Felipe Alves, sem espaço no Fortaleza, está perto de ir para o Juventude

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Após perder espaço na equipe do Fortaleza e de fazer treinos separados até a definição do seu futuro, parece que o goleiro Felipe Alves está perto de ter o seu futuro definido para reforçar a equipe do Juventude em caráter de empréstimo.

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>Confira também o canal do LANCE! no TikTok

A informação, publicada pelo diário ‘O Povo’, é de que as diretorias do dois clubes vem mantendo contato para fazerem os acertos finais do acordo que, inicialmente, teria duração até o fim de 2022.

Quando de sua chegada ao Leão do Pici, em 2019, Felipe tinha a chancela de ser trazido pelo técnico e uma das “cabeças” do projeto de estruturação do clube para almejar resultados mais ambiciosos, Rogério Ceni.

Porém, com o passar dos confrontos onde Juan Pablo Vojvoda foi se ambientando no comando técnico do tricolor, ficou claro que a opção prioritária seria Marcelo Boeck. Além disso, o Fortaleza contratou outro nome para a posição, Fernando Miguel, e deixou as oportunidades para Felipe Alves ainda mais restritas.

Scott Boland six-for leads humiliation as Australia romp to Ashes glory

England blown away in little more than an hour on third morning for third Test rout

Valkerie Baynes28-Dec-2021Scott Boland’s six-wicket haul on his Test debut allowed Australia to wrap up the Ashes 3-0, by lunch on the third day at the MCG.Australia’s quicks continued their demolition job on England, with Boland adding to his two wickets from three balls during a devastating final hour on the second day, with four more on the third morning to seal an innings victory as the hosts retained the urn.Boland took six wickets in 21 balls in all while Mitchell Starc, who had a big hand in reducing England to 31 for 4 in a cauldron-like atmosphere on day two, added the wicket of Ben Stokes inside the first 25 minutes of the resumption, to end with 3 for 29.Pat Cummins, whose pressure was instrumental in keeping England’s beleaguered batters under Australia’s thumb, went unrewarded in England’s second innings, having helped restrict them to a first-innings total of 185 when he and Nathan Lyon claimed three wickets apiece.But the day – as short as it was – belonged to Boland, who was selected as an MCG specialist after his performances for Victoria and who became the fourth Indigenous Australian to play Test cricket. After taking 1 for 48 in England’s first innings, he was simply unplayable for a side with its confidence beaten and its batting in disarray. In a historic moment, Boland won the Mullagh Medal as Player of the Match, named after Johnny Mullagh, who toured England as part of the Australian Aboriginal team in 1868.With players from both sides cleared to resume after returning negative tests following a Covid scare the previous morning, England’s task always looked insurmountable, even with Stokes and Joe Root still in. But the emphatic way in which Australia rammed home their advantage consigned England to new lows, their 68 all-out the lowest Ashes total in Australia since 1936 and England’s lowest total in Australia since 1904.Starc rattled Stokes’ middle stump with a rapid, fuller ball that sailed through the gate as the batter moved forward in defence to remove the man still remembered for his heroics at Headingley in 2019 but who is in a much different place now after taking an extended break from the game.Scott Boland claimed six wickets in 21 balls to humiliate England•Getty Images

Boland entered the attack and struck with his fifth ball of the day, trapping Jonny Bairstow lbw for 5. Bairstow, dropped by Cameron Green at gully on the first ball of the over, reviewed the lbw decision, but it was upheld on umpire’s call on impact and hitting the stumps.Root must have wanted to disappear when a Cummins delivery struck him in the groin – the third time Root has suffered such an injury in just over a week. He shook it off more quickly than he did Starc’s effort in Adelaide, which came off the back of a serious knock in the nets which had sent him to hospital for scans earlier that day.Root hung around long enough to be England’s top-scorer – yet again – with just 28 this time, but he fell driving at Boland and edging to David Warner at slip. After scoring 1708 runs in 2021, Root ended the calendar year two runs shy of second-placed Viv Richards and 80 off Mohammad Yousuf’s record.England brought up another less-coveted record, however, when Mark Wood and Ollie Robinson departed in the space of three Boland deliveries without scoring, taking their side’s tally of ducks to 54 this year and equalling their worst performance in that department of 1998. Wood spooned a return catch to Boland to give him his five-for and then Robinson fenced at one outside off stump, stabbing a catch to Marnus Labuschagne at third slip.It was Green who bowled last man James Anderson for 2 to seal the result on a day that Australia – and Boland – will long remember. England, meanwhile, face a serious period of analysis if they are to prevent a 5-0 sweep.

West Ham wasted £36m on Moyes signing who earned more than Kudus

West Ham spent the best part of £120m last summer, making five new signings, four of which were considered big first-team additions to improve the squad ahead of their 2023/24 campaign, after their UEFA Conference League success.

The best deal of the lot is looking to be Mohammed Kudus, who joined from Ajax for just £38m, making 55 appearances for the club, scoring 16 goals and providing seven assists in 4,204 minutes played.

Player

Fee (£)

Mohammed Kudus

£38m

Edson Alvarez

£35.4m

James Ward-Prowse

£30m

Konstantinos Mavropanos

£19m

Andy Irving

£1.4m

West Ham also spent £19m on central defender Konstantinos Mavropanos from Stuttgart, who made 33 appearances for the Hammers last season, scoring once, and totalling 2,706 minutes played.

But to replace Declan Rice, the Hammers made a few signings, with Edson Alvarez and James Ward-Prowse joining the club, one of which is still there, and one of which is now already out on loan elsewhere.

It’s safe to say of all those signings, it is Kudus who has enjoyed a far better year…

Mohammed Kudus' time at West Ham

Kudus made 45 appearances in his first campaign for West Ham, scoring 14 goals, providing six assists, and totalling 3,511 minutes played.

The 24-year-old’s ability to drive with the ball, carry the team forward, create chances for himself and others, and unleash shots from a variety of zones, makes him an excellent addition for the Hammers.

This season has started in slower fashion for Kudus, scoring just two goals in his ten appearances, as West Ham have struggled to get going under new manager, Julen Lopetegui.

Mohammed Kudus celebrates for West Ham

The Ghana international, who is currently earning £90k-per-week, will also now serve a three-match ban, after his red card against Tottenham at the weekend. But another player on West Ham’s books was also sent off a few weeks ago, and he is currently on loan at Nottingham Forest.

Comparatively, he has not really earned the wage he’s been taking home.

James Ward-Prowse's failed time at West Ham

West Ham completed the signing of James Ward-Prowse in 2023, joining the club from Southampton for around £30m.

The 29-year-old midfielder is on £115k-per-week and £6m-per-year at West Ham, earning more than Kudus, Emerson, Alvarez, Tomas Soucek, and Michail Antonio, all players who remain a key part of the first-team squad.

West Ham midfielder James Ward-Prowse

The Englishman made 51 appearances for the Hammers last season, scoring seven goals and providing 11 assists but he flattered to deceive. Now, the midfielder is on loan at Nottingham Forest for the duration of the 2024/25 season having been alienated by the new manager.

Goals

0.15

0.06

0.23

Assists

0.26

0.06

0.07

xG

0.15

0.06

0.20

Progressive Carries

0.62

0.78

0.41

Progressive Passes

4.48

3.53

2.89

Pass Completion %

83.6%

86.1%

76.1%

Tackles

1.25

2.91

1.52

Blocks

0.90

2.16

1.57

Interceptions

1.01

1.55

1.26

Aerials Won

0.79

1.16

3.40

These metrics show Ward-Prowse only outperformed the other West Ham midfield options in two areas, with the most progressive passes per 90, and the most assists per 90.

However, with plenty of their progression and creation coming from more forward-thinking players, the other metrics such as defensive actions, and pass accuracy became more important to the team, which Alvarez and Soucek covered better.

Wolves midfielder James Ward-Prowse.

Extra defensive qualities, including the height of Alvarez and Soucek, was needed for David Moyes’ side, and as Lucas Paqueta could offer plenty of what Ward-Prowse was offering the team, he became less important and thus has been moved on by Lopetegui.

That’s helped cater for new midfielders such as Guido Rodriguez and Carlos Soler.

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فرنسا تتأهل بشق الأنفس أمام كرواتيا إلى نصف نهائي دوري الأمم الأوروبية (فيديو)

خاض منتخب فرنسا، مساء يوم الأحد، منافسات دور ربع نهائي بطولة دوري الأمم الأوروبية نسخة 2025، وذلك ضد نظيره منتخب كرواتيا.

وتلاقى المنتخبان على ملعب “فرنسا” في خضم لقاءات إياب مرحلة ربع نهائي البطولة، حيث فازت فرنسا بفضل ركلات الترجيح.

كانت مباراة الذهاب، يوم الخميس الماضي، قد انتهت بخسارة منتخب فرنسا بهدفين دون رد.

وسيطر التعادل السلبي على أحداث مباراة المنتخبين في الشوط الأول، حيث لم يتمكن الفريقان من التسجيل طوال الدقائق الـ45 الأولى.

واستمر الوضع كما هو حتى الدقيقة 52، حيث تمكن مايكل أوليز من تسجيل هدف التقدم لصالح منتخب فرنسا.

وفي الدقيقة 80، تمكن النجم عثمان ديمبلي من تسجيل الهدف الثاني لصالح منتخب فرنسا، لتشتعل المباراة، حيث أصبحت النتيجة 2/2 (مجموع الذهاب والإياب).

واحتكم المنتخبان إلى الأشواط الإضافية، حيث لم تتغير النتيجة، ليحتكما إلى ركلات الترجيح والتي حسمها منتخب فرنسا لصالحه بنتيجة 5/4.

وتأهلت فرنسا بذلك إلى نصف نهائي دوري الأمم الأوروبية حيث ستواجه إسبانيا التي تأهلت على حساب هولندا.

وتواجدت فرنسا بذلك في المجموعة الرابعة في تصفيات أوروبا المؤهلة إلى كأس العالم 2026 رفقة كل من أوكرانيا، آيسلندا وأذربيجان، في حين أن كرواتيا تتواجد في المجموعة الثانية عشر رفقة كل من التشيك، مونتنيجرو، جزر الفارو وجبل طارق.

West Ham wasted money on "nightmare" flop whose value has already halved

New boss Julen Lopetegui was given a war chest during his first summer in charge of the Irons, bringing in eight new permanent signings and two loan players, spending around £120.6m.

Jean-Clair Todibo and Carlos Soler both joined on loan from Ligue 1, with Todibo having a buy option in his deal.

West Ham 2024/25 summer signings

Player

Fee (£)

Maximilian Kilman

£39.6m

Crysencio Summerville

£24.4m

Niclas Füllkrug

£27m

Luis Guilherme

£19.2m

Aaron Wan-Bissaka

£14.7m

Guido Rodriguez

£0

Wes Foderingham

£0

Mohamadou Kante

?

Stats taken from Transfermarkt

One of the biggest signings made was German Niclas Füllkrug, joining from Dortmund for around £27m, as the Hammers continue to search for a clinical and reliable number nine.

The latest on Niclas Fullkrug's future at West Ham

West Ham opted for Fullkrug after weeks of searching for their striker target, with Jhon Duran being another name to consistently pop up over the summer.

The German has only made four appearances this season for the Hammers, suffering from an “injury nightmare” in the words of journalist Dom Smith since joining the club. Now, according to club insiders ClaretandHugh, it’s said that the striker simply “hasn’t settled in the UK” yet.

This would leave West Ham with just Michail Antonio and Danny Ings as striker options, the same situation they were in during the summer, which could force their hand in the January transfer window.

Fullkrug’s goal record last season was very strong, scoring 16 goals in 46 appearances, also providing ten assists, which makes it understandable as to why the Hammers wanted the 31-year-old.

However, for the fee paid, many questioned if it was too much for a player his age, and his valuation has already been depleted by half since!

Niclas Fullkrug's falling value at West Ham

The German who was signed for £27m is now only valued at a measly £12.5m according to Transfermarkt, more than half the value he was signed for just three months ago. This suggests the Hammers massively overpaid for the 31-year-old, and could rue their decision.

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West Ham can’t afford to wait things out with Fullkrug, as Antonio and Ings have only scored one goal each this season, with the 34-year-old Antonio making 12 appearances, and the 32-year-old Ings making six appearances.

Fullkrug vs Antonio & Ings – 2024/25

Stats (per 90 mins)

Fullkrug

Antonio

Ings

Goals

0.00

0.13

0.67

xG

0.43

0.26

1.25

Progressive Carries

2.86

2.70

2.50

Progressive Passes

0.00

1.89

0.00

Shots Total

2.00

2.31

3.33

Key Passes

1.43

1.08

1.25

Shot-Creating Actions

1.43

2.43

5.00

Aerial Duels Won

11.4

1.62

6.25

Stats taken from FBref

When analysing these metrics, you have to take into account the minutes played by each player, as it massively affects the per 90 stats. Ings, for example, has only played 134 minutes across six outings this season, which explains his high goals per 90, and xG per 90.

Fullkrug, despite playing fewer games than Ings (four) has 139 minutes played, which explains his 11.4 aerial duels won, a stat which is clearly skewed by these per 90 numbers, whilst Antonio has the majority share of the minutes, playing 700 so far.

Michail Antonio

With this trio, you clearly get a lot of different attributes. Antonio is a hard worker who runs the channels and carries the ball forward for his side, Fullkrug is a target man type who wins aerial battles and links play well and then Ings is more clinical in and around the box, and likes to get his shots off.

However, as the three are all in their 30s, the Hammers clearly lack a youthful option up front who can offer consistent minutes and goal threat, which could force their hand to offload one of these ageing forwards and replace them with a younger striker to take the number nine mantle.

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Reporter shares update on West Ham Mourinho move amid Lopetegui pressure

A fresh report has emerged on the future of Julen Lopetegui at West Ham United, and his potential replacement at the London Stadium, as the London side continue to struggle in the early stretches of the Premier League campaign.

Lopetegui under early pressure at West Ham

Though he only arrived over the summer, Lopetegui is already headed firmly towards last-chance saloon in east London after a poor start to the season.

After 11 games, his side sit in the bottom half of the Premier League table with just 12 points to their name, losing five times and conceding 19 goals, among the highest in the division.

It follows a summer in which they laid their ambitions to join the elite in the top flight, spending over £130m on the likes of Niclas Fullkrug, Crysencio Summerville, Aaron Wan-Bissaka and Jean-Clair Todibo.

Their summer spending was the fifth-highest in the Premier League, just £1m less than London rivals Tottenham, but they are yet to see any return on their investment as they struggle towards the bottom of the division ahead of their trip to Newcastle United.

Premier League’s biggest spenders summer 2024

Club

Outlay

Chelsea

£219.6m

Manchester United

£205.9m

Brighton

£192m

Tottenham

£133.5m

West Ham United

£132.5m

Their form has seen fingers pointed at Lopetegui, who became the first West Ham boss to lose his first three home games and has fared little better since, with very few truly impressive performances from his side and little indication that results will improve in the future.

Now, an update on his future and potential replacement has been provided.

West Ham update on potential Mourinho move

That comes courtesy of Football Insider reporter Pete O’Rourke, who claims that Fenerbahce boss Jose Mourinho has “switched on a charm offensive to circulate his name around clubs in the Premier League” as he eyes a potential return to the top flight amid rumours he was very interested in the West Ham job.

However, a move to West Ham is unlikely for several reasons, not least because the ex-Chelsea man would be an expensive hire and Lopetegui’s departure would also be costly given his recent arrival.

Meanwhile, the report adds that “as things stand, the club are set to grant Lopetegui more time to turn things around ahead of a favourable run of fixtures in the Premier League”, with the Hammers facing Leicester City, Bournemouth and Wolves all in their next five Premier League games.

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Mourinho has also ruled out a move this season, explaining to Sky Sports: “Let’s make it clear for the next two years, this season and the next, nobody would take me from Fenerbahce.”

However, a future move could well be on the cards, with the Portuguese coach openly revealing his desire to return to a London club.

“I had three clubs in England, Chelsea twice, so in four different periods I’ve coached in England and I loved it. I’ve been so, so lucky to live in beautiful countries and beautiful cities like Istanbul, Rome, Madrid, Milan but my family lives in London. London is home so one day I want to be back, unless nobody wants me.”

For now though, should West Ham opt to part ways with Lopetegui they will seemingly have to look elsewhere to find a new coach.

Fresh report now reveals just how close Gary O’Neil is to Wolves exit

A fresh update regarding the future of Wolves boss Gary O’Neil has emerged ahead of his side’s clash with Crystal Palace.

Winless Wolves face relegation rat-race

Wolves bravely battled back from 2-0 down to rescue a point at the AMEX stadium in their most recent Premier League outing, with Matheus Cunha finding the net in stoppage time to complete the comeback after Brighton had squandered a glorious chance to make it 3-1.

After the game, O’Neil held up his hands, admitting that he had got it wrong in the first half.

“I’m a little bit disappointed, with myself really, that I started with five [at the back]. I know we did well with a five-back against Manchester City, and [I thought] the lads deserved another go at it.

“I didn’t think a five-back would fit very well against Brighton today, but at least we were quick enough to change it at half-time.

“At 85 minutes, when Brighton scored their second goal, I thought I was going to be stood here answering some more tough questions.”

However, beyond the short-term jubilation the reality of their situation once more set in for Wolves, who are one of three sides yet to win a game this season and sit 19th in the Premier League almost a quarter of the way into the season. They have just two points and have conceded a mammoth 25 goals, five more than any other side in the division.

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Gary O'Neil given two games to save his job

Now, a fresh report has claimed that the Wolves boss is under increasing pressure to deliver results at Molineux. So far, there has been an acceptance that Wolves have faced one of the hardest starts to the season of any Premier League season, playing all of the current top five (Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester City, Liverpool and Aston Villa) as well as Newcastle United.

Now though, there is set to be a change of tone, with Football Insider reporting that the next two games are crucial in O’Neil’s future in the Wolves technical area. The Old Gold face 18th placed Crystal Palace in their next game, before a mammoth clash with bottom of the table Southampton ahead of the November international break.

Wolves’ next five games

Crystal Palace (Home)

Southampton (Home)

Fulham (Away)

Bournemouth (Home)

Everton (Away)

And they claim that poor results in those games will “change the mood’” in the Midlands, with the upcoming games “critical” for O’Neil’s future, though it is added that the Wolves boss “still has the backing of the changing room”.

However, failure to pick up points against their direct relegation rivals may prove too much for both the Wolves fans and the board, with the prospect of a drop to the Championship likely to become an increasing reality.

Should Wolves part ways with O’Neil over the international break, any new manager would be the beneficiary of a favourable run of games, with the Old Gold not facing a member of the “top six” again until Boxing Day.

Women's ODI World Cup made free in Australia after snub termed 'slap in the face'

The matches will be available without a subscription on the Kayo platform after Nine did not take the rights

AAP and ESPNcricinfo staff23-Jan-2022The Women’s ODI World Cup will be removed from a paywall after Alyssa Healy labelled the Nine Network’s failure to pick up the event as a “slap in the face”.Healy and fellow players were left annoyed on Sunday morning when it was confirmed that Nine had purchased simulcast rights from Fox to broadcast the next two men’s World Cups. However missing from the release was March’s Women’s ODI World Cup in New Zealand. That prompted Healy to offer up 20 vouchers to steaming platform Kayo for followers on social media.Foxtel have since confirmed to AAP they made the call on Sunday to make it part of their “freebies pack”, meaning viewers will be able to watch it on Kayo without a subscription.The move will please both cricket fans and players, after both Healy and Rachael Haynes criticised the move.”It’s a little bit of a slap in the face to say that we’re not commercially viable,” Healy said. “That someone doesn’t want to stick their hand up and say, ‘we’re going to put this on the telly so that everyone can watch it’. It’s a little bit hard to take in that regard.”Not having it on free-to-air excludes a fair chunk of our population who don’t want to pay or can’t afford to pay for subscription TV.”Under the broadcast structure, Foxtel purchases the rights to all ICC tournaments from the ICC’s global partner Star Sports.Fox can then on-sell the rights to free-to-air broadcasters, which is how Nine picked up the rights to this year’s Men’s T20 World Cup and next year’s ODI World Cup.Nine also simulcast the 2020 Women’s T20 World Cup in Australia, attracting 825,000 viewers for the final as well as criticism for placing it on secondary channel 9GEM while Married At First Sight was on the main channel.”I think people get obsessed with bums on seats and numbers at the ground,” Healy said. “But the reality of modern day sport at the minute is that’s not realistic for people to get there and watch the games live.”So for us it’s probably more relevant the TV audiences that we’re getting and even just looking the other night I think the first T20 here in Adelaide actually got really good number of of people watching the game considering we were fighting Nick Kyrgios for TV time.”AAP sought comment from Nine on Sunday if they had been offered the rights to broadcast the Women’s World Cup, but did not receive a direct answer.”Nine’s sub license agreement with Foxtel only includes rights to the Men’s T20 World Cup,” a Channel Nine spokesperson said in reply.The removal of the paywall subsequently came at the same time Haynes called for change.”It sends a really powerful message to see our female athletes have an opportunity to share in the spotlight,” Haynes said. “The visibility is extremely important. I am disappointed it’s not on free-to-air TV in Australia.”Meanwhile Nine confirmed it will screen every game involving Aaron Finch’s side at this year’s men’s T20 World Cup, which is being staged in Australia from October 16 to November 13.The network has flagged it will broadcast “other big match-ups”, likely to include a blockbuster between India and Pakistan at the MCG on October 23.Every match at the two World Cups will be screened on Foxtel and Kayo.Last year’s Men’s T20 World Cup, where Australia won the title for the first time, was not available on free-to-air in the country because when the initial broadcast deal was signed it was due to be a Champions Trophy event.

Ranked: The 10 best badge redesigns in football

Centre-backs at full-back, VAR lines, newly promoted teams attempting to play out from the back.

There are several modern tropes that often get the more traditional football fan brandishing their fists in pure anger, and the redesign of club badges have not been exempt from that over the years – looking at you, Leeds United. But occasionally, new designs are rightly welcomed with open arms.

With that said, we’ve taken a look at the redesigns that have gone rather well following the news that Tottenham Hotspur have undergone a change of their own by simply removing the words from underneath their badge.

10 West Ham United (2016)

Now, this one may be a controversial shout – hence its place at number 10 – but West Ham United are one of few clubs to have done simplicity well. They moved on from Upton Park and into the modern London Stadium, which receives mixed reviews in its own right – and took a new badge with them, introducing the change in 2016.

Ditching the crest’s shape and the castle, the Hammers replaced their old badge with a new shape based on the bow of HMS Warrior – the first armour-plated, iron-hulled warship built and launched at Thames Ironworks in 1860. For all the modern touches, it remains a badge decorated with history.

9 Bristol City (2019)

Replacing the heraldic crest with a simple robin in 2019, which showcases their red home shirt, Bristol City stepped into the modern world through simplicity in what was a successful badge change. The new design was chosen to reflect the club’s progressive attitude and to create an identity that the fans could be proud of.

A robin, meanwhile, was picked because of its symbol of hope and rebirth, as well as its place in the club’s history. Modern, simple and effective, City’s redesign was much-needed in 2019. However, whether the Robins are one day reborn in the Premier League remains to be seen.

8 Fiorentina (2022)

Unveiling a club manifesto alongside a new badge in 2022, Fiorentina had the task of redesigning a historic pillar of the Florence community. In the end, like many others, not much change was needed. The Italian club simply changed the size and shape of the badge whilst staying true to the violet colour and removing the gold outline.

Perhaps the gold outline will return one day if Fiorentina find themselves at the top of Italian football, but for now, their redesign remains simpler and more in line with the club’s main colours.

7 Chelsea (2005)

Chelsea’s badge from the early 2000s will be unrecognisable to some. After all, the Blues’ decision to redesign their crest was the beginning of their Premier League success, meaning that many will associate their current badge with the majority of their history, which is certainly ideal for the designers.

A new badge was the right choice, it must be said. Chelsea’s old crest was pretty dated, with a yellow and blue lion in between the CFC letters, creating a very ‘old First Division’ look rather than that of the Premier League’s prestige.

Stepping into the Premier League title race just as the cameras could take a look at their new badge, Chelsea’s crest, which is a modern take on their badge from their previous 50s heyday, is now one of the most recognisable in English football.

6 Arsenal (2002)

Before Chelsea, Arsenal paved the way for the modern badge by swapping their old design, which featured gold, red and the famous cannon that we are all familiar with these days. For over two decades, the Gunners have had the modern design, which kept the gold cannon but changed the main colours to red with a hint of blue.

In the last year, we’ve even seen the cannon alone featured on club kits in what would be the ultimate change. The former crest has plenty of history and remains a favourite, but the current logo has become iconic in its own right.

5 Inter (2021)

There would have been plenty of nerves surrounding Inter’s redesign in 2021 after Juventus had gone too far the other way towards minimalism whilst binning a historic look. But those at the San Siro did not make the same mistake. Rather than ditching the ideas in their previous crest, it seems as though Inter simply updated them into a modern look.

Where Juventus failed, Inter enjoyed success, and that change has ironically been reflected on the pitch ever since, with the former struggling to take back their Serie A crown in a frustrating few years.

4 Deportivo Alaves (2020)

Deportivo Alaves completed the task that several top clubs failed to achieve when they redesigned their badge to such success in 2020. Simplifying the appearance, the sky blue colour was ditched in favour of a blue and white design, whilst the flag now slots straight into the new crest shape.

A badge worthy of a La Liga place, Alaves will now be looking to maintain their status as a top-flight club in style for a third consecutive campaign to represent a new era.

3 Brentford (2016)

Speaking of clubs taking new badges into a new era with them, Brentford redesigned theirs for the first time in 23 years back in 2016 and have not looked back since. Swapping the rather chaotic and classic English design, Brentford decided to focus on the bee alongside the red and white colours to create a far more modern badge now well-recognised in the division.

It’s fitting that those in west London eventually took their new badge into the Premier League rather than their old design, which now represents an era outside of England’s top tier.

2 Man City (2016)

At the time, ditching the classic eagle didn’t seem like a good idea for Manchester City. Many were unsure about their new badge, but time is a great healer and their redesign now has a place among the best we’ve seen in football. A design now associated with such success, Man City took a step back in history to redesign their 1974 look to create the badge that we see today.

As far as redesigns go in the Premier League, not many have done it better than Manchester City, which is proving to be the case for many other achievements.

1 Ajax (2025)

Recency bias can be argued here, but as things stand, Ajax’s redesign is refreshingly classy. A throwback to the crest that they used between 1928 and 1990, Ajax are celebrating their 125th anniversary next year in style. Ditching the red outline, the Dutch giants are set to return to the vintage and bolder look, perhaps in an attempt to return to their best on and off the pitch.

Club CEO Menno Geelen explained the decision, telling reporters (as relayed by FourFourTwo): “Ajax will celebrate its 125th anniversary on March 18. The celebrations will include the announcement of the return of the classic logo.

“We know that the majority of our fans have cherished this wish for years, and we felt that our 125th anniversary was the perfect moment to give back the classic logo to our fans and ourselves.”

Ruben Amorim is not to blame: Man Utd's beleaguered head coach isn't at fault for nightmare season, even if it ends in relegation

The Red Devils look worse than ever under the Portuguese tactician, but he's shown real bravery in dire circumstances

"I truly believe in the players. I know you [the media] don't believe a lot, but I do. I want to try new things. You guys don't think it's possible, but I do. Call me naïve, but I truly feel that I am the right man in the right moment. I could be wrong, but the earth will turn and the sun will rise again, it doesn't matter, and I am not worried about that. I truly believe that I am the right guy for this job."

Just three months on from his opening press conference, you have to wonder if Ruben Amorim still has that same belief in his Manchester United players. United have only won four of their first 15 Premier League games under the Portuguese, which has left them wasting away in 15th place, just 13 points above the drop zone.

Relegation still seems unlikely given how much newly-promoted-trio Ipswich, Leicester and Southampton have struggled, but it's not beyond the realms of possibility, because United have been bad. And even if Amorim keeps them in the top flight, he won't escape the embarrassment of overseeing their worst-ever finish in the Premier League era.

As such, some critics believe that Amorim has already been proven wrong. Their consensus is that United have hit a historic new low on the 40-year-old's watch, and the players haven't improved, so how can he be the "right guy" to take the club forward?

However, that viewpoint doesn't take into account the huge risk Amorim took by leaving his comfort zone at Sporting CP to try and clean up the mother of all messes at Old Trafford. Things were always going to get worse before they got better. Amorim has conducted himself with dignity and class in the face of unfair scrutiny, while also refusing to budge on his ideals, and might just be the ' guy' capable of seeing this daunting project through.

Getty 'We have so many problems'

United's latest setback came at Goodison Park on Saturday, as they were held to a 2-2 draw by Everton, who are enjoying a resurgence under former Red Devils boss David Moyes. But it could have been a lot worse.

Everton dominated the first half and went in at the break with a two-goal lead. Incredibly, United failed to muster a single shot on target in the first 70 minutes of the game, and only sparked into life after Bruno Fernandes curled a low free-kick into the far corner of the net to reduce the arrears.

Manuel Ugarte then earned United a point with a brilliant volleyed finish in the 80th minute, though they did also have VAR to thank for overturning a last-gasp Everton penalty. But there was no reason to celebrate, certainly not for Amorim.

When asked why he has yet to build any momentum in terms of positive results at United, Amorim told after the game: "I don't know. If I knew, I would change it. We have to continue to think in the next game, everything we do in the week we have to use it in the game. If we do that, we are near to winning games like we did in the second half. In this moment we need to focus on day by day. We need to survive this season, and then to think ahead.

"We have so many problems, and then when we go to the game and let the time pass, it's really hard. I don't want to just say the negative part, the second half was so much better in the belief. In the end we were near to winning this game."

AdvertisementGetty Images SportBest way to affect real change

Amorim's honesty has counted against him since his arrival at Old Trafford. His refusal to make any excuses for bad performances, or indeed try to sugar-coat the limitations of the squad, which he famously branded "the worst in the club's history", has led to questions about his leadership style.

But Ten Hag was the polar opposite, and there is no doubt whatsoever that his approach didn't work. The Dutchman became a laughing stock due to his delusional ravings, claiming United were making progress after every miserable defeat, and he showed blind loyalty to a host of players who were guilty of letting the team down.

At least now the man in charge is facing the problems head-on instead of burying his head in the sand. It's true: United are in survival mode, and Amorim is learning who he can and cannot trust in this time of crisis.

Most of the first-team squad are fighting for their futures at the club. Amorim is demanding the highest possible standards from a group severely lacking in quality and character, which is the best way to change the culture of mediocrity that has been allowed to run rampant at Old Trafford over the past decade.

GOAL/Getty'Stick to the plan!'

A large number of fans and pundits have called for Amorim to tweak his tactics to halt United's slide. This was the case again at half-time at Goodison Park, but Amorim never considered any kind of deviation from the 3-4-3 formation that served him so well at Sporting.

"[He told us] to stick to the plan, that's what the manager was very upset with us [about]," Fernandes revealed to . "To stick to the plan that we have during the season to make it work, even if things are not going well. We have to stick to what our ideas are."

Amorim confirmed as much by adding: "In training, we continue to do the same. That's why in the second half we didn't change anything, we have to do the same thing, but in a good way." So far, that attitude has merely led to Amorim being labelled as a stubborn, one-dimensional coach, but the bigger picture isn't being taken into consideration.

The main reason for Ten Hag's failure was his team's lack of identity. With no clear plan or patterns of play, United were relying purely on individual brilliance, which simply wasn't sustainable. United won the Carabao Cup and FA Cup in spite of Ten Hag's input, not because of it.

A bull-headed leader was needed to undo the damage done by Ten Hag, and that's exactly what United now have in Amorim. There will be progress if he is afforded patience, though much will also depend on if he is backed in the transfer market in the same way his predecessor was.

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Getty/GOALPaying the price

The "problems" Amorim keeps referring to are almost entirely out of his control. United's injury list is the main one, with Amad Diallo and Lisandro Martinez ruled out for the remainder of the season, Kobbie Mainoo facing "weeks" on the sidelines, and firm return dates still not forthcoming for Luke Shaw and Mason Mount.

Amad and Mainoo are arguably the best players in the United squad, along with Fernandes, while Martinez is the only centre-half who can naturally play on the left of Amorim's three-man defence. It's no surprise, then, that the Red Devils are shipping too many goals and creating so little at the other end.

The January signing of promising young full-back Patrick Dorgu was a step in the right direction, but United need to bring in more high-quality defensive reinforcements in the summer, and find a replacement for calamitous goalkeeper Andre Onana. Upfront, meanwhile, a major overhaul will be necessary.

Rasmus Hojlund was subbed for 17-year-old Chido Obi with United losing 2-0 against Everton, which means he has now gone 16 games across all competitions without scoring. It's fair to say now that the £72 million ($90m) United paid Atalanta for the Danish striker's services in 2023 was a complete waste of money.

That's not yet true of £36m ($45m) Joshua Zirkzee, who is clearly a decent footballer, but his end product has to improve dramatically. The enigmatic Argentine, Alejandro Garnacho, is just as frustrating in that respect, and Amorim has had no choice but to turn to the academy to try and muddle through.

It's clear Amorim is paying the price for Ten Hag's poor decision-making. How can he blamed for United's short-falls when he played no part in creating them?

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