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Worst transfers of the window, ranked: From Cunha to Isak, 13 big moves that might fail

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Worst transfers of the window, ranked: From Cunha to Isak, 13 big moves that might fail


Every year, after the NFL draft, everyone is talking about “steals” and “reaches.” The “steals” are the players that the football-watching public thinks went way later than their talent warranted. And the “reaches” are the players we thought went way higher than they should’ve.

It turns out: we’re only half right.

A 2021 study by Timo Riske of Pro Football Focus looked back at six years of draft data and identified the players who went significantly higher or lower than the consensus of publicly available draft rankings. What he found is that the players who were “reaches” did underperform, on average, compared to the other players drafted at the same pick in other years. But the players who were “steals”? They didn’t perform any better than we’d expect, based on their draft position.

The elegance of this study comes in the rationality of its explanation. For a player to be a true “reach,” only one team has to make a player-evaluation mistake. For a player to be a true “steal,” almost the entire NFL has to make a player-evaluation mistake, and NFL teams have access to way more information than the general public does.

I bring this up because I think a similar heuristic might apply to the soccer transfer market. It’s very easy for one club to lock onto a player and pay way more than any other would have ever considered. It’s much harder for every club with the requisite budget to undervalue the same talented player. This is why there’s a common refrain among data-based thinkers in the soccer world: Hire me just so I can tell you “no” a couple times a year, and I’ll be worth it.

So, with the transfer window now closed across Europe’s top leagues, what moves look like the biggest reaches? Who might’ve benefitted from someone on staff saying “no”? Here are the top 13 most questionable transfers of this summer window.


The best worst transfers: Why Sancho, Werner were good moves
Striker domino effect: How Premier League clubs net out
Men’s transfer grades: What moves mean across Europe


13. Martín Zubimendi, defensive midfielder, Real Sociedad to Arsenal

-Age: 26
-Fee: €70 million
-Market value (per Transfermarkt): €60 million
-Projected negative differential between fee and value in a year: 16.7%

Last summer, I wrote about a simple transfer projection system that NFL analyst Kevin Cole helped me create. And we’re using that same system to come up with these rankings. Here’s an excerpt:

To varying degrees, a lower age, a lower transfer fee, and a higher market value at the time of the transfer made it more likely there was an increase in value after a year. Then, we can take those factors and create a formula to predict an increase or decrease in value for any big transfer.

In other words: a year from now, is a player’s market value likely to be higher or lower than their transfer fee, and by how much?

This is a basic analysis, and it doesn’t account for the extra costs of player wages, which can vary significantly. Plus, we’re using estimated numbers from Transfermarkt to come up with the market values and the fees, which often contain add-ons.

However, studies have found that Transfermarkt values tend to be pretty close to true player value on average, and it also lets us harness the power of the wisdom of the crowds: The market values on the site are a pretty good representation of what the world thinks of a player. At least based on our analysis, when teams have paid significantly more than the Transfermarkt value for a player, those moves have tended to not work out.

Fitting with what I said earlier: When I looked at last summer’s 30 most expensive transfers, the system was much better at projecting the misses than it was nailing the hits. Among the players projected to see a less than 1% increase in value, I’d say one of the 12 (Elliot Anderson to Nottingham Forest) was a true success. Three of the players, João Palhinha, João Félix, and Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall are already playing for new teams.

Arsenal’s transfer approach this summer was seemingly designed to rate poorly in these projections: They want to win now and don’t seem to care much about how things might look down the road. The Gunners have signed three players age 26 or older for €65 million or more.


12. Gerson, central midfielder, Flamengo to Zenit Saint Petersburg

-Age: 28
-Fee: €25 million
-Market value: €25 million
-Projected negative differential: 17%

There are two Zenit players on Carlo Ancelotti’s most recent Brazil roster. And neither of them are named “Gerson.”


11. Luis Díaz, winger, Liverpool to Bayern Munich

-Age: 28
-Fee: €70 million
-Market value: €70 million
-Projected negative differential: 17%

Diaz was fantastic for Liverpool last season, but there are only three 28-year-olds who required a higher transfer fee than what Bayern Munich paid to acquire him:

-Eden Hazard: €120.8 million, Chelsea to Real Madrid
-Antoine Griezmann: €120 million, Atletico Madrid to Barcelona
-Romelu Lukaku: €113 million, Inter Milan to Chelsea
-Gonzalo Higuain: €90 million, Napoli to Juventus

Hazard might be the worst transfer of all time, Lukaku lasted one season at Chelsea, and Griezmann and Higuain made it two full years with Barcelona and Juventus, respectively, before moving elsewhere. All of these players were held in similar — if not higher — esteem to Diaz at the time of their moves. For as good as Diaz has looked to start the season, history is not on Bayern’s side with this one.


10. Kingsley Coman, winger, Bayern Munich to Al-Nassr

-Age: 29
-Fee: €25 million
-Market value: €30 million
-Projected negative differential: 17.3%

The Saudi Pro League isn’t operating on the same economic terms as the rest of the soccer world. They’re not constrained by Profit and Sustainability Rules, UEFA regulations, or even more universal concerns like “budgets,” “profits,” and “the value of money.” They’re also typically paying such inflated salaries to players that looking at only the transfer fees tells an even smaller part of the story than it usually does.

But just for fun, I wanted to see if any of the deals they’ve made this summer actually project well based on our simple model. And one of them actually does. While it seemed as if Enzo Millot was headed to Atletico Madrid, Al Ahli swooped in and nabbed the 23-year-old attacking midfielder from Stuttgart for €30 million. Transfermarkt put his market value at €35 million, and a year from now that number projects to be 17.5% higher than the fee Al Ahli paid. That would make Millot the 24th “best” transfer of the summer.


9. Matheus Cunha, attacking midfielder, Wolverhampton to Manchester United

-Age: 26
-Fee: €74.2 million
-Market value: €60 million
-Projected negative differential: 21.02%

play

1:09

Did Manchester United overpay for Cunha?

The “ESPN FC” crew discuss their thoughts on Matheus Cunha joining Manchester United for 62.5 million pounds.

We’ll dig in here when we get to another Man United signing on this list. Can you guess who?


8. Alexander Isak, forward, Newcastle to Liverpool

-Age: 25
-Fee: €140 million
-Market value: €120 million
-Projected negative differential: 26%

This nicely encapsulates the upside and downside of spending more money on a transfer fee than any club not owned by the nation of Qatar ever has.

It’s pretty much impossible for Isak to give Liverpool more than they’ve invested in acquiring him. If he wins the Ballon d’Or, then maybe you could say that. But basically, Isak has to be one of the 10 or 15 best players in the world — immediately and then for many more years after that for this deal to “break even” in any kind of value sense.

Unlike the club’s two other major moves for youngsters Hugo Ekitike and Florian Wirtz, Isak is 25, already in his prime. He turns 26 next month. This is it.

Plus, well, I’m not convinced that Isak is in that absolute top tier of elite talent. He has never scored 20 non-penalty goals in a season. Heck, he has hit double digits only three times. And he played fewer than two-thirds of the available Premier League minutes in his three years with Newcastle. The overwhelmingly likely outcome is that Isak nets out somewhere below “€140 million player” when all is said and done.

But barring injury, which is a concern, given Isak’s lack of ability, there’s probably quite a high floor here, too.

Sure, the model projects Isak’s crowd-sourced value to be 26% lower, come this time next year, than that €140 million fee Liverpool paid. But even with that decline, Liverpool would still have a starting striker valued at somewhere around €104 million.


7. Bryan Mbeumo, winger, Brentford to Manchester United

-Age: 25
-Fee: €75 million
-Market value: €55 million
-Projected negative differential: 21.6%

OK, now we can talk about Cunha and Mbeumo together. I’ve already written a bunch about these moves and why I didn’t like them — and the first couple of games already started to prove this out.

Manchester United paid a lot of money for two players who outperformed their expected-goals numbers by massive amounts and by much more than they’d ever done before. It was incredibly unlikely that both players, let alone one of them, would continue to convert their chances at such high rates. Through the games against Fulham and Arsenal, they’ve combined for 12 shots worth 1.21 xG and zero goals:

Even without the goals, I think Mbeumo and Cunha have still made Manchester United better. They were quite competitive at home against Arsenal, and then they played Fulham even on the road. But that’s the thing: These were two already-in-their-prime, competent Premier League players with no real chance of ever becoming stars. They were going to improve Manchester United in the short term because Manchester United finished last season in 15th place.

Now, they look as if they’re about as good as Fulham. That would be a 12-point improvement on last season. And it would still only get them up to 11th place in the table.


6. Luis Suárez, forward, Almeria to Sporting Lisbon

-Age: 27
-Fee: €22.2 million
-Market value: €8 million
-Projected negative differential: 26.82%

I, uh, yeah: This one beats me! Sporting replaced Viktor Gyokeres with the 27-year-old not-that-Luis Suarez on a five-year contract. The fee makes him the third-most expensive player the club has ever acquired, after Manuel Ugarte and Gyokeres. Given that both of those players eventually moved for big fees to bigger clubs, maybe I shouldn’t be doubting them. But it sure seems as if they think they can do the Gyokeres thing again.

They signed Gyokeres at 25, after he’d washed out at Brighton and played well in the Championship. He dominated the Portuguese league and then moved to Arsenal this summer. With Suarez, they signed him at 27, after he scored 19 non-penalty goals and added eight assists in Spain. But not in LaLiga — this was in the second division.

Before that, he’d played four first-division seasons mostly in Spain but with a half-season in France, and he’d scored 25 goals and added 10 assists — total.


5. Eberechi Eze, attacking midfielder, Crystal Palace to Arsenal

-Age: 27
-Fee: €69.3 million
-Market value: €55 million
-Projected negative differential: 26.93%

On paper, this deal projects poorly, but I want to step away from age curves and algorithms for a second. I hope this move works out. Eze grew up rooting for Arsenal, played for them at early youth levels, but was released when he was 13. Then he bounced around the lower levels of England for a while, made his pro debut with Wycombe in League Two, spent a few years with Queens Park Rangers in the Championship, and eventually signed with Palace in 2020.

Now, 14 years later, he’s back at the club that gave up on him, trying to help them win their first major title since he was 6 years old. He worked his butt off and finally got to where he has always wanted to be. This video, I mean, c’mon:

As I mentioned earlier, Arsenal are trying to win now. Their net spend on transfer fees this summer is €285.5 million, way higher than any other club in the world. And they’re pushing the majority of their resources toward players who are already well into their primes, as opposed to what they’d done in the past: targeting players who would spend all their best years at the club. That’s a massive risk.

And I think that’s especially true with this deal. It makes Eze the third-most expensive 27-year-old ever: behind Luis Suarez (Liverpool to Barcelona) and Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Inter Milan to Barcelona) and ahead of Kaka (AC Milan to Real Madrid), Riyad Mahrez (Leicester City to Manchester City), and Ángel Di María (Manchester United to PSG).

The hit rate with those moves is mixed, and those players were all established, title-winning superstars. We still haven’t seen Eze play at that level yet.

There’s still a chance, though, that it all works out.


4. Mateo Retegui, forward, Atalanta to Al Qadsiah

-Age: 26
-Fee: €68.25 million
-Market value: €45 million
-Projected negative differential: 30.98%

Before last season, his first with Atalanta, Retegui had never scored more than 13 non-penalty goals in a season — in any professional league, in any country — and he’d never generated more than two assists. This was a goal-scoring striker who didn’t really score many goals.

Plug him into Gianpiero Gasperini’s system for a season, though, and you get 21 non-penalty goals and eight assists. He joined from Genoa for €20.9 million. A year later, he’s leaving for more than triple that fee.

A quick word of warning to the rest of the world: the fee paid for Retegui is the second-biggest Atalanta has ever received. Right behind him: Teen Koopmeiners, who had three goals and three assists for Juventus last season. And right ahead of him: Rasmus Højlund, who is already on his way out at Manchester United.


3. Yoane Wissa, forward, Brentford to Newcastle

-Age: 28
-Fee: €57.7 million
-Market value: €32 million
-Projected negative differential: 45.27%

play

1:45

Hutchison slams Isak and Wissa’s ‘lack of professionalism’

Don Hutchison discusses Alexander Isak and Yoane Wissa’s lack of professionalism by refusing to play and train for their respective clubs when trying to move clubs.

This feels like a good example of why (A) you don’t let your best player leave on the last day of the window, and (B) you don’t pay for past performance.

The whole Isak saga felt pretty pointless in the end. If Newcastle had just made the move two months ago, then they would’ve had … [does math] … two months to figure out how best to replace him.

Granted, they did try to find his replacements earlier this summer — and kept failing. But I’m not sure how you can look at this move, and then one at the top (bottom?) of this list and not see a team that’s suddenly realizing the season’s already started, the Champions League is coming, and they might have no one to play striker.

Wissa has been one of the most underrated players in the Premier League for the past couple of seasons, but last season he hit a new level: 0.71 non-penalty goals+assists per 90 minutes, after averaging just slightly over 0.5 in the three previous seasons. If Wissa were 23 or 24, you could make a pretty good case that he’d “made the leap,” that this was his new expected level of play. But Wissa turns 29 this week.

The way more likely explanation is that he just had the best season of his life, and it’s probably not going to happen again.


2. Son Heung-Min, winger, Tottenham to LAFC

-Age: 33
-Fee: €22 million
-Market value: €20 million
-Projected negative differential: 48.2%

This is the highest transfer fee ever paid by an MLS club, and it’s the third-highest fee ever paid by any club for a player 33 or older. Only Cristiano Ronaldo‘s €117 million move to Juventus from Real Madrid and Robert Lewandowski‘s €45 million move to Barcelona from Bayern Munich cost more. Both of those players scored a ton of goals for their new clubs, and I’d suspect Son will do the same, in a much less competitive environment.

The move makes sense for LAFC, a club in MLS, a league that tends to sign players before retirement. For just about any other team in the world, though, it wouldn’t make any sense.


1. Nick Woltemade, forward, Stuttgart to Newcastle

-Age: 23
-Fee: €85 million
-Market value: €30 million
-Projected negative differential: 48.5%

Let’s say there was this really tall striker with great feet for a player his size. In his first professional season, he was playing on loan in the third division in Germany, and he was … fine. As a 20-year-old, he played a little over 2,000 minutes and scored nine non-penalty goals. A 19-year-old scored the same number of goals in the same league. Another 20-year-old scored three more.

The following season, this tall striker played about 1,200 minutes in the Bundesliga. Given that he was making a two-tier jump, he did about how you might expect: two goals across 12 starts. Then, in his third year as a full-time pro, he finally seemed as if he’d begun to develop. He started half of his team’s matches and scored 10 non-penalty goals.

This is also the player that Newcastle United have decided to invest more than half of the Alexander Isak money into.

There’s no more to the story — those were Woltemade’s last three seasons. Across his 29 starts in the Bundesliga, he has scored 12 goals. He has never played more than 1,700 minutes in a first-division season. And at 23, his peak years aren’t even that far away.

Could Woltemade develop into a star striker who lives up to the club-record fee? Absolutely — but that’s also the absolute best-case scenario. Given his incredibly limited track record, Woltemade could just as easily be out of the Premier League in a year or two.





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Ex-NFL star Doug Martin was dealing with ‘mental health challenges’ before death, rep says

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Ex-NFL star Doug Martin was dealing with ‘mental health challenges’ before death, rep says


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The agent of former NFL star Doug Martin provided clarity on the circumstances around his death on Monday as he released a statement on behalf of the late player’s family.

Athletes First CEO Brian Murphy said the retired running back was dealing with mental health issues in the days before authorities in California were requested to be involved by Martin’s family. Martin died on Saturday after an incident while in police custody.

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Tampa Bay Buccaneers running back Doug Martin (22) stretches before an NFL football game against the Buffalo Bills, Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017, in Orchard Park, New York. (AP Photo/Adrian Kraus, File)

“Privately, Doug battled mental health challenges that profoundly impacted his personal and professional life,” the statement read. “Ultimately, mental illness proved to be the one opponent from which Doug could not run.

“Following recent media reports about Doug’s untimely passing, the family wishes to clarify the circumstances. Doug’s parents were actively seeking medical assistance for him and had contacted local authorities for support. Feeling overwhelmed and disoriented, Doug fled his home during the night and entered a neighbor’s residence two doors down, where he was taken into custody by police. An investigation into what transpired as he was detained is underway.”

Oakland police also released more information about Martin’s death.

Doug Martin runs the ball

Tampa Bay Buccaneers running back Doug Martin (22) during the second half of an NFL football game against the New York Jets Sunday, Nov. 12, 2017, in Tampa, Florida. (AP Photo/Jason Behnken, File)

LIONS PUT NFL ON NOTICE WITH STATEMENT WIN OVER BUCS

“Prior to his death, Martin was involved in a break-in at a residence in Oakland,” police said in a news release. “While responding officers were attempting to detain him, a brief struggle occurred. After being taken into custody, Martin became unresponsive.

“Paramedics responded to the scene, provided medical aid, and transported Martin to a local hospital, where he later died.”

Police said they have been in contact with Martin’s family since the incident on Saturday and the situation remained under investigation.

Martin’s death was announced on Sunday. He was 36.

Doug Martin on the sideline vs the Rams

Tampa Bay Buccaneers running back Doug Martin (22) against the St. Louis Rams at the Edward Jones Dome on Dec. 17, 2017.  (Aaron Doster/USA TODAY Sports)

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He played for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Oakland Raiders during his career.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.





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The most dominant UFC heavyweight ever hasn’t even fought for the title yet

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The most dominant UFC heavyweight ever hasn’t even fought for the title yet


Being the heavyweight champion has to be the most chest-thumping experience possible for a fighter, if for no other reason than that the title comes with the swaggering nickname “baddest man on the planet.”

That glorifying designation first surfaced widely in boxing in the late 1980s during the heavyweight championship reign of Mike Tyson. His aggression, punching power and spine-chilling demeanor left opponents defeated by intimidation as much as fisticuffs. No one since has duplicated his fearsome aura in boxing, and the “baddest man” moniker has essentially shifted to MMA, a sport with a broader variety of combat engagement than anything the Marquess of Queensberry ever envisioned. Just ask three-weight boxing champion James Toney, who was taken off his feet with ease by Randy Couture within 18 seconds and beaten down for the duration of their one-sided 2010 UFC fight.

When an MMA heavyweight gains recognition as the “baddest man on the planet,” it’s often an outgrowth of the story behind how he won the championship. Francis Ngannou captured the UFC belt in 2021 by knocking out Stipe Miocic, whose three title defenses established a heavyweight record that still stands. Miocic first won the title in 2016 by knocking out Fabricio Werdum, who earlier had secured a place of honor in the sport’s annals by finishing two of the greatest ever, Fedor Emelianenko and Cain Velasquez. Velasquez, whose multifaceted skill set and revving engine made him unlike any previous heavyweight, became UFC champion in 2010 with an iconic wrecking of the seemingly indestructible Brock Lesnar.

Contrast those splashy ascents to the top of the mountain with the unimpeded rise of the current owner of the UFC heavyweight belt, Tom Aspinall. Whereas Ngannou, Miocic and many other greats established their supremacy with statement victories, Aspinall did not dethrone a reigning champion to gain the title. The UFC simply elevated him from interim champion to undisputed champ four months ago to fill a vacancy left by the retirement of Jon Jones.

Aspinall will defend the belt for the first time on Saturday, facing third-time title challenger Ciryl Gane at UFC 321 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates (2 p.m. ET on ESPN PPV, prelims at 10 a.m. on ESPN+). But even before the new champion steps inside the Octagon this weekend, here’s something essential to know about him: Aspinall has already established himself as the most dominant heavyweight in MMA history.

If that sounds premature or even preposterous, consider that this is not a proclamation that Aspinall (15-3) is the greatest heavyweight ever. That’s an honor generally bestowed upon Emelianenko, who amassed a 29-fight unbeaten streak that extended for nearly the entire first decade of the 2000s.

Aspinall is not MMA’s most accomplished heavyweight, either. There’s a strong argument there for Miocic, who defended the UFC title more than anyone else and owns the heavyweight record with six title fight wins. Perhaps the most accomplished is Couture, the only fighter to reign three times as UFC heavyweight champion.

They’re extraordinary heavyweights, every one of them, but none sustained dominance the way Aspinall has.

Aspinall is 8-1 in the UFC, his only loss being the result of a freak noncontact injury. He blew out his knee in the opening seconds of a 2022 bout with Curtis Blaydes, and in addition to being saddled with a 15-second “TKO (Injury)” loss, Aspinall ended up sidelined for a year. He would step in with Blaydes again in 2024 and win by knockout in one minute. That victory fell right in line with the rest of Aspinall’s UFC résumé, as all but one of his eight wins ended in the first round, the most recent three in 1 minute, 13 seconds or faster.

According to ESPN Research, Aspinall’s seven first-round wins are the most by any fighter in any weight class through nine Octagon appearances in the promotion’s modern era (since UFC 28 in 2000).

Some other shiny Aspinall statistics:

• He has the shortest average fight time in UFC history (2 minutes, 2 seconds).

• He has spent the least time in bottom position of any fighter in UFC history (1 second).

• His 4.09 knockdowns per 15 minutes of fight time average is the most in UFC heavyweight history (second-most in any weight class).

• His 8.07 significant strikes landed per minute average is the most in UFC heavyweight history (third-most in any weight class).

• His significant strike differential (strikes landed minus strikes absorbed) of plus-5.18 per minute is the highest in UFC history.

Aspinall is dominance personified. Unprecedented dominance.

Emelianenko, for all of his greatness, had to persevere through perilous moments during his lengthy unbeaten run, none more so than in a Pride fight in 2004, when he was suplexed onto his head by Kevin Randleman (before turning things around for his 15th straight win). And when Emelianenko was submitted by Werdum in a 2010 Strikeforce match, it was the first of three straight defeats. One can be an all-time great yet not dominant all the time.

Miocic had his ups and downs as well. He owns the heavyweight title defense record but was knocked out four times in the Octagon — although Miocic should get a pass on the last one, against Jones just under a year ago, because he’d been retired for 3½ years before returning to the cage as a 42-year-old shadow of his old self. Even in his prime, though, Miocic didn’t dominate like Aspinall.

Couture doesn’t have the dominance of Aspinall, either. Nor does Ngannou, Werdum or anyone else. Couture had those three heavyweight reigns but also lost three heavyweight title bouts. Ngannou is as explosive as Aspinall, if not more so, but in 2018 he took consecutive losses to Miocic and Derrick Lewis. Werdum had unparalleled grappling chops — 12 submissions among 24 wins — but lost nine times in his career. Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira beat Couture, Werdum, Mark Coleman, Mirko “Cro Cop” Filipovic and Dan Henderson but lost 10 fights. Then there’s Jones, inarguably the greatest ever at light heavyweight, but having competed at heavyweight just twice, he grades out as an incomplete.

If anyone from MMA’s past showed Aspinall-level supreme dominance, it was Ronda Rousey. She won her first 12 fights, every one of them by finish, all but one in the first round. The final three fights during that untouchable run ended in 16, 14 and 34 seconds. But then it all fell apart for “Rowdy Ronda,” thanks to Holly Holm and Amanda Nunes.

At heavyweight, the story was much the same with Shane Carwin. He also built a 12-0 record on fast finishes — in his case, every one of them came in Round 1. Carwin was on his way to adding a 13th demolition, until Lesnar withstood a first-round beatdown and survived to the horn. When Round 2 began, Carwin was in uncharted waters, and Lesnar drowned him. So much for big-boy dominance.

Some might say Aspinall, like Jones, deserves an incomplete grade. But while he has yet to make a single defense of the undisputed title, Aspinall did put his interim belt up for grabs once while waiting (in vain) for Jones to return. He owns a victory over a former UFC heavyweight champion, Andrei Arlovski. And if he defeats Gane on Saturday (as a -425 favorite by ESPN BET), Aspinall will have beaten the four UFC heavyweights situated right behind him in the ESPN divisional rankings. That’s a heavy dose of dominance for a career that feels like it’s just getting started.

At age 32, Aspinall has time to accomplish much more and face down any challenges lurking ahead. No one has slowed his roll yet. Will this weekend add another stellar chapter to a story that’s been all his, or will it change the narrative on Tom Aspinall entirely?



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Transfer rumors, news: Chelsea to go back in for Spain striker Samu

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Transfer rumors, news: Chelsea to go back in for Spain striker Samu


Chelsea will make a fresh attempt to sign Spain striker Samu Agehowa, while Manchester United have learned how much it will cost to sign VfB Stuttgart midfielder Angelo Stiller. Join us for the latest transfer news and rumors from around the globe.

Transfers home page | Men’s grades | Women’s grades

TOP STORIES

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TRENDING RUMORS

– Chelsea are prepared to make an £87m offer to FC Porto for striker Samu Agehowa next summer, according to Record. The Blues had been close to signing the Spain international from Atlético Madrid in the summer of 2024, but the move collapsed and he joined Porto instead. Samu scored 25 goals in his first season in Portugal, and has netted eight goals in nine games so far this term. The 21-year-old has a contract at the Estádio do Dragão until June 2029.

– Stuttgart have set their fee for Angelo Stiller at €50 million with Manchester United among the clubs who have expressed an interest in the midfielder but the 24-year-old’s valuation could still rise, according to Sky Sports Deutschland. While Stiller has a €40m release clause, the Bundesliga club can buy that out and make his transfer fee freely negotiable. Meanwhile, TEAMtalk reports that United are looking to January with their list of options featuring Sporting CP‘s Morten Hjulmand, Crystal Palace‘s Adam Wharton, Brighton & Hove Albion‘s Carlos Baleba, Borussia Dortmund‘s Jobe Bellingham and Porto’s Victor Froholdt. The Red Devils are optimistic that they can reunite coach Ruben Amorim with Hjulmand for £50m despite the 26-year-old’s £70m release clause, with this coming due to Sporting’s relationship with their former manager.

Sky Sports Deutschland have offered an insight into the domino effect that could happen regarding free agent centre-backs in the summer. A final decision hasn’t been made on David Alaba‘s future but he is likely to leave Real Madrid, while the Saudi Pro League is watching the situation of his teammate Antonio Rüdiger with his future uncertain despite an offer having been tabled for a contract that runs until 2028. Liverpool‘s Ibrahima Konaté could be the replacement if either of them leave, while Marc Guéhi could replace the Frenchman at Anfield but is also wanted by Barcelona, Real Madrid and Bayern Munich. Dayot Upamecano could also move despite Bayern wanting to extend his contract to 2030.

– Manchester United midfielder Kobbie Mainoo is weighing up a January loan move with Tottenham Hotspur, Newcastle United, Manchester City and Brentford all looking at the 20-year-old, according to TEAMtalk. Mainoo remains committed to the Red Devils, but the feeling is that he needs more minutes to aid both his development and ambitions to represent England at the FIFA World Cup. Man United’s lack of depth in midfield has raised questions about whether they will be willing to allow a loan move.

– Barcelona are monitoring Mallorca winger Jan Virgili and could look to re-sign him, as reported by Diario Sport. The 19-year-old left the Blaugrana for €3.5m this summer as he didn’t want to be part of a reserve team any longer, but Barca included a clause that would see them receive a percentage of the funds from his next move and another clause that would allow them to re-sign him. Virgili marked his return from the Under-20 World Cup by providing the assist for Vedat Muriqi‘s equaliser in Mallorca’s win against Sevilla.

OTHER RUMORS

– AC Milan had a scout at Parma’s goalless draw against Genoa to watch goalkeeper Zion Suzuki. (Nicolò Schira)

– Paris Saint-Germain centre-back Willian Pacho could extend his contract in the coming weeks, with an offer on the table to extend his deal by one year so it lasts until 2030. (Le Parisien)

– Clubs from across Europe are monitoring Crystal Palace striker Jean-Philippe Mateta. (Rudy Galetti)

– Massimiliano Allegri has given his approval for AC Milan to extend Fikayo Tomori‘s contract with initial informal discussions already taking place. (Calciomercato)

– Rodez centre-back Mathis Magnin is being monitored by various Ligue 1 clubs having impressed in Ligue 2. (Rudy Galetti)

– Several European clubs, especially from Italy and England, are monitoring Copenhagen centre-back Gabriel Pereira. (Rudy Galetti)

– Barcelona will not move in the January transfer window unless they suffer injuries. (AS)

– Bologna have turned down a “huge” offer from Saudi Pro League club Al Qadsiah for Riccardo Orsolini, and the Rossoblu are in talks to extend the winger’s contract until 2029 with the option for another year. (Nicolò Schira)



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