me,” Azhar said. “It’s a big responsibility and I am happy and ready to take the challenge.”When asked how he would deal with players like Umar Akmal and Ahmed Shahzad, who are more experienced than him, Azhar said: “I have captained them in the past and it shouldn’t be any problem in the future as well. They are good players and I hope they will be better in my captaincy.”

USMNT legend and Premier League great Tim Howard elected to National Soccer Hall of Fame Class of 2024

Former goalkeeper Tim Howard has been elected to the U.S. National Soccer Hall of Fame Class of 2024.

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Howard had distinguished careerPlayed in Premier League and for USANow elected into 2024 Hall of Fame Getty ImagesWHAT HAPPENED?

Former Manchester United and Everton keeper Howard was on the ballot for this honour for the first time and received 46 of 48 votes (95.8%) from the player select committee. The stopper made 121 appearances for the U.S. men's national team from 2002-17 and was first-choice between the sticks at the 2010 and 2014 World Cups.

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After being told of the news live on air for NBC's Premier League coverage, he said: "When you play football, you try and for the love and play for the glory, and hopefully along the way you do some things."

THE BIG PICTURE

Howard will go down as one of America's greatest-ever goalkeepers. Not many from his country have starred in the Premier League but he has done that. Josh McKinney, captain of the U.S. seven-a-side Paralympic team, was also elected to the Hall of Fame. A player must appear on 50% or more of ballots to be elected and Howard, 52, passed with flying colours.

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GettyWHAT IS NEXT?

Howard will be inducted into the Hall of Fame on May 4, 2024. On top of his television work, the former keeper is a minority owner and sporting director at Memphis, who are in the second tier of the United Soccer League's League Championship.

Unknowns Oman take on big-event regulars Ireland

Ireland have played eight global tournaments, this is Oman’s first. Ireland have caused upsets in several of those global tournaments, but still have to face what is essentially a qualifying round here

The Preview by Sidharth Monga08-Mar-2016Match factsWednesday, March 9, 2016
Start time 1930 local (1400 GMT)Big PictureThe most heartbreaking part of the tournament is already underway, and Ireland and Oman will be the last ones to enter the crucible. Ireland are arguably the most backed Associate team by the neutral fan, and that they have to play the qualifiers – or whatever the ICC might call this round – is the face of the injustice to Associate teams. They have caused upsets in three successive 50-over World Cups even though their Twenty20 form of late has been wonky; they struggled in the qualifiers at home last year, losing to Papua New Guinea, Hong Kong and Netherlands.Ireland’s batting has been a bit of a worry; they have reached 150 only once in their last 11 matches. Although they have not had a chance to score 150 on all of these occasions – they have been asked to chase lower scores too – the lack of power hitting has been a bit of a concern, which is why coach John Bracewell has focussed on that aspect of their game. When asked about his side’s batting, captain William Porterfield was defiant and wondered if the reporter was talking about Oman’s batting. “That’s the perception,” he said. “I am not too bothered about that. I think we are in a good place. I am happy where we are.”Against Oman, the relative unknowns of this round, Ireland will need their power hitting. Largely built of immigrants of Indian and Pakistani origin, Oman have caught the attention of the hardcore fan with their hard-nosed attitude to cricket, especially their refusal to bow down to the idea of the spirit of cricket when it comes to a batsman stealing yards at the non-striker’s end. Porterfield made it clear his side doesn’t play its cricket that way, and that they are not going to mankad players, which makes for a delicious contrast with Oman who refuse to be apologetic about it.Here is to a mankading in the first game with both sides standing their ground without getting ugly about it. And here is to a close first game.Form guideIreland LWLWW (last five completed matches, most recent first)
Oman LLWLLWatch out forBoyd Rankin is back for Ireland. This is not exactly news, but this will be only his third international back after his return, and the first big tournament. He will love the conditions in Dharamsala. Every captain has said he expects good pace and carry. Rankin will be a big test for Oman batsmen who don’t usually get to face that pace form such tall bowlers. On the eve of the game, Porterfield said of Rankin: “It is great to have him back. It is like he hasn’t been away. Good to have him back on this surface. If there is something in the surface he is great, but even if there isn’t he has got the accuracy to be a threat on any surface.”Munis Ansari has drawn everybody’s attention with a perfect impersonation of Lasith Malinga’s action. He slings them in like Malinga, but not at his pace. That is the kind of bowler who can travel when put under pressure. He is also a bowler who can win games if he gets it right. Ireland have never faced Oman in an international so that could help Ansari.Team newsIreland have no fitness concerns despite a stomach bug here or there during the week. They have all 15 to choose from. Porterfield declined to talk about the combination, but they could leave out the Stuarts, Poynter and Thompson. Andy Balbirnie opened with Porterfield in their last warm-up, but that was in the absence of Paul Stirling who is available now. One of the seamers, and one out of Balbirnie and Andy McBrine might miss out.Ireland (probable) 1 William Porterfield (capt), 2 Paul Stirling, 3 Andrew Poynter, 4 Niall O’Brien, 5 Gary Wilson (wk), 6 Kevin O’Brien, 7 Andy McBrine/Andy Balbirnie, 8 George Dockrell, 9 Max Sorensen, 10 Tim Murtagh, 11 Boyd RankinOman are the unknowns in the tournament, and didn’t give any indication of changes they might make to the XI that played the last T20I for them.Oman (probable) 1 Zeeshan Maqsood, 2 Jatinder Singh, 3 Aaqib Sulehri, 4 Adnan Ilyas, 5 Aamir Kaleem, 6 Sultan Ahmed (capt & wk), 7 Mehran Khan, 8 Amir Ali, 9 Sufyan Mehmood, 10 Munis Ansari, 11 Bilal KhanPitch and conditionsThe pitch is expected to be hard and bouncy with the evening chill adding another dimension to it. The dew will be a factor too. Luckily the hail storms and snow of the previous few days have missed the start of the tournament in Dharamsala.Stats and trivia This is the first time Ireland are facing Oman in an international match Kevin O’Brien is two caps short of becoming the first Ireland cricketer to play 50 Twenty20 internationals George Dockrell is six short of 50 T20 international wickets. No Irishman, and only 11 bowlers world over, have managed the feat This is Ireland’s eighth World Cup, and Oman’s firstQuotes”You always get a bit of a thrill anytime you’re playing in a World Cup. Myself, brother Niall, and William [Porterfield] have been fortunate enough to play in all eight, but each one brings something new and there’s always a sense of adventure.”
“If mankading is so wrong, why is it in the rules of the game? It is the batsman who is violating the spirit of cricket by stealing yards.”

Christian Pulisic returns! USMNT star to feature against Fiorentina as Milan boss Stefano Pioli confirms winger's availability

Milan boss Stefano Pioli confirmed on Friday that USMNT winger Christian Pulisic will feature against Fiorentina at the weekend.

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Pulisic to return for MilanUSMNT winger over injuryLeao & Giroud to miss matfchGettyWHAT HAPPENED?

After missing the entirety of the November international break, the USMNT winger is set to return to action for the Italian side. Pulisic went down with an injury against PSG in the UEFA Champions League on November 7, and a little over two weeks on, he's now back and fit for action. However, winger Rafael Leao is set to be sidelined for the match, meaning the American may be moved to the left-side of the pitch to open up options on the right. Meanwhile, striker Olivier Giroud is also suspended for the contest, so there's also the option of playing him through the middle.

AdvertisementWHAT PIOLI SAID

“When a player gets injured, we suffer at Milanello,” Pioli said in a press conference. “We’ve always tried to change something and we are doing anything to improve this situation. We have analyzed all injuries, each player has their own history. Somebody got injured because he played too much, others didn’t play enough."

“National teams are not helping us either. Many other clubs are facing the same situation but of course, the numbers are not positive. We are all working to improve and lower the number of injuries. Pulisic, [Davide] Calabria and [Ruben] Loftus-Cheek will be back [against Fiorentina], [Rafael] Leao, [Simon] Kjaer and [Noah] Okafor won’t be available.”

THE BIGGER PICTURE

The American has been on fire of late for the Rossoneri, and the underlying stats of when he's on the pitch only back that up. When featuring on the scoresheet for Milan, they have not lost once, and have only settled for a draw on a single occasion too. He's net five times since arriving from English Premier League side Chelsea over the summer.

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GettyWHAT NEXT FOR PULISIC AND MILAN?

The Rossoneri return to Serie A action on Saturday when they host Fiorentina in a top-half table clash. Third place Milan sit on 23 points while La Viola are on 20; a win would see the latter jump to level on points with Milan, while a win for Pulisic's side would further the gap from those below.

Still a Chelsea man at heart? Mateo Kovacic appears to celebrate Cole Palmer's stoppage-time equaliser against Man City in shocking new fan footage

Chelsea may still hold a special place in the heart of Mateo Kovacic, with the Manchester City star appearing to celebrate a goal from Cole Palmer.

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Croatian midfielder left London in the summerBack at the Bridge for Premier League thrillerOdd reaction to dramatic penalty levellerWHAT HAPPENED?

The Croatia international midfielder brought a five-year spell at Stamford Bridge to a close over the summer when he swapped west London for the North West of England. Kovacic had enjoyed considerable success in a different shade of blue, becoming a Champions League winner while taking in over 200 appearances.

AdvertisementTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Kovacic’s colours are supposed to be firmly nailed to City’s mast now, with the 29-year-old looking to help Pep Guardiola’s side defend their Premier League title. He could, however, be seen reacting to a dramatic late goal during a return to the Bridge on Sunday in surprising fashion.

DID YOU KNOW?

City dropped two points at Chelsea as Palmer converted a stoppage-time penalty in a thrilling 4-4 draw and Kovacic – who was standing on the edge of the box as a nerveless spot-kick was crashed into the top corner – appeared to give a fist bump when seeing the ball hit the net.

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GettyWHAT NEXT?

It is impossible to tell what was going through Kovacic’s mind at that point, unless the man himself speaks out, and it may be that he was merely geeing himself up for the time that remained on the clock. Chelsea fans are, however, taking his actions as an indicator that he will forever be one of them.

Saqlain addition a big boost – Miller

Nikita Miller, the West Indies spinner, said that spin coach Saqlain Mushtaq’s advice will be crucial in the limited-overs series against England that begins on February 28

Renaldo Matadeen24-Feb-2014Nikita Miller, the West Indies spinner, said that spin coach Saqlain Mushtaq’s advice will be crucial in the limited-overs series against England that begins on February 28. Saqlain was brought in to help West Indies’ spinners after a clinic at the WICB High Performance Centre last year and Miller believes his addition has benefitted players like Samuel Badree, Sunil Narine and himself.”Mushy [Mushtaq] has been helping me for a little time now,” Miller said. “We have a few days before the first ODI and there are some things we are going to work on. We spoke about a few points and I’ll be going into the nets with him and work on them because England is a much tougher opponent. Hopefully I can bring the sort of form forward that I had in New Zealand but it will be challenging indeed.”Miller led the spin attack in the only ODI against Ireland at Sabina Park and returned figures of 10-0-30-2, setting the platform for West Indies’ four-wicket win. “I haven’t played here [Jamaica] since 2010 and looked forward to the challenge and playing at home,” he said. “It gives you that extra push. I think I bowled well enough.”It was great to see that we got the runs quite comfortably but we lost too many wickets in the end. Based on the previous two games, the pitch played a lot better for batters. It offered some sharp spin, which allowed us to put them [Ireland] under a bit of pressure early on. It was a bit of support but not as much as in the T20s.”While Miller is not a part of the West Indies World T20 squad, he is aiming for the World Cup in 2015 and still believes that he can be part of future T20 plans.

Pakistan players set for pay hike

Pakistan’s centrally contracted players will now get a 25% hike in their monthly retainers, the PCB announced on Wednesday

ESPNcricinfo staff14-May-2014Pakistan’s centrally contracted players will now get a 25% hike in their monthly retainers, the PCB announced on Wednesday. This is in addition to hikes of 25% in Test match fee and 10% for ODIs.However, the board is yet to finalise the list of contracted players in all categories. The list will be released after the conclusion of the ongoing camp at the National Cricket Academy in Lahore. The revised salaries come into effect from January 1, 2014. The PCB will also release up to 50% of the players’ remunerations for those who have represented Pakistan in international matches since January 2014.The system of bonuses has also been revised to incentivise outstanding individual performances and series wins.

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