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    Crystal Palace set to ring changes with 13 players out of contract including Batshuayi, McCarthy and Benteke

    CRYSTAL PALACE are heading for a king-sized change of the guard — with THIRTEEN players coming out of contract.
    The Eagles have monumental decisions to make with so many of their squad in the last six months of their deals.

    Striker Michy Batshuayi is set to return to Chelsea in May after his loan from Crystal PalaceCredit: Rex Features

    Ex-Liverpool and Aston Villa frontman Christian Benteke could be exiting the Eagles when he is contract ends next summerCredit: Getty Images – Getty

    It could lead to the biggest turn-around seen at Selhurst Park in years, with several new players also needed to replace them.
    Palace have keepers Vicente Guaita, Wayne Hennessey, both 33, and Stephen Henderson, 32, out of contract.
    They have a one-year option to keep Guaita but Wales international Hennessey could be on his way.
    PREM RIVALS EYE DANN
    Midfielder James McCarthy, 29, could also have his deal extended by a year.But the rest will have to haggle over fresh contracts.

    Dutch left-back Patrick van Aanholt, 30, is looking for new terms but that might be an issue as Tyrick Mitchell, 21, has done so well in the position since stepping up.
    Centre-halves Gary Cahill, 34, and Mamadou Sakho, 30, are two that Palace want to keep.
    But defender Scott Dann, 33, could be off, with some Prem clubs even looking at him as a capture in the next window.
    Strikers Christian Benteke, 29, and Connor Wickham, 27, were given deals for this season but could then move on.

    Winger Andros Townsend, 28, was wanted by West Brom but they were rebuffed last summer.
    He will want his deal sorted soon or could leave in the January window.

    Out-of-favour midfielder Max Meyer, 25, sees his contract up next summer. He could go back to Germany.
    Striker Michy Batshuayi, 27, returns to Chelsea at the end of his loan in May.Palace would save around £1MILLION a week if they left.
    Boss Roy Hodgson, 73, will be watching the situation anxiously — but his own deal is up and it may be that a new-look squad could coincide with the arrival of a new manager.

    Crystal Palace star Andros Townsend wants the Premier League to scrap VAR now More

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    Southampton kept faith in Ralph Hasenhuttl after 9-0 drubbing – it should serve as a lesson for other clubs

    YOU know I like a flutter now and then but even I would have thought twice if you’d given me odds on this a year ago.
    The suggestion that Ralph Hasenhuttl would still be manager of Southampton, never mind the fact they could be in the top five at the end of this weekend.

    Harry Redknapp has praised Southampton for sticking with Ralph Hasenhuttl after a 9-0 defeat last year

    Hasenhuttl’s Saints side currently sit in tenth spot in the Premier League table

    I don’t think anyone would have stuck a penny on the first part, let alone anything else. I know I wouldn’t.
    A year ago, Southampton had just been whacked 9-0 at home by Leicester and dropped into the bottom three.
    The board could have taken the easy option and sacked Hasenhuttl, so give them credit for sticking with him.
    And you’ve certainly got to give plenty to the manager for how he’s steadied the ship ever since. That faith has definitely been rewarded.

    I must be honest, I didn’t know a lot about him when he arrived — but you can’t knock the fact he’s done a good job.
    They beat Everton last week and fully deserved it, too.
    No one gets an easy game against Southampton and you’d have to fancy them for a top-half finish at least. Probably more, the way they’re going.
    It’d be nice to think a few other clubs would show the same sort of patience Saints did when they hit a rocky patch — because not too many do.

    Southampton beat Everton 2-0 last week at St Mary’s thanks to goals from James Ward-Prowse and Che Adams

    You have all these billionaire owners who are massively successful in what they do, and don’t understand why it isn’t the same in football.
    If a manager is good enough to get the job in the first place, he doesn’t become a bad one on the back of a bad result or two.
    They should be asking things like: What has he to work with? What’s he been given?
    Would it make a difference if Pep Guardiola came in, if you were a Burnley, Fulham or whoever?
    Unfortunately not too many are keen to do that, any more than they are to stick with the manager if things are going badly.
    Imagine if Manchester United had thought like that 30 years ago.
    Sir Alex Ferguson is maybe the greatest manager ever but he was anything but a  success in those early years.

    Southampton fought back against Chelsea to draw 3-3 at Stamford Bridge a fortnight agoCredit: Simon Dael – The Times
    I remember we played them in the FA Cup at Bournemouth and should have had a penalty in the last minute when Steve Bruce went through Luther Blissett when it was 1-1.
    There was the goal Mark Robins scored at Nottingham Forest which everyone says kept Fergie in a job. He didn’t do too badly in the end, did he?
    I’m not saying Southampton will do the same by any stretch but you see what I mean.
    Then again, maybe we should not be that surprised about how well Hasenhuttl and his team are doing, because it really is turning into a strange season — and not all in a good way.
    Of course you love the fact there have been loads of goals, it’s great the league is so open and fantastic to see different sides up there.
    But I have to say we’re watching a totally different game now. One which lacks the real intensity of a normal year.
    A lot of them have been like practice matches, like the first team versus reserve games I’ve stood and watched all my life.

    Players are not closing down or getting tight, they’re standing a yard off and I’m seeing more and more rolling it out from the back and passing it about, going nowhere.
    From one centre-back to another, to the full-back, to the keeper, to the other full-back… you just couldn’t do that if there was a crowd.
    I’m not against playing out of defence — but if there were punters in, they’d be on to them and demanding a  forward pass.
    Instead you’ve got goalkeepers thinking they can do Cruyff Turns and centre-backs thinking they’re Bobby Moore or Franz Beckenbauer.
    I do like the fact we are  getting some odd results though — and we probably should have had a few more, to be honest.
    Sheffield United were excellent at Liverpool and probably deserved a point, while Burnley were unlucky not to get anything against Tottenham.

    Then I look at Brighton and think they’re really good but they can’t win a game at the minute.
    It’s going to be tight at both ends this time.
    So when they say it’s a strange old season, they’re not kidding — although surreal would probably be a better description.

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    Wolves powerhouse Adama Traore used to get roughed up as a skinny kid, admits ex-Barcelona youth boss

    HE has the speed of an Olympic sprinter, the build of a middleweight boxing champion  and strikes fear into every team he faces.
    Yet there was a time when the only thing scary about Adama Traore was the rough-house approach opponents used to stop him.

    Adama Traore has developed into one of the most feared attacking players in the Premier League Credit: Getty Images – Getty

    Back in his young years, Traore did not pose the same physical threat, according to his former coach at BarcelonaCredit: Supplied

    Back then he was still a flier, yet a waif of a player with a body more like a butcher’s pencil than powerhouse Prem star.
    And Andres Carrasco, the man who coached Traore in those early days at Barcelona, remembers how he would wince at the punishment handed out.
    Time and again he feared the kid would throw in the towel.
    Carrasco, recently named Kuwait coach, was in charge of Barcelona’s Under-12s through to Under-14s and the spindly lad scorching up and down the wing stood out a mile.

    Not just for the afterburners in his feet but the fire in his belly — and Traore had only just turned ten at the time.
    Carrasco revealed: “There were a lot of 11-year-old boys at Barcelona who gave the impression they were three or four years older. Adama wasn’t like that. He was very small — one of the smallest in the team — but really caught our attention.
    ““When we defended a corner, we’d put him on the edge of box to take advantage of the rebounds. With his speed we’d go straight up to the other end — he scored a lot like that.
    “When Adama had the ball in a one against one, the defenders didn’t even smell him. He created total panic among them.”

    Traore developed under Andres Carrasco in the Under-12s through to Under-14sCredit: Supplied

    Some at Barca doubted his ability to reach the top levelCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    He created a fair bit for his coach too, as teams gradually realised the only way to halt the gangly ace was to stop him running — however they could.At the time, he was a world away from the man who is now a cult hero to Wolves fans.
    Carrasco said: “When he was a little boy I’ve never seen so many brutal and dirty tackles against a player in grassroots football.“The incredible thing is Adama kept getting kicked and we’d have our hands over our faces that he’d be badly injured — but he always got up as if nothing had happened.”In fact, the bigger threat to him making it was his tendency to turn up just before kick-off. Carrasco explained: “He was a really nice kid, always smiling away — but a very forgetful boy.
    “He would forget his passport when we played international tournaments and would have to call his mum or dad to bring it.“Adama was also well known because sometimes he used to arrive late to  the games.

    Traore left Spain in search of making it in the Premier LeagueCredit: Reuters
    “Everybody was stressed, looking at their watches and asking, ‘Where is he’? But he’d come in cool as a cucumber.
    “When we kicked off he transformed to the Adama we know.”
    Yet for all his speed and talent, many at Barca doubted whether he had the ‘footballing nous’ to go right to the top.
    With the first-team door locked, Traore tried his luck at Aston Villa, then Middlesbrough, until the 24-year-old found his spiritual home at Molineux.

    Carrasco added: “English football is made for him and obviously he has silenced any who doubted him.“Look at the international market, there are no players of his ability to destroy defenders in a one v one.“He is the best — Adama can change a game.”

    Wolves star Adama Traore shows off incredible ripped physique as he works out at home More

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    Shearer pays tribute to Nobby Stiles and says great’s family wait for answers over possible football-related dementia

    HEARTBROKEN Alan Shearer paid tribute to ‘giant’ Nobby Stiles — but said his family are still waiting for answers on possible football-related dementia.
    Stiles died on Friday at the age of 78 — the seventh member of England’s 1966 World Cup-winning starting XI to pass away.

    England stars past and present have been paying tribute to Nobby Stiles, who sadly passed away on FridayCredit: Getty Images – Getty

    Stiles, Martin Peters, Jack Charlton and Ray Wilson have all died since 2018 after living with dementia.
    Former England striker Shearer made a powerful BBC documentary in 2017 investigating whether there is a link between heading footballs and the brain syndrome.
    Stiles’ family featured on the programme after the Manchester United icon was revealed to be suffering from advanced dementia in 2016.
    Shearer believes serious questions need to be answered, especially as footballs were heavier in the past.

    And he added that funding for ground-breaking research is due to run out next year.
    Shearer, 50, said: “We had spoken to the family when we did the documentary.
    “As you can imagine, they were pretty angry in terms of the lack of answers — and the research has started.
    “There are about six months left of the funding and then there are serious questions about where it goes from there.

    Alan Shearer says Stiles family are waiting on answers on whether the World Cup winner (right) suffered from football-related dementiaCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    “That needs to be answered because there is no way it can be stopped. There are too many families who need those answers.
    “There are too many families that are being left alone and are unable to fund what they need to.
    “So there is still work to be done and hopefully that will continue to happen.
    “It’s unbelievably sad news. Obviously, I was aware of him and the struggles with him and his family.
    “It’s terrible news that another one of our giants has sadly passed away — his record, winning the World Cup and helping England, was incredible. Such a sad day for football again.”

    Manchester United fans have been laying flowers outside Old Trafford in honour of Red Devils hero Stiles Credit: Getty Images – Getty
    Manchester United fans left touching tributes to Stiles outside Old Trafford, while the players will wear black armbands and observe a minute’s silence at today’s Premier League clash with Arsenal.
    Stiles won two league titles and the 1968 European Cup during an 11-year career with the Red Devils.

    He was someone who the fans saw as a salt-of-the-earth kind of guy
    Rio Ferdinand

    But he will be most remembered for that glorious summer 54 years ago which culminated in a 4-2 victory over West Germany in the World Cup final.
    The sight of Stiles dancing around the Wembley pitch while holding aloft the trophy remains one of the defining images of English football. In 2000, he was awarded an MBE.
    Members of United’s famous Class of 92 paid their respects over the weekend.

    Manchester United’s old rivals Liverpool are among the clubs who observed a minute’s silence in honour of Stiles following his deathCredit: Getty – Pool
    Former midfielder Stiles helped the likes of Ryan Giggs, Paul Scholes, David Beckham, Nicky Butt and the Neville brothers while working as a youth team coach between 1989 and 1993.
    Former  Red Devils defender Rio Ferdinand said: “He was someone who the fans saw as a salt-of-the-earth kind of guy.

    His contribution to that World Cup success was enormous. Everyone who knows football understands and respects that
    Roy Hodgson

    “He was always charismatic and a lovely person to be around.
    “The impact he had on football I don’t think is valued as highly as it could have been.
    “He was a fantastic competitor — very modest and down to earth.”
    Crystal Palace boss Roy Hodgson, 73, said: “Like all football lovers and being very much a keen spectator of that wonderful final, my image will forever be of Nobby at the end of the game.

    “He had given his heart, his soul around the field, putting so much effort into protecting the England lead.
    “His contribution to that World Cup success was enormous. Everyone who knows football understands and respects that.
    “I do know other members of the team and they’ve spoken to me about how highly they valued his contributions. What a wonderful job he did.” 

    England World Cup-winner Nobby Stiles has died aged 78 after long illness More

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    Eddie Hearn claims Kell Brook and Dominic Ingle dropped him over money as Matchroom boss hits back

    EDDIE HEARN has accused Kell Brook of axing him and trainer Dominic Ingle for financial reasons.
    The Sheffield welterweight, 32, cut his long-time promoter and coach out of a £2million deal to fight WBO champion Terence Crawford on November 14.

    Kell Brook’s social media followers have been taking potshots at Eddie Hearn following the spat between the pairCredit: ©Mark Robinson Ltd

    Brook blamed Hearn for Sky Sports turning their back on him and accused the Matchroom boss of being too busy promoting his new book to work on his fight.
    Hearn tried to bite his tongue but Brook’s fans piled in on social media — and now the Essex matchmaker has hit back.
    He said: “I’ve done a lot with Kell and I thought I was going to rise above it.
    “But then I started getting people on Twitter saying, ‘It’s bang out of order what you’ve done to Kell Brook’.

    “I have so many problems on my plate right now getting fights for people who are with me and I thought, you know what, I’m going to let you know the truth.
    “It wasn’t like they came to me and said, ‘Let’s work a deal’.
    “They were whoring themselves to everyone else first. They tried BT, ITV, Channel 5, DAZN . . . I think they tried everybody and got turned down.
    “And then they came to me asking for money!”

    Kell Brook (right) was one of Eddie Hearn’s earliest signings and has consistently boxed on Sky in the pastCredit: PA:Press Association
    Brook, along with Darren Barker and Carl Froch, was one of Hearn’s earliest signings.
     The promoter always defended his former charge over the ill- discipline that regularly left him struggling to make the 10st 7lb welterweight limit.

    People are accusing me of hanging him out to dry — but he’s making £2m to fight Crawford and just didn’t want to pay me
    Eddie Hearn

    He said: “What was so  disheartening for me was when he questioned my loyalty. I went way above and beyond trying to help Kell.
    “I flew to Fuerteventura when he was in hospital after getting stabbed (right), sorting out all his  medical insurance, lots of things.
    “We’ve had some good times and it’s sad really.
    “I feel really sorry for Dominic Ingle also because he has done everything for him from day one and they have got a big cash fight and got rid of him for it.

    Eddie Hearn says he is ‘gutted’ his relationship with Kell Brook has deteriorated Credit: LAWRENCE LUSTIG
    “I don’t think he wasted too much time chasing the Amir Khan fight, I think he wasted too much time away from the gym.
    “Lots of times I had to drive up to Sheffield to help keep him on track.
    “But now people are accusing me of hanging him out to dry — but he’s making £2m to fight Crawford and just didn’t want to pay me. That’s all.”
    Hearn seems genuinely gutted his relationship with Brook has gone down the pan.
    But he wished him the best against Crawford, despite worries about lack of a proper game-plan.

    Hearn added: “What I will say is, he is on weight. He’s trained hard and he’s fit, but you can’t just be fit to fight Crawford.
    “You have to have a game-plan.
    “Kell saying, ‘I’ve got one, I’ve been watching Tyson Fury beat Deontay Wilder’ isn’t going to cut it”.

    Angry Eddie Hearn tells old pal Kell Brook to stop talking ‘b******s’ amid row over Crawford fight being on Sky Sports More

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    Derek Chisora ‘sorry for the priests’ as he looks forward to end of six-week sex ban after Oleksandr Usyk rendezvous

    TONIGHT signals the end of Derek Chisora’s six-week BONK BAN.
    The heavyweight was ordered by manager and training mentor David Haye to save up all his sexual energy for the showdown with Oleksandr Usyk.

    Derek Chisora is looking forward to ending his six-week sex ban after tonight’s fightCredit: ©Mark Robinson Ltd

    Chisora slapped on white paint for his weigh-in with Oleksandr UsykCredit: ©Mark Robinson Ltd

    The result is a shredded 18st monster.
    Haye explained: “I told him, if you lose you will always wonder if you could have done more to win.
    “It’s not worth it. So hold it in until the fight.
    “After the fight, do what you want to do.

    “But before the fight you need to be fully loaded in every department.
    “Everything needs to be full and ready to go. 
    “When is a lion most dangerous? When it hasn’t mated and it’s hungry.
    “And when I see him pacing up and down, I don’t know if he’s thinking about fighting or f******!”

    Chisora and Usyk go head-to-head ahead of their showdownCredit: ©Mark Robinson Ltd

    Father-of-one Chisora confirmed his agonising regime has left him with a newfound respect for anyone else who stays celibate through choice.
    He said: “Celibate is alright but I feel sorry the priests.
    “It’s why I have been having ice baths.”

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    Rhys Williams’ story is inspirational but West Ham will hope to make his life difficult as hell on Liverpool Prem debut

    IF you’re playing a team as outstanding as Liverpool, the slightest hint of a weak link gives you hope.
    So if 19-year-old centre-back Rhys Williams makes his debut against West Ham at Anfield today, you can bet West Ham will be determined to make his life as difficult as hell.

    Rhys Williams is set to make his Premier League debut against West Ham Credit: EPA

    I love this kid’s story — on loan with Kidderminster Harriers in National League North last season, then playing an hour of a Champions League game at Anfield on Tuesday.
    Having been on loan at a non-league club, I know how good a grounding he will have got.
    And that says so much about the strength of the English pyramid system, which is something that needs protecting now more than ever.

    But however talented Williams is — and he looks good — West Ham will have been working on targeting him, getting the ball behind him, making him turn and face goal with an experienced Premier League striker breathing down his neck.
    They will target him with crosses and set-pieces, they will target him relentlessly.
    This is no disrespect to Williams. When Virgil van Dijk, the best defender in the world, is absent, then any replacement will be a downgrade.
    But with Joel Matip and Fabinho also injured, there is an obvious potential weakness in the Liverpool defence.

    Jurgen Klopp’s other option will be Jordan Henderson. I’ve got huge admiration for Jordan but unlike Fabinho, who has played a lot of in defence, he has barely played there.

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    When Watford ended Liverpool’s unbeaten record with a 3-0 win last season, Dejan Lovren was in defence.
    Lovren has played in World Cup finals and Champions League finals but even he was singled out as a potential weakness as he hadn’t been playing regularly.
    If you’re Watford or West Ham, you know that if Liverpool play at ten out of ten and you play at ten out of ten, you are going to lose.
    You need the stars to align. You need every player to be at ten out of ten and every Liverpool player to be at six or seven and that is what happened.
    But if it’s Williams, on debut, or Henderson, in such an  unfamiliar role, you know there is a chance.
    While we all miss fans being in the stadium, this behind-closed-doors era is a good time for Williams to make his debut.
    Even though a capacity crowd on The Kop would be doing everything they could to support him, you would still be able to sense the edginess.
    Liverpool haven’t started this season as well as they’ve played in the last two campaigns, so one mistake from a youngster and that edginess can spread.

    This time last season the teen was playing in the National League North on-loan at Kidderminster HarriersCredit: PA
    In normal times, Williams would probably have 20 family members at Anfield — and that brings extra pressure, too. That’s difficult to block out.
    So I hope Klopp does give him the chance today.
    I think it’s great that Williams went down to National League North because that is a real life experience.
    When I was at Walsall I went on loan to Halesowen Town, a similar level to Kiddy, and that is an experience I still look back on.
    If you’re a kid who has come through a Premier League academy, you are going to be used to the best facilities and having privilege.
    That’s their version of ‘normal’ — so I think any player between 17 and 20 would benefit from going on loan and experiencing a whole different world.
    You often hear a kid like Williams will head to the lower leagues and get a kicking and be forced to toughen up.
    That is true. You have to learn to be a man in a boy’s body — but that isn’t the whole story. At Halesowen, I had team-mates who played a Saturday afternoon match, got showered, then headed straight out for a 12-hour night shift working on the roads or the railways.

    Troy Deeney is an exclusive columnist for Sun Sport Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
    Then there’s the travel. I remember going on a five-hour trip to Merthyr Tydfil — 20-odd lads packed into the sort of bus your kids travel into the  swimming pool at school.
    Then they’d stop off at service stations and have a pack of Discos for their pre-match meal.
    In the Premier League you have luxury travel. At Watford we might have flown to Sheffield, or first-class rail to Manchester, or in a coach with a full-on kitchen out the back.
    Then there’s the fans, the 100 or so who follow Halesowen away. The dedication of those people to their small club and the support they gave to someone like me made me feel ten feet tall.
    You learn to respect the non leagues and lower leagues — the histories of those clubs, what they mean to their communities.
    These smaller clubs are under threat because of Covid. But the solution is not to have Liverpool B and Manchester United B playing in League One — that would take so much away from what makes English football unique.
    I’m sure Williams will agree.
    And I’m sure if he plays for the mighty Liverpool today, he will be thankful for the  opportunity to have played for Kidderminster Harriers.

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    Dele Alli may need transfer away from Tottenham as his face doesn’t seem to fit with Jose Mourinho

    IT feels as if Dele Alli might need a move from Tottenham.
    After he was taken off at half-time in the Europa League defeat by Antwerp, it seems Dele’s face doesn’t fit with Jose Mourinho.

    Dele Alli has struggled to impress under the management of Jose MourinhoCredit: EPA

    I have always been impressed when I’ve played against Dele but it seems as though there is a personality clash and that he doesn’t fit in with Jose’s way of playing.
    Spurs are now operating without a classic No 10.
    Harry Kane is deeper and the wide men, like Son Heung-min and Gareth Bale can hit teams with pace.
    For that reason, Spurs benefitted from Christian Eriksen moving on, however good a player the Dane is.

    I don’t know if Dele is not a great trainer but that is what you hear.
    And when you also hear of the intensity at which teams such as Manchester City and Liverpool train, you understand how they have gone up a notch.
    Mourinho is now trying to replicate that at Tottenham.

    Kevin De Bruyne is a magnificently gifted player but, when you play against him, you are soon struck by how hard he works.

    Dele has to do the same — and maybe he needs a different club to get the best out of him.
    Whoever does would be recruiting a seriously good player.

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