Barcelona, Arsenal and the top 10 spending clubs in the January transfer window

Money might not be able to buy you love, but it can secure you success and heavyweight teams around the world have been chasing the dream once again

Getty10Borussia Dortmund£21.3m on Manuel Akanji and Sergio GomezAdvertisementGetty Images9Tottenham Hotspur£25m on Lucas MouraGetty Images8Athletic Bilbao£28m on Inigo MartinezENJOYED THIS STORY?

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Getty Images7Beijing Guoan£35.3m on Cedric Bakambu

Premier League Team of the Week: Hazard & Lacazette star in Best XI

The in-form Chelsea forward continued his fine goalscoring form this weekend, while his Arsenal counterpart struck twice against Fulham

Getty1Alexandre Lacazette | ST | ArsenalThe Frenchman scored with both of his shots on target against Fulham, taking his scoring tally to four for the 2018-19 PL campaign.AdvertisementGetty2Eden Hazard | LW | ChelseaEden Hazard scored and assisted in a Premier League game for the first time since October 2016 (also v Southampton).3Gylfi Sigurdsson | CAM | EvertonIn addition to scoring the winner, no Everton player had more shots (4) or made more key passes (4) than Sigurdsson.ENJOYED THIS STORY?

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Getty4David Brooks | RW | BournemouthBrooks opened the scoring for Bournemouth at Vicarage Road, netting his second goal in as many Premier League outings.

From Pogba to Di Maria – Woodward's Man Utd transfer rankings from worst to best

The United chief doesn't have the greatest of reputations for his moves in the market, but which signings have been a success and which have failed?

He has overseen 30 senior signings at a cost of almost £750 million over the last six years, but Ed Woodward is still struggling to prove he has what it takes to be a successful football administrator at Manchester United.

The executive vice-chair has been widely pilloried for some of his transfer market moves since taking over from David Gill in 2013 as United’s boardroom chief, even attracting the criticism of former manager Louis van Gaal recently.

“At Manchester United, Ed Woodward was installed as CEO – somebody with zero understanding of football who was previously an investment banker,” Van Gaal told . “It cannot be a good thing when a club is run solely from a commercially-driven perspective.”

So what has Woodward added in the way of positives in the transfer market and what have been his biggest failures? Here, Goal  ranks all of United’s signings since the summer of 2013.Getty Images30. ALEXIS SANCHEZ – from Arsenal (swap deal)

Five goals in 45 appearances was not the kind of return United had in mind when they swapped £35m-rated Henrikh Mkhitaryan for Alexis Sanchez in January 2018 and handed the Chilean a record £390,000 weekly wage plus significant appearance bonuses.

Not only has Sanchez failed to deliver on the pitch in his 18 months at Old Trafford, but his unprecedented pay packet has boxed United into a corner with the rest of the first-team squad. The decision to break the back for the 30-year-old has created disharmony and conjecture at every level of the club and the sooner they get him off the bill and start from scratch once more, the better.

Rating: 1/10

AdvertisementGetty Images29. ANGEL DI MARIA – from Real Madrid (£60m)

Angel di Maria was not Louis van Gaal’s choice in the summer of 2014. But with Real Madrid offloading the misfiring Argentine, Woodward found the chance to sign a notable world star to be too big a chance to turn down, whatever the footballing fallout. His £59.7m signing was a British transfer record.

"I was satisfied, because he was a creative player, but I had other players on the list,” Van Gaal told . “Di María had a problem with the English football culture and the climate. You cannot buy players and know, for sure, that they can deliver.”

Di Maria didn’t deliver, and within a year he had engineered a move to Paris Saint-Germain at a £15m loss to United having netted four goals in 32 games.

Rating: 1/10

Getty Images28. MEMPHIS DEPAY – from PSV (31m)

Memphis Depay was the marquee signing of the summer of 2015 as Louis van Gaal looked to push his side on to the next level after Champions League qualification the previous season. But the Dutch attacker would instead become a symbol of a failed era.

The £30.6m signing was a perennial substitute within six months of his arrival, with the emergence of Jesse Lingard squeezing him out of Van Gaal’s favoured XI. And a dramatic fall from grace was completed in January 2017 when Jose Mourinho allowed him to leave for Lyon having made only one start – in the League Cup – in half a season under the new manager.

Rating: 2/10

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Getty27. RADAMEL FALCAO – from Monaco (£6m loan)

Only strictly a loan addition, the entire package of Radamel Falcao’s one-year spell at Manchester United is well worth a closer look. United paid Monaco £6m for his temporary addition and the player earned in excess of £260,000 a week as part of the deal.

It didn’t go altogether well. Falcao made just 14 league starts and scored only four goals in 29 total appearances before United turned down the opportunity to pay £43.5m for his permanent transfer and the striker headed out on loan to Chelsea instead.

Rating: 2/10

Pogback! Can Man Utd flop really rescue his club career at Juventus?

In July 2016, Massimiliano Allegri issued a warning that was clearly intended for Paul Pogba.

"Anyone who has the opportunity to leave Juventus has to consider things very carefully because, right now, Juve are among the top four European clubs," the Bianconeri boss stated.

Sadly, that warning went unheeded.

Even though Pogba's then-agent Mino Raiola had always insisted that his client would only leave Juve at the right time, for the "right project" and the "right team", he instead joined Jose Mourinho's Manchester United.

Essentially, Raiola and Pogba could not have got the most important move of the midfielder's career more wrong.

There were sentimental considerations, of course. Pogba hadn't really wanted to leave United for Juventus in 2012. He felt "Mancunian". He wanted to prove himself at Old Trafford.

So, he was "shocked" by the way in which talks over a renewal collapsed, with Raiola and then-United manager Sir Alex Ferguson clashing during a decisive meeting over the midfielder's future.

Raiola later admitted in an Amazon Prime documentary that he deemed United's offer derisory, telling Ferguson, "For this money, my chihuahua would not walk on the grass of the training centre!"

The Scot's subsequent retirement thus facilitated Pogba's return four years later; but it also doomed it to failure.

GettyThe post-Ferguson fallout at United

United were a club in utter disarray in 2016, still failing dismally to come to terms with Ferguson's retirement three years previously.

They no longer had one of the greatest managers in football history calling the shots; they had Ed Woodward.

And, in his desperation to return the club to winning ways, he turned to Mourinho – akin to putting Josep Maria Bartomeu in charge of your personal savings account.

Mourinho and Pogba's partnership was never going to last long and it was fitting that the former was eventually sacked after putting the latter on the bench for a game against Liverpool.

Woodward continued to make one recruitment mistake after another, with the net result being that Pogba, who was 23 at the time of his return to Old Trafford, essentially wasted what should have been the prime years of his club career.

So, here is now, at 29, back AT Juve, hoping to make up for lost time. The problem, of course, is that this is not the same club that Pogba left six years ago.

AdvertisementGettyJuventus have sunk to Man Utd's level

Juve are no longer among the top four teams in Europe. They may have reached the Champions League final the year after Pogba's departure, but they've not made it past the quarter-finals since.

Their recent but rapid regression is best illustrated by the fact that they've been humiliated at the last-16 stage for the past three seasons by clubs with far smaller budgets: Lyon, Porto and Villarreal.

It is no stretch to say, then, that Pogba's exit was a significant event in the gradual weakening of what had previously been one of Juve's great strengths: their midfield.

When the Frenchman had arrived in Turin on a free transfer from United in 2012, he was surrounded by Andrea Pirlo, Arturo Vidal and Claudio Marchisio.

And while Antonio Conte had convinced Pogba to turn down Arsenal and Chelsea because he would get more first-team opportunities at Juve, it was thought that the teenager's game time would be carefully managed, at least during his first season.

However, Pogba was playing regularly by the end of the 2012-13 season, his natural physical gifts, outstanding technique and limitless potential obvious from his very first training session with some of the biggest names in world football at the time.

"He was only young, but we could see he was special," Pirlo later told The Telegraph.

"We were walking back to the dressing room after the session and I clearly remember Gianluigi Buffon coming up to me laughing and he just said: 'Did they really let him go for free?!'"

GettyGetting the best out of Pogba

United, of course, would end up buying him back for a record-breaking £89m – testament to the remarkable progress he made at Juve, first under Conte, and then Allegri.

Conte even altered his tactical plan just to make room for a prodigious talent on the left-hand side of a midfield three – a move Pogba admitted was pivotal to him first breaking into the France squad.

Allegri, meanwhile, pushed Pogba even further forward during his final season in Turin to try to get the very best out of his creative qualities – particularly as Juve were slowly but visibly starting to struggle to manufacture openings and control games following Pirlo's move to New York after the 2015 Champions League final loss to Barcelona.

Not long after Berlin, in fact, Pogba was presented with the No.10 jersey (he's been given the same shirt upon his return).

It was a very deliberate move on Juve's part, a symbolic show of appreciation, a public attempt to appease him, given talk of a transfer away from Turin was already intensifying (thanks in no small part to Raiola).

The hope was that Pogba would relish the added responsibility and commit his medium-term future to the club, allowing Beppe Marotta & Co. to build a new midfield around him.

Instead, he left for United. It was a transfer that made financial sense for both Pogba and Juve, but both parties would eventually be left counting the cost of its timing.

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imago SportfotodienstJuve missed Pogba as much as Pogba missed Juve

Juve have spent the past six seasons trying – and failing – to find someone capable of bringing the same mix of power, skill and, perhaps most importantly of all, goal threat to their midfield.

Sergej Milinkovic-Savic would have made for a fine replacement but he never arrived in Turin, for a variety of reasons, from Lazio's reluctance to sell the Serb for anything less than nine figures, to Juve's post-pandemic financial problems.

There was also the fact that in the same summer Juve banked €105m from selling Pogba, then-CEO Beppe Marotta made an uncharacteristically extravagant purchase, signing Argentina striker Gonzalo Higuain from Napoli for €90m (£77m/$92m) – a controversial transfer that really only worked well for a season.

Hardly surprising, then, that after Juve took another massive, ill-advised gamble on a forward the year after, Cristiano Ronaldo this time, Marotta quit the club soon after.

Thus began a dramatic decline in the Bianconeri's transfer dealings, with Marotta's successor and former right-hand man, Fabio Paratici, eventually paying for a succession of shocking signings with his job, in 2021.

So, while Pogba once teamed up with Pirlo, Vidal and Marchisio in Turin, now, as it stands, he will be mixing it with the likes of Arthur, Adrien Rabiot, Weston McKennie, Denis Zakaria and Manuel Locatelli.

The latter aside, it's not really a significant step up from the mediocrity he found himself surrounded by at Old Trafford.

Of course, the fact that Scott McTominay and Fred represented a more reliable midfield pairing than any option involving Pogba tells you much about the calamitous nature of his second spell in Manchester, his lack of versatility and dismal failure to stand up and be counted.

Champions League group stage draw winners and losers as Lewandowski and Haaland face old friends while Premier League clubs dodge a bullet

Bayern & Dortmund will face familiar foes in the group stages as Premier League clubs and the Madrid sides gave a sigh of relief…

The Champions League is back, with the draw for the group stages having taken place in Istanbul on Thursday.

This year's draw has once again throw up fascinating storylines, with a clear 'Group of Death', some tasty reunions and plenty of plenty of eye-catching match-ups both on the pitch and on the touchline.

So which clubs, players and coaches will be happy with the draw, and whose task of securing European glory just got a little bit tougher?

GOAL runs through the winners and losers…

GettyWINNER: Premier League clubs

Of the last eight Champions League finalists, five have come from the Premier League, and this year's cohort are once again overwhelming favourites to make it to the knockout stages.

Manchester City, Liverpool, Chelsea and Tottenham have all avoided the European giants that they could have been paired with, and none can be unhappy with their draw.

Jurgen Klopp's side perhaps have the toughest group, but Liverpool fans can look forward to some amazing atmospheres against Ajax, Napoli and Rangers, the latter returning to the competition for the first time in more than a decade.

Pep Guardiola will expect to make the last-16 for a seventh straight season with City, despite the danger posed by Borussia Dortmund, while Chelsea should be the favourites for Group E despite being second seeds.

AdvertisementGettyLOSER: Juventus

If you're searching for a big club that could fall at the first fence, then look no further than Juventus, who have been handed a fearsome draw.

Champions League success remains a priority for their main Group H rivals Paris Saint-Germain, so they will throw everything at ensuring they finish top.

And while Benfica may no longer have Darwin Nunez's goals, they remain a real danger after knocking out Barcelona in last season's group stages before progressing to the quarter-finals.

It's 27 years since Juve last succeeded in Europe, and with Massimiliano Allegri under pressure already this season, he would have hoped for an easier task in the first round.

GettyWINNER: Robert Lewandowksi

Lewandowski said it was "sad and difficult" to leave Bayern Munich this summer, so he will be delighted to be making a quick return to his old club.

His eight years and 375 appearances for the Bundesliga giants were simply phenomenal, as he scored an incredible 344 goals and won eight league titles.

Lewandowski also helped Bayern to the 2020 Champions League where they humiliated his new team, Barcelona, 8-2 on the way to the final.

At previous club Borussia Dortmund, he lost only once to Bayern in eight attempts in the league although he was beaten 2-1 when the two sides met in the 2013 Champions League final.

He will be out to avoid a repeat in Europe over the next few weeks.

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GettyLOSER: Borussia Dortmund

Lewandowski won't be the only big name striker returning to Germany, with Manchester City's Erling Haaland heading back to Dortmund.

The Bundesliga side were powerless to stop him leaving in the summer, with the Premier League champions triggering his £51 million release clause.

Haaland's time in Germany was shorter than Lewandowski's, but he was just as explosive, scoring 86 goals in 89 matches as defences were made to fear the Norwegian hitman.

Now, they will get a dose of their own medicine when they line-up to face City.

13 fun facts about Marcus Rashford

Everything you need to know about the English star!

Marcus Rashford is a professional footballer who currently plays as a forward for Manchester United and the England national team. He was born on October 31, 1997, in Manchester, England.

Rashford began his football journey with the Manchester City academy before being scouted by Manchester United and joining their youth academy at the age of seven.

Rashford made his professional debut for Manchester United in February 2016, scoring twice on his first start in the Premier League. Since then, he has established himself as a key player for the club, known for his pace, technical ability, and finishing skills. He has won numerous awards and accolades for his performances, including the PFA Young Player of the Year award in the 2015-16 season.

In addition to his football career, Rashford is also known for his activism and charitable work.

Rashford has also represented England at international level, scoring several important goals and helping the team reach the semi-finals of the 2018 World Cup.

With his talent, work ethic, and off-field endeavours, Rashford is seen as a role model and inspiration to many young people around the world.

But what are the 13 things you absolutely need to know about the attacker?

Youngest goalscorer in Manchester derby

Rashford became the youngest player to score a goal in a Manchester derby when he netted his club’s winner against their city rivals back in 2016 at the age of 18 years and 141 days.

AdvertisementGettyScored on international debut

Rashford scored on his England debut in May 2016, just a few months after breaking into the Manchester United first team. He became the youngest player in the history of the England national team to score on his debut, at the age of 18 years and 208 days. Rashford has since established himself as a key player for England and has scored 17 goals in 46 appearances for the Three Lions.

Second youngest Man Utd player to reach 100 appearances

Rashford is the second youngest player in Manchester United's history after Ryan Giggs to reach 100 appearances for the club. He achieved the milestone at the age of 22 years and 92 days, which is a testament to his rapid rise to prominence and his impact on the team.

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GettyIdolised Rooney and Ronaldo

Rashford idolised Manchester United legends Wayne Rooney and Cristiano Ronaldo growing up. He went on to play alongside both players.

Chelsea's 2022-23 signings RANKED: Mykhailo Mudryk already a MAJOR concern but Enzo Fernandez looks the real deal

Blues co-owner Todd Boehly has invested mega money to improve the squad this season – but how many of the new faces have hit the ground running?

Chelsea have shattered every transfer record in the book this season, forking out a staggering £600 million ($749m) on a grand total of 17 players.

Nine of those came in before Thomas Tuchel's sacking last September, and the club's new owners provided his successor Graham Potter with a huge January war chest to bring in the remaining eight.

French full-back Malo Gusto and Brazilian wonderkid Andrey Santos were among those to sign for Chelsea in the winter window, with the former sent straight back to Lyon on loan and the latter taking up a similar offer at Vasco da Gama until the summer.

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The rest of the new additions have all made their debuts for the Blues, either at senior or Under-21 level, but very few have been able to make a big impact.

Potter was dismissed at the start of April due to his failure to gel the new squad together. Now, club legend Frank Lampard has been brought back to steady the ship as interim boss before Potter's permanent replacement tries to succeed where he failed in the summer.

Amid the ongoing chaos in west London, GOAL assesses how all of Chelsea's new signings have fared in their first few months at the club…

Getty1Enzo Fernandez (£107m, Benfica)

The most expensive player in the history of British football, Chelsea paid £107 million to lure World Cup winner Fernandez away from Benfica on January deadline day, and he slotted straight into Potter's engine room.

It was always going to be difficult for a deep-lying midfielder to justify such a hefty price tag, but Fernandez has given it his best shot, standing out with his superb passing range and tenacity out of possession.

The 22-year-old is a classy operator and will surely prove to be well worth the investment in the long-term, not least because he seems to be ideally suited to English football.

STAR RATING: ⭐⭐⭐⭐

AdvertisementGetty2Wesley Fofana (£72m, Leicester City)

Fofana has been restricted to just 13 appearances for Chelsea to date, having missed the majority of his first season in west London due to a serious knee injury.

Still, the 22-year-old has impressed since his return to action in March, and produced a colossal performance at the back during the Blues' 0-0 draw with Liverpool on Tuesday.

Lampard will surely give Fofana a key role in his plans as Chelsea seek to salvage a top-half finish and go all the way in the Champions League.

STAR RATING: ⭐⭐⭐

Getty Images3Joao Felix (Loan, Atletico Madrid)

Alongside Fernandez, Atletico loanee Felix has undoubtedly shone brightest out of Chelsea's crop of January signings.

He made a huge impression on his debut against Fulham before getting himself sent off, but has learned from that mistake since returning from suspension to lead the Blues' attack.

Felix has only found the net twice so far for Chelsea, but his quality is undeniable. The 23-year-old is capable of making the difference in the final third with his excellent pass selection and dribbling ability, and defenders are often left on their heels when he explodes into action.

Chelsea must do everything they can to buy the Portugal international outright in the summer.

STAR RATING: ⭐⭐⭐

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Getty4Benoit Badiashile (£35m, Monaco)

Badiashile has made a solid, if rather unspectacular start to his Chelsea career, featuring in eight Premier League games to date.

The Frenchman is strong and quick, with good instincts when it comes to breaking up play and stepping out from the back, but he wasn't able to nail down a spot in Potter's line up.

Lampard's return could change things for Badiashile, who has all the necessary attributes to become a top defender in the future.

STAR RATING: ⭐⭐⭐

The return of FC Hollywood? Bayern Munich are in a MESS all of their own making

The Bavarians have descended into total chaos ahead of Wednesday's Champions League quarter-final second leg against Manchester City

At the height of the speculation surrounding David Alaba's future at Bayern Munich in 2020, Thomas Muller was asked if he felt there was a danger of the protracted contract talks affecting the Austrian's performances. "David is still his own man on the pitch and is not influenced by it," the veteran forward insisted in an interview with .

Then, Muller made a rather amusing admission.

"It's also interesting for the audience: it's nice when there's a little bit of drama at the club," he argued. "I used to enjoy reading about that stuff – FC Hollywood – and now you can watch it live!"

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That particular episode didn't end well for Bayern, as Alaba eventually left for Real Madrid on a free transfer. However, in the grand scheme of things, the defender's departure wasn't outrageously disruptive.

It was certainly nothing compared to the current chaos engulfing the club.

Since the turn of the year, there have been dismissals, dressing-room dust-ups and dismal defeats, prompting talk of the real return of FC Hollywood after years of relative stability.

Consequently, there is now a very real fear that a season that began with talk of a treble might actually end with Bayern failing to win the Bundesliga for the first time since 2012.

GettyFC Hollywood: The origin story

The FC Hollywood nickname was coined during the 1990s – arguably the most turbulent period in Bayern's history, a time when superstars such as Lothar Matthaus, Jurgen Klinsmann, Stefen Effenberg and Mario Basler were making headlines on and off the field, and Munich became something of a coaching merry-go-round.

However, player power has long been a feature of the club.

At the tail end of the club's first golden era in the 1970s, a dressing-room coup led to the dismissal of coach Gyula Lorant. The players wanted his assistant, Pal Csernai, to take over on a permanent basis, but club president Wilhelm Neudecker turned to Max Merkel.

The players revolted once again, though, unanimously voting against the Austrian's appointment (16-0).

A humiliated Nuedecker resigned, replaced at the helm by Willi O. Hoffmann, while Csernai continued as coach, even if it was Paul Breitner, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge and Uli Hoeness who were really calling the shots. "For the first time in the history of German football, a few players took over an entire club," Thomas Huetlin wrote in his book 'Gute Freunde'.

A squad has never quite wielded the same level of power since, but there remains the belief that the manager is the weakest person at Bayern. And recent events have done little to alter that perception.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesNagelsmann's time in the spotlight cut short

The timing of Julian Nagelsmann's sacking shocked the football world, with the announcement coming late on a Thursday night during the recent international break.

Sure, Bayern's Bundesliga form had been surprisingly shaky and they had just dropped to second in the standings, behind Borussia Dortmund, after a 2-1 loss at Bayer Leverkusen, but the Bavarians had just made it eights wins from eight in this seasons Champions League by comprehensively beating Paris Saint-Germain home and away to progress to the quarter-finals.

To those that had been following Bayern closely, though, it was clear that all was not well behind the scenes.

Nagelsmann had never hidden his desire to coach Bayern. Even during his time in charge at Hoffenheim, he admitted that it was his dream job. It was an impressive show of ambition, evidence that he felt he would have no problem thriving in such a high-pressure environment.

However, at Bayern, there was a feeling among certain figures that Nagelsmann enjoyed the spotlight a little too much; that he believed he was the star of the show.

Some players were reportedly of the opinion that the manager was quick to take credit for himself, but slow to attribute any to his squad.

(C)Getty Images'The most brutal thing I've experienced in my career'

Furthermore, while Nagelsmann built a good relationship with Joshua Kimmich, arguably the most important player to his tactical approach, that in itself became a bone of contention, given the coach did not have anything like the same rapport with club captain Manuel Neuer.

Indeed, Nagelsmann's decision to sack Toni Tapalovic, Neuer's long-time goalkeeping coach, caused a huge amount of tension.

even claimed that the January dismissal, which was made with immediate effect and described by Neuer as "the most brutal thing I've experienced in my career", was related to the belief that private discussions between members of the coaching team were being fed back to senior figures in the playing squad.

Nagelsmann went on another mole hunt in March after tactics sheets appeared in the press. "It bothers me a lot," Nagelsmann told reporters at the time. "The person who leaks something like that harms every single player.

"What is the person who is passing this on looking for? What does he expect? I don't see what his motivation can be, other than to make it easier for the opponent.

"Moles are a protected species. Every time you drive through the countryside you see 80,000 moles and you can't get rid of them. It's very, very complicated to find them.

"I'm trying to find out what the reason is. It's always important for me to be able to look in the mirror at night, to treat my players and my fellow coaches well. I hope this person can't look in the mirror because it's not fair."

By that stage, it was clear that Nagelsmann was feeling the strain.

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(C)Getty ImagesNagelsmann's pays the price for 'lazy' displays

After a 3-2 defeat at Borussia Monchengladbach in February, Nagelsmann launched an extraordinary tirade against the match officials in full view of journalists waiting in the mixed zone as he made a beeline for the referee's dressing room.

Just over a month later in Leverkusen, he accused his players of being "lazy" and having a "zero percent work rate".

Bayern sporting director Hasan Salihamidzic also took aim at the squad, admitting, "I've rarely experienced so little drive, so little mentality, so little fight and so little assertiveness."

What he didn't say at the time, though, was that he felt Nagelsmann was to blame. Indeed, the Leverkusen loss was viewed as the final nail in his coffin, definitive proof that the manager was incapable of motivating his players to perform as impressively in the Bundesliga as they were in Europe.

Nonetheless, Bayern have copped an awful lot of criticism for the way in which they handled Nagelsmann's sudden exit. His representatives have claimed that their client only found out he had been fired through the media, and while Bayern continue to insist otherwise, they have acknowledged that there was no face-to-face meeting before the decision was announced because their former manager was still on a skiing trip at the time.

Furthermore, while both Salihamidzic and CEO Oliver Kahn have insisted that the decision was motivated solely by results, Tottenham, Real Madrid and Paris Saint-Germain's interest in hiring long-time target Thomas Tuchel obviously also played a part in Bayern's sudden switch of coaches.

Norway Women's World Cup 2023 squad: Who's in & who's out?

Norway are hoping to achieve great things in the upcoming 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup with Ada Hegerberg upfront. But who is in their squad?

The Norway national women's team is set to play in their ninth FIFA Women's World Cup finals in July which is going to be held in Australia and New Zealand.

The Grasshoppers qualified for the marquee international tournament by topping Group F in the UEFA Qualifiers. They went unbeaten throughout their qualifying campaign and won nine of their 10 matches.

However, their recent form is slightly concerning as they have won only once in five matches in 2023.

They were champions in 1995 and coach Hege Riise would hope to turn around their fortunes and bring back the cup to the European nation.

They will compete with hosts New Zealand, the Philippines and Switzerland in Group A of the Women's World Cup.

Elisabeth Terland, Emma Stolen Godo, and Malin Brenn registered for the 2023 Women's World Cup finals as reserve players, Riise's final 23-player squad was announced on June 19. GOAL takes a look…

Getty ImagesGOALKEEPERS

Aurora Mikalsen of Brann should be the first-choice keeper of Norway in the World Cup. The 27-year-old was called up to stand between the sticks in the recent friendlies against Spain and Sweden which shows that Riise has put his trust in the keeper.

However, Guro Pettersen is another strong contender for the spot. The 31-year-old plies her trade for Valerenga Fotball Damer in Norway and was handed a start in a 2-1 loss to Denmark earlier in the season, which shows that the keeper does feature in the coach's plans.

Cecilie Fiskerstrand can be picked as the third-choice goalkeeper.

Name Club

Guro PettersenValerengaAurora MikalsenBrannCecilie FiskerstrandLSK KvinnerAdvertisementGetty ImagesDEFENDERS

Riise likes to stick to a four-man backline and he is reasonably sure of the defenders that he is going to start with.

Skipper Maren Mjelde and Mathilde Harviken are the two first-choice centre-backs. However, if Mjelde is deployed as a defensive midfielder then Brighton's Guro Bergsvand slots in at the heart of defence.

Tuva Hansen has made the right-back position her own; whereas with Manchester United defender Maria Thorisdottir missing out through injury, Marit Bratberg Lund is the preferred choice at left-back .

Sara Horte completes the list of defenders in Norway's final 23.

Name Club

Anja SonstevoldInter MilanMathilde HarvikenRosenbergTuva HansenBayern MunichMaren MjeldeChelseaMarit Bratberg LundBrannGuro BergsvandBrighton & Hove AlbionSara HorteRosenborgGetty ImagesMIDFIELDERS

Norway mostly play with a three-man midfield but can switch to a five if Riise thinks that his defenders need more cover.

In a three-man midfield, it is Vilde Risa who plays the role of an anchor and also dictates the momentum of the match from a deeper position. Meanwhile, experienced players like Guro Reiten and Frida Maanum flank her on the left and right, respectively.

But if there are five midfielders at the centre of the park then it might be set up with two pivots and three advanced players, or, one defensive midfielder with another bank of four just behind a lone striker.

Then a few other players come into the equation like Ingrid Engen, who can be used as a midfielder, and Amalie Eikeland and Emilie Haavi who are deployed in the wide areas.

Name Club

Ingrid Syrstad EngenBarcelonaVilde Boe RisaManchester UnitedGuro ReitenChelseaThea BjeldeVålerengaAmalie EikelandReadingEmilie HaaviRomaFrida MaanumArsenalENJOYED THIS STORY?

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GettyFORWARDS

Norway boast of having one of the most prolific forwards in Europe in Ada Hegerberg. The Lyon striker has 51 goals in 82 international appearances and a lot rests on her form in Australia.

Although she got injured in the friendly against Sweden in April, she has made a comeback to the Lyon squad.

If Riise chooses to go with two strikers, she is likely to be paired with either Caroline Graham Hansen or Karina Saevik upfront. Hansen recently won the Champions League with Barcelona and has 11 goals and six assists in 13 matches in the Primera Division.

Name Club

Caroline Graham HansenBarcelonaSophie Roman HaugRomaKarina Saevik AvaldsnesAda HegerbergLyonJulie BlakstadBK HackenAnna JosendalRosenborg

Hit or miss? Gianfranco Zola, Mario Balotelli and the most high-profile Italians to have played in the Premier League as Sandro Tonali completes Newcastle move

With the AC Milan star on his way to St. James' Park, GOAL grades the most famous – and infamous – Italians to have played in England since 1992

There is no denying that Italy has played a hugely influential role in the development of the Premier League. In recent years, coaches such as Claudio Ranieri, Carlo Ancelotti and Antonio Conte have been responsible for title wins and tactical trends that changed the English game.

Before that, players like Gianfranco Zola, Gianluca Vialli and Paolo Di Canio improved the standard of play in the Premier League, adding a combination of quality and character, as well as an international flavour, that helped transform the competition into the global brand that it is today.

However, not every Italian has made such a positive impact. Below, GOAL grades the most high-profile Italian players ever to ply their trade in the Premier League, running through all of the greatest hits, and most miserable misses…

GettyGianfranco Zola

A massive hit, the biggest of all, in fact. Zola isn't just one of the best signings Chelsea have ever made – he's one of the best in Premier League history. The diminutive, fleet-footed No.10 won seven trophies during seven seasons at Stamford Bridge, including the Cup Winners' Cup, and was also named Football Writers' Association (FWA) Player of the Year in 1997. Just a true Premier League legend. Verdict: HIT!

AdvertisementGettyGianluca Vialli

Vialli may have been past his very best, but the striker still made a monumental impact at Chelsea, first as a player, and then as a coach. Indeed, he was very much part of the first wave of superstars to play in the Premier League, and he scored 21 times in 58 appearances before hanging up his boots in 1999.

By that time, though, he had already won the League Cup and the Cup Winners' Cup as Chelsea's player-manager, having succeeded Ruud Gullit at the helm. He would spend four years in west London in total and his recent passing was meant with devastation among a fanbase that will forever adore Vialli. Verdict: HIT!

Fabrizio Ravanelli

Ravanelli announced himself to the Premier League in sensational fashion in August 1996, scoring an opening-day hat-trick against Liverpool. The former Juventus forward would go on to net 31 times in all competitions, as Middlesbrough reached the final of both domestic cup competitions. However, they won neither and were also relegated from the Premier League.

Ravanelli, therefore, couldn't wait to quit the Riverside, having repeatedly complained about the facilities, the standard of training, the quality of English football and Middlesbrough itself. So, while the £7 million ($9m) signing may have lived up to his billing on the field, he ultimately proved more trouble than he was worth. Verdict: MISS!

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GettyBenito Carbone

May not have made quite the same impact in England as former Sheffield Wednesday team-mate Paolo Di Canio, but Carbone is still fondly remembered by many fans because of some of the magical goals he scored during his three-year spell at Hillsborough. A subsequent switch to Aston Villa didn't go well, and he quit the Birmingham-based club after a solitary season, but there were some more memorable moments during his time at Bradford City.

Carbone clearly wasn't the easiest character to manage and it felt like he was always at loggerheads with his employers, but the little forward was a joy to watch at times. Verdict: HIT!

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