Tag: age group

  • Ange gets his man… but big issue remains; Chelsea’s $400m signing spree: PL Transfer Report Card

    Ange gets his man… but big issue remains; Chelsea’s $400m signing spree: PL Transfer Report Card

    The 2023-24 summer transfer window has drawn to a close, with some clubs nailing their business while others have fallen well short of the mark as financial regulations heavily influence the Premier League’s spending habits.

    Unlike windows of the past, where the Premier League attracted some of the biggest names in Europe, this year has felt a little different, with clubs focused more on ensuring safer financial practice as opposed to nailing their big money signings.

    We saw less deals akin to the ones that brought Erling Haaland to Manchester City and Romelu Lukaku to Chelsea in recent seasons, and more like Elliot Anderson’s to Nottingham Forest and Conor Gallagher’s to Atletico Madrid: transfers done to appease accountants more than managers.

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    The strict Premier League crackdown on its Profit and Sustainability rules in recent seasons, exemplified by Everton and Forest’s respective points deductions, appear to have frightened clubs.

    This was highlighted in the 10 days preceding the June 30 accounting deadline when six clubs – Forest, Newcastle, Chelsea, Everton, Aston Villa and Leicester – sold 15 players for a grand total of £323 million ($631.8 million AUD) in a late attempt to meet PSR requirements.

    According to a report from The Athletic, those 15 deals accounted for 16% of the Premier League’s spending this window, with some of those clubs enacting creative accounting to ensure their books comply and a costly points deduction is avoided.

    Though this did not slow Premier League spending, with 14 clubs parting with over $150 million on players during the window, but did create a strange spending environment that will surely become a mainstay in the coming seasons.

    Changed spending conditions have coincided with changing spending habits, which have been on show throughout the window and go in part to explaining the business of some sides.

    The average age of the league’s 10 most expensive signings this season is 23.3 years old, highlighting how clubs are targeting younger players with high potential and resale value, as opposed to proven products in the prime of their careers.

    Foxsports.com.au rates every Premier League team’s summer dealings in our Transfer Report Card!

    Arsenal

    Biggest signing: Riccardo Calafiori ($81.3m from Bologna)

    Total spend: $186.5 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Emile Smith Rowe ($65.8m to Fulham)

    Total income: $161.4 million (AUD)

    Having finished second last season, Mikel Arteta’s side needed a strong transfer window to strengthen their side and solidify their title push. They did just that.

    Riccardo Calafiori arrives after a strong season with Bologna and a good Euros campaign with Italy to strengthen one of Arsenal’s problem areas last season – left back, with the Italian’s ability to seamlessly invert into midfield key to Arteta’s tactical shape. Mikel Merino provides midfield strength, and allows Arsenal to push Declan Rice into a deeper role whenever required, while the move to permanently sign David Raya, and sell Aaron Ramsdale, cleared up one of the biggest clouds over the club’s 2023-24 season.

    Raheem Sterling’s deadline day arrival from Chelsea is a great move, providing cover on both wings as well as title-winning experience. If Arteta can get the Englishman to perform at his best, like he did when the pair were at Manchester City, it’ll provide Arsenal with an additional goal scoring threat this season and afford Bukayo Saka a chance to rest his legs after an intense year.

    Fighting off interest in Leandro Trossard from the Saudi Pro League is shrewd too given the Belgian’s impact off the bench and versatility, which will come in handy given Gabriel Jesus’ recent injury record.

    Crucially in modern football the sales of Emlie Smith-Rowe and Eddie Nketiah, which will appear as pure profit on the club’s books, ensure they remain compliant with the Premier League’s strict PSR rules.

    Where some feel Arsenal’s window missed the mark is their failure to bring a world class No.9 in, with Victor Osimhen and Ivan Toney but avoided for various reasons. Arteta has faith in Kai Havertz, who scored eight goals in 13 games as striker last season, with Trossard, Jesus and Sterling as cover.

    Grade: B+

    Arsenal’s Italian defender Riccardo Calafiori challenges for the ball with Brighton’s Paraguayan attacker Julio Enciso during a English Premier League match between the Emirates Stadium.Source: AFP

    Aston Villa

    Biggest signing: Amadou Onana ($96.8m from Everton)

    Total spend: $295.8 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Moussa Diaby ($97.7m to Al-Itthad)

    Total income: $271.2 million (AUD)

    Villa were dealt a massive blow this window in losing Moussa Diaby and Douglas Luiz, two of their strongest performers last season.

    The club signed Belgian holding midfielder Amadou Onana from Everton, with the 23-year-old already hitting the ground running by scoring twice in his first three games. Onana adds size, power and strong ball-winning skills to Villa’s midfield, though lacks the passing range and set-piece threat of Luiz.

    Not to worry Villa fans, given the club already possesses Youri Tielemans, one of the Premier League’s strongest passers and a set piece specialist to rival the best of them.

    Ian Maatsen, who was key in Dortmund’s run to last season’s Champions League final, gives good depth at left back, though there are concerns about the drop off between right back Matty Cash and his understudy, particularly with injuries in central defence not allowing Ezri Konsa to shuffle across.

    Diaby’s loss is massive, even if the Frenchman’s performances tailed off at the end of last season, but Unai Emery already has the pieces to compensate for his departure.

    Samuel Iling-Junior and Enzo Barenechea, both signed from Juventus as part of the deal to send Luiz the other way, are young and unproven but could become integral cogs in the Villa machine once they return from their respective loans.

    Villa haven’t just signed Ross Barkley is an underrated piece of business. The former Chelsea man provides Emery with experience and brilliant midfield cover following an impressive Premier League season with Luton Town.

    Omari Kellyman, Tim Iroegbunam and Cameron Archer’s sales will go towards balancing the club’s books, even if the latter was re-signed from Sheffield United before being sold to Southampton, while Philippe Coutinho’s loan move to Vasco da Gama lightens the club’s wage bill.

    Grade: B

    LONDON, ENGLAND – AUGUST 17: New signing Ian Maatsen acknowledges Aston Villa fans after the team’s victory against West Ham United FC (Photo by Bryn Lennon/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Bournemouth

    Biggest signing: Evanilson ($61.3m from Porto)

    Total spend: $172.3 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Dominic Solanke ($106m to Tottenham Hotspur)

    Total income: $110.3 million (AUD)

    There was no more important player to Andoni Iraola’s Bournemouth side last season than striker Dominic Solanke, who finished the campaign with 19 goals and three assists.

    Brazilian striker Evanilson joins for a club-record fee having scored 13 Portuguese league goals last season for 3rd placed Porto.

    An unknown quantity in England, Evanilson has all the makings of a well-rounded striker and joins a side that had more shot creating actions last season than Aston Villa and Crystal Palace, though it will be hard for the striker to have link up play as exceptional as Solanke.

    First-choice goalkeeper Neto joins Arsenal on loan, with Kepa arriving from Chelsea to replace the Brazilian, marking a significant downgrade in the club’s goalkeeping ranks. The Spaniard is a gamble for Iraola’s side given his failure to set the Premier League alight, weak shot stopping and shortcomings when competing for crosses.

    19-year-old Spanish-Dutch defender Dean Huijsen has all the makings of a serious transfer coup, with multi-Premier League winning manager Jose Mourinho once describing the centre back as “one of the highest-quality prospects in European football at this age level.”

    Grade: C-

    BOURNEMOUTH, ENGLAND – AUGUST 25: AFC Bournemouth’s Evanilson during the club’s Premier League match against Newcastle United. (Photo by Eddie Keogh/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Brentford

    Biggest signing: Igor Thiago ($58m from Club Brugge)

    Total spend: $169.5 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Ivan Toney ($77.4m to Al-Ahli)

    Total income: $129.7 million (AUD)

    Sometimes a transfer window is less about what you gain and more about what you lose.

    In letting Ivan Toney walk, Brentford offloaded a player who evidently did not want to be at the club for some time, at a significant fee that allowed them to invest in the future of their club by bringing several talented youngsters in, such as Fabio Carvalho, Sepp van den Berg and Gustavo Nunes.

    Not only does Toney’s transfer have significant financial benefits for the Bees, but it should also create a harmonised Brentford squad this season.

    Igor Thiago was signed as Toney’s replacement after 29 goals in the Belgian league last season but is currently sidelined with a knee injury. Bryan Mbeumo and Yoanne Wissa have led Frank’s line brilliantly to begin the season, with the club’s ability to hold on the latter arguably their most important piece of business.

    Keep an eye on teenage left back Jayden Meghoma, viewed by many good judges as one of England’s brightest young prospects. Injuries could pave the way for the flyer to break into Thomas Frank’s side at left back at some point this season.

    Grade: B

    Brighton

    Biggest signing: Georginio Rutter ($77.4m from Leeds United)

    Total spend: $381.2 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Deniz Undav ($49.7m to VFB Stuttgart)

    Total income: $90.4 million (AUD)

    Only Chelsea spent more money than Brighton, which comes as a surprise given the South Coast club’s highly successful ‘moneyball’ style tactics in recent years.

    Those tactics are still at play, with the club not splashing huge cash on a big name signing this summer. Instead, they’ve picked up several highly promising footballers who add to 31-year-old coach Fabian Hurzeler’s squad.

    Georginio Rutter, Matt O’Riley, Mats Wieffer, Ferdi Kadioglu and Brajan Gruda all have the makings of quintessential Brighton signings and will no doubt be sold for triple their purchase price in 18 months.

    Over the opening three games of the season, fresh faced winger Yankuba Minteh has been incredibly impressive, playing with little fear and plenty of creativity and drive, frightening opposition left backs with his relentless attack.

    Billy Gilmour’s deadline day move to Napoli weakens the club’s holding midfield stocks, which took a hit earlier in the window with Pascal Gross’ departure to Dortmund. Hurzeler has said as much in recent days, noting the club “don’t have enough players at (No.) six.”

    Grade: B

    Right winger Yankuba Minteh during Brighton’s Premier League win against Everton. (Photo by Jan Kruger/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Chelsea

    Biggest signing: Pedro Neto ($104.6m from Wolves)

    Total spend: $400.6 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Conor Gallagher ($65.9m to Atletico Madrid)

    Total income: $303 million (AUD)

    Deep breath in. And another. 11 players arrived at Stamford Bridge over the summer, bloating Enzo Maresca’s first team squad out to a whopping 30, with a further 12 out on loan.

    “You want to ask about where Joao Felix is going to play, I’ve got another question – where’s he going to get changed at the training ground?” Sky Sports pundit Jamie Carragher questioned.

    “How are all these players in one dressing room? How are you putting on a training session?”

    The Conor Gallagher and Raheem Sterling sagas were sour, and typified the current Chelsea regimes cold, and seemingly senseless, approach to business, but the deals to offload Ian Maatsen, Romelu Lukaku, Lewis Hall and Omari Hutchinson were savvy moves that will go towards balancing the club’s books.

    In amongst the madness of moving on Sterling and Gallagher, uncertainty around Trevoh Chalobah’s future, the lack of resolution around Ben Chilwell’s situation, and signing three left wingers, there is some small semblance of method.

    Chelsea have made their intentions clear with their business; they are backing Maresca in the market and signing players whose profile fits his needs.

    There is little risk to the Jadon Sancho deal, while Joao Felix’s signing could be viewed differently if the Portuguese star hits the heights expected of him when he burst onto the scene six years ago.

    And yet, despite these faint glimmers of hope there is still the overwhelming sense of restlessness at the Bridge, not only given the way the club has conducted business this summer, and the enormous squad size, but also given the club spent more money than any other Premier League side while failing to address their widely perceived problem area: striker.

    Toney and Osimhen were both on the table, though moves for either failed to materialise, with finances key to this. A lack of depth in holding midfield remains a concern for Maresca with Romeo Lavia’s injury history meaning the club are a Moises Caicedo injury away from a near unpluggable hole in their midfield.

    Grade: B-

    New signing Jadon Sancho is presented to the Chelsea fans before his side’s 1-1 draw with Crystal Palace. (Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Crystal Palace

    Biggest signing: Eddie Nketiah ($48.3m from Arsenal)

    Total spend: $130.7 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Michael Olise ($87m to Bayern Munich)

    Total income: $174 million (AUD)

    Oliver Glasner’s Crystal Palace shocked the Premier League at the back end of last season, winning six of their last seven from 14th to 10th.

    The pre-season expectation was for them to build on this, even with Michael Olise’s big money move to Bayern Munich removing one of the stars of last season from the fold.

    Joachim Andersen left for Fulham not long after, and things could’ve gone from bad to worse if Newcastle’s aggressive pursuit of captain Marc Guehi paid off.

    It didn’t, and Palace’s defence was stronger for it. Trevoh Chalobah arrived on loan from Chelsea, while the promising French Maxence Lacroix joined from Wolfsburg, further strengthening Glasner’s backline.

    Japanese international Daicha Kamada and Senegalese winger Ismaila Sarr strengthen his frontline, so too does the signing of Eddie Nketiah – who just feels like a Crystal Palace player.

    While they’re yet to reap the rewards on the field, Palace have had one of the better windows in the Premier League, defined not so much by who they brought in as much as who they didn’t lose – Guehi, Eberechi Eze and Adam Wharton.

    Grade: B+

    Everton

    Biggest signing: Jake O’Brien ($33m from Lyon)

    Total spend: $83 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Amadou Onana ($96.8m to Aston Villa)

    Total income: $133.6 million (AUD)

    Much like Palace, Everton’s best bit of business in the summer window was not allowing their most important defensive cog to leave the club.

    That Jarrad Branthwaite remained at Everton is a massive win for Sean Dyche, even if the defender has missed the opening games of the season through injury.

    The 22-year-old was ranked sixth for clearances and seventh for interceptions last season and was a key reason behind Everton keeping 13 clean sheets, second only to Arsenal.

    However, the Toffees lost Amadou Onana to Everton, denting their midfield stocks for perhaps the most important Premier League campaign in the club’s recent memory.

    Iliman Ndiaye, Jack Harrison and Jesper Lindstrom headline a suite of creative signings that have their work cut out for them in trying to inspire a side that scored just 40 goals last season.

    There’s no doubting Everton have made some smart additions. Whether they’ll be what’s needed to keep them away from the relegation fight is a question only time has the answer for.

    Grade: D+

    Amadou Onana traded Everton for Aston Villa this transfer window. (Photo by Richard Pelham/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Fulham

    Biggest signing: Emile Smith Rowe ($65.8m from Arsenal)

    Total spend: $173.7 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Joao Palhinha ($81.9m to Bayern Munich)

    Total income: $112.9 million (AUD)

    One of the smaller Premier League clubs who executed a smart summer window that leaves their squad stronger this year than when it ended last season.

    Of course Joao Palhinha’s departure to Bayern Munich leaves a massive hole in Marco Silva’s midfield – no player made more than his 152 tackles last season. Not signing a replacement may come back to bite them, though Harrison Reed, Sasa Lukic and new signing Sander Berge are more than capable in that role.

    At the back Joachim Andersen rejoins from Palace, softening Tosin Adarabioyo’s departure, while Jorge Cuenca offers Silva an additional left footed centre back following Tim Ream’s departure.

    In attack, Fulham’s have invested plenty in Emile Smith Rowe, a brilliant attacking talent who’s been stifled by injuries and falling out of Mikel Arteta’s favour in recent years. The winger/attacking midfielder has hit the ground running, scoring in Fulham’s 2-1 win over Leicester City, and could be viewed as a bargain in coming seasons if he can match, or exceed, the 10 goals he scored for the Gunners in 2021-22.

    Reiss Nelson provides depth out wide following Willian’s departure for Olympiakos and could potentially push Alex Iwobi into a central midfield role he excelled at for Everton a few seasons ago.

    While their business hasn’t set the world alight, it’s quietly done what it’s needed to do: make up for their outgoings and strengthen where possible.

    Grade: B-

    Fulham attacking midfielder Emile Smith Rowe joined the club this summer for $65.8 million from Arsenal. (Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Ipswich Town

    Biggest signing: Omari Hutchinson ($42.6m from Chelsea)

    Total spend: $205 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: George Edmundon (loan to Middlesbrough)

    Total income: N/A

    Only two players contributed more than Omari Hutchinson’s 16 goals in Ipswich’s promotion campaign last season. A deal to bring the England youth international back to the club is massive towards their bid to stay up, with the attacking midfielder showing lots of promise in the season’s opening games.

    Jack Clarke, Jacob Greaves and Liam Delap all have the potential to be great signings, especially for the price tag they were collected at, and could all benefit from Kieran McKenna’s brilliant management, while signing last season’s Championship top scorer Sammie Szmodics for just over $17 million is smart business.

    This quartet are good enough to cut it in the Premier League, but also have the added benefit that, in the event of relegation, Ipswich can extract a high resale value or utilise their talents to earn promotion back to the top flight.

    The deal to bring Kalvin Phillips on loan from Manchester City has rocks or diamonds potential. At his best Phillips is a brilliant defensive midfielder with an exceptional passing range and wonderful ability to bait and beat opposition presses. At his worst he is injury riddled, just ask Manchester City, and error-laden, just ask West Ham.

    Ipswich will be praying he’s more of the former, especially considering the 28-year-old’s experience keeping freshly promoted sides in the Premier League.

    Grade: C

    Omari Hutchinson during Ipswich’s Premier League match against Liverpool FC. (Photo by Marc Atkins/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Leicester City

    Biggest signing: Bilal El Khannouss ($38.7m from Genk)

    Total spend: $153.2 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall ($58.1m to Chelsea)

    Total income: $58.1 million (AUD)

    A few seasons ago the Foxes had a reputation as one of the savviest market operators in Europe. Deals for N’Golo Kante, Riyad Mahrez, Youri Tielemans, Wilfred Ndidi, Wesley Fofana and Ricardo Pereira were struck with little interjection from other clubs and to great benefit for Leicester.

    Relegation zapped that reputation. And while it will be hard to replicate their previous market success there are at least several positives to take from Leicester’s transfer window.

    Bilal El Khannouss arrives from Genk as the Belgian league’s Young Player of the Season and an Olympic Bronze medallist who was involved in nine goals last season. The Moroccan’s stats may fail to flatter, but he’s a highly technical and intelligent footballer who glides across the park and could provide some necessary creative spark.

    That creative spark takes on greater importance without Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall, the attacking lynchpin around which the club won promotion last season. Dewsbury-Hall’s move to join Enzo Maresca is the club’s only major outgoing – a big plus in their bid to keep their top-flight status intact.

    Dewsbury-Hall’s is also major for Leicester given the fee he collected will register as pure profit on the clubs’ books, an important factor given they had significant financial restraints throughout the window.

    Elsewhere, Oliver Skipp is a reliable Premier League footballer signed at a good price, while making Abdul Fatawu’s loan permanent is savvy too. Both will be crucial for Steve Cooper this season.

    Where their window fell short is really strengthening at striker, especially considering Jamie Vardy’s age and recent injury history and the departure of Kelechi Iheanacho to Sevilla.

    Odsonne Edouard has Premier League experience, and was once a prolific goalscorer at Celtic, yet found the net just 21 times in his 103 Palace games. Given the importance of reliable goalscoring in staving off relegation.

    Grade: C

    Liverpool

    Biggest signing: Federico Chiesa ($19.4m from Juventus)

    Total spend: $19.4 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Fabio Carvalho ($43.7m to Brentford)

    Total income: $102.6 million (AUD)

    This summer always loomed as the end of an era at Liverpool. Jurgen Klopp’s time at the club had drawn to a close, with Dutchman Arne Slot taking the reins of Anfield.

    Immense change was expected, with new personnel viewed as a guarantee in order to assist Slot’s transition in the Liverpool managerial role.

    Yet, for much of the window Liverpool were the only club in Europe’s top five leagues to have not signed a single player. That was until Giori Mamardashvili was signed from Valencia before being immediately loaned back to Spain, while a bargain move for Federico Chiesa is as risky as it is promising given the Italian’s recent injury history.

    Their lack of market activity has not significantly impacted Liverpool, who have begun the season brilliantly.

    Even more impressive is the club’s failure to panic once Martin Zubimendi informed them he would remain at Real Sociedad. The Spaniard, who impressed in the Euro final, was billed as the No.6 the Reds desperately needed, with many doubting who would be shoehorned into the role in his place.

    Enter Ryan Gravenberch, who has done so seamlessly, bringing a unique profile into the defensive midfield role and justifying Liverpool’s lack of panic in the market.

    Fabio Carvalho, Sepp van den Berg and Bobby Clark all left for good deals given their experience, while Stefan Bajcetic’s loan to RB Salzburg will be beneficial to the club in the coming seasons.

    Thiago retired and Joel Matip was released, with the club opting not to dip into the market to replace the experienced Cameroonian centre half. A move for Frenchman Castello Lukeba never materialised, meaning the club only have four recognised central defenders, which could prove their Achilles heel down the line.

    Liverpool great Jamie Carragher believes the club “are still short – not in terms of numbers but maybe in terms of quality – at centre-back and in holding midfield,” though credited them for not panic buying, which rarely ever works.

    Grade: C+

    (FILES) Liverpool new signing Federico Chiesa celebrates scoring a goal for Juventus. (Photo by Marco BERTORELLO / AFP)Source: AFP

    Manchester City

    Biggest signing: Ilkay Gundogan (Free from FC Barcelona)

    Total spend: $40.7 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Julian Alvarez ($125m to Atletico Madrid)

    Total income: $264.6 million (AUD)

    When Julian Alvarez traded Manchester for the warmth of Madrid and the intensity of Diego Simeone, there was a sense that this may be the season City finally trips up.

    At times filling in for both Erling Haaland and Kevin De Bruyne, the Argentine World Cup winner played the fifth most minutes for Pep in the Premier League last season, scoring 11 and creating eight.

    Where exactly would City find a player capable of filling in for both their striker and chief creator? The answer, it seems, had been hiding in plain sight.

    Released from the final two years of his Barcelona contract, former City captain Ilkay Gundogan has been deployed as a false nine many times for Guardiola but is naturally a brilliant creative midfielder. There is arguably no better Alvarez replacement in world football.

    The German headlines a quiet summer of incomings for City, which includes tricky Brazilian winger Savinho – who joined from Girona and has already shown what a delight he is with the ball at his feet. Both are smart additions that boost an already exceptional squad.

    Even still, City enter the campaign without a recognised back up striker on their books.

    For any other side this would be deeply concerning. For City, it’s a problem, given Haaland’s relatively good injury record, without yet being a major issue, yet.

    Pep noted as much, stating the club’s choice not to replace Alvarez could be a “problem” that may turn into a “mistake” but believes the club have enough players in house who can fill in for Haaland, including Gundogan, Phil Foden and youngsters James McAtee and Oscar Bobb.

    Where City were smart this window is their ability to offload unwanted, but talented, academy products for strong fees that allow them to clean their books.

    Liam Delap, Taylor Harwood-Bellis and Tommy Doyle all permanently moved away from the Etihad. Offloading Joao Cancelo’s contract from the club’s books can also not be understated.

    Grade: B-

    lkay Gundogan re-joined Manchester City from FC Barcelona on a free transfer this summer. (Photo by Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Manchester United

    Biggest signing: Lenny Yoro ($101.4m from LOSC Lille)

    Total spend: $354.4 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Scott McTominay ($49.9m to Napoli)

    Total income: $164.5 million (AUD)

    As has been the case for the last decade, it’s incredibly hard to get a read on whether or not United’s transfer window has been good.

    On paper they’ve brought in good players. Lenny Yoro has massive wraps on him and may just be the best centre back at his age group, Joshua Zirkzee is a unicorn of a striker as capable of dropping deep and creative as many attacking midfielders, and Manuel Ugarte appears the kind of no-nonsense midfield anchor they’ve been crying out for.

    Matthijs De Ligt was once Europe’s finest young centre half but has failed to impress at two of the continent’s biggest clubs. He arrives with a major question mark. While at just over $25 million, Noussair Mazraoui has all the makings of a bargain.

    And yet there is an element of groundhog day about this window. United have had good windows in the past. Remember 2021, When the club signed Jadon Sancho, Raphael Varane and Cristiano Ronaldo? Or 2022, when Casemiro, Antony and Lisandro Martinez arrived at Old Trafford? Or last year, when Mason Mount, Andre Onana and Rasmus Hojlund joined?

    All of these windows were rightly perceived as great windows on face value of the signings. And the same can be said for this window. All of United’s deals look good on paper, but that matters for very little if the club’s form doesn’t turn around.

    Where United, and their restructured footballing ownership, deserve credit is offloading Mason Greenwood to Marseille, clearing the club of the winger’s baggage. Allowing Aaron Wan-Bissaka to move to West Ham is also smart given he doesn’t fit the profile of an Erik Ten Hag fullback.

    At nearly $50 million, the club would have been foolish to reject Napoli’s offer for Scott McTominay, though his passion and versatility could well be missed dearly.

    Grade: B-

    Manchester United’s new signings (L to R) Matthijs De Ligt, Leny Yoro (using crutches due to a metatarsal injury), Joshua Zirkzee and Noussair Mazraoui acknowledge the fans prior to United’s clash with Fulham. (Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Newcastle United

    Biggest signing: Lewis Hall ($54.6 million from Chelsea – loan move made permanent)

    Total spend: $74.2 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Elliot Anderson ($68.3 million to Nottingham Forest)

    Total income: $132.8 million (AUD)

    Arguably no Premier League club had their hands tied behind their back by financial constraints more than Newcastle United.

    Manager Eddie Howe described it as “challenging,” before sharing his hopes the club’s minimal business helps them strengthen in future windows.

    Out went Elliot Anderson and Yankuba Minteh, both of whom would have pushed for a place in Howe’s squad, and potentially starting XI, with Anderson’s move to Forest facilitated purely for financial reasons.

    The club’s financial constraints meant they were limited in their ability to dip into the transfer market, with Lewis Hall’s loan move being made permanent and William Osula’s signing the only two the club splashed cash on.

    Lloyd Kelly adds much-needed defensive depth, and will be a valuable squad player once everyone is fit, but is hardly a signing to set the world alight.

    It would be harsh to judge Newcastle’s incomings too severely due to the club’s financial constraints, though questions need to be asked about their failed pursuit of Palace centre back Marc Guehi, as well as their inability to offload Kieran Trippier – who begins the season as Howe’s right back deputy.

    Clearly the money was there, just not used in ways that strengthen the players at Howe’s disposal. What did strengthen Howe’s side was keeping Anthony Gordon and Alexander Isak, which is about the only commendable business Newcastle conducted.

    At best, Newcastle will reflect on this window as one that boosted their squad and brought in two fine young talents. At worst, it will be seen as a failure that failed to achieve anything other than balance the club’s books.

    Grade: D+

    Nottingham Forest

    Biggest signing: Elliot Anderson ($68.3 million from Newcastle United)

    Total spend: $175 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Moussa Niakhate ($52.8 million to Lyon)

    Total income: $88.9 million (AUD)

    Dare we say it… did Forest have a strong transfer window?

    Considering the club have had an even more scattergun approach to transfers in recent years than even Chelsea, their activity was measured, geared towards strengthening Nuno’s squad as opposed to signing as many players as possible.

    Elliot Anderson is a wonderful footballer, Nikola Milenkovic has been impressive in recent seasons for Fiorentina, Jota Silva has massive wraps as an elusive winger with goal scoring nous, while James Ward-Prowse’s loan adds depth, experience and set piece threat to Nuno’s midfield.

    Murillo, Morgan Gibbs-White and Anthony Elanga remain at the City ground, highlighting how their astute incomings came without expensive outgoings.

    Given the club targeted seven goalkeepers throughout last season, and current No.1 Matz Sels had the lowest save percentage (57.4%) of all 25 goalkeepers in the Premier League last season, not bringing in a new goalkeeper is the one glaring negative against Forest’s window.

    The club lagged in their attempt to sign Aaron Ramsdale, who joined Southampton instead, saw their advances for Neto knocked back, missed out on Sam Johnstone to Wolves, failed in their attempt to bring French international Brice Samba back to the club and were unwilling to meet Liverpool’s valuation for Ireland international Caoimhim Kelleher.

    Another clear area the club were attempting to strengthen but failed to do is up front, with their pursuits of Eddie Nketiah, Yoane Wissa, Omar Marmoush, Evanilson and Santiago Gimenez all ending in nothing.

    While this is disappointing for Forest fans, their manager reportedly has no qualms with Sels as first choice keeper, while New Zealand international Chris Wood has begun the season in red-hot scoring form.

    What isn’t disappointing for Forest fans is the fact their club didn’t panic buy when missing out on their targets and instead stuck the course with what they had and trusted Nuno to get the best out of them.

    Grade: B-

    Elliot Anderson joined Nottingham Forest from Newcastle just before the June 30 PSR deadline. (Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Southampton

    Biggest signing: Aaron Ramsdale ($35.2 million from Arsenal)

    Total spend: $205.4 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Carlos Alcaraz ($29.7 million to Flamengo)

    Total income: $82.5 million (AUD)

    For much of the window, Southampton seemed to sign players with one eye on remaining in the Premier League and another on gaining promotion in the event they’re relegated this season.

    Given last season’s promoted contingent – Burnley, Luton Town and Sheffield United – all went straight back down at the end of 2023-24, this business approach is as smart as it is sad.

    Aaron Ramsdale’s signing late in the window shows the hunger is there for Russell Martin’s side. He headlines a savvy window for the Saints, who also made Taylor Harwood-Bellis and Flynn Downes’ loan moves permanent, while Ben Brereton-Diaz should add goals.

    Goals will be a problem for Southampton this season given Adam Armstrong’s never scored more than two Premier League goals in a single season, and Brereton-Diaz has the potential to provide a threat upfront after scoring six times in 14 Premier League games on loan at Sheffield United last season.

    There is hope Cameron Archer can blossom into a reliable Premier League striker, which is why the Saints paid Villa $29 million for his services, even if he’s scored more than 10 goals in a season once in his career.

    At the very least, should Southampton fail to find the goals they’ll need to survive, their signings this window have a high enough ceiling to serve them well in the coming years.

    Grade: C-

    Ange bullish wins will come soon | 00:25

    Tottenham Hotspur

    Biggest signing: Dominic Solanke ($107m from Bournemouth)

    Total spend: $234.8 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Oliver Skipp ($39 million to Leicester City)

    Total income: $114.6 million (AUD)

    12 months after Harry Kane moved to Bayern Munich, Spurs have finally landed on their replacement for the England captain.

    In Dominic Solanke, Ange Postecoglou has a striker moulded similarly to Kane as you can get on the market. A career-high 19 goal haul last season is the headline figure for the former Bournemouth man, but his link up play and ability to drag opponents out of position and bring teammates into play is among the best in Europe.

    An early injury setback following a disappointing debut has soured the early weeks of Solanke’s time at Spurs but Postecoglou has made it no secret that he feels the 26-year-old will succeed at the club.

    “He is a presence and scores different types of goals. I think the way we play suits him,” the Spurs coach said.

    Elsewhere, the club brought in Archie Gray, Wilson Odobert and Lucas Bergvall in, all three of whom are fine young footballers with the potential to grow into exceptional players around which Spurs’ side can be constructed.

    18-year-old Gray in particular marks a significant transfer coup, with the 2023-24 Championship Young Player of the Season already a fine holding midfielder, and capable right back, who was highly-rated by former Leeds manager Marcelo Bielsa.

    Last season, Gray led Leeds in tackles, was ranked third in tackles and won possession back more often than just about anyone at the club.

    Away from new signings, Spurs were able to offload several high-wage, low performance players, namely Tanguy Nbombele, and find new homes for footballers who don’t suit Postecoglou’s style, such as Eric Dier, Emerson Royal and Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg.

    For his part, the Australian described the club’s activity as a “real positive” but noted there were shortcomings with their activity.

    “We know there’s still some areas where I look at squad management and we can improve. Again, it’s got to be the right person, the right player and right person,” Postecoglou said, before hinting at potential reinforcements joining the club in January.

    One area the club are undoubtedly assessing depth options for is defence. Last season, Spurs’ campaign was derailed by injuries and suspensions to Micky van de Ven, Cristian Romero and Destiny Udogie.

    At present, Spurs have just four centre backs on their books, with one of those being Ben Davies – who began his career at left back. Depth in this area is a must if Spurs are to blossom in the coming seasons, with a potential January defensive signing on the cards, one in a similar mould to Radu Dragusin.

    Grade: B

    Spurs record signing Dominic Solanke joined Spurs from Bournemouth during the summer window for $107 million. (Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    West Ham

    Biggest signing: Max Kilman ($78.2 million from Wolves)

    Total spend: $247.5 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Flynn Downes ($35.2 million to Southampton)

    Total income: $81 million (AUD)

    It’s almost impossible to ignore West Ham’s business and suggest the club aren’t the winners of this year’s summer transfer window.

    And the fact they’re the winners is not because they’ve signed a lot of players (nine). If that were the case Chelsea would’ve won by many country miles.

    No, it’s the type of players the Hammers have brought in. Good players, with a clear place in the squad, that add value to Julen Lopetegui’s side while coming at largely affordable prices.

    Picking up Max Kilman from Wolves is such astute business; only three players made more clearances last season and only four won a higher percentage of their tackles.

    He is one of several defence reinforcements joining the Hammers, alongside Aaron Wan-Bissaka, who’s defensive excellence compensates for his offensive limitations, and Jean-Clair Todibo, who joins on a loan with an obligation to buy.

    Given the two-time French international was on the radar of many clubs, including Manchester United, West Ham’s ability to sign him represents a significant transfer coup.

    Last season’s Championship Player of the Season Crysencio Summerville bolsters an already stacked attack line. The Dutchman’s importance could grow depending on the outcome of an FA investigation into Lucas Paqueta’s potential betting breaches.

    Spanish international Carlos Soler and Argentinian midfielder Guido Rodriguez provide depth to Lopetegui’s midfield too, especially with James Ward-Prowse’s loan to Forest.

    West Ham’s smart signings have been counteracted with necessary outgoings, including Said Benrahma, Thilo Kehrer, Maxwel Cornet and Nayef Aguerd, all of whom had rather forgettable spells with the Hammers.

    Grade: A+

    Wolverhampton Wanderers

    Biggest signing: Andre ($41 million from Fluminese)

    Total spend: $120.3 million (AUD)

    Biggest exit: Pedro Neto ($104.6m to Chelsea)

    Total income: $192 million (AUD)

    Club captain, gone.

    Best player, gone.

    Fair to say, it hasn’t been the best window for Gary O’Neil’s Wolves. Max Kilman left for West Ham and Pedro Neto for Chelsea, significantly weakening the manager’s defensive and creative options.

    “Those guys, we need to replace them,” O’Neil told Sky Sports. That they didn’t could prove damning for the club, even if they have faith in the in-house options they have to make up for their two big losses.

    Andre, signed from Fluminese, shapes as smart business, with the ball-winning midfielder a wild success in his homeland. He adds to a strong midfield contingent at the club.

    Tommy Doyle’s return is positive after he impressed on loan last season, with Jorgen Strand Larsen has already shown his immense presence up top.

    Sam Johnstone is a fine goalkeeper, but is he better than Jose Sa? While question marks remain about the rest of the clubs’ signings, many of whom have high ceilings while lacking Premier League experience.

    Speaking to Sky Sports, O’Neil indicated earlier in the window that the club needed to look at bringing in players capable of helping them win now.

    “Recruitment has been asset-driven and we are hopeful that we can balance that slightly, to get some that are Premier League ready,” he said.

    For the large part the club didn’t, and if their start to the season is anything to go by that strategy will do more short term harm than long-term good.

    Grade: D-

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  • The ‘coming out party’ and ‘F-U’ dunk behind Australian Johnny Furphy’s ‘meteoric’ NBA Draft rise

    The ‘coming out party’ and ‘F-U’ dunk behind Australian Johnny Furphy’s ‘meteoric’ NBA Draft rise

    When Ash Arnott first laid eyes on Johnny Furphy, the then-14-year-old looked more likely to have a future as the frontman for Australian indie rock band Ocean Alley than as a player in the NBA.

    “A little surfer boy,” as Arnott described it to foxsports.com.au, with the blonde hair to match.

    Although Arnott, now assistant coach of the men’s program at Basketball Australia’s Centre of Excellence (CoE), saw more than just those long locks.

    He saw a light frame but one with plenty of room to grow, knowing Johnny’s brother Joe had started out at a similar height before growing five or six inches one summer.

    He also noticed the way Furphy moved. It was and still is “different”, as Robbie McKinlay, the head coach at the CoE, put it.

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    Johnny Furphy playing junior basketball for Collingwood. Picture: SuppliedSource: Supplied

    “The way I sort of describe it is he kind of glides,” McKinlay told foxsports.com.au.

    All of this is to say that Arnott saw something in Furphy. He wasn’t entirely sure where it would take him or what he would become, but he always knew this kid “had a chance”.

    A chance to play college basketball for the Kansas Jayhawks and then go declare for the NBA Draft after his freshman year?

    “I’d be lying. I can’t predict that,” Arnott said.

    “But my job back then was to try and identify players to see who could maybe take the next step and be a pro. That’s the idea through Basketball Victoria and Basketball Australia, to identify kids that you think can go on and be professional basketballers, and knowing that he was going to be tall and a long athlete, I always had that belief that this kid could be good.

    “He’s gone way past what my beliefs were when I saw him.”

    Which says a lot given how much Arnott believed in Furphy, not just in that first time he saw him back in 2018 but throughout his time at the CoE, where he and other staff would tell Furphy “you are where you’re supposed to be”.

    Furphy wasn’t supposed to be here, preparing to attend Thursday’s first round of the draft in the green room, where the top prospects in each year’s class wait to hear their name called.

    ULTIMATE GUIDE: Everything you need to know ahead of the 2024 NBA Draft

    Furphy could be drafted in the first round. Chris Gardner/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    Last year, 24 of the 25 players invited to the green room were selected in the opening round, with ESPN reporting Furphy is drawing “strong interest” from as high as Memphis at ninth overall.

    Just over a year ago the prospect of Furphy declaring for the draft, let alone going in the first round, was the furthest thing from his mind.

    In fact, the prospect of even playing college basketball wasn’t really on his radar. He had just one college scholarship offer and was already planning on spending another year at the CoE.

    So, how did Furphy go from a relative unknown to a potential lottery pick in this week’s draft?

    It all starts in the unlikeliest of places.

    Well, if you asked Arnott he would probably push back on describing it as unlikely. Because, as he pointed out, “this is the small world” of Australian basketball after all.

    ‘WHO’S THAT KID?’: HOW FURPHY WENT FROM UNKNOWN TO ON THE RISE

    The story of Furphy’s rise starts, not on a basketball court, but at the AUSVEG Convention in Adelaide.

    Arnott’s parents were vegetable farmers and Richard Furphy, Johnny’s father, was at the Convention as part of his work. They also happened to be seated at the same table.

    So, they got to talking and naturally, as is the case with all parents, the topic of their kids eventually came up.

    It turned out Joe, the Furphy’s eldest son, was also a talented basketball player and the family were trying to get him to college. It also turned out Ash Arnott wasn’t a new name for them.

    Arnott was an assistant coach with the Basketball Victoria State Development Program at the time and, being the “small world of basketball” as he would say, they already knew of him.

    So, Arnott agreed to catch up with Joe and Richard one day at a cafe near Waverley Park, where the Hawthorn Hawks train, and also began the process of reaching out to some colleges.

    Then he learned about Johnny.

    Johnny and brother Joe while playing Big V basketball. Picture: SuppliedSource: Supplied

    “So I made an effort to go out and watch him,” Arnott said.

    “Straight away I was saying to Richard, ‘Mate I love his frame’, you can see he’s the baby of the family and the way he moves you can see he’s skilled but he was just so lightly built.”

    Still, again, Arnott saw something in Furphy. So, he talked to Michael Czepil, Basketball Victoria’s Metropolitan High Performance Coach, convinced there was a “hooper there”.

    Furphy made Southern Cross Challenge teams, would regularly be picked for the State Development Program and was part of the Under 18 state team as an emergency player.

    But it wasn’t until 2022 that he made his first state team and even still, it was as part of the second team at the Under 20 National Championships up in Mackay.

    That happened to be the first time McKinlay, head coach at the CoE, saw Furphy and he also liked what he was seeing.

    “Hey mate, do you know Johnny Furphy?,” he asked Arnott around halfway into his first game.

    “Yes I do. I know him very, very well,” Arnott replied, adding: “You like him, don’t you?”

    Intriguing was the word McKinlay used, according to Arnott.

    Marty Clarke, technical director at the NBA’s Global Academy, also got his first look at Furphy in Mackay.

    “I just said, ‘Who’s that kid? I hadn’t seen or heard of him’, and I know most of the guys around that level because generally you’ve seen them at 16s and you’ve seen them at 18,” Clarke told foxsports.com.au.

    “He just looked different. He ran up and down the floor effortlessly, and that was the first thing I would have said, ‘Oh, that guy runs really well’. And then he shot it and the shot looked nice.

    “He played really hard, attacked the rim off the dribble, attacked the rim on rebounding. He tried to play defence, and I was like, ‘Oh this kid is pretty good, who is he?’.”

    Furphy impressed enough to score a scholarship at the Centre of Excellence. Picture: SuppliedSource: Supplied

    There were some things Furphy had to work on. His handle “wasn’t great” while he “didn’t go side to side all that well” either.

    “But they were all things you can work on,” Clarke added, and the way Furphy handled himself on the court suggested he was a kid that was ready to learn too.

    His high “wasn’t too high” and his low “wasn’t too low”, as Clarke put it, while McKinlay said Furphy was “steady the whole time”.

    “And that’s when the whole entire staff started to get this interest in Johnny,” Arnott added.

    From there, Furphy was invited to play in the NBL1 Wildcard series in Perth as part of a CoE squad which included Alex Toohey, Ben Henshall, Alex Condon and Tyrese Proctor.

    “If you saw him in his first couple of games there to where he is now you just would laugh,” Arnott said, thinking back to the moment Furphy first joined the team for breakfast in Western Australia and was asking him if he could get a coffee.

    “Because none of our kids would ever do that,” Arnott laughed.

    “They were still drinking hot chocolates and just getting their bacon and eggs and I was like, ‘coffee Robbie’ and just jokingly said, ‘coffee Johnny’ and he goes, ‘Yeah mate can I get a latte please’.

    “And I look back at Robbie like, ‘Oh my God’, because that was just the type of kid he was. He beat his own drum, he was comfortable in his own skin and not in a bad way.”

    Because as Arnott got to know this “skinny little kid from Clifton Hill” more and got to “peel the layers back”, he found out a morning coffee wasn’t just a morning coffee for Furphy.

    It was “something special for him”, something he and his dad Richard would always share at the Victorian markets. Just one, small glimpse into the person behind the player.

    The player that scored 12 points in his first game at the Wildcard series to go with just as many rebounds and five steals in a 46-point win against the Rockingham Flames.

    Halfway through that game, McKinlay was already convinced.

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    “This is a kid we need to bring into the CoE,” he said, and it was a process made easier by the fact Proctor was leaving the program for Duke, opening up a scholarship for Furphy.

    Although Furphy’s move to Canberra was far from straight-forward, starting with the fact he was halfway through Year 12 and as a result had to finish his final year of high school online.

    Then there were the shin splints which, while not serious, did “sort of restrict what he could do straight away” according to McKinlay.

    And you can add in a broken wrist too, which Furphy suffered in a March 2023 game while playing in the CoE’s 110-37 win over the Penrith Panthers in the NBL1 East.

    But in between those setbacks, Furphy was starting to show signs and playing high-level basketball along the way, first during a joint trip with the NBA Global Academy to Spain in October 2022 and then in January the following year at the North East Prep School Invitational in Providence, where he was named to the All-Tournament Team.

    Still, at that point he only had one college scholarship offer from Sacramento State. By the end of July that had all changed after Furphy turned heads at the NBA Academy Games.

    Suddenly he was one of the most sought-after recruits in college basketball, with around 30 high major offers from programs including Kansas, Gonzaga, Providence and North Carolina according to McKinlay.

    “That first game Robbie and I kind of looked at each other,” Arnott said, “and we were like, ‘This is the coming out party. This is the Johnny that we were waiting for’.”

    THE WAKE-UP CALL AND ‘F-U’ DUNK IN FURPHY’S ‘COMING OUT PARTY’

    Although at one point during a game against NBA Academy Select Red, the Johnny they had been waiting for had gone missing again.

    “We were sort of just running up and down,” McKinlay said.

    Going through the motions. So, he called a timeout and pulled Furphy to the side.

    “And I said, ‘Hey Johnny, you’re wasting my time, you’re wasting all the college coaches’ time, you’re wasting your time. What’s going on?”.

    McKinlay knew how important a tournament like this could be for Furphy’s career. How important it had already been for Alex Toohey, who committed to Gonzaga but ended up playing in the NBL as part of its Next Stars program after breaking out at the Academy Games the year prior.

    It is why he got on a call with Furphy and his parents before the trip to Atlanta, telling them: “Listen. These Academy Games, this thing’s going to blow up in a good way”.

    “Now, to the level it did, I didn’t forecast that,” McKinlay added.

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    But he knew there was at least the opportunity for Furphy to make a name for himself, especially with multiple high-major coaches and NBA scouts watching on.

    Furphy assured McKinlay that he was fine, telling his coach: “Nah, I’m good”.

    “OK. Well, do something,” replied McKinlay.

    He did something alright. A play or two later, Furphy got the ball on the left baseline and ripped it to the middle for a monster dunk that brought the entire CoE bench to its feet.

    The opposing coach called a timeout and McKinlay grabbed Furphy once more.

    “That was an F-U dunk, wasn’t it?” he said, to which Furphy innocently replied: “What do you mean by that?”.

    “Well,” McKinlay responded, “I got on you and you were sort of just saying, ‘Hey go sit down and shut the you know what up’.”

    “No it wasn’t that,” Furphy told his coach, with a “little cheeky smile” as he went to the bench.

    It was one of many highlight plays Furphy had in the tournament, including another big dunk against one of the African NBA Academy teams, as he went on to average 14.8 points, 7.5 rebounds, 1.3 assists and 1.8 steals a game to start what Clarke described as a “meteoric rise”.

    “He exploded at that tournament,” added Shawn King, who coached Furphy in the Under 18s at Hawthorn and then in 2022 when he played for Melbourne University in the Big V.

    “I always thought he would be like a D1 player. But he kind of just took it to a whole other level.

    “You could see glimpses of the NBA. I thought he could be an NBA kid. But obviously I didn’t think it would happen this quick.”

    Arnott, meanwhile, said Furphy’s success at the tournament and the interest that followed gave rise to a “new Johnny”.

    “He had this swagger about him,” the CoE assistant coach said.

    “He knew that he was at the level and he was ready for this next step in his career and you see the last couple of games he played with the CoE in the [NBL1] East. He was dominant.”

    Furphy was just as impressive at the Sportradar Showdown in Las Vegas later that month and with interest quickly skyrocketing, then came another sit-down with his parents and McKinlay. Because as much as he had planned to stay at the CoE for another year, McKinlay was right. It had blown up in a good way.

    Fortunately, McKinlay had the expertise of Clarke and others at the NBA Academy, including Greg Colucci and Brian Cardinal, to lean on as they mapped out Furphy’s next steps.

    “He was going to stay (at the CoE) an extra 12 months,” McKinlay said.

    “We just sort of sat down and said, ‘Why would you want to stay now when you’ve got these schools that want you now’.

    “The one luxury he did have was because it was so late in the piece most of the rosters were set and so I said, ‘You’re going in to fill a need… you may commit and stay for an extra 12 months, but that roster with the transfer portal could be a completely new roster’.

    “The family decided they wanted to head off straight away and it happened at light speed. And next thing you know, he was at the University of Kansas.”

    THE MOMENT FURPHY PROVED HE WAS READY FOR COLLEGE BASKETBALL

    As fast as it all happened, Furphy still had plenty of catching up to do when he arrived in Kansas, having missed summer workouts and the Jayhawks’ exhibition game against the Bahamas National Team.

    It was always going to take time for him to adjust to the physicality and speed of college basketball and the fact he arrived not as prepared as the other freshmen on the roster, through no fault of his own, only should have made it even harder for Furphy to earn playing time.

    The emphasis there being on should have, because if there is anything to take away from Furphy’s rapid rise, it is the fact that he continued to exceed expectations.

    “What Johnny did is he got himself right physically,” McKinlay said.

    “He jumped straight into the playbook. I know they’ve got over 100 plays in that playbook. He made sure he didn’t give the coaching staff a reason to not play him and I thought he did a good job with that.”

    Furphy quickly learned the playbook. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    Furphy started out the season as a rotation option for Kansas coach Bill Self off the bench but ended up starting 19 of 33 games as a freshman, finishing 14 of them in double figures.

    His shooting efficiency dipped down the stretch as he was forced into a more prominent role, which in turn led to more attention for the Australian from the opposition.

    But as a whole Furphy was highly productive once given a starting role, going 12-for-22 from downtown during one four-game stretch of the season as he rocketed up draft boards.

    For King, Furphy’s former coach at Hawthorn and Melbourne University, his breakout season with the Jayhawks wasn’t a surprise.

    “Once he feels comfortable in his situation he gets better and better and I think you saw that at Kansas this year where he didn’t quite have the rhythm and then all of a sudden he found it and he’s like, ‘I can do this’ and then he was playing at a different level,” King said.

    McKinlay, meanwhile, actually got to meet up with Furphy in early December and watch him play 14 minutes off the bench in Kansas’ 69-65 win over UConn.

    “He hit two big threes in that game in that environment,” McKinlay said.

    “And it was like, ‘OK. If this doesn’t rattle you here in this one, then you’re fine’.”

    McKinlay also got to watch one practice session where he said Furphy, still only relatively new to the team, was already “telling some of the older guys where they needed to be”.

    Furphy had a prominent role in his freshman season. (Photo by John E. Moore III/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    “I was like, ‘OK. He’s fine. He’s ready to go’. The big environment didn’t bother him,” McKinlay added.

    “He’s got a self-confidence that, it’s hard to crack that thing. He’s got a belief in himself and his ability.”

    A belief that meant when McKinlay was once talking to his dad Richard, who asked Johnny if he thought he was going to make the NBA, the 19-year-old was quick to reply.

    “Yeah absolutely,” McKinlay said, recalling that conversation early in Furphy’s time at Kansas.

    “That sort of surprised his dad a little bit, that he had that confidence. He definitely showed that in the second half of the season for Kansas.”

    McKinlay had a lot of scouts reach out to him about Furphy and he told them all the same thing: the ball doesn’t stick with Johnny.

    “His quick decision-making is going to help him in the NBA,” McKinlay said.

    “I think NBA players are going to enjoy playing with him because they know if he doesn’t have his shot then he’s going to move that thing on quick or he’s going to cut to the right space or whatever it is.

    “He’s just got to continue to work, get stronger physically, so when he does drive the ball he doesn’t get bumped off his line. I think once he gets that down then, he’s going to be one hell of a player.”

    Furphy is rocketing up draft boards. (Photo by Jay Biggerstaff/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    ESPN’s Jonathan Givony and Jeremy Woo have Furphy going to the Magic at 18th overall in their latest mock draft, adding he is receiving “strong interest, starting with Memphis at No. 9, extending throughout the teens and ending with Cleveland at No. 20”.

    Sam Vecenie of The Athletic also has mocked Furphy to Orlando, while The Ringer has him at No.24 to the Knicks, CBS Sports has him at No.20 to Cleveland and it is No.27 to Minnesota for Bleacher Report.

    Either way, most experts seem to agree that Furphy, while raw, has the right combination of size, shooting and athleticism that makes him an intriguing upside swing in this year’s draft.

    But as the bright lights of the NBA await, Furphy still hasn’t forgotten where he came from.

    Which is why when he and his family received an invite to the green room, Furphy had two more familiar faces he wanted to be alongside when his name was called.

    REFLECTING ON HOW FAR FURPHY HAS COME… AND HOW FAR HE WILL GO

    McKinlay was “speechless” when, “completely out of the blue”, he got a text message from Furphy inviting him to the draft, which will be held at Barclays Center in New York.

    He didn’t just invite him though. Furphy also offered to pay to bring McKinlay over too.

    “That’s something that I didn’t expect but it just speaks volume to him as an individual, how he was brought up in his family,” McKinlay said.

    “He’s just a phenomenal kid… he knows where he’s come from and people that have played a small part in it.”

    King received the same offer, as did Arnott. Unfortunately he’s in Turkey as assistant coach of the Crocs squad representing Australia in the FIBA Under-17 Basketball World Cup and can’t make it.

    Three of Furphy’s former CoE teammates from the Academy Games — Dash Daniels, Nash Walker and Sa Pilimai — are part of that Crocs squad and even from afar, and at 3am local time when the draft will start in Istanbul, Arnott will be watching.

    Watching and then thinking about just how far that “little surfer boy” has come and how far he has to go, still only 19 years old and hopefully with a long NBA career ahead of him.

    But as much as Johnny Furphy’s story is about how much things have changed over the past two years, it is also just as much about what has stayed the same.

    Because in many ways he is still that little surfer boy who didn’t make a state team until 2022 and yet “never said one negative word” according to Arnott, choosing grace and gratitude — thankful to even have the opportunity to try out.

    Furphy was always thankful for opportunities.Source: FOX SPORTS

    “A big part of that is just hanging in there,” Clarke, the technical director at the NBA Global Academy, said.

    “If you hang in there and do the work and keep believing, there’s a chance you’re going to get where you want to get to. If you get all disappointed early on because you don’t make a team or you don’t get as many shots as you want to get or you’re not playing as much, then you give yourself no chance, absolutely no chance.

    “I think the thing for Johnny is he just hung in there, hung in there long enough until he was ready and an opportunity came along and then he made the most of his opportunity.”

    There are many lessons to be learned from Furphy’s success but that in particular, the ability to stick it out and keep showing up, is the part Arnott holds onto as he ushers in the next generation of Australian basketball talent in his role as assistant coach at the CoE.

    “Not getting too high and not getting too low, but continuing to work and showing up, that was one of his greatest assets,” Arnott said.

    “A lot of these new athletes coming through want everything now and I understand, you want every opportunity that comes your way, but the most important skill these days is to be able to turn up every day and be available and work on your game and that’s something that I think sometimes gets missed.

    “Everyone wants to talk about Johnny’s athleticism, his skill. The skill part came from his ability to work on his game constantly.”

    Connected to that is the fact everyone has their own pathway. Furphy took the college route. Dyson Daniels went through G-League Ignite. Josh Giddey was an NBL Next Star.

    They all went on different journeys and yet it led to the same place. It started in the same place too, in the same locker rooms where McKinlay said the next Johnny Furphy may be sitting right now.

    “What we tried to let the kids know is [that] Johnny was here 12 months ago,” he said.

    “He was in this locker room sitting where you guys are. So while we sometimes think the NBA is so far away, in actual fact, it might be 12 months away, so you better get yourself ready now for what may come.

    “Just because you didn’t make that first team you thought you should have made, if you keep working then good things can definitely happen. Johnny is the poster boy for that right now and there’ll be another Johnny Furphy, who knows when?”

    But even if there is another player like Johnny Furphy, there won’t be another Johnny Furphy the person. McKinlay said he doesn’t know anyone who doesn’t like him.

    In fact, Furphy was his son’s favourite player during his time at the CoE. McKinlay isn’t sure why his son, who was five years old at the time, gravitated towards Furphy in particular.

    But every time McKinlay talked to his son on the phone after a game, he always asked the same question: Where’s Johnny?

    Furphy is reaching new heights. Jay Biggerstaff/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    There were plenty of other great players on the roster at the time, including Toohey, Condon and Henshall, who were part of a 2004 age group that McKinlay described as “special”.

    “I think there’s a lot of future Boomers in that crop of 2004 players,” he added.

    Furphy was included in the Boomers’ extended squad for the upcoming Paris Olympics before being cut when a revised squad was later announced, although the fact he was in the mix in the first place speaks to just how highly-regarded the 19-year-old already is.

    Again, remember this was a kid who didn’t make his first state team until the Under 20s and even still, it was with the B team.

    This was also a kid who, after being told by Arnott early at the Academy Games that a high major Division I school had interest in him, couldn’t hide his excitement.

    Because if there is one thing Arnott will take away from his time with Furphy, it is joy.

    “To see the smile on his face,” Arnott said, “and [him] being like, ‘No way. Oh my God’, and just to remember that he was still an 18-year-old kid.

    “To see that pure joy in him and then once he’d really taken off and started playing this great style of basketball, sitting back and just being like, ‘This kid is going to be special’.”

    And while Arnott won’t have be there in person on Thursday, instead sitting in a hotel room in Instanbul over 8,000 kilometres away, he had a first-hand look at all the key moments leading up to it.

    “I guess just having a front row seat to it, not necessarily being a part of it, but just having a front row seat to how special he was becoming, I think that’s the best memory,” Arnott said.

    “And I’m most thankful for just being a part of it, having that front row seat. Nothing better than that.”

    So, which team will take Furphy? Catch live coverage of the 2024 NBA Draft with ESPN on Kayo Sports. Thu 9:30am / Fri 6am AEST. New to Kayo? Start Your Free Trial Today >

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  • ‘Perfect’ Asian Cup step as Socceroos claim win in ‘physical’ test

    ‘Perfect’ Asian Cup step as Socceroos claim win in ‘physical’ test

    Socceroos coach Graham Arnold rated his team’s 2-0 defeat of Bahrain as the “perfect” preparation for Australia’s Asian Cup campaign, which starts next Saturday night against India.

    An own goal from Bahrain defender Amine Benaddi and a Mitch Duke header secured the Socceroos victory in their Asian Cup warm-up clash in Abu Dhabi.

    “It was a great hitout,” Arnold told Paramount +.

    “It was quite a physical game, and playing against these types of nations, (and) how they sit back, as much as you can do presentations and train and get ready for it, it’s always great to play against opposition that play that way.

    “It was the perfect game that we could have had leading into the Asian Cup.”

    Arnold gave Perth-born, Wales-raised Bolton Wanderers defender Gethin Jones his Socceroos debut, playing him at right-back in a starting back four that also included Cameron Burgess, Harry Souttar and Jordan Bos.

    Midfielder Jackson Irvine captained the team in the absence of regular skipper, goalkeeper Mat Ryan, who is yet to fully recover from a fractured cheekbone he suffered last month,

    Ryan’s unavailability also allowed Adelaide United gloveman Joe Gauci to earn his second Socceroos cap.

    Apart from one sharp save in the second half, Gauci was rarely called into action against a Bahrain side that hardly threatened the Socceroos.

    “These types of nations, especially against us, they always sit back and they always try to hit us on the counter attack,” Arnold said.

    “It was important that we had our rest defence strong, that we didn’t bomb too many players forward and get caught out on the break.

    “They only had one shot at goal for the whole game, which is good.”

    The Socceroos celebrate after taking the lead against Bahrain from an own goal. Picture: Martin Dokoupil/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

    In attack, the Socceroos were at times clunky but that didn’t stop them taking the lead in the 35th minute when Benaddi turned the ball into his own net after a fluffing his attempt to clear a dangerous, low cross from winger Craig Goodwin,

    Goodwin was also involved in Australia’s second goal in the 61st minute, when he headed a far post cross from midfielder Aiden O’Neill into the path of Duke, who nodded the ball home from close range.

    Duke and Goodwin were later replaced as Arnold made six second-half changes as he further got players ready for next weekend’s Asian Cup Group B battle with India in Qatar.

    The other starters to come off were Jones, Burgess, attacker Sammy Silvera and midfielder Connor Metcalfe.

    The six players used off the bench were defenders Nathaniel Atkinson, Kye Rowles and Aziz Behich, attacking pair Marco Tilio and Kusini Yengi, and midfielder Riley McGree in his international return from a foot injury.

    “I made a number of changes, and used players that hadn’t played for quite a while,” Arnold said.

    “It just shows you that (with) those six boys I brought on, how much depth we are creating and building.

    “That’s pretty much what I’ve been trying to do for the last four years as well, build depth for the Socceroos because of the old age group that we had.

    “You can see some of the younger boys that are coming on, they’re doing well, (and) they’ve got that experience.”

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