Sports
Tottenham Flop Conor Gallagher is a ‘Shadow of His Former Self’
Tottenham Hotspur were relatively quiet in the January transfer window and when you look at their form and position in the Premier League table, you wonder if they should have done more.
Of course, Spurs wanted to bring Antoine Semenyo to the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium last month, but the Ghana international respectfully rejected them and chose to join title-chasing Manchester City instead.
Meanwhile, Tottenham are 16th and just four points above the relegation zone following the 4-1 home defeat to arch-enemies Arsenal on Sunday, and they are deep in a genuine relegation battle alongside the likes of West Ham United and Nottingham Forest.
The January additions that did arrive – Conor Gallagher and Souza – have failed to make much of an impact with the north London outfit still without a league win in 2026, with just two in their previous 18 Premier League games.
Conor Gallagher Arrived With Big Expectations
A long-term transfer target for Tottenham, there was excitement when they hijacked Aston Villa’s deal to sign the England international last month, given his Premier League experience and the fact he was joining from Atletico Madrid.
Spurs blew Villa’s offer out of the water as they agreed a deal for Gallagher to join permanently right away, with a £35m deal quickly completed on a £200,000-a-week salary.
The Englishman’s non-stop running, leadership and goalscoring threat were seen to be attributes that could really help this Tottenham team move up the table, but it has so far failed to materialise.
TalkSPORT pundit Gabby Agbonlahor has labelled him a ‘shadow of his former self’, saying Villa dodged a bullet by not signing him.
Gallagher Making No Impact on Matches
The 26-year-old made the move to Tottenham hoping to play regularly and boost his chances of being named in Thomas Tuchel’s England squad for the 2026 World Cup, but it’s difficult to see that happening.
While the midfielder has started all six of Spurs’ Premier League matches since he joined, he is already looking like a big-money flop, when you take into account his wages and transfer fee.
Gallagher has made little to no impact so far and hasn’t been helped by the absence of the likes of James Maddison and Dejan Kulusevski through injury, which has brought more onus on him to create for his teammates from the centre of the park.
While he did get an assist against Manchester City, creativity isn’t one of the Englishman’s main strengths and he quickly needs to show a lot more to help stop Tottenham being dragged into the bottom three, with the other teams around them in better form currently.
With so many injuries and absences for Spurs at the moment, Gallagher is one of their most senior and experienced players available and now he needs to step up, starting at Fulham this weekend.
Who is Tottenham’s Biggest Transfer Flop?
GIVEMESPORT asked ChatGPT who should be considered as Tottenham’s biggest transfer flop, and this is what it said:
‘One of Tottenham Hotspur’s most widely cited transfer flops is Tanguy Ndombele. Signed for around a club-record fee from Lyon in 2019, he never justified that outlay at Spurs — showing glimpses of talent but failing to consistently impact matches, spending much of his contract out on loan before leaving by mutual consent, meaning the club got little to no return on the big spend. Other costly misfires often mentioned include Roberto Soldado and Vincent Janssen, but Ndombele’s combination of high fee and lack of return usually puts him at the top of flop lists.’
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Sports
De Zerbi’s Dream Tottenham XI With Two More Signings Added
Tottenham Hotspur have been the most active Premier League club in this summer transfer window so far, yet Roberto De Zerbi could still add a few more signings to complete his dream starting eleven for next season.
The Lilywhites narrowly avoided relegation last term, finishing 17th in the English top flight for the second consecutive campaign. Evidently, significant investment in the squad was required, and thus far, Spurs’ hierarchy have delivered.
Marcos Senesi and Andy Robertson arrived on free transfers for Bournemouth and Liverpool, respectively, to add experience and defensive resilience at the back. Goalkeeper Martin Dubravka has also arrived from Burnley.
Jan Paul van Hecke was acquired for £52million from Brighton in a staple move, while a major midfield overhaul is in motion. Mateus Fernandes has joined from West Ham United for £85million, and Sandro Tonali is set to complete a mouth-watering £100million switch from Newcastle United.
The forward line still needs work, but by all accounts, Tottenham aren’t prepared to slow down in the market. With that said, GIVEMESPORT have put together a dream Spurs eleven for next season, which includes two further signings.
Goalkeeper
Kinsky
In one of their more low-key moves of the summer, Tottenham have also added experienced free agent Premier League goalkeeper Martin Dubravka to their ranks. This acquisition suggests that De Zerbi is committed to using Antonin Kinsky as his first choice in between the sticks.
When the Italian manager arrived in North London, Kinsky was still ruing the humiliating experience he’d endured away at Atletico Madrid in the Champions League under Igor Tudor. However, De Zerbi resurrected the Czech’s career at Tottenham, and he subsequently enjoyed an impressive end to the season.
Kinsky signed a new long-term deal last week, which essentially confirms De Zerbi’s plans to platform him as the number one, ahead of Guglielmo Vicario and Dubravka.
Defence
Porro, Van Hecke, Senesi, Van de Ven
All of a sudden, Spurs have a plethora of options in their backline, and many favourites from the previous iteration of the team won’t start on a regular basis.
At right-back, Pedro Porro is expected to keep his place. De Zerbi showed faith in the Spaniard in the final weeks of the season, and while there were some suggestions that the player could depart this summer, few concrete developments have emerged on this front. Djed Spence will have a tough task on his hands to compete with Porro.
At centre-back, De Zerbi has several different combinations he can experiment with, although the Cristian Romero and Micky van de Ven partnership is likely to be a thing of the past. Romero has reportedly told Spurs he wants to stay, but other reports indicate that the North London club are prepared to cash in on the Argentine.
Regardless of whether he remains in N17 or not, it appears De Zerbi might be keen on moving on from being overly reliant on the ill-disciplined defender. Van Hecke and Senesi have been signed for a reason, and the two players could complement each other perfectly in a new-look Tottenham defence. Spurs’ passing issues from deep areas are likely to become a thing of the past with these two excellent ball-players at the heart of their back four.
While Romero could be axed from his starting role, De Zerbi will almost certainly want to utilise Van de Ven, but perhaps offer the Dutchman a new role. For the Netherlands at the World Cup, the pacey defender was used at left-back, allowing Denzel Dumfries to push forward on the right. A similar dynamic could unfold in De Zerbi’s team with Porro on the opposite side.
This means there is no space for Robertson in De Zerbi’s dream eleven. However, given where the Scotsman is in his career, a squad rotation role makes sense. Where all of this leaves the likes of Kevin Danso and Destiny Udogie is a different question, however.
Midfield
Tonali, Fernandes, Akliouche
Spurs are likely to start the new campaign with an entirely new midfield. The likes of Rodrigo Bentancur, Pape Sarr and Lucas Bergvall may find themselves on the periphery of De Zerbi’s squad, as the new men take over.
After spending such a significant sum on Tonali and Fernandes, it would be fair to assume that the two players will form a double pivot at the base of Spurs’ midfield. This should create a nice balance, with Fernandes’ in-possession skills dovetailing nicely with Tonali’s hard-running and defensive work.
In front of them, while James Maddison and Conor Gallagher will certainly feel they should be included in this concept team, Spurs are seemingly attempting to sign a new creative player. Tottenham are in talks to sign Monaco’s Maghnes Akliouche, who they view as the heir to Maddison.
Akliouche is an outstanding talent and has the ability to replace some of Maddison’s creative passing attributes.
Attack
Kudus, Kroupi, Simons
Finally, the attack at Spurs still needs some work, although De Zerbi already has some promising pieces in place. Xavi Simons is on the long road to recovery from an ACL injury, although once he’s back and available, he should be parachuted straight back into the Lilywhites’ best starting XI.
Simons was regularly deployed off the left by De Zerbi, so this is likely where the Italian sees his primary creator operating long-term. Off the right, Mohammed Kudus should reassume this position in Spurs’ attack, once he’s free of his own injury issues.
The Ghanaian started brightly at Tottenham last season, but was halted by a string of serious fitness problems. He should be ready to rebuild this fitness in pre-season, and De Zerbi will no doubt enjoy his direct dribbling skills.
Up front, a new number nine is needed at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Richarlison and Dominic Solanke are approaching their 30s, and neither can be trusted to fire Spurs back into the Champions League places. Instead, they should invest in a long-term option in this position.
Junior Kroupi is the most exciting young striker on the market, and the Frenchman has been heavily linked with Tottenham in recent weeks. An £80million move has been mooted for Kroupi, who scored 13 Premier League goals last season at the age of 19.
He should be able to lead the line for Tottenham for years to come.
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Sports
Diego Maradona’s Response to Cristiano Ronaldo Calling Himself the GOAT
The debate over football’s greatest-ever player has raged for decades, with Pele, Diego Maradona, Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo all holding a genuine case.
Ronaldo has never been shy about where he stands on the matter, and back in 2017, fresh off the back of his fifth Ballon d’Or, he made his feelings clear in typical Ronaldo fashion.
Maradona, who was present at the time, wasn’t about to let Ronaldo’s statement slide, and his response has gone down as one of the great put-downs in football punditry.
With the host of records and achievements Messi has gone on to claim since, the whole debate looks rather different these days, and arguably points to a very different conclusion than the one Ronaldo was pushing back then.
Ronaldo Crowned Himself the Best Ever
After collecting his fifth Ballon d’Or in 2017, Ronaldo left no room for interpretation when discussing his own legacy. Speaking to France Football via Goal, he said:
“I’m the best player in history, in the good moments and the bad ones.”
“I’ve never seen anyone better than me. I have always thought that. No footballer can do the things I can. There’s no player more complete than me. I play well with both feet, I’m quick, powerful, good with the head, I score goals, I make assists. There are guys who prefer Neymar or Messi. But I tell you: there’s no-one more complete than me.”
It was classic Ronaldo, supremely confident and unwilling to entertain any rival claims to the throne, a stance he still holds today.
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Ronaldo issued a nine-word response as he’s asked about Messi – while storming out of the interview
Maradona’s Brutal Reply, and Messi’s Case Since
Maradona, who has a claim of his own when it comes to being the greatest of all-time, wasn’t having any of it when AS asked him about Ronaldo’s comments shortly after. Upon learning that Ronaldo considered himself the greatest of all time, Maradona simply replied:
“Tell him to stop taking the p***.”
When pushed about where Ronaldo’s claim leaves Maradona, he doubled down, near-enough repeating the same line: “That’s why I said stop taking the p***.” He did soften slightly as the interview went on, calling Ronaldo “marvellous” and praising his reliability whenever his team needed him most, comparing that quality to the great Johan Cruyff.
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Nearly a decade on, Messi has done more than anyone to settle the argument, winning the World Cup with Argentina in 2022 and adding an eighth Ballon d’Or to his tally the following year, extending his own record and possibly ending all reasonable debate.
Sports
Rafael Nadal vs Roger Federer on a 50-50 Court of Clay and Grass in 2007
Around 19 years ago in 2007, tennis greats Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer competed in an exhibition match with a twist.
The match, which was named ‘Battle of Surfaces’, pitted the two best players on their preferred surfaces to try and find out who was the better. The true tennis GOAT, if you will. Sorry Novak fans…
It was played in Mallorca and the incredible court, which had clay on one side and grass on the other, cost over £1 million to put together.
Federer was the world number one at the time and had won 48 successive matches on grass, whereas, Nadal hadn’t lost on clay for over three years.
Before the match, the Swiss star said: “We are both looking forward to this absolutely new event. The idea really appeals to me as we both dominate one of the surfaces. It’ll be fun to find out what it’s like to play on a court with mixed surfaces! And it ought to be interesting to see who chooses the better tactic.”
Video: Nadal vs Federer on 50-50 Surface
Nadal took the opening set 7-5 in front of 7,000 spectators, who were intrigued to see who would come out on top on the historic occasion.
The now 44-year-old Federer, who retired from the game a few years ago, bounced back, however, and took the second set 6-4 to set up a decider.
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The match swung one way then the other before the Spaniard took the deciding set 12-10 in the tie-break to emerge victorious.
After his win, the King of Clay said: “It was a good experience, although before the game I thought it would be a disaster because I felt it would be very difficult for me to adapt to the court.”
In the years following the event, Nadal went on to win the French Open, which is the only Grand Slam on clay, a further 11 times, taking his overall tally to a stunning 14.
Federer, meanwhile, won the grass Grand Slam of Wimbledon a further three times, taking his haul to eight in total.
Whether you are Team Rafa or Team Roger, you can absolutely appreciate both of them and what they have both done for the sport of tennis as a whole.
With the two of them now both officially retired from the professional game, it’s a case of looking back and truly being thankful that they gave us one of the best rivalries in, not just tennis, but sport as a whole.
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