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Carsley reveals he does have plan for England’s Bellingham-Foden-Palmer riddle as he says reputations count for nothing

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Carsley reveals he does have plan for England's Bellingham-Foden-Palmer riddle as he says reputations count for nothing

IT says much about the Cole Palmer phenomenon that he has been named as England’s Player of the Year without having ever started in a competitive international.

In Thursday’s Nations League clash with Greece, Lee Carsley will finally give the Chelsea talisman his chance to shine in a meaningful match for his country after a sensational start to the new season.

Cole Palmer was named England's Player of the Year on Wednesday

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Cole Palmer was named England’s Player of the Year on Wednesday
Lee Carsley has heaped praise on Chelsea superstar Palmer

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Lee Carsley has heaped praise on Chelsea superstar Palmer

Palmer’s first-half quadruple against Brighton earlier this month has raised his figures to an extraordinary 28 goals and 16 assists in 41 Premier League games for Chelsea.

Underused by both Pep Guardiola and Gareth Southgate, Palmer now has two true believers to manage him at club and international level.

Chelsea’s Enzo Maresca and Carsley — under whom Palmer won the European Under-21 Championship last year — both seem ready to build their teams around the sublime gifts of the 22-year-old Mancunian.

On and off the field, Palmer appears supremely unruffled.

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As Carsley says: “Whatever you throw at Cole, he deals with it.”

That includes the England Player of the Year award after just nine caps, seven as a substitute.

Though he did deliver a goal in the Euros final defeat by Spain and assist for Ollie Watkins’ dramatic late winner in the semi-final win over Holland.

If that gong, voted for by fans, feels like a cuff around the ear for Southgate, then it is also a rare slight on Guardiola, who allowed Palmer to join Chelsea last year because he could not guarantee him regular starts at Manchester City.

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Interim boss Carsley is careful not to openly criticise Southgate but, asked about the player’s lack of starting chances, he replied: “I can’t really talk, from a seniors point of view, about what’s gone on with Cole.

“But I’ve seen the impact he has had when he’s been given the opportunity.

New dad Jack Grealish reveals why he would never ask Bukayo Saka to babysit and which England pal he’ll go to for tips

“He had a similar role for us in the Under-21 Euros where he built into the tournament and then started in the final.

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“Cole is in a brilliant position. He has really found his feet at Chelsea, he is highly-rated, he’s getting minutes, he’s showing that he can handle the intensity of playing game after game.

“So that’s been a real plus for him and we’re getting the benefit of that.

“Because when you talk about players who are in form, the fact that he’s getting so much exposure and his numbers in terms of goals and assists is brilliant for us.

“Ultimately, he’s still a young player, he’s still got a lot of improving to do.

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“Even though he’s at an incredible limit at the moment, I still think he can get better.”

Carsley admits it will be tough to include all of Jude Bellingham, Palmer and Foden

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Carsley admits it will be tough to include all of Jude Bellingham, Palmer and Foden

Carsley spoke last week about the difficulties of trying to fit Palmer, Real Madrid Galactico Jude Bellingham and Footballer of the Year Phil Foden into the same eleven, as all of them covet the No 10 role.

That trio all missed last month’s Nations League 2-0 wins over Ireland and Finland.

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And Carsley now faces a fascinating selection dilemma against the Greeks, who top the group ahead of England on goal difference.

While Foden has often started wide for club and country, Carsley — who worked with the player as a City youth coach — is adamant that his best position is in a more central role.

Carsley said: “It’s been a few years but I spent a lot of time with him at Manchester City with the Under-18s and also England Under-21s.

“Phil’s an unbelievable player, we’re very lucky to have someone with his talent and mentality.

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“And we now need to make sure we put him in positions where he can really affect the opposition.

“Playing him in the wider positions, he can do it, but we’d have to change the way we play to get the best out of him.

“In central areas, Phil’s at his most effective.”

Carsley worked closely with Phil Foden at Manchester City Under-18s and England Under-21s

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Carsley worked closely with Phil Foden at Manchester City Under-18s and England Under-21s

Whether Foden, Palmer and Bellingham can start together, we are unlikely to find out either at Wembley or against Finland in Helsinki on Sunday, given that all three are having their workloads managed after injuries.

But asked about this selection conundrum, Carsley said: “I’ve definitely got a plan in place.

“The beauty of this job is you get a lot of time to think.

“In between driving from game to game, you are constantly thinking about combinations and relationships.

“Those three are brilliant players but we have a squad of really exciting, talented players.

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“So you have to have that feeling you’ve earned your place — rather than try and shoe-horn players into positions.

“You get diluted as a head coach if you’re picking players who are out of form, based on what they’ve done in the past.”

That sounded like a veiled criticism of Southgate at the Euros — and it’s an opinion shared by the voting public.

Just imagine how good England’s Player of the Year might be once he’s actually starting matches.

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England ratings vs Finland: Kane bags double on his big day… but he’s not the Three Lions’ star man

TRENT ALEXANDER-ARNOLD showed his brilliance as Harry Kane’s brace saw England beat Finland.

Interim boss Lee Carsley maintained his 100 per cent win record in charge of England.

SunSports Tom Barclay has given their ratings of the England players…

Jordan Pickford – 6

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Had nothing to do.

Trent Alexander-Arnold – STAR MAN 9

England’s best player as he supplied some beautiful balls from deep that on another day would have led to a glut of assists.

He did get one in the end, although that was more thanks to Harry Kane’s lethal finishing.

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Ezri Konsa – 6

Showed his ability on the ball with a super ball through for Bukayo Saka on the half hour.

Twisted his ankle early in the second half, surprisingly played on before being replaced on the hour.

John Stones – 6

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Played at left-sided centre-back before shifting when Levi Colwill came on.

Solid though not much to deal with. Now 19 short of 100 caps.

Rico Lewis – 7

In the right place to snuff out early danger from ex-Norwich man Teemu Pukki.

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Came close to a goal on his second England cap when prodding wide after the break.

Declan Rice – 5

Lost possession to give Finland their one and only big chance which Topi Kesinen should have squared to Pukki, but instead fired wildly over.

Angel Gomes – 7

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Wanted the ball from the off, just like Lee Carsley thought he would. Deliciously drilled cross-field ball to Alexander-Arnold early doors showed his range.

Bukayo Saka – 7

Almost scored and almost assisted in a lively display.

Unlucky that Kane was millimetres offside after the centurion had headed home the Arsenal man’s wicked delivery.

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Jack Grealish – 7

Enjoyed being in the heart of the action at No10 again, as he did on Saturday against the Republic of Ireland.

Carsley clearly likes him – it will be fascinating to see what happens when Mssrs Bellingham, Foden and Palmer all return.

Anthony Gordon – 7

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Caused problems down the left with his rapid pace – how we needed some of that in the Euros.

But did not have on his shooting boots as he fluffed a decent chance early in the second half.

Harry Kane – 8

Two blistering finishes took the centurion to an astonishing 68 goals in 100 caps.

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Was denied the chance of a hat-trick in front of his family when subbed off to a standing ovation for the final ten.

Kane said he fancies his chances of reaching a ton of international goals – and it does not seem fanciful.

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Levi Colwill (on for Konsa, 61) – 6

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Next to no threat from Finland by the time he came on.

Eberechi Eze (on for Gordon, 66) – 6

Raced on to yet another special Trent pass but could not loop it over the keeper.

Noni Madueke (on for Saka, 66) – 7

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Looked to make an impact every time he got the ball on debut. Excellent one-two with Trent saw the Chelsea man tee up Kane’s second.

Marc Guehi (on for Stones, 80) – 6

As with Colwill, little to do.

Jarrod Bowen (on for Kane, 81) – 6

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Played up top after Kane went off for the final minutes, as he has done for West Ham.

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Saskia Clark: America’s Cup a ‘big deal’ for women, says ex-Olympian

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Saskia Clark: America's Cup a 'big deal' for women, says ex-Olympian

“Alongside the sailing bit, there’s a lot of background work in engineering and boat building, careers that haven’t been that accessible for females so we’re really trying to push the science, technology, engineering and maths aspects to get young women and girls interested in those career paths.

“We’ve done some roadshows in schools in the UK and a big thread of the campaign is trying to push that gender equity.”

The Parkway team was co-founded by Mills and Ainslie in 2022 to fast-track promising sailors and increase diversity in the sport.

More than 300 sailors applied to take part, and 18 months of trials followed before the team was whittled down to the final dozen.

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Others taking part include Anna Burnet, who won a silver medal at the Tokyo Games in 2021 and fellow Olympians Ellie Aldridge, Saskia Tidey and Freya Black.

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Watch cruiserweight champ Jai Opetaia take 44 PUNCHES to stomach in brutal training routine ahead of Jack Massey fight

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Watch cruiserweight champ Jai Opetaia take 44 PUNCHES to stomach in brutal training routine ahead of Jack Massey fight

JAI OPETAIA took 44 punches to his stomach in a brutal training routine ahead of his blockbuster bout this weekend.

The IBF cruiserweight champion, 29, is set to defend his belt against Britain’s Jack Massey in Saudi Arabia this weekend.

Jai Opetaia took 44 unguarded shots to the body during his session

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Jai Opetaia took 44 unguarded shots to the body during his sessionCredit: SunSport
The IBF cruiserweight champion is preparing for his huge title defence this weekend

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The IBF cruiserweight champion is preparing for his huge title defence this weekendCredit: SunSport
Opetaia, 29, is preparing to fight Jack Massey

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Opetaia, 29, is preparing to fight Jack MasseyCredit: SunSport

Aussie Opetaia has been stepping up his preparation for the fight with intense training sessions.

In footage filmed by SunSport, the southpaw can be seen taking 44 shots to the stomach in quick succession.

Throughout the 34-second sequence, Opetaia makes no attempt to fight back or defend the blows.

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The 25-0 bruiser was last in action in May against Mairis Briedis.

On that occasion he earned back his IBF title, having previously vacated the belt.

Massey, 31, will attempt to dethrone Opetaia in Saturday’s much-anticipated bout.

The Cheshire-lad spent 2022 scaffolding with his brother, before a narrow points loss to heavyweight Joseph Parker the following year got his career moving again.

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In an emotional chat with SunSport, Massey recounted his experiences working alongside his dad at a brake pad factory.

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He said: “My dad has worked at the same brake pad factory for 40 years.

“When I was there he would always say to me: ‘Do you want to be stuck here like me for the rest of your life – or do you want to make something of yourself in boxing?’

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I was packaging up brake pads and considered hanging up my gloves while scaffolding, now I’m making my way in boxing

“When I used to work with my brother, he would say ‘do you really want to be doing this s***?’

“They both told me I could make something of my life through boxing and that has stuck with me.

“It’s been a bit like that Matt Damon film where he is really intelligent and his mate tells him the best thing that could happen was that he drives to collect him for another day on site and Damon has gone.

“They always told me it would be offensive to them if he didn’t go on and make something of himself. And that sticks in my mind.

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“The fellas on sites and in factories are the boxing fans in our country – so it means a lot and it reminds me why I do it.”

Jack Massey is ready for this Saturday night

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Jack Massey is ready for this Saturday nightCredit: Getty

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Alisson: Liverpool goalkeeper set for at least one month out injured

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Alisson: Liverpool goalkeeper set for at least one month out injured


Liverpool goalkeeper Alisson is expected to be out until at least mid-November with a hamstring injury.

The Brazil international was hurt in the 1-0 win at Crystal Palace on Saturday and was replaced by Vitezslav Jaros after 79 minutes.

Liverpool do not expect Alisson to be back before the next international break, which takes place 11-19 November following a round of league games.

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Prior to that, the Premier League leaders face top-flight matches against Chelsea, Arsenal, Brighton and Aston Villa, while they play RB Leipzig and Bayer Leverkusen in the Champions League and Brighton in the Carabao Cup.

Caoimhin Kelleher missed the game at Palace because of illness but is expected to replace Alisson in goal.

“It is quite clear then that he [Kelleher] is the number two,” said Liverpool boss Arne Slot following the game at Selhurst Park.

“Otherwise, the last time Alisson was injured I would have played Vit, but I played Caoimhin. So Caoimhin is the number two and did really well.”

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Kelleher came in for Alisson when the 32-year-old had a spell out in September, playing in a league win against Bournemouth and League Cup victory against West Ham.

Liverpool’s first game following the November international break is at Southampton on 24 November, before they then face Real Madrid, Manchester City, Newcastle United and local rivals Everton.



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Formula 1 in 10 Years: ‘Drivers as gladiators a thing of the past’

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Formula 1 in 10 Years: 'Drivers as gladiators a thing of the past'

Some of the new elements introduced for 2026 are developments prompted by a crash for Romain Grosjean at the 2020 Bahrain Grand Prix which even Hollywood couldn’t have dreamt up.

On the first lap, Grosjean made contact with Daniil Kyvat’s Alpha Tauri, which pitched his Haas into a barrier at high speed, exploding on impact as the car became wedged between the metal bars of the barriers which flank a large part of every Formula 1 circuit.

It was the type of crash the sport hadn’t witnessed for decades, and one which frequently led to fatalities in the past.

Little has ever looked more gladiatorial than Grosjean rising from a huge ball of flames after squeezing between charred and twisted steel and striding across to a waiting ambulance, received by disbelieving marshals and medical staff.

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“The engine split from the chassis,” says Tombazis, “which is OK as such, but in splitting it ripped the chassis apart, and so it left the fuel tank exposed, thus fuel came out and it caused a fireball.

“We were very fortunate the driver was conscious and therefore could come out.”

Tombazis then explained how the post-crash analysis process worked.

“Every car has an electronic box which logs a lot of signals,” he says.

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“It logs all the G-[force] loads of the car, therefore it’s possible to calculate the trajectory of car as it was out of control and how quickly it decelerated and how hard it hit the barrier, and how it came to rest.

“This data gets analysed. In addition, the remains of the car, the chassis, gets analysed.

“Some of the subsequent analysis we did, we worked on how the engine would come off the chassis and applied further regulation to ensure that when the engine rips off, the failure points are bolts connecting the engine to the chassis and not the chassis itself.

“So now if things go as planned in similar circumstances, maybe the engine comes apart, but the chassis remains intact and the fuel tank also. So that’s one outcome of that accident.”

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Grosjean, who now races for Lamborghini in the United States, credits the ‘halo’ head protection device for saving his life, after the structure around the cockpit helped to create enough space in the barrier for the Frenchman to escape.

“Without it, I wouldn’t be able to speak with you today,” said Grosjean after the crash.

There have been several clear instances where serious injury has been averted thanks to the halo and other innovations across the sport.

F1’s current quickest man – McLaren’s Lando Norris – agrees, highlighting the crash between Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen at the 2021 Italian Grand Prix.

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“It can hold a number of double decker buses without breaking,” he says. “Given the speed we do, it can deflect an enormous about of things.

“We saw with Lewis and Max, where Max’s car ended on top of Lewis. If [the halo] was not there it would have been on Lewis’ head – you never want to know what the consequences might have been if we didn’t have the halo.”

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Chelsea legend reveals boozy Christmas party tactic that stopped him ‘being in a coma for seven days’

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Chelsea legend reveals boozy Christmas party tactic that stopped him 'being in a coma for seven days'

CHELSEA legend Gus Poyet has recalled the sneaky Christmas party tractic he used to avoid drinking too much booze.

The former Blues star jokingly explained how he cleverly avoided “being placed in a coma for seven days” during Chelsea nights out.

Gus Poyet recalled his brilliant party trick to avoid getting too drunk at Chelsea

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Gus Poyet recalled his brilliant party trick to avoid getting too drunk at Chelsea

Poyet reckons he mastered the practice of safe drinking during his five years in West London between 1997 and 2001.

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In fact, the Uruguayan finally held his hands up to admit that he would turn up hours late to avoid a deadly hangover.

Poyet told The Times:“For Christmas nights out in London the players would get together at two o’clock, so I would get there at seven.

“If I start at two — I’m not going to name names but the way some could drink was unbelievable.

“And the next day, they train — no problem. Me, I would be in a coma for seven days.”

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When asked about his social life at Chelsea, he said: “Top. But the drinking culture — I was shocked. I remember being injured, my first night out.

“They gave me a beer and I’m holding it, I don’t know if I’m going to drink. And then they bring me another one and put it in my other hand.

“I adapted. I knew you have to give something of yourself and even if I wasn’t a big drinker I needed to be present. Part of the team.

Poyet won the FA Cup and the Uefa Cup Winners' Cup during his stint at Chelsea - with Dennis Wise  and Roberto Di Matteo

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Poyet won the FA Cup and the Uefa Cup Winners’ Cup during his stint at Chelsea – with Dennis Wise and Roberto Di Matteo

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“So I never missed a night out, but did it my way.”

When asked about the football, Poyet said: “It was physical. I liked it. Away from home, north, it was always tough. Leeds!

Tottenham legend Gus Poyet explains why Ange Postecoglou can end trophy hoodoo and win Carabao Cup despite Coventry horror show

“A typical question they ask me everywhere in the world is: ‘who was the toughest player you play against?’

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“Well, every time you were facing Roy Keane you needed to be prepared. Because you knew he was coming.”

Poyet scored 49 goals in 145 Chelsea midfield appearances after joining as a free agent.

He joined Tottenham in May 2021 for around £2.2m and scored 14 goals in his debut season, helping Spurs reach the League Cup final where they lost 2-1 to Blackburn.

His time at Spurs was blighted by injuries after he sustained cruciate ligament damage for the second time in his career in August 2002.

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After hanging up his boots in 2004, Poyet began his coaching career as assistant coach of Swindon Town.

He later managed Brighton, Sunderland, AEK Athens and the Greece national team until his contract ended in March this year.

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Women T20 World Cup: Watch South Africa’s Sune Luus’ ‘fabulous’ caught & bowled

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Women T20 World Cup: Watch South Africa's Sune Luus' 'fabulous' caught & bowled

Watch Sune Luus’s “unbelievable” caught and bowled as she removes Scotland’s Lorna Jack-Brown during the second innings of their Women’s T20 World Cup match in Dubai.

FOLLOW LIVE: Women’s T20 World Cup: South Africa vs Scotland

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