Tag: assistant coach

  • World Cup winner, Ex-Man Utd and Chelsea star finally scores first A-League goal

    World Cup winner, Ex-Man Utd and Chelsea star finally scores first A-League goal

    It was a Wild West shootout that would have made John Wayne proud.

    The Western Sydney Wanderers and Macarthur opened the new year in spectacular fashion at CommBank Stadium, putting on a five-goal thriller that ultimately ended in a 3-2 win to the Bulls.

    This match had everything you could want from a football game—thrilling goals, gilt-edged chances, desperate defence and a red card that inspired a spirited comeback.

    A double to emerging winger Jed Drew had Macarthur ahead 3-1 at halftime, but a 52nd-minute red card awarded to Wanderers defender Dean Pelekanos for taking out Ariath Piol while the striker was one-on-one with the keeper, seemed to galvanise the home side, who got back to within one goal three minutes later via a deflected goal to Anthony Pantazopoulos.

    Despite their numerical disadvantage, the Wanderers had the better of the closing half-hour, peppering the Macarthur goal. However, the Bulls’ defence rallied, blocking multiple shots to deny Western Sydney a late equaliser.

    “I thought the character and fight in the term was superb,” Wanderers assistant coach Nahuel Arrarte said post-match.

    Liverpool turns down Real Madrid offer | 01:27

    “Their ability to continue to push forward, even when we went down to 10 men shows the character in the group.

    “To be honest, I haven’t looked at it [the red card decision] . . . but while it played a part [in the loss], there are certain aspects of our game that we still need to improve if we want to be a top team.”

    The Bulls now sit in second place on the A-League men’s ladder, leapfrogging the Melbourne Victory who played out a nil-all draw with Auckland earlier in the day, while Western Sydney sit seventh, one point outside the top six.

    DREW PROVES THE DIFFERENCE

    Despite playing just 66 minutes of the match, Jed Drew was a clear choice as Player of the Match.

    The son of former Parramatta Eels hooker Brad Drew continued his stellar season, scoring the two goals which ultimately gave his side victory. While his first strike was a decent effort off a deflected cross, his second was an absolute stunner.

    After receiving the ball on the right flank 20 metres out from goal, Drew turned Wanderers defender Jack Clisby inside out before curling the ball into the net from an extremely tight angle.

    Rooney quits Argyle manager role | 00:57

    The 21-year-old has been a revelation for Mile Sterjovski’s side chalking up five goals and five assists in nine games this season and must surely be in contention for a Socceroos shirt.

    “I definitely think he has the potential to do it,” Sterjovski said when quizzed on Drew’s Socceroos chances.

    “He’s got the quality to do it, it’s just about being consistent.

    “To play at the top level . . . you have to be consistent and do those sorts of things week in and week out.

    “With the form he’s in, he definitely deserves a look in [with the Socceroos].”

    Drew wasn’t the only Bulls young gun to shine, though. Piol produced a magic moment, putting the Bulls ahead 2-1 in the 26th minute with an individual effort that saw him sprint 40 metres down the right flank before effortlessly flicking the ball past Western Sydney keeper Lawrence Thomas.

    SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA – JANUARY 01: Juan Mata of Western Sydney Wanderers celebrates after scoring a goal during the round 11 A-League Men match between Western Sydney Wanderers and Macarthur FC at CommBank Stadium, on January 01, 2025, in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Ayush Kumar/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    MATA FINALLY SCORES

    With Dylan Scicluna injured, Alen Stajcic opted to give marquee signing Juan Mata just his third start of the season. The FIFA World Cup winner repaid his manager’s faith when he put his side on level terms in the 23rd minute by tucking away a low cross from Josh Brillante.

    While the former Chelsea and Manchester United star was replaced by Nicolas Milanovic after 56 minutes, he can be satisfied with the shift he put in against Macarthur.

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  • Hungarian assistant ‘stable’ after shock medical emergency halts Netherlands clash

    Hungarian assistant ‘stable’ after shock medical emergency halts Netherlands clash

    Netherlands outclassed Hungary with a 4-0 victory in their winner-takes-all Nations League encounter on Saturday while Germany hammered Bosnia and Hercegovina 7-0.

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    Netherlands and Hungary went into the match tied on five points each and with the winner set to join Germany in ensuring their progress from Group A3 to the quarter-finals.

    First-half penalties by Wout Weghorst and Cody Gakpo sent the Oranje on their way, before Denzel Dumfries and Teun Koopmeiners made the game safe in the second period.

    The match at the Johan Cruyff Arena was briefly interrupted in the seventh minute following a medical emergency on the Hungarian bench.

    The referee stopped play for some 10 minutes while Hungary’s assistant coach Adam Szalai received treatment, shielded from view by huddled players and staff members, as well as a large white sheet.

    Szalai, 36, was stretchered off to applause from spectators and players alike, the Hungarian FA later released a statement saying he was “conscious” and in a “stable condition” at an Amsterdam hospital.

    Almost forgotten in the aftermath of the worrying incident was the handball by Tamas Nikitscher as the ball was crossed into the Hungarian box.

    The referee consulted the touchline video monitor and promptly restarted play by pointing to the spot, allowing Weghorst to sweep the Netherlands in front.

    Denes Dibusz was the busier of the two goalkeepers as the first period wore on and had to be alert to keep out efforts from Tijjani Reijnders and Donyell Malen.

    A medical tent is set up in front of the Hungary bench during the UEFA Nations League 2024/25 League A Group A3 match between Netherlands and Hungary at the Johan Cruijff Arena on November 16, 2024 in Amsterdam, Netherlands. (Photo by Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    In the 11th minute of added time, Dutch dominance told and Malen was clipped by Zsolt Nagy in the box.

    Gakpo dispatched the resulting spot-kick, sending Dibusz the wrong way and Netherlands into a two-goal lead.

    Right-back Dumfries sealed the Netherlands’ spot in the quarters as he latched onto Malen’s flick-on at the back post and fizzed a volley back into the far corner shortly after the hour.

    Koopmeiners marked his first international match since 2022 by nodding in a fourth in the 86th minute.

    – Germany cement top spot – Germany cemented their spot at the top of the group with a 7-0 win over Bosnia in Freiburg.

    Jamal Musiala opened the floodgates after two minutes with a header from Joshua Kimmich’s cross.

    Tim Kleindienst scored his first goal for Germany in the 23rd minute and Kai Havertz made the game safe eight minutes before the break, slotting home after a slick one-two with Florian Wirtz.

    Wirtz then made it four on 50 minutes with a sublime swerving free-kick from wide on the left, before doubling up seven minutes later.

    Substitute Leroy Sane scored Germany’s sixth in the 66th minute and Kleindienst completed the rout just over 10 minutes from time as he guided home a pinpoint cross from centre-half Antonio Rudiger.

    The emphatic result leaves Germany five points ahead of Netherlands with only one match left to play.

    In Group B1, Georgia played out a 1-1 draw at home to Ukraine. Mykhailo Mudryk was the creator of the opener for Ukraine when he burst down the right flank in the seventh minute, shimmied past the covering defender and drilled a low cross into the box, which Solomon Kverkvelia could only acrobatically direct past his own goalkeeper.

    Ronaldo stunner in Portugal’s big win | 01:13

    But Georges Mikautadze levelled for Georgia with 14 minutes remaining and stay two points ahead of the fourth-placed visitors.

    The Czech Republic drew 0-0 in Albania and remain top of the group on eight points, one ahead of Georgia in second and their third-placed opponents.

    Turkey stayed top of Group B4 with a 0-0 draw at home to Wales, while Iceland beat Montenegro 2-0.

    Turkey were presented with a golden opportunity to win the match inside the final five minutes when the referee decided that Neco Williams had just caught his man in the box before taking the ball.

    Kerem Akturkoglu sent Karl Darlow the wrong way with his 89th-minute penalty but his effort clipped the outside of the post and went behind as Turkey failed to grow their two-point lead over Wales at the top of the group.

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  • Club legend shown the door as Man Utd usher in new era with brutal clean-out

    Club legend shown the door as Man Utd usher in new era with brutal clean-out

    Ruud van Nistelrooy left Manchester United’s coaching staff on Monday as new manager Ruben Amorim arrived at the club’s training complex to start his Old Trafford reign.

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    Dutchman Van Nistelrooy, a former star striker at the club, was put in temporary charge after the sacking of Erik ten Hag late last month.

    He oversaw three wins and a draw in his four-match spell, signing off with a 3-0 victory against Leicester in the Premier League on Sunday.

    The former PSV Eindhoven boss, appointed as an assistant coach in July on a two-year contract, had voiced a desire to stay at Old Trafford to work with Amorim.

    But United issued a statement on Monday confirming the 48-year-old would not be part of the new coaching set-up.

    “Manchester United can confirm that Ruud van Nistelrooy has left the club,” the statement said. “Ruud rejoined in the summer and has taken charge of the team for the past four matches as interim head coach.

    “Ruud is, and always will be, a Manchester United legend.

    “We are grateful for his contribution and the way in which he has approached his role throughout his time with the club. He will always be very welcome at Old Trafford.” United said fellow coaches Rene Hake, Jelle ten Rouwelaar and Pieter Morel had also left the club.

    “We will confirm the full men’s first team coaching composition in due course,” United said.

    – ‘Amazing period’ –

    Van Nistelrooy, who scored 150 goals during a stellar playing career for United, said he had relished his time in charge.

    “I really enjoyed it, it’s been a short but amazing period,” he said after the Leicester win. “We are in an uncertain position but we tried to do our jobs and help the club, which is important.

    “There are a lot of feelings there, the way the fans supported me and the team always in difficult moments…. To close down this block of games with good results and a good connection I can’t thank them enough.” Amorim was named as the new United boss earlier this month.

    The 39-year-old jetted to Britain from Portugal on Monday after completing his stint as Sporting Lisbon boss with a 4-2 win against Braga.

    He was met at the club’s Carrington training complex by chief executive Omar Berrada, and was also welcomed by sporting director Dan Ashworth and technical director Jason Wilcox.

    The former Portugal international is United’s sixth permanent appointment since the end of Alex Ferguson’s trophy-filled 27-year-reign in 2013.

    United are 13th in the Premier League table after a poor start to the season but are only four points off the top four.

    Amorim’s first match in charge will be away at struggling Ipswich on November 24, following the current international break.

    The new boss, who transformed Sporting’s fortunes during his four-and-a-half-year spell at the club, said he was aware of the scale of the task awaiting him at Old Trafford.

    “I feel ready for the new challenge,” he said after his farewell match with Sporting. “I’m not naive, I know that it’s going to be very, very different, very tough but I feel that I’m ready.”

    – Change the script –

    Manchester United have been crowned English champions a record 20 times but they have failed even to compete for the Premier League or Champions League titles since Alex Ferguson stepped down in 2013.

    Amorim, a 39-year-old former Portugal international, is United’s sixth permanent appointment since the end of Ferguson’s trophy-filled 27-year-reign.

    David Moyes, Louis van Gaal, Jose Mourinho, Ole Gunnar Solskjaer and Ten Hag have all come and gone, unable to take United back to the top despite lavish spending.

    More than £600 million ($772 million) was spent over Ten Hag’s five transfer windows on new signings but few have proved value for money.

    Despite United’s flaws, Amorim will have a greater pool of talent than he did at Sporting, but he will have to work hard to get the most out of an under-performing squad.

    Liverpool extend lead on top of table | 00:34

    He is the first manager appointed since British billionaire Jim Ratcliffe became a minority owner of the club earlier this year, taking control of football operations.

    Being Ratcliffe’s man should buy him wriggle room and time, but he will know that at a club of the size of United, patience only stretches so far.

    “I feel ready for the new challenge,” an upbeat Amorim said after his farewell match with Sporting. “I’m not naive, I know that it’s going to be very, very different, very tough but I feel that I’m ready.”

    Style makeover Two trophies in his only two full seasons were not enough to save Erik ten Hag, whose side never got going in the current campaign.

    The Dutchman secured some impressive wins during his tenure against Barcelona, Liverpool and Manchester City but he relied on moments of individual brilliance from an expensively assembled squad rather than imposing a clear style of play.

    Ange involved in ugly tunnel incident | 00:18

    United frequently appeared chaotic on his watch, combining an alarming fragility with an inability to score goals, and proved infuriatingly inconsistent.

    Amorim has earned his ticket to the Premier League after restoring Sporting to the pinnacle of Portuguese football over the past four and a half years.

    His preferred 3-4-3 formation could suit the players he will have available at Old Trafford.

    But he will have precious little time on the training ground to impose his philosophy as United face a gruelling run of 12 games between November 24 and January 5 following the current international break.

    “I know how I’m going to play at the beginning because you have to start with a structure that you know and then you will adapt with the players that you have,” Amorim said.

    Restore belief among fans United fans so long used to success have suffered as their team slipped down the pecking order, usurped by Manchester City and Liverpool.

    Brighton comeback sinks Man City | 00:50

    Old Trafford is no longer the fortress it once was. Liverpool and Tottenham cruised to 3-0 victories in September, while Brighton, Bournemouth, Crystal Palace and Fulham won there last season.

    Amorim has to energise the Old Trafford crowd and infuse them with the belief that this time things really will get better.

    Although United are in the bottom half of the Premier League, they are just four points off the top four, a finishing position that would bring back Champions League football.

    Midfielder Casemiro says the players are hungry to learn from their incoming boss.

    “We cannot ignore how he has changed Sporting (Lisbon),” he said. “We know that Sporting won many titles, changed the club with titles, with trophies.

    “He has already proved that he is a coach that has won a lot.”

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  • Man Utd has spent years on the brink of disaster. A key meeting will decide if they reset… again

    Man Utd has spent years on the brink of disaster. A key meeting will decide if they reset… again

    An executive summit chaired by Manchester United part owner Jim Ratcliffe is set to determine the future of Erik Ten Hag, which presently sits on a knife’s edge.

    And while the meeting is regularly scheduled in the diaries of the clubs hierarchy and no different to one held last month in Barcelona, it will be attended by many prominent figures at the club, including Ratcliffe, chief executive Omar Berrada, sporting director Dan Ashworth and technical director Jason Wilcox, as United are amidst their worst-ever Premier League start.

    According to the Guardian there is no indication from within Old Trafford that Ten Hag will be sacked, United’s poor start to the season means the Dutchman’s job is under immense pressure.

    Eight points in seven games, including two wins over Fulham and Southampton, and just five goals scored, means 2024-25 is the worst start United have made in three decades.

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    Vale Johan Neeskens, ex-Socceroo coach | 02:31

    Their next worst start? Last season, when they were one point better off than they currently are.

    However, it’s just their abysmal league form that has Ten Hag teetering on the brink of unemployment, with the club’s two Europa League games this season creating cause for immense concern.

    Against Ten Hag’s former side, FC Twente of the Eredivisie, United drew 1-1. A week later they let an early 2-0 lead slip against Porto to draw 3-3, with a late Harry Maguire header salvaging a point in Portugal.

    After that draw Ratcliffe was quizzed about his manager’s future but insisted his opinion mattered very little when it came to ensuring the Dutchman remained at the helm after the upcoming international break.

    “I don’t want to answer that question. I like Erik. I think he’s a very good coach but at the end of the day it’s not my call,” he said.

    Ange suffers “worst loss” as Spurs coach | 01:18

    Instead, it’s down to Berrada and Ashworth, who publicly backed Ten Hag in a media briefing last month and could be placed in an uncomfortable position of ending the Dutchman’s tenure barely a month after supporting him.

    A draw away at high-flying Aston Villa, who took three points from German giants Bayern Munich midweek, may have, for now, saved United’s powerbrokers from making a call on Ten Hag, according to club great Gary Neville.

    Speaking on Sky Sports following the Villa game, Neville described the point as “ a small step forward.”

    “Before the game if you’d offered any Manchester United fan, player and coach a draw they would have snapped your hand off.

    “I think that’s where at the end (in) Erik Ten Hag’s interview there was probably a bit of relief because it keeps the wolves at bay for a couple of weeks, gives him a little more time.”

    The season’s second international break means United don’t play until hosting Brentford on October 20 (AEST). Five days later it’s a trip to Turkey to clash with Fenerbahce, managed by former United top dog Jose Mourinho.

    Neville feels United will afford Ten Hag more time to turn his side around and push for Champions League football come season’s end.

    “No club wants to sack a manager during the season because it’s not only a reflection upon the manager, it’s a reflection upon them,” he said.

    Ashworth made the notable caveat during his public backing of Ten Hag last month that the contract extension the 54-year-old signed during the European summer was “taken prior to both our arrivals.”

    Despite this, Neville doubled down on his belief Ten Hag will remain United manager beyond the conclusion of this week’s meeting.

    “The club did make the decision to keep Ten Hag in the summer and they don’t want to have to basically reverse that decision (after) six, seven games,” he said, adding how the international break may prove beneficial to the club’s situation.

    Coaching change won’t effect Socceroos | 01:11

    “They’ve just got to hope in these next couple of weeks through maybe a reset, some thinking time, some planning,” he said.

    “Manchester United fans, coaches and players have talked about this new structure that surrounds Erik Ten Hag, it needs to go to work quite quickly in these next few weeks.

    “If the next international break (in mid-November) comes around and Manchester United are still 13th, 14th, there’s going to be pressure building.

    “They can’t stay 14th without repercussions.”

    Speaking following the Villa draw, Ten Hag showed minimal concern about his job, revealing he is in constant contact with those above him in the club’s structure.

    “We communicate very openly and transparently. I speak continuously with them. Every week, I would say every day, we talk, so I expect I will speak with them,” he said.

    United’s manager also feels his side’s form is largely due to their poor goalscoring abilities, which has seen them find the back of the net just five times this season, less than any other side in the English top flight.

    In many ways, Ten Hag is correct with the club’s 17 big chances missed this season the second most of any side in the division.

    “We know in this moment we have a lack of goals, in that perspective it’s not a good start, we have to step up,” Ten Hag said after the Villa game.

    “That’s an area we have to improve. But we have four clean sheets. That’s good because we have to defend proper.”

    However, several prominent football clubs believe a lack of goal threat is just one of the issues at United, with the likes of Jamie Carragher and Les Ferdinand believing the club have stagnated under Ten Hag.

    “No we’re not (seeing any signs of improvement.) For him, he needs results right now,” Carragher told Sky Sports ahead of the weekend’s Villa draw.

    Former Spurs and Newcastle striker Ferdinand agreed, telling that same broadcaster’s post-game coverage that United’s performances are flatlining.

    “(Ten Hag) keeps talking about improvement, improvement, improvement (and) we’re struggling to see that improvement,” Ferdinand said.

    Ange ‘shell shocked’ after ‘worst loss’ | 01:11

    “It’s easy to stand here and hammer Manchester United because during my playing career they were the benchmark. At the moment, they’re not the benchmark.”

    Gary Lineker told the Rest Is Football podcast that he feels Ten Hag’s lack of consistent tactical approach has hindered United’s ability to maximise their output in the transfer market.

    Over the summer window, United brought in six players for more than $328 million AUD, none of whom have set the world alight since moving to Old Trafford. Lineker believes Ten Hag is to blame for this reality.

    “I think it’s very difficult to buy a player for Erik ten Hag because he plays a different system all the time. Sometimes they’re counter-attacking, sometimes they’ll play a little bit of a high press. Sometimes they won’t,” he said.

    “We’ve said it many times on here. What is their style of football? What is their identity?”

    The Athletic’s Laurie Whitwell also questioned United’s transfer strategy following Ten Hag’s selection of Maguire and Jonny Evans as his centre backs against Villa.

    Whitwell stated those decisions “somewhat undermines the club’s recruitment policy.”

    Ange watches in horror as Spurs choke | 01:09

    United’s bench against Villa, which contained seven Ten Hag-era signings, acquiried for around £400 million, was described as “striking” by Whitwell, who commented how strange it was to see “several recruits brought in by Ten Hag considered only necessary for cameo appearances when the pressure dial is turned up.”

    All these factors will likely be considered and assessed by the United hierarchy at their upcoming executive summit, with current assistant coach and legendary Manchester United striker Ruud Van Nistelrooy is reportedly the club’s preferred caretaker should they opt to sack Ten Hag.

    But, one potential barrier to United parting with the Dutchman is the £17.5m ($34m) payout the club would need to fork out should they opt to venture down that path, which has been reported in several outlets including the Mirror.

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  • ‘Deeply saddened’: Football world in mourning as Johan Neeskens dies

    ‘Deeply saddened’: Football world in mourning as Johan Neeskens dies

    Johan Neeskens, part of the Ajax and Netherlands teams that created “total football” in the 1970s and a key team-mate of Johan Cruyff, has died aged 73, the Dutch football federation said Monday.

    “With Johan Neeskens, the Dutch and international football world loses a legend,” the KNVB federation said in a statement, adding that the midfielder had died on Sunday from an unspecified illness.

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    Neeskens was part of the Ajax team that won three straight European Cups in the early 1970s and was also a member of the ‘Clockwork Oranje’ Dutch team that reached consecutive World Cup finals in 1974 and 1978.

    He won 49 caps for the Netherlands.

    “With his characteristic tackles, sublime insight and iconic penalties, (he) will forever remain one of the leading players that Dutch football has ever produced,” said the KNVB.

    After his playing career, Neeskens took part in coaching programmes around the world including as an assistant to Australian national team manager Guus Hiddink for the 2006 World Cup where the Socceroos progressed from the group stage to the Round of 16.

    Known on the pitch for his uncompromising tackling, he also had a softer side, the KNVB said in its statement.

    He was “a world citizen and a gentle family man who was proud of his children and grandchildren and who, until the very end, knew how to touch others with his love for football.” The KNVB said it would hold a minute’s silence at the next two international matches against Hungary and Germany.

    Ajax wrote on X: “We are deeply saddened to hear about the passing of Johan Neeskens. Our thoughts are with his family at this time.” “Rest in peace, Ajax legend.” Barcelona, where he was known as “Johan The Second” (after Crujff), according to Dutch public broadcaster NOS, also tweeted condolences.

    “A blaugrana legend who will forever be in our memory.” Current Dutch coach Ronald Koeman described Neeskens as his “great idol”. Playing football in the street as a boy, Koeman said his friends either wanted to be Crujff or Dutch star Willem van Hanegem.

    “But I wanted to be Neeskens,” said Koeman, cited by local news agency ANP. “His style really appealed to me. His fight, for example. And he was also a great penalty specialist.”

    Neeskens, tough midfielder in Cruyff’s Ajax and Dutch teams

    Johan Neeskens, who has died aged 73, was the powerful but smooth engine of the Ajax and Netherlands teams that created “total football” with Johan Cruyff at their heart.

    Neeskens was part of the Ajax team that won three straight European Cups and a key component of the “Clockwork Oranje” Dutch team that reached consecutive World Cup finals in 1974 and 1978, losing both.

    “He was worth two men in midfield,” Ajax team-mate Sjaak Swart once told FIFA.com.

    Neeskens was a relentless runner and tough tackler, but he was also skilful. He finished the 1974 World Cup with five goals, second to only to Grzegorz Lato of Poland and top scorer in a Dutch team that also contained Cruyff and the flamboyant Johnny Rep.

    “I always liked to play with style — and to win,” Neeskens said. Johannes Jacobus Neeskens was born in Heemstede, west of Amsterdam, on September 15, 1951. He was signed from his home-town club by Ajax coach Rinus Michels in 1970.

    Neeskens was right-back when the club beat Greek side Panathinaikos 2-0 for their first European Cup win in 1971. He then switched to central midfield, playing there as Ajax won two more titles in 1972, against Inter Milan, and 1973, against Juventus.

    The Ajax team led by Cruyff and Neeskens formed the spine of the Dutch side that dazzled on the way to the 1974 World Cup final in West Germany.

    After just two minutes in Munich, Neeskens set two World Cup final records, scoring the quickest goal in as he converted the first penalty, awarded before any West German and most Dutch players had touched the ball.

    “As a player it is a little bit strange because sometimes you need the feeling,” he later told FIFA.

    “I’d hardly touched the ball and wasn’t even warm. Then you have to make that penalty in front of 80,000 who are against you and of course the whole world is watching it.

    “That was the first time that I was a little bit nervous in taking a penalty,” he said.

    “When I started running, I was thinking: ‘which side am I going to shoot?’ It was more or less always in the right side of the goal. At the last step, I thought ‘no, I’m going to shoot the other way’. It was not my meaning to kick the ball straight through the middle.” But he also said: “If you’re not sure, just hit it as hard as possible. If you don’t know where it’s going, nor will the keeper.” The West Germans fought back, equalising with the second ever World Cup final penalty, converted by Paul Breitner, and winning with a goal by Gerd Mueller.

    Despite the loss, “that tournament was a dream,” Neeskens told FIFA. “I was 22 and a key player.” The Dutch had caught the eye, but West Germany took the trophy. “We lost that game but everybody was talking about our team and our football,” Neeskens recalled. “We deserved to win that final.”

    – ‘Kamikaze pilot’ –

    Four years later in Argentina, as Cruyff opted to stay at home, Neeskens was again a key part of the Dutch team that reached the final.

    He was injured early in a group loss to Scotland and missed the revenge victory over West Germany. He returned for the last two matches, including the 3-1 defeat in extra time as the Dutch again lost the final to the host nation.

    By then Neeskens had followed Cruyff to Catalonia, where Barcelona fans dubbed the midfielder “Johan the Second”.

    In five years at Barca, he won a Copa del Rey and European Cup Winners’ Cup before heading to the United States for five seasons with the star-studded New York Cosmos.

    Bobby Haarms, Michels’ assistant at Ajax, was quoted in “Brilliant Orange”, a book on Dutch football by David Winner, as saying Neeskens was “like a kamikaze pilot.” He coached in the Netherlands, Turkey, Switzerland and South Africa and spent more than four years as Netherlands assistant coach under first Guus Hiddink and then Frank Rijkaard.

    He was also Rijkaard’s assistant at Barcelona and Hiddink’s assistant with Australia.

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  • Superstar switch to fix Pies? Question over Dusty final chapter — Blowtorch

    Superstar switch to fix Pies? Question over Dusty final chapter — Blowtorch

    Could Collingwood consider moving its superstar to a familiar role?

    Plus Carlton’s ongoing ruck dilemma has been labelled its “biggest issue” amid a wide open premiership race.

    Every club’s burning question ahead of Round 19, as well as the commentators for every Fox Footy game, in our ultimate weekly preview: The Blowtorch!

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    AFL umpires not training properly? | 02:33

    ESSENDON v ADELAIDE CROWS

    Friday July 19, 7.40pm at Marvel Stadium

    How to watch on Fox Footy: From 6.30pm on Channel 504 with Garry Lyon, Jonthan Brown, Jordan Lewis, Nathan Buckley, Brad Johnson (Boundary) & Jon Ralph followed by Fox Footy Live

    Bombers’ burning question: Can they handle high-pressure games?

    While Essendon is currently sixth on the ladder and has been in the top four for key stages this year, it’s still failed challenges against some of the best sides. And overall, the Bombers have played in the third-lowest pressure rating games on average this year including going 3-1-4 in high pressure games and 7-2 in low pressure games (over/under 180). It includes Essendon losing groundball in recent losses to Carlton (-19), Geelong (-17) and Melbourne (-15) to draw questions from Saints great Leigh Montagna on whether Brad Scott’s side is capable of rising when the pressure is at its hottest. “They’ve failed the test now three out of the last four times. Are they tough enough against contest and finals-like teams? You’ve got to start to question if they’re hard enough or desperate enough,” he said on Fox Footy’s The First Crack.

    Crows’ burning question: Just how good can Riley Thilthorpe be?

    Adelaide young gun Riley Thilthorpe made his long-awaited AFL return last week against St Kilda and you only had to watch his small stint as the substitute to get excited about the talent he could be at AFL level. Taken at pick two in the 2021 National Draft, the 201cm key forward looked dangerous in tough conditions against the Saints, booting two goals and clunking a couple of marks. Thilthorpe was all the hype out of West Lakes in the pre-season, but a knee injury in the dying stages of a pre-season match meant the 22-year-old spent the first half of the season on the sidelines. Put rather than dwell on the injury, Thilthorpe went to work in the gym and how possesses a physique that will see key defenders tremble for years to come. He could well and truly light up Marvel Stadium on Friday night and bring the Bombers back down to earth.

    ‘Tackle is going the way of the bump’ | 00:37

    GWS GIANTS v GOLD COAST SUNS

    Saturday July 20, 1.45pm at ENGIE Stadium

    How to watch on Fox Footy: From 1.30pm on Channel 504 with Leigh Montagna, Nick Dal Santo, Gerard Healy, Alastair Lynch & David Zita

    Giants’ burning question: Are they back?

    After appearing at risk of missing the finals a few weeks ago, the Giants have won two games in a row to re-enter premiership calculations. Perhaps more promising than anything is that Toby Greene, both the Giants’ spiritual and literal leader, returned to his best form against Richmond with four goals. And when the GWS skipper is at his best, the Giants are a different side. The only real concern is Stephen Coniglio being bothered by a shoulder issue that’ll cause him to miss this weekend. But Adam Kingley’s side is very much trending in the right direction, with its powerful offensive game (averaging 112 points over the last two games) back on show. “They weren’t brilliant and I think there will be a lot they’ll want to fix up, particularly defensively and around the contest. But offensively — when they got their flow going and tsunami from half back going inside 50 — it was the Giants we know,” Saints legend Leigh Montagna said on Fox Footy’s The First Crack. Asked if they can continue rising, Montagna said: “I do, they’ve still got to work on some things defensively. Their system is very identifiable, it’s hard to stop but they can get scored against the other way.”

    Suns’ burning question: Can star, like the team, replicate epic home form?

    The Suns’ contrasting form in home games (9-0) and on the road (0-8) this season has been widely discussed — and there’s perhaps not a player who’s embodied that variance more than Noah Anderson. The star midfielder is the highest rated player in the competition based on home games this season, averaging 32.7 disposals, 13.7 contested, 7.8 clearances, 4.3 tackles and 8.6 tackles. However Anderson’s numbers “dramatically decline” in away games, as put by Saints great Leigh Montagna on Fox Footy’s The First Crack, where he just hasn’t produces at the same level. So if the Suns are to finally get that first win on the board in enemy territory under Damien Hardwick they so desperately need to prove themselves and make a genuine run at finals, Anderson will need to start replicating his brilliant home heroics on the road.

    Greene’s perfect troll job in question | 02:13

    ST KILDA v WEST COAST EAGLES

    Saturday July 20, 1.45pm at Marvel Stadium

    How to watch on Fox Footy: From 1.30pm on Channel 503 with Mark Howard, Nathan Buckley, Brad Johnson, Sarah Jones & David Zita

    Saints’ burning question: Can any more young guns emerge?

    After a seriously promising patch from Mattaes Phillipou following his return to the AFL side and move to the midfield, the former Pick 10 will now be sidelined for up to four weeks due to a hip injury in an untimely blow. While the timing couldn’t be worse for Phillipou given he was finally producing at the top level, it opens up an opportunity for another young player to come into the team and show their worth. Could Hugo Garcia or Angus Hastie get another opportunity or Olli Hotton come in for his debut? The Saints want as many as these types to come out as their building blocks for the future.

    Eagles’ burning question: Can Schofield really throw his hat in the ring for coaching role after strong first showing?

    It feels like so much talk surrounding the next full-time Eagles coach has been around other candidates. Dean Cox, Jaymie Graham, Josh Carr, Ash Hansen, even Fox Footy’s own Nathan Buckley. But have we underestimated the man who is set to take the reins in Adam Simpson’s absence for the next six weeks? The Eagles were really brave in their narrow loss to Brisbane in Schofield’s first game in charge and it was a performance that would surely have piqued the interest of Eagles powerbrokers. Schofield is perceived throughout the industry as someone who has a hard edge, but his ability to connect to his players is also something he’s developed while being an assistant at the Eagles and at Port Adelaide under Ken Hinkley. It’s never easy being a caretaker coach – you’re essentially trying to enhance your credentials while needing to blood youth – but the opportunity is there for Schofield. The next six weeks are a dress rehearsal for the former Eagle and should his side continue to show signs of growth, he’ll have to be considered for the mantle permanently.

    Swans fine with Eagles interest in Cox | 00:47

    HAWTHORN v COLLINGWOOD

    Saturday July 20, 4.35 at the MCG

    How to watch on Fox Footy: From 6.30pm on Channel 504 with Anthony Hudson, Jason Dunstall, Garry Lyon, Cam Mooney & David Zita

    Hawks’ burning question: Can Ginnivan kick a bag against his old side?

    Imagine this. Hawthorn’s excitement machine Jack Ginnivan kicks five goals to essentially eliminate Collingwood from the finals race in 2024 and sink their hopes of back-to-back flags. It would be fitting, wouldn’t it? Ginnivan had an ‘almost game’ back in Gather Round when the Hawks fell to a five-point defeat at the Adelaide Oval, booting two majors from eleven disposals, but he showed glimpses of tearing that game apart. “He’s desperate to play against his old team and get out there, get under their skin in typical Jack fashion,” Hawthorn veteran Luke Breust said during the week. Plenty has been made of Collingwood’s off-season, where they traded Ginnivan and recruited former Docker Lachie Schultz to the club to play a similar role. Both livewires have similar numbers this year, with many experts questioning whether the weight of draft value they gave up for Schultz was worth it. But Collingwood’s trash has been Hawthorn’s treasure. If Ginnivan was to be the matchwinner for the Hawks come Saturday afternoon, that would absolutely break Collingwood hearts.

    Magpies’ burning question: Should Daicos move back behind the ball?

    While Nick Daicos is having an incredible third season in the midfield as one of the leading Brownlow contenders, reigning premier Collingwood has slid down to 12th and just doesn’t look the same team as last year. It includes the Pies lacking their usual slingshot from half back and ability to transition the ball from defence to forward 50. In fact, Craig McRae’s side has dropped from being ranked first in the competition last year to 16th in moving the ball from half back to inside 50 percentage, with Daicos’ time in defence falling from 41 per cent to 12 per cent amid his permanent midfield move. Granted, Collingwood’s midfield has also been down. However, former Collingwood coach Nathan Buckley pondered whether the club would be considering moving Daicos behind the ball again to help with its transition game. “It’s the opposite of what the Cats have done with Tom Stewart … can Daicos start as a half back and be facing the goals and the decision maker? That first kick breaks that first line of pressure, the decisions are easier after that first one. I just wonder if it’s in their thoughts,” Buckley said on Fox Footy’s On the Couch.

    AFL wildcard weekend on the way? | 01:13

    GEELONG v WESTERN BULLDOGS

    Saturday July 20, 7.30pm at GMHBA Stadium

    How to watch on Fox Footy: From 7.20pm on Channel 504 with Ben Dixon, Jack Riewoldt, Eddie Betts, Brad Johnson & David Zita

    Cats’ burning question: Is Danger still the man?

    When you watch Geelong captain Patrick Dangerfield in action right now, it’s hard to believe that he’s 34 years old. The Cats have a win-loss record of 7-1 when Dangerfield plays and a record of 4-5 when he doesn’t, highlighting the true importance the skipper has to their side. “I still think he is their barometer; I think how far the Cats go in September centres around how well Patrick Dangerfield plays,” St Kilda champion Leigh Montagna told Fox Footy’s First Crack. “It’s not so much about the quantity anymore of his numbers, it’s the impact of what he does,” he said. While Dangerfield’s numbers are down from seasons gone by, his work around the contest is still elite and he makes his Geelong teammates walk taller when he’s fit and firing. The Cats are fighting for a top four berth and Dangerfield still remains an integral piece of the puzzle for Chris Scott and his coaching staff. The question is, can Dangerfield keep it up as the season goes on and spearhead his side into yet another finals campaign?

    Bulldogs’ burning question: Is Jamarra the ‘difference’?

    Jamarra Ugle-Hagan last week responded to being slightly down on form, booting four goals from a career-best 20 disposals to lead the Dogs to a huge win over the Blues. It might well have been the former No. 1 draft pick’s best ever AFL outing in a real statement performance where he put the Dogs on his back. And it importantly came without Aaron Naughton by his side up forward as Ugle-Hagan showed he can be the man. Kangaroos legend David King on Fox Footy’s The First Crack said it “was a different beast to what we’d seen the last month or so,” questioning if the Dogs copped a “little clip” from Luke Beveridge after the team’s heavy loss to Port Adelaide. Saints great Leigh Montagna: “It’s the mental aspect, I reckon he had the kick up the backside. Now it’s up to him to stay at that consistent level … that’s the talent he’s got. He’s going too be the difference for the Dogs and how far they go.”

    ‘I think ruckmen are overrated’ | 03:27

    PORT ADELAIDE v RICHMOND

    Saturday July 20, 7.30pm at Adelaide Oval

    How to watch on Fox Footy: From 7.30pm on Channel 503 with Dwayne Russell, David King, Mark Ricciuto, Kath Loughnan & David Zita

    Power’s’ burning question: Do they have a ‘problem’ with the Hornet?

    Jason Horne-Francis has taken his game to new heights in his third AFL season — and second campaign at the Power. However Kangaroos legend David King believes Port has a “problem” with the former No. 1 pick with his discipline. While not doubting the 21-year old’s on-field talent, King thinks Horne-Francis still needs to mature to become the best version of himself — and to help the Power. “They’ve got a problem that they haven’t really wanted to talk about for a little while. Everyone defends Jason, he’s a wonderful player, he’s an extreme talent — but he’s gettable now. You can get under his skin, you can draw 50-metre penalties, and you can draw goals. “He spends a lot of time talking to the coach .. but at some point, he needs to take this situation by the horns himself and just, emotionally, remain in check,” King said on Fox Footy’s The First Crack.

    Tigers’ burning question: Will we ever see Dusty in yellow and black again?

    Dustin Martin has been sidelined since the Tigers’ Round 16 loss to Carlton as he deals with a nagging back injury that’s even stopped the champ from training – though that’s not the only reason. Seven reported on Thursday night Martin spent this week in New Zealand, missing the side’s Sunday loss and only returning to the country on Tuesday night. It meant he was never a chance of proving his fitness for this Saturday – which begs the question of what the club is letting the 33-year-old get away with, as they wait for his decision on 2025 and beyond. Adem Yze said the 33-year old could return against Collingwood next week, and perhaps we’ll see him back and yellow black. But perhaps not. The three-time Norm Smith medallist’s contract is due to expire at season’s end as rumours swirl around his future including a potential move to the Suns to reunite with Damien Hardwick or retire altogether. And the longer this back concern lingers and we don’t see Martin in action, the more you question if his legendary 301-game career at the Tigers has already had its last chapter written.

    Clarkson on the rebuild doubters | 05:30

    BRISBANE LIONS v SYDNEY SWANS

    Sunday July 21, 1.10pm at the Gabba

    How to watch on Fox Footy: From 1pm on Channel 504 with Anthony Hudson, Jonathan Brown, Gerard Healy, Alastair Lynch & Jon Ralph

    Lions’ burning question: Could Neale win a record-equalling third Brownlow?

    There’s only a dozen people in the history of the game who have won multiple Brownlow Medal’s, and Lachie Neale is one of them. Despite this, the star midfielders still manages to sneak under the radar, with the 31-year-old now in such good in good n he could well make a late run for medal number three. The third-highest rated player in the league since Round 10, Neale has reignited this Lions outfit after a slow start to the year; with Josh Dunkley and Hugh McCluggage working very well in tandem with the South Australian. It’ll be a pleasure to watch the trio, led by Neale, clash with Sydney’s own engine room on Sunday in almost certainly match of the round. “His quality stands out … I still think he reflect on him the way we should (despite two Brownlow’s),” David King said on Fox Footy’s First Crack. Leigh Montagna added. “I think we still probably underrate what he has done, because he doesn’t have the attributes and look like Dusty and Bontempelli; his actual output stacks up with any of them … he’ll get remembered as one of the all-time greats of the modern era.”

    Swans’ burning question: Will this truly their biggest test to date?

    The clear number one team in the competition in 2024, the Swans endured their first real bump in the road with back-to-back losses in across Round 16 and 17. They lost to a rising Fremantle and their anomaly loss to the Saints, but outside of that they haven’t been tested for four quarters in over last three months. With the inclusion of Heeney into their midfield and Cunningham in defence, the Swans are crazily only getting better – and besides McInerney, are now playing their best 23. That being said, Brisbane are arguably the in-form team of the competition in the last six weeks, and look to be peaking at the right time. In what should be their biggest test to date, the Swans can’t afford a slow start to the Lions – especially on their home turf.

    “What has happened to our great game!” | 03:35

    FREMANTLE DOCKERS v MELBOURNE

    Sunday July 21, 3.20pm at Optus Stadium

    How to watch on Fox Footy: From 3pm on Channel 503 with Kelli Underwood, David King, Nick Dal Santo & Jon Ralp

    Dockers’ burning question: Can they ‘rip the heart’ out of Dees again?

    Last time these teams met in Round 12, the Dockers put Melbourne to the sword in Alice Springs in a 92-point smashing. It was arguably Justin Longmuir’s side’s best performance this season given it showed it can really put damage on the scoreboard after at times being criticised for being too defensive minded. So can they rediscover such a killer instinct again against a more in-form Demons outfit back at their Optus Stadium fortress? “They’re a frustration for me because I love when they play a little bit of express. Often they don’t go and rip the heart out of the opposition and say: ‘We’re going to play win this game’. With five and a half minutes left against Hawthorn they still wanted to play in a controlled manner and it irks me a little bit … you’ve got to take a risk and adjust with what the scoreboard is telling you when you need to score,” Kangaroos legend David King said on Fox Footy’s The First Crack.

    Demons’ burning question: How important is Rivers to their finals hopes?

    He’s not quite Christian Petracca yet, but my word has Trent Rivers filled a void for Melbourne these last weeks. With Petracca out for the season and Oliver dreadfully out of form, coach Simon Goodwin desperately needed someone else to deliver in the engine room with Jack Viney – and Rivers looks to be that man. Registering 29 disposals in each of his last two matches, the 22-year-old has taken flight in the role with damaging kicking through the middle of the ground. This weekend against Fremantle will be another step above the Eagles and Bombers midfields he’s played in the last fortnight, but in front of his home crowd it would be fitting for the young gun to make it three out of three weeks as Melbourne’s best on ground and get his side one step closer to finals.

    Scott struggles with AFL tackle bans | 02:26

    CARLTON v NORTH MELBOURNE

    Sunday July 21, 4.40pm at Marvel Stadium

    How to watch on Fox Footy: From 4pm on Channel 504 with Dwayne Russell, Jack Riewoldt, Jordan Lewis, Sarah Jones, Ruby Schleicher & Jon Ralph followed by Bounce and First Crack

    Blues’ burning question: Where to now with their ruck situation?

    Having lost their last two games, the Blues will need to recapture their form this weekend against North – but is this the last chance they can rectify their ruck dilemma? Tossing and turning between young gun Tom De Koning and experienced campaigner Marc Pittonet, the club is still yet to land on their preferred combat of attack. AFL greats David King and Leigh Montagna discussed the decision on First Crack last Sunday night.

    “I think it’s the biggest issue at Carlton that they need to address at correct,” King said.

    “He (Pittonet) is solely responsible for (their) first possession profile … he doesn’t bring the score, (but) he brings the ability for you to start with the ball.”

    “It’s hard to argue with what he does as a ruckman,” Montagna added.

    While it’s widely accepted that De Koning provides more run and impact around the ground in general play, the duo highlighted Pittonet’s very good tap work last week against the Bulldogs, where his midfielders were ultimately unable to convert from stoppage. With six weeks to go until an impending finals appearance, do the Blues pick youth and speed, or experience and deft touch?

    Kangaroos’ burning question: Can they show they’ve learned from last week?

    To come up against the first and second-ranked sides in the competition as North Melbourne in back-to-back weeks is unlucky in some ways, but it’s also a great way to show what they’ve learned from last week. Sydney smashed them after quarter time at the SCG, but in the opening term they looked up for it. And the Blues are vulnerable too; as least as much as they ever have been this season, ranking fourth-worst in the competition for points against. On the back of two losses, Carlton won’t want to slip up against a Roos side that has looked a completely different team for most of the last month.

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  • ‘Build him a statue’: NBA superstar’s shocking $113m sacrifice revealed

    ‘Build him a statue’: NBA superstar’s shocking $113m sacrifice revealed

    Many stars said they want to play for the Knicks. Few actually tried it.

    And only one — Jalen Brunson — was willing to leave potentially over $100 million on the table to continue to be the marquee man at MSG.

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    With a gesture that will only further ingratiate himself to Knicks fans, Brunson agreed Friday to a four-year, $156.5 million ($AUD231.4 million) extension, the team announced.

    “Build him a statue,” Josh Hart, Brunson’s friend and teammate, tweeted after the news broke, echoing the sentiment of the fan base.

    It was a move that wasn’t too surprising given the rumblings ahead of Brunson’s extension eligibility, but nonetheless shocking from a financial perspective.

    If Brunson, 27, had waited until next summer for free agency, he could’ve inked a five-year contract worth about $270 million.

    There was some risk associated with waiting — what if he suffered a devastating injury next season? — but the point guard had already established himself as a max player when healthy.

    A source confirmed the fourth year on the extension is a player option, setting up the opportunity for Brunson to recoup some of the sacrificed millions on his next contract.

    Jalen Brunson was willing to leave $100 million on the table. (Photo by Quinn Harris / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)Source: AFP

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    But even in the ideal hypothetical scenario — where Brunson inks a free-agent max contract in 2028 — he can’t recover the roughly $37 million difference over the first three years of the extension.

    “Jalen signing the extension to remain with the Knicks for the long-term shows the dedication and passion he has for the organisation, the fans and this city,” team president Leon Rose said in a statement.

    “Jalen has often called the Knicks his family and we are beyond proud to have him wear and represent our orange and blue for years to come. … Since Jalen joined us two years ago, he has consistently led by example and continues to show a willingness to sacrifice for this organisation.”

    By taking the team-friendly deal, Brunson alleviates some Knicks cap concerns and potentially helps them avoid the dreaded second apron — the highest luxury-tax threshold that severely limits a team’s ability to build a roster — as they vie for a title.

    According to ESPN, Brunson studied the financial sacrifices of Derek Jeter, Patrick Mahomes and Tom Brady for the “blueprint” of building sustained success around the star’s contract.

    Of course, the agreement Friday wouldn’t be possible if Brunson wasn’t elated playing in New York. It’s hard to imagine a better situation for the point guard.

    Brunson’s latest contract is very team-friendly. (Photo by Sarah Stier/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    His father is the assistant coach, his longtime family friend (Rose) is the team president, his head coach (Tom Thibodeau) is a huge fan and his Villanova buddies are on the team.

    The core around him — OG Anunoby, Mikal Bridges, Julius Randle, Josh Hart, Donte DiVincenzo, Mitchell Robinson — are all between the ages of 26 and 29.

    It’s their prime window on the heels of a 50-win season and elimination in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference semis, a finish that left Brunson unsatisfied despite a flood of Knicks injuries.

    “I would say there’s pros and cons in how I played,” Brunson said after going on a playoff scoring tear that was comparable to Michael Jordan.

    “The pros are, I played well individually at some points and time during the playoffs. The cons are, I didn’t play well enough to help my team move forward. You can say I got hurt in Game 7 [against the Pacers, when Brunson fractured his hand]. I wasn’t playing well in Game 7. We had a 2-0 [series] lead and a 3-2 lead. So, it’s hard to look at things individually when you don’t help your team.”

    With the notable exception of Randle, most of the top Knicks players are locked up through at least the 2025-26 season (Brunson, Anunoby, DiVincenzo, Hart, Mikal Bridges, Mitchell Robinson, Miles McBride).

    Brunson has played some of his best basketball since moving to the Knicks from the Mavericks. (Photo by ELSA / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)Source: AFP

    Randle, who has a $31 million player option for the 2025-26 campaign, is eligible for an extension next month and expressed his desire to re-sign.

    He’s eligible for a deal much higher than Brunson’s at four years, approximately $190 million.

    Brunson’s extension max is based on his salary next season, which is just $25 million — another huge underpay given the booming NBA cap with $60 million annual paydays.

    Brunson, for instance, will be paid about $12 million less next season than Anunoby, who squeezed out a five-year, $212.5 million deal this summer.

    Brunson will be 31 when he can become a free agent in 2028, when he’d become eligible for the veteran’s max of five years at an estimated $418 million.

    It’s crazy money, more than Brunson probably ever imagined as a second-round pick. But a lot can happen before 2028.

    The only given is that Brunson is under contract until at least then. And he gave a huge discount to get there.

    This story was originally posted on the New York Post and has been reposted with permission

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  • Crazy reason nation was dumped from Euro as moment everyone missed comes back to bite

    Crazy reason nation was dumped from Euro as moment everyone missed comes back to bite

    Denmark have finished second ahead of Slovenia in Group C at Euro 2024 in the most bizarre circumstances as the draw for the Round of 16 was finalised.

    England topped Group C with five points, but the real intrigue came via the battle to decide who would come second and third.

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    Denmark and Slovenia both finished on three points with the same goal difference (zero), number of goals scored (two), number of goals conceded (two) and yellow cards shown to players.

    They both drew all three of their group fixtures.

    However, a moment during their group fixture proved to be the difference maker that ensured Denmark would finish second.

    UEFA confirmed the Danes were runners-up in Group C because Slovenian assistant coach Milivoje Novakovic received a yellow card.

    It meant Slovenia finished the group stages with seven yellow cards to Denmark’s six.

    Turkey too good for Czechia | 01:09

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    As a result, Denmark would face Germany in the Round of 16 while Slovenia, one of the four best third-placed teams, would book a clash against Portugal.

    The blockbuster clash of the Round of 16 is undeniably France against Belgium, as the latter’s 0-0 draw against Ukraine meant they could not seal top spot in Group E.

    Instead, world No. 47 Romania topped the group and will take on the Netherlands in the Round of 16.

    The winner of that match will then take on either Turkiye or Austria for a spot in the semi final.

    EURO 2024 ROUND OF 16 FIXTURES (all times AEST)

    Sunday, June 30

    Switzerland v Italy – 2am

    Germany v Denmark – 5am

    Monday, July 1

    England v Slovakia – 2am

    Spain v Georgia – 5am

    Tuesday, July 2

    France v Belgium – 2am

    Portugal v Slovenia – 5am

    Wednesday, July 3

    Romania v Netherlands – 2am

    Austria v Turkiye – 5am

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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.

    Boomers start Olympics selection camp | 01:18

    “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.

    Gaze: Bulls a ‘better fit’ for Giddey | 00:59

    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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  • ‘Young Michael Jordan’: Anthony Edwards is the next ‘face of the NBA’ and these numbers prove it

    ‘Young Michael Jordan’: Anthony Edwards is the next ‘face of the NBA’ and these numbers prove it

    From the year he entered the league, putting Yuta Watanabe on a poster before a month later exploding for a 42-point haul against the Suns, Anthony Edwards has always been special.

    How special?

    Special enough to warrant Minnesota using its first overall pick in the 2020 draft to select the Georgia guard, with the kind of tantalising combination of athleticism and playmaking to transform a franchise.

    And that goes without even mentioning his personality which Tom Crean, Edwards’ coach at Georgia, described as “infectious”.

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    Gobert hits a frankly absurd fadeaway | 00:23

    “He’s a pied piper personality,” Crean told The Athletic in 2020.

    “People gravitate to him. They want to be around him and people really want him to like them. It’s a tremendous aura for a 19-year-old.”

    Some people have a quiet confidence in the way they go about things. Anthony Edwards is not one of them.

    There is nothing quiet about the way he operates. Nothing quiet about the way he dunked on Watanabe as a rookie, or the way he trash talked Kevin Durant after hitting a 3-pointer over the Suns superstar as Minnesota won Game 1 and went on to sweep the Phoenix series.

    Edwards averaged 31 points, 8.0 rebounds, 6.3 assists and 2.0 steals in that series and Durant said after Game 4 that the 22-year-old was his “favourite player to watch”.

    “[He has] just grown so much since he came into the league,” added Durant.

    “His love for the game shines bright. That’s one of the reasons I like him the most. Love everything about Ant.”

    He is one of those players who makes it hard not to like them and now Edwards is rapidly rising towards superstardom after helping take Minnesota to the Western Conference Finals.

    Like Edwards, there was nothing quiet about the way the Timberwolves took it to the defending champion Nuggets, claiming the opening two games on the road before obliterating Denver by 45 points in Game 6 and clinching the series with a historic second-half comeback.

    Anthony Edwards is taking over the league. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    While the basketball world has been so used to the likes of Durant, LeBron James and Steph Curry dominating the playoffs conversation, the Suns and Lakers were eliminated in the first round while the Warriors didn’t even make it out of the play-in tournament.

    Even Milwaukee’s superstar duo Giannis Antetokounmpo and Damian Lillard are out of the picture after battling injuries in an opening round series defeat to Indiana.

    The same goes for three-time MVP Nikola Jokic, leaving Edwards as one of the biggest names left in the postseason along with Dallas superstars Luka Doncic and Kyrie Irving, Celtics duo Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum and the much-improved Tyrese Haliburton.

    But it seems like Edwards belongs in a separate category, probably along with Doncic and maybe one of either Brown or Tatum, depending on how the rest of the playoffs shake out, as the leading candidates to be the next face of the league.

    Edwards in particular though seems purpose built for the role, with highlight-reel plays and an equally loud personality to match. Put simply, Anthony Edwards the player and person cuts through.

    Want proof? According to the NBA, Edwards generated more than 100 million video views across the league’s social and digital platforms in the opening round of the playoffs.

    That number was second behind only one player: LeBron James. Edwards had also gained the most Instagram followers among players since the start of the playoffs.

    It wasn’t just the playoffs either, with Edwards finishing the regular season as the seventh most viewed player on NBA social media pages.

    Edwards could be the next face of the league. (Photo by C. Morgan Engel/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    “He’s the face of the league,” teammate Karl-Anthony Towns said after Minnesota swept Phoenix.

    “I’ve been saying that. He hate when I say it but it’s true.”

    ESPN’s Brian Windhorst, meanwhile, said on NBA Today that Edwards is “the future of American basketball”.

    “The thing that is so great about him is he plays both ends and he cares about both ends and he truly loves his teammates,” added Windhorst.

    “He is not a conventional leader but he is an effective leader.”

    That means taking responsibility when you don’t play as well because as much as a confident Anthony Edwards is an unstoppable Anthony Edwards, self-accountability is just as important.

    It wasn’t like Edwards’ output of 19 points, six rebounds and six assists in the Game 3 loss to Denver was that bad either. He just has such high expectations of himself and what he is capable of.

    “It’s on me,” Edwards said after that game.

    “I’ll take the blame for this loss. I came out with no energy at all. I can’t afford to do that for my team. I let my team down, the fans down.”

    This was a different side to the Edwards who appeared on ESPN’s NBA Today in January 2022 and was asked who is the hardest player to guard in the league.

    “Myself because I’m unstoppable,” a confident Edwards replied.

    Confident. Not cocky. There is a difference, according to the man himself, who later told Malika Andrews ahead of this year’s playoffs series that is the one thing people don’t understand about him and the way he goes about his game.

    “A lot of people be calling me cocky,” he told Andrews.

    “That’s the main thing. It’s not cocky, it’s not arrogance. I’m just a confident person. I just think I’m the best in everything that I do.”

    And by the end of last season when championship-winning guard Bruce Brown was asked who the hardest player is to guard in the league, he mentioned Edwards’ name alongside Thunder superstar Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

    Anthony Edwards is a rising superstar in the NBA. C. Morgan Engel/Getty Images/AFPSource: AFP

    Nuggets coach Michael Malone, meanwhile, said ahead of Game 7 that Edwards had “proven to be unguardable”, with second-year bench player Christian Braun Denver’s best bet of trying to limit his effectiveness.

    Edwards averaged 27.7 points throughout the series against Denver, scoring 43 points in Game 1 and 44 in Game 5, when he warned a Nuggets locker room staffer that he’d be back.

    “I told them,” explained Edwards, “I said ‘I’ll see y’all motherf*****s for Game 7.’”

    It is that fierce competitiveness, confidence and swagger that has people across the league, including Edwards’ own teammates, drawing parallels with Michael Jordan.

    “I’ve never met a guy or been a teammate with a guy who believes more in himself than Anthony Edwards,” Mike Conley said on ‘Inside the NBA’ of Edwards, who reminds him of a “young Michael Jordan”.

    Former teammate Patrick Beverley even made the comparison back in 2022 on J.J. Redick’s podcast, declaring Edwards “has a chance to be really special” in the NBA.

    “If I say this, I know you guys are going to look at me like I’m crazy and I’m going to put all that pressure on that kid,” Beverley said at the time.

    “But, I told him, ‘Man, you got a chance, man. You got a chance, brother, to be Michael Jordan. You really do. You really do.’

    “I’ve been around a lot of them and the kid doesn’t indulge in anything negative — just all positivity, all video games. His talent level, his skill level, it’s crazy. He has a chance to be really special. Really special in this league.”

    Jordan himself also called Edwards “special” after Game 1 against the Suns, according to Stephen A. Smith.

    Edwards has consistently dismissed the comparisons, telling FOX Sports he can’t be compared to somebody of Jordan’s calibre.

    “I want it to stop,” Edwards said. “He’s the greatest of all time. I can’t be compared to him.”

    Meanwhile, in that sit-down interview with Andrews before the playoffs, Edwards was asked the same question and said he doesn’t want to be known as “the next Michael Jordan”.

    Instead, he would prefer to be “the first Anthony Edwards”. In other words, he just wants to be himself and that is what makes Edwards so easy to root for and so marketable for the league according to assistant coach Micah Nori.

    NBA Wrap: Wolves storm back to KO Nugs | 01:00

    “I think that the people gravitated to him because he was just a likeable dude,” Nori said earlier this month after a practice session.

    “He doesn’t change. He is who he is. I think anytime you’re not putting on a front or you’re not fake, you don’t have to change who you are, whether you’re in front of the media, or you’re out doing commercials or playing a game.

    “Anthony Edwards is who he is, he knows who he is, and I think that’s why he’s able to accept it and handle it so well.

    “… There’s obviously a big difference between confidence and arrogance. He’s just a very, very confident person and trusts his ability.”

    It is why when Edwards told that Denver staff member he would see them in Game 7, it didn’t seem like just talk, and it is why when he said he “wins two championships this summer”, the rest of the league should have been taking notice.

    If they weren’t then, they are now and all signs point to this just being the start of Edwards’ time in the spotlight as one of the most prominent characters in a new era for the NBA.

    Don’t miss a second of the Dallas Mavericks vs Minnesota Timberwolves in the NBA’s 2023-24 Western Conference Finals! You can watch every game LIVE on ESPN, available via Kayo. Are you new to Kayo? Start Your Free Trial Today >

    MAVERICKS VS TIMBERWOLVES SERIES SCHEDULE

    Game 1: Mavericks vs. Timberwolves, Thursday, May 23, 10.30am

    Game 2: Mavericks vs. Timberwolves, Saturday, May 25, 10.30am

    Game 3: Timberwolves vs. Mavericks, Monday, May 27, 10am

    Game 4: Timberwolves vs. Mavericks, Wednesday, May 29, 10.30am*

    Game 5: Mavericks vs. Timberwolves, Friday, May 31, 10.30am*

    Game 6: Timberwolves vs. Mavericks, Sunday, June 2, 10.30am*

    Game 7: Mavericks vs. Timberwolves, Tuesday, June 4, 10.30am*

    *if necessary

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