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Which clubs still have a lot to do in the January transfer window?

With only a few days left to go in the January transfer window, it's fair to say a number of Europe's top clubs have left themselves a lot to do.
From the Premier League to the Bundesliga to Serie A and back again, there are title contenders and Champions League juggernauts who will be scrabbling around to find the final missing pieces their season may rely upon.
Here, we highlight a few of these clubs and discuss what it is they still need to do.
Wherever you stand on Kai Havertz as a No. 9 striker -- and there are two definitive, credible sides to the debate -- it's fair to say these last few weeks of botched finishing suggest that Arsenal need to at least have another option to turn to if needed. Gabriel Jesus was that, but a severe knee injury has ruled him out for the season.
In addition to a striker -- with RB Leipzig's Benjamin Sesko most notably linked -- there's also a strong case that Arsenal lack appropriate depth in terms of creativity and goal scoring from the supporting cast. Injuries to winger Bukayo Saka and midfielder Martin Ødegaard have brought the team grinding to a halt at times, leading to the suggestion that the signing of another left-winger to help carry the burden could be useful.
The trouble with all of this is that second-placed Arsenal -- six points behind Liverpool, who have a game in hand -- may feel that their Premier League title chase is over already and, given their domestic cup runs are finished, too, why pay a January premium to sign another player in the midst of a lost season? Whether or not we see some action before the deadline may reveal the club's true feelings on the matter.
It was jarring to see Aston Villa, a team in the hunt for the Premier League top four and in the conversation for a top-eight Champions League finish this week, reduced to playing diminutive left-back Lucas Digne at centre-back for 60-plus minutes against West Ham. Indeed, with Pau Torres and Tyrone Mings injured, plus Diego Carlos having left for Fenerbahçe, Villa only have one fit centre-back in Ezri Konsa. They tried and failed to sign Sevilla's Loïc Badé this month and must now press ahead with other options, such as Villarreal's Juan Foyth or Chelsea's Axel Disasi.
There are other concerns bubbling, too: The talk around a potential departure for 21-year-old striker Jhon Durán will not go away and if they do sanction a deal, they'll need to find another striker. In addition to that, Villa need to quickly assess whether new right-back Andrés García (who signed from Levante in Spain's second division) can make the step up to the Premier League swiftly, or whether they need to find a better solution there.
Another midfielder might also be needed if Emiliano Buendía leaves for Bayer Leverkusen, with links to Chelsea's João Félix surfacing recently.
Dortmund entered the season with a defensive corps that looked ill-equipped to cope and that has proven to be the case. The club have just three senior full-backs (one of which, Ramy Bensebaini, is enduring his worst-ever season) and an injury-riddled set of centre-backs, so it's no surprise the 11th-placed side have conceded 33 goals in 19 games and earned just five points on the road.
While they sacked manager Nuri Sahin and are courting a new hire, they've signed no one to help address their issues with under a week to go in the transfer window. There were links surrounding a loan deal for Chelsea defender Renato Veiga, but he went to Juventus, and there's now talk of either taking out-of-favour Chelsea left-back Ben Chilwell or Arsenal's Oleksandr Zinchenko.
Julien Laurens believes that Christopher Nkunku should leave Chelsea due to his lack of game time.
Speaking of Chilwell, he's one of a number of Chelsea players who need to find another club as soon as possible. Axel Disasi, Carney Chukwuemeka and Cesare Casadei are also clearly not part of the project under Enzo Maresca, while forward Christopher Nkunku and midfielder Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall could yet find new homes.
Not all of the above will leave this month, but they should at least be under consideration. Depending on who goes, it may create scope for Chelsea to enter the market for a player or two late on. It has been reported they'd like to sign another winger, given Mykhailo Mudryk is facing a doping suspension, while they'd need a striker if Nkunku left, too.
By far the busiest of all of Europe's top clubs this month, Manchester City have already signed Omar Marmoush, Vitor Reis and Abdukodir Khusanov for a combined 145m plus bonuses. But there's still more work to be done.
Kyle Walker's exit to AC Milan leaves a gap at right-back, and if the answer is that Matheus Nunes is moved there permanently to tag-team with young Rico Lewis, then that creates another hole in midfield that City are already well aware of.
City have been linked to Douglas Luiz (Juventus) and Éderson (Atalanta) this window. Those are two very different types of central midfielders, so it's still unclear exactly what shape this final bit of business takes and what effect it has on the squad. But the club have shown a willingness to try to rescue their season with new signings.
On Sunday night, Rúben Amorim told reporters that he'd rather put his 63-year-old goalkeeping coach in the matchday squad than out-of-favor forward Marcus Rashford, citing training standards and his attitude once again. With the relationship between the two in such disrepair, it is imperative that United find a way to get Rashford out on a temporary basis at least this month.
Another forward, Alejandro Garnacho, has also been linked with move away as he doesn't really fit with Amorim's 3-4-2-1 system, with Napoli, Chelsea and Dortmund reportedly interested. There's also the simmering 40m chase for Lecce's 20-year-old full-back, Patrick Dorgu, to wrap up. He's hardly an immediate fix to the club's many woes, but is the sort of young talent United are newly committing to signing. And the fact he's left-footed would go a long way towards helping the balance of the team, too.
It might seem odd to discuss Napoli in these terms, as they're top of Serie A and racking up wins with ease, but consider these two facts: Internazionale are right on their tails and look strong; while the Partenopei have 60m (plus 10m in possible add-ons) burning a hole in their pocket following the exit of their most talented player, Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, to Paris Saint-Germain.
Antonio Conte's men have done well in Kvara's absence so far this season, often winning, and Brazilian winger David Neres has stepped up to the plate when asked to. But clearly Conte has his eyes set on a long-term replacement, as both United's Garnacho and Karim Adeyemi of Borussia Dortmund have been linked this month.
There's a chance Napoli can stave off Inter to win the Scudetto without spending, but there's an equal chance they don't, which will likely result in a classic Conte combustion and risk derailing what they've built this term.
Languishing in 15th in the Premier League table, with five losses from their last six games, the conversation after each disappointing performance has been the same: "Will Ange Postecoglou survive this?"
Without wishing to unfairly exonerate the manager from his part in all this, one glance at Spurs' injured, beleaguered and exhausted squad should generate a different question: "What would a new manager even do with them?"
What the club need more than anything right now is reinforcements. They need fresh legs and fresh minds just about everywhere across the pitch, but most notably at left-back, centre-back and in central midfield. Their January arrivals so far have been 21-year-old goalkeeper Antonín Kinský (who has been thrown straight into action) and 18-year-old winger Yang Min-Hyeok. It's nowhere near enough.
Head to replace Konstas as opener against Sri Lanka

Konstas impressed in his first two Tests to help Australia secure a first series win over India in a decade. But Head's supreme efforts as an opener on the previous subcontinent tour in 2023 were enough to win him the spot next to Usman Khawaja.
Head averaged 55.75 runs across two-and-a-half Tests replacing David Warner on that India tour, two years ago.
"He did really nicely in India against the new ball. He put spinners under pressure immediately and we know how well he hits the seam as well if they come with that," Smith said. "It's going to be good fun watching him."
Konstas's inexperience appears to have worked against him in the selection conversation, with the 19-year-old embarking on his first subcontinent tour. Smith said Australia would have to select its XI with the conditions in mind.
"Just playing what's in front of us, it's quite different to back home on the surfaces we've been playing on there where it's very pace dominant," he said. "We'd imagine this is going to be quite spin dominant."
Inglis is uncapped at Test level but has averaged 72.60 across three matches for Western Australia this summer and would bring a similar positive intent to Head. McSweeney averaged only 14.40 on a tough assignment in his first three Test matches, facing Indian pace ace Jasprit Bumrah out of position as an opener.
The South Australia captain batted in the middle order in his 30 Sheffield Shield appearances and made an unbeaten 127 earlier in the summer. Uncapped 21-year-old Connolly appears the longest odds with only four first-class games to his name but is rated highly within the Cricket Australia hierarchy.
Connolly and McSweeney each provide part-time off-spin options - advantageous on a Galle wicket that could turn from day one.
"We'll have another look at the wicket and from there we'll name the team at the toss," Smith said. "We've got all the options available to us. We'll see how we go."
"He stands the seam up really nicely, hits good areas. Whether it's him opening the bowling with Mitchell Starc or a spinner opening, there's always plenty of options there," Smith said. "There's lots of considerations: Two fast-bowlers, one fast-bowler. Couple of spinners, three spinners, two spinners, allrounders."
"We're kind of a bit gobsmacked," Smith said. "Either he's a tremendous actor or he's got great pain tolerance."
Smith won't need strapping on his elbow after a minor BBL injury of his own healed "much better than expected". But he will be unable to throw in the field.
"Fortunately, this part of the world I'll be parked in the slips for the entire time," Smith said. "If I have to chase one to the boundary, hopefully one of my mates comes with me."
Bangladesh finish Super Six campaign on a high; SA vs USA washed out

Higher honours, big pay day on the cards for Hurricanes hero

After a record-breaking knock to win the competition for his home-town side, Owen, also the top run-scorer for the league, can start to lift his sights higher. The 23-year-old is set to earn life-changing amounts of money in franchise cricket, potentially starting with a replacement deal at the Indian Premier League.
Owen's manager confirmed to ESPNcricinfo that he is available as a replacement player for the IPL, having registered for the auction longlist late last year before failing to make the shortlist. The Pakistan Super League, which virtually runs concurrently with the IPL in April and May, could be another option for him.
Owen's mighty knock of 108 off just 42 balls - the equal-fastest ton in competition history off 39 deliveries - had the sellout crowd chanting his name and won Hobart their first BBL title.
"I feel a bit awkward in these situations. I don't really know how to take it," Owen said of the adoration. "It's super special... the most special thing is hearing everyone in the crowd enjoying it. And I'm so grateful, I'm so proud that we could bring this trophy to Tassie."
Owen had played just six matches in the previous two seasons for Hurricanes, for a total of 42 runs. Previously a middle-order hitter, Owen said a decision that he would be batting in the top order came "probably one day, to be honest" out from their tournament opener.
"There's not many players in the world that can do that," he told AAP of Owen's heroics in the final. "He's done it pretty consistently through the tournament... some of his 30s and 40s that he's got have actually won and set up games for the Hurricanes. And then he ended up getting a hundred in 30-odd balls and the game's over."
Hurricanes team-mate and 2021 T20 World Cup winner Matthew Wade agreed Owen "would be there or thereabouts" when it came to squad selection for the 2026 tournament.
"He can be anything... no stage really worries him too much. It was phenomenal," Wade told AAP.
Owen said he "absolutely" wanted to work towards the squad for the India-Sri Lanka-hosted tournament, which begins in February 2026.
"No, no. You've got the guys that are there at the moment," he said. "You can earn your stripes... we can't be just picking blokes and chopping and changing when the guys that are there have won World Cups."
It will be difficult top order to break into, with Travis Head, Matt Short, Jake Fraser-McGurk and T20 captain Mitch Marsh having claims on those spots.
Steven Smith, left out of last year's underwhelming T20 World Cup campaign, also has to be considered after starring for the Sydney Sixers in the past two seasons when he has played as an opener in between international duties.
But Warner was certainly happy to credit Owen with a "phenomenal knock" that meant his side came up short after posting 97 without loss after 10 overs.
"We got beat by one player tonight, plain and simple," he said.
0815 GMT - This story was updated to reflect Owen's availability as an IPL replacement player.
Australia, Sri Lanka and a touch of the dramatic

Big Picture: The Warne-Muralidaran trophy is back
And so it shapes up again. Australia are coming off their big Border-Gavaskar Trophy win, of course. Through their 3-1 win in that series, they also booked their World Test Championship final spot. They are missing regular captain Pat Cummins, who is on paternity leave, but have a seasoned leader in Steven Smith.
Sri Lanka had had a decent Test year in 2024, until the disappointing series in South Africa to finish it off. But they will feel as if their Test team is building to something - maybe mounting a more serious campaign in the next WTC cycle, in which they appear to have a relatively easy schedule.
It will likely come down to spin in Galle. This surface doesn't appear to be the dryest one the ground has turned out, and may stay together a little longer than usual, owing to January's cooler weather. But it is likely to take substantial turn from day three onwards. Expect plenty of sweeping and reverse-sweeping, and catchers around the bat as the match wears on.
Form guide
Sri Lanka: LLWWW (last five completed matches, most recent first)
Australia: WWWDL
In the spotlight: Nathan Lyon and Prabath Jayasuriya
A track that tends to start off dry, a sea breeze that helps sap what little moisture there is in the pitch, footmarks to bowl into from as early as day two sometimes - Galle is basically spin-bowling paradise. As such, how well your lead spinner goes in a Galle Test goes a long way to deciding the outcome.
Pitch and conditions: Some rain around
There's a little unseasonal rain around in Galle, but rare is the Galle Test that even goes into the last couple of sessions, even if there are interruptions along the way. Dhananjaya de Silva said he expected the surface to be decent for batting to begin with. Temperatures are forecast to hover around 30 degrees celsius.
Team news: Who will be SL's opener?
Australia (possible): 1 Usman Khawaja, 2 Travis Head, 3 Marnus Labuschagne, 4 Steven Smith (capt.), 5 Josh Inglis, 6 Beau Webster, 7 Alex Carey (wk), 8 Mitchell Starc, 9 Mathew Kuhnemann, 10 Nathan Lyon, 11 Scott Boland/ Todd Murphy
Sri Lanka (possible) 1 Dimuth Karunaratne, 2 Oshada Fernando, 3 Dinesh Chandimal, 4 Angelo Mathews, 5 Kamindu Mendis, 6 Dhananjaya de Silva (capt.), 7 Kusal Mendis (wk), 8 Prabath Jayasuriya, 9 Nishan Peiris, 10 Asitha Fernando, 11 Lahiru Kumara/Vishwa Fernando
Stats and trivia: Smith 10,000 watch
- Steve Smith is one run away from completing 10,000 in Test cricket. He'd be the fourth Australia batter to the milestone, after Alan Border, Steve Waugh, and Ricky Ponting.
- Prabath Jayasuriya took 12 wickets for 177 in the one Test he'd played against Australia - on debut in Galle.
- All up, Australia have won three of the six Tests they've played in Galle, losing two and drawing one.
Andrew Fidel Fernando is a senior writer at ESPNcricinfo. @afidelf
Healy trains strongly ahead of historic Test, Australia delay selection call

Healy participated fully in Australia's first main session at the MCG and looked impressive with no signs of pain or limitations with her right foot.
Healy also did short sprints thereafter without issue and then took part in Australia's fielding session. Healy will be in the outfield if she does play and had no trouble during the session which was completed at a good intensity. She then had a solid hit in the nets cycling through pace, spin and throw downs and had no trouble at any stage on her feet.
Speaking prior to the training session, coach Shelley Nitschke said no decision had been made on whether Healy would play and that the team management would wait to see how Healy pulled up after testing her foot.
"She's going as well as can be expected," Nitschke said. "I think you've all seen her out in a boot and taking some weight off of that foot.
"She will have a test today, and we'll just sort of see where that lands and have some discussions about that, whether or not we think she's going to be okay for a four day test."
Nitschke said they would try and leave the decision as late as possible but they were wary of creating problems around role clarity given Healy's significance as the captain and a senior batter.
"We don't have to actually lock it in until the toss," Nitschke said. "But obviously there's repercussions around that with who's the captain and what our line-up looks like. So I think people sort of want to know their role coming in, so as soon as we can we will, but it certainly doesn't have to be today."
The coach did admit there was some emotion involved in the decision. It is the first time women will play a Test match at the MCG since 1949 and the occasion will be historic as the two teams celebrate the 90-year anniversary of women's Test cricket.
Australia do not play another Test until February-March of 2026 by which time Healy will be nearly 36. There is a possibility, given her recent injury struggles, that this could be the final opportunity she has to play Test cricket and to appear at the MCG although she has not given any hint as to when she may finish her international career.
"I think it's just about keeping in mind what's best for the team and making sure we're putting the best team we can out there to perform," Nitschke said. "So that's always been front and foremost. But we don't play a lot of Tests, so there's sort of some emotion involved there, but we want to do what's best for the team and see what happens."
Nitschke confirmed Gardner was fit and would play after overcoming her calf injury. She completed her running, batting and bowling without issue and looms as a key player after her player of the match performance in the third ODI and her player of the match performance in the last Ashes Test in England in 2023.
Nitschke added the selectors were unsure of how they would structure the XI for the day-night Test. Spin has been a huge part of Australia's six victories in the white-ball matches so far but the MCG has been one of the most seam-friendly pitches in long-form men's cricket since the drop-ins were redone in 2019. The pitch was under cover throughout the evening on Tuesday and neither side were able to look at it.
"We certainly look at what the pitch has played like in whether it's Shield and the Test match, and then considering the pink ball as well and what that brings to the game," Nitschke said. "So we certainly do look at the results and how the wicket has played in the men's game, because there's been no female longer format played here. And then obviously use, what's happened in the white-ball series as well as some intel to how we're matching up."
"I don't know," she said. "You'll have to ask the physios who will review with her as to whether she got through the net sessions, alright. And I'm sure tomorrow will have a good bearing on that as well. She's tracking good. It's nice to see her rocking out a few overs in the nets as well. I think she got through two spells today. It's great to see her back to being herself."
Sciver-Brunt did not shy away from the fact that the tour had been extremely difficult for the team, stating that it might have been worse than their last trip down under in 2021-22 when they lost the Ashes 12-4 under Covid restrictions, only claiming points from the drawn Test and two washed out T20Is.
But she said the incentive of performing well in a historic Test had the team excited to finish the tour on a bright note.
"It is difficult," Sciver-Brunt said. "But I think being a Test match at the end of that at this iconic venue, we love putting on the whites. We love the fact that we get to create new memories with our team-mates, with our close friends, and hopefully put a good showing of ourselves.
"Grateful that we've got opportunity to do that after six games. But the last few days have been tough. But, we've regrouped, and we'll do our best to stay up."
Alex Malcolm is an associate editor at ESPNcricinfo
Scheyer's 'honest' talk fuels Flagg in Duke win

DURHAM, N.C. -- Cooper Flagg wrapped the first half of Duke's 74-64 win over NC State with just five points, and during a late timeout, Blue Devils coach Jon Scheyer had some particularly pointed comments for his star freshman.
"He told me I was being finesse, soft," Flagg said. "Coach is always honest with me about what he thinks. That's what I need. It's about responding well, and hearing that helps me a lot."
He responded with force.
Flagg put up 23 second-half points and added five rebounds, an emphatic block and two assists, including a nifty dish to Sion James for a dunk just as the shot clock was about to expire.
Flagg's fireworks keyed Duke, which erased a four-point halftime deficit to finish with a double-digit triumph.
"In that timeout, I challenged him because his game is not just about scoring but his game is about impacting winning in every facet. He knew it. Credit him for responding."
Flagg said that type of criticism from his coach is exactly what drew him to Duke, and Scheyer said Flagg's willingness to accept coaching is one of the traits that sets him apart.
"I could go on all day about Cooper, how coachable he is," Scheyer said. "There's maybe a few times throughout the year where he's not going to like everything you say. A lot of guys will fight it, not acknowledge it. It's a credit to him and the relationship he's allowed us to develop, telling each other the truth."
Scheyer chalked up some of Flagg's early tentativeness to playing a second game in three days -- something Flagg hadn't yet done -- after a physical outing against Wake Forest on Saturday. The coach said the sluggish first half ignited Flagg at halftime, however, getting him "a little mad."
Flagg said learning experiences are part of why he came to Duke and that Scheyer's willingness to "let me work through some things" is critical. But his takeaway from his five-point first half on Monday was that the time for taking a back seat on the court is over.
"It's not a choice anymore; I have to be aggressive," Flagg said. "What Coach has told me is that's going to create for everyone else. In the first half, I felt that a little more -- just being passive and playing soft. I can't create for anyone else that way. I can't get anyone else open if I'm playing soft. For me, it's no longer a choice of if I want to be aggressive or not. I have to be aggressive at all times."
Despite Flagg's heroics, NC State was within a point with 4:21 to play, as Duke struggled to pull away. But an extended break courtesy of Duke big man Khaman Maluach offered a final chance for the Blue Devils to prep for a late push.
Maluach had been taking fluids earlier in the game, but after a Wolfpack foul under the basket, the Duke freshman turned and vomited along the baseline. Officials paused the game, and a cleanup crew quickly gathered with a few dozen towels to soak up the mess. After the long delay, the game was stopped again as a Duke student was helped out of the stands after falling unconscious. A Duke spokesman said the student was fine and ultimately left the arena under her own power.
"That was just a little bit of a breather to set up and get stops and go on a run," said Flagg, who helped Duke finish on an 11-2 run after Maluach's departure. "It was a break to collect myself."
Scheyer said Maluach hadn't been ill but was cramping.
The two demanding contests in three days took a toll all around on Duke, Scheyer said, but the response he saw from his best player down the stretch was a reminder of just how much these Blue Devils have left in the tank.
"Coop is a special guy," Scheyer said. "He got angry. He just had a chip. And when you do that, you forget about being tired. And he had some all-time plays to will us back. That's a credit to his spirit, what he did in the second half."
New Jets brass noncommittal on Rodgers' status

FLORHAM PARK, N.J. -- The New York Jets have a new coach, a new general manager and a new approach to star quarterback Aaron Rodgers.
Aaron Glenn, who was introduced Monday in a news conference with general manager Darren Mougey, made it clear that he doesn't consider any player bigger than the team. Glenn was noncommittal on Rodgers, saying the future Hall of Famer will be evaluated just like everyone else on the roster.
"This thing is not about Aaron Rodgers, folks. This is about the roster," Glenn told reporters after his news conference. "We plan on building the best roster that we can. So, whatever that may be -- guard, tackle, defensive tackle -- that's what we're evaluating.
"Listen, everybody's under the microscope. That's just what it is."
It's a new day at One Jets Drive.
Glenn said that he has exchanged texts with Rodgers, and that he hopes to speak with him soon. Other than that, the newly hired coach declined to get into much detail about Rodgers. Glenn shut down questions from reporters the way he once handled wide receivers as a cornerback for the Jets from 1994 to 2001.
"We're still in the evaluation mode, so for anybody else who's going to ask that, I'm going to give you the same answer," Glenn said. "So don't waste your time. We clear?"
Owner Woody Johnson, whose involvement in personnel matters last season chafed people in the previous regime, said he will leave the Rodgers decision up to Glenn and Mougey. Johnson, whose relationship with the four-time MVP has appeared strained at times, said he will welcome him back if his new hires decide it's best for the team.
"Absolutely," Johnson said. "Aaron's a talent, for sure. He's a Hall of Famer. ... I'm not going to voice my opinion. That's up to them."
The previous regime, which acquired Rodgers in 2023 trade with the Green Bay Packers, catered to him by acquiring some of his former wide receivers and hiring one of his closest friends, Nathaniel Hackett, as the offensive coordinator.
Rodgers, 41, missed virtually the entire 2023 season with a torn Achilles and was uneven in 17 starts in 2024, finishing with 28 touchdowns and 11 interceptions on a 5-12 team. He has said he's undecided on whether he wants to keep playing.
"First and foremost, I've got the utmost respect for Aaron Rogers and what he's done in this league as a player," said Mougey, most recently the Denver Broncos' assistant GM. "[He's] one of the greatest of all time to play the position -- one of the greatest players of all time.
"I know Aaron has his process in the offseason that he goes through. We have ours. But, yeah, that [decision] is going to come. I don't have a timeline on it."
Rodgers is under contract for 2025, but none of his money his guaranteed. He has a $35 million option bonus, a $2.5 million salary and a manageable $23.5 million cap charge. There's a $49 million cap hit if he's released or retires; it can be spread over two years.
If he returns under his existing contract, there will be a $63 million cap hit in 2026 -- a massive charge that would hamper the team's financial flexibility. Rodgers has said he's open to a pay cut if he returns.
"When it comes to the team, it's always a football decision," said Glenn, adding that he and Mougey will study every play from the 2024 season.
Glenn, formerly the Detroit Lions' defensive coordinator, knows what he wants in his quarterback.
"A winner," he said, adding, "Mental and physical toughness."
If the Jets move on from Rodgers, they'll be wading into a shallow pool of free agent options. The in-house alternative is backup Tyrod Taylor, 35, a former starter who played only 36 snaps in 2024. Also on the roster is 2024 fifth-round pick Jordan Travis, who sat out with an injury from college.
The Jets took an unconventional approach to rebuilding their regime, hiring the coach before the GM. The team has revamped its power structure, with both Glenn and Mougey reporting directly to Johnson, according to the owner. Previously, coach Robert Saleh reported to GM Joe Douglas. Mougey will have the final say on personnel matters and the 53-man roster, but he said it will be a collaborative effort with Glenn.
Glenn showed his fiery side at his introductory news conference. Alluding to the Jets' losing history, he declared, "We're the freaking New York Jets and we're built for this s---!"
A popular player in his day, and later a scout for the Jets (2012-13), Glenn was greeted by no fewer than 10 former Jets, many of them his former teammates. He interviewed with four other teams but said this was the only job he wanted.
"We're going to do some magical things here, bro," he said, turning to Mougey. "Some magical things. I look forward to it."
Love, Arizona deliver 'great theater,' stun No. 3 ISU

TUCSON, Ariz. -- Caleb Love hit a game-tying heave from beyond half court at the end of regulation -- in what he later called the "best moment of my life" -- and made two more 3-pointers in overtime, finishing with 22 points and lifting Arizona to an 86-75 win over No. 3 Iowa State on Monday night.
The Cyclones (17-3, 7-2 Big 12) appeared to be in control when Joshua Jefferson hit one of two free throws with 2.2 seconds remaining, but they left too much time on the clock.
Love, who was 1-for-10 on 3s at that point, took a couple of dribbles and banked in his shot from behind the midcourt logo, sending a roar through McKale Center.
Love then hit two corner 3s in overtime, and Carter Bryant added another to cap Arizona's first win over a top-five opponent as an unranked team since beating No. 3 UCLA in 1979.
"They were better down the stretch in regulation than we were; you're just trying to hang in there and give yourself a chance," said Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd. "Desperation 3 was probably not the chance you're trying to give yourself -- but it made for great theater.
"It was a great moment for Arizona basketball."
Love's shot at the buzzer was his second career go-ahead or game-tying field goal in the final 10 seconds; as a sophomore with North Carolina against Syracuse on Feb. 28, 2022, he hit a go-ahead 3-pointer from roughly 30 feet with eight seconds left.
"You just got to give it up to God at that point," Love said of his shot against the Cyclones. "We practice half-courters in shootaround, you know, that's the fun of it. We do that shot at practice, and like I said, you got to give it up to God, and that was all him."
Love noted that he always is going to have confidence in himself to keep shooting, whether he's "1-for-10 or 10-for-10 ... you got to have confidence in yourself that the next one's going in."
Tobe Awaka finished with 17 points and 12 rebounds for the Wildcats (14-6, 8-1).
Tamin Lipsey scored 18 points, and Keshon Gilbert added 17 to lead the Cyclones.
Iowa State had a seven-point advantage in the first half before Arizona answered with the biggest run against the Cyclones this season, scoring 16 straight points to go up 34-25.
Lipsey, who registered 14 first-half points, pulled the Cyclones within 34-30 at halftime on a corner 3.
The Cyclones have had a knack for pulling out close wins, but they fell flat after Love's heave. It was their fifth loss to an unranked opponent as a top-five team and their second such defeat this season (Jan. 18 at West Virginia).
Arizona outscored Iowa State 15-4 in overtime. The Wildcats' 11-point margin of victory tied their largest in an OT game in program history.
Iowa State shot 1-of-6 and had three turnovers in the extra period.
ESPN Research and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Warriors' Green (calf) nears return to practice

Golden State Warriors star forward Draymond Green is nearing a return to practice this week but power forward Jonathan Kuminga will be out at least another two weeks.
Green has been cleared to rejoin parts of team practice this week after being out the past four games with a calf injury, the team said. Green has been doing light on-court work. He suffered the calf injury on Jan. 18 in the first three minutes of a win over Washington.
Kuminga has missed the past three weeks since suffering a sprained right ankle on Jan. 4 against Memphis. He has been out for 11 games. The Warriors said Kuminga is expected to begin light on-court individual workouts in the next week.
"He's not close to coming back," Warriors coach Steve Kerr said of Kuminga on Saturday. "He's on a bike just now. He's not been on the court in any other capacity other than just shooting stationary shots. So it's going to be some time."
The Warriors have been getting a little healthier as Brandin Podziemski (abdomen) and Gary Payton II (calf) recently return from injuries.