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Juventus defender Joao Cancelo has signed for Premier League champions Manchester City for £27.6 million.
We've got our man! ?
Welcome to the Champions, João Cancelo!
? #mancity
— Manchester City (@ManCity) August 7, 2019
The Portugal international, who primarily plays as a right-back, though he can also play on the right wing and at left-back, arrives as part of a £55.25m deal that sees Danilo join Juventus.
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Cancelo, 25, joined Juventus from Valencia in 2018 for a fee of €40m, having spent the previous season on loan at Inter Milan.
The defender made 25 Serie A appearances last season as Juventus won the league title, and was part of Portugal's Nations League-winning squad earlier this summer.
Cancelo's arrival marks City's fourth signing of the summer, following the additions of Rodri, Angelino and Zack Steffen to manager Pep Guardiola's squad.
Danilo joined City from Real Madrid in 2017 and won back-to-back Premier League titles under Guardiola as well as two EFL Cup trophies and an FA Cup. The Brazilian will be hoping to add to this impressive trophy haul in Italy, which would represent the fifth country in which he has won a league title.
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Sources: Luiz refuses to train, wants Arsenal move
Published in
Soccer
Wednesday, 07 August 2019 11:16

David Luiz refused to train with Chelsea's first team on Wednesday in hopes of forcing a move out of Stamford Bridge, sources have told ESPN FC.
Luiz going on strike was first reported in France by L'Equipe and has since been confirmed by ESPN FC.
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Arsenal, who are actively looking for a centre-back, are interested in recruiting the Brazilian, who is also keen on joining the Gunners, sources have told ESPN FC. But other centre-backs are also on Arsenal manager Unai Emery's wish list, including Juventus and Italy defender Daniele Rugani.
Luiz, 32, has two years left on his contract after signing a new deal only a few months ago. Arsenal are only looking at a loan or a loan with a small fee as they can't pay the price that a club like Chelsea would demand for a player of his calibre. They are yet to make an offer to Chelsea for the former Paris Saint-Germain man.
Sources have also told ESPN FC that Luiz has fallen out with Blues manager Frank Lampard in recent days. There have been a few issues between the two men, and Luiz is clearly behind Antonio Rudiger, Kurt Zouma and Andreas Christensen in the pecking order of the new manager.
The Brazilian international is determined to leave Chelsea this summer. He rejoined the London club for £31.5m in August 2016 for a second spell after playing there between January 2011 and his departure to PSG in July 2014.
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Think the Premier League was exciting last season? Just wait ...
Published in
Soccer
Tuesday, 06 August 2019 09:44

A single football match is one telling of a hundred stories, a small drama in every hard tackle, in every substitution, in every counter and cross. Fates of players and managers and the hearts of entire cities will move depending on how those dramas finally combine and unfold.
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There are 380 matches, 380 chances to change everything, in the impossible spectacle that is the Premier League season. The last campaign was riveting to its finish: After all that, Manchester City held off Liverpool by a single precious point, and Spurs qualified for the Champions League by the same slim margin over archrival Arsenal.
Somehow, the 2019-20 season looks to be even more compelling. This weekend's opening fixtures alone should become the first few lines of a classic.
At the very top of the table, there's no reason to think that Pep Guardiola and Jurgen Klopp won't again duel for supremacy in football's best rivalry. Let's take a moment to remember that Liverpool lost a single match last season and weren't good enough to win the league. They lost once and finished second.
The margin between Pep's manic collection of intricacies (now including young Rodri, declared "a perfect fit" by perpetual Player of the Year candidate Kevin De Bruyne) and Klopp's speed-metal approach couldn't be finer. Every game involving either City or Liverpool -- the first clash between them takes place on Nov. 9 at Anfield -- will feel like a must-win.
The remaining big clubs will contribute their share to the plot. Can Harry Kane and Spurs, finally back home in Tottenham, crack City's stranglehold on the title? (No.) Will Unai Emery be able to harness Arsenal's dynamic front three -- welcome to London, Nicolas Pepe -- and lift the Gunners into the top four? (He'll be in trouble if he can't.) What will Chelsea look like without Eden Hazard in the lineup but with club legend Frank Lampard at the helm and American Christian Pulisic on the gallop? (Less like statues.) Where will Manchester United finish under Ole Gunnar Solskjaer's wildly erratic watch? (Sixth.)
The middle of the table, rather than playing its usual function of skimmed second act, is poised to be more exciting than it has been in years. There's a real opportunity for the forgotten sides that usually compete for seventh to finish in the top six, with Leicester City and the ascendant Wolves each in with a chance to upstage Man United especially. Imagine the hysterics at Old Trafford.
No, wait. Close your eyes and imagine. [Takes drag off cigarette.] Oh, that's the good stuff.
On the subject of perfection, this season's table is as close to flawless in its assembly as we could wish. Last year's relegation battle was largely foregone. Fulham will be missed, if only because Craven Cottage is a jewel, but Huddersfield Town's top-flight tenure might soon be seen as anomalous as Blackpool's. What the hell was that?
Instead, the Premier League returns to Sheffield, England's capital of defiance, for the first time in 12 seasons with the promotion of attack-minded Sheffield United. Mighty Birmingham, too, has ended its briefer exile with Aston Villa's playoff triumph. Look for Jack Grealish, with his Peaky Blinders haircut and creative footwork, to become a star. And Norwich City soared in the Championship last season, scoring a thrilling 93 goals on their way to 94 points and promotion to the top flight.
Which clubs don't belong up top? Bournemouth still seem a strange diversion, but Eddie Howe's Cherries play such an attractive, optimistic game, it's difficult to begrudge them a spot. Trading Brighton out for Leeds, say, might provide the more "complete" Premier League, but that's editing for the sake of change: The bottom of this year's table will provide plenty of interest ... and trouble for the better clubs.
One widely discussed AI-driven forecast, led by BT Sport, predicts that Newcastle United, Norwich City and Sheffield United will each earn more than 30 points but still be relegated. The point totals, if not the sides that earn them, seem about right. The same model suggests that only 12 points will separate last place from the eleventh spot, in contrast to last season's gap of 34. Incredibly, that seems right, too.
There's no longer much debate whether the modern Premier League is the most compelling in the world. Last season's Champions League and Europa League finals, which featured all English clubs, put an end to the argument. The EPL is the work that casts a shadow on other giant works.
Now watch the Premier League become the best-written version of itself. None of its lines should be wasted; its magnificent cast of characters should each play his due role. And like all good stories, its finish should be equal parts surprising and inevitable -- if we're lucky, a drama so perfect that it becomes a fairy tale.
Once upon a time is about to begin.
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Jofra Archer bowls long spells for Sussex seconds to confirm Ashes fitness
Published in
Cricket
Wednesday, 07 August 2019 12:23

Jofra Archer got through 19 overs for Sussex's 2nd XI on Wednesday to further emphasise his readiness for a likely Test debut at Lord's next week.
With James Anderson already ruled out of that Test, Warwickshire confirmed today that Olly Stone would miss at least two weeks' cricket with a back problem, leaving Archer and Sam Curran as the frontrunners to bolster the pace attack against Australia.
Mark Wood (side and knee) and Lewis Gregory (foot) are also injured, meaning England's seam bowling stocks are relatively bare.
After a staggering first day, in which he took 6 for 29 in 12.1 overs before hitting a rapid hundred from number six, Archer had a quieter day at Woodmancote against a young Gloucestershire 2nd XI.
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He leaked a few runs in his first spell, as opener Tom Price hit three boundaries in the first four balls he bowled, before Greg Willows pulled a short ball for six over long leg.
But Archer ended up with 19 overs under his belt, returning figures of 1 for 78. There was a brief scare after he dropped a difficult caught-and-bowled chance, as he stayed down for around a minute, but he picked himself back up and took the wicket of George Drissell, who fended a short ball that rose sharply off the pitch to gully.
Archer is playing in the fixture to prove his fitness, after suffering a side strain during the World Cup, although Sussex coach Jason Gillespie told TalkSPORT he was "surprised" he had missed out on the first Test and that Archer was "100 percent fit, ready to go".
Curran, meanwhile, is set to play in Surrey's Vitality Blast fixtures on Thursday and Friday, though will be made unavailable for Sunday's game at Glamorgan.
While Archer has not made a first-class appearance in nearly 11 months, Curran has played four games for Surrey this Championship season - taking 18 wickets at 23.22 - as well as an England Lions game and the Test against Ireland two weeks ago. Curran took 3 for 28 in that game, but with coach Trevor Bayliss highlighting the need for "guys with a bit more pace", Archer looks to be the front-runner.
It is feasible that both seamers could play, with Joe Denly dropping out and Ben Stokes moving up to number four, though captain Joe Root stressed after the defeat at Edgbaston that England "don't have to make any shotgun decisions in terms of selection.
"We got plenty of time before the next game," Root said. "It's really important that we're very clear on how we want to go about it."
Anderson, meanwhile, remains hopeful of playing some part in the rest of the series.
"The thought of more time away from the game is driving me nuts," he told The Sun. "I haven't thought about giving up. My body feels great everywhere else, I'm as fit as I've ever been. It's just this one muscle that is bugging me and not allowing me to do what I want to.
"I'm pretty confident I can get over this, I want to keep going. The plan is to get back and play some part in The Ashes but, if that doesn't work out, the winter is absolutely on my radar."
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Rob Keogh's offspin helps Northants squeeze home
Published in
Cricket
Wednesday, 07 August 2019 14:39

Northamptonshire 145 for 6 (Wakely 47*, Potts 3 for 31) beat Durham 124 for 8 (Handscomb 65*, Keogh 3 for 30) by 21 runs
Rob Keogh was the unlikely hero with the ball for Northamptonshire as they pulled off a tremendous defence of only 145 to beat Durham by 21 runs at Wantage Road and claim their second win in the Vitality Blast.
Sent in, the home side laboured to a modest total but Alex Wakely's unbeaten 47 in 35 balls gave them a score to defend. Keogh then took advantage of a pitch that gripped to take 3 for 30 - comfortably his best T20 figures - as Durham could only make 124 for 8 in reply.
Northants realised there was help for the spinners and used 12 overs of slow bowling to strangle Durham in a way the visitors managed to do themselves until Wakely helped strike 19 from the final over.
Cobb opened the bowling and sent down four overs for only 12, Graeme White's left-arm spin took 1 for 27 but it was Keogh who sealed victory with a fine spell.
He lured Alex Lees into swinging to long-on where Faheem Ashraf sprinted to his right, dived, and claimed a tremendous catch. Liam Trevaskis did likewise - this time the catch more comfortable - before Stuart Poynter reverse-swept to backward point.
Only Peter Handscomb kept Durham together with a 41-ball fifty. The required rate had leapt to 12 an over before he lifted Keogh over extra-cover for the first boundary for eight overs and swept another wide of midwicket. He then powered White over his head to raise a half-century but despite his unbeaten 65 in 54 balls it was too great an ask.
Durham's other Australian - D'Arcy Short - fell in the powerplay as the visitors made only 33 for 3. Scott Steel scooped Ashraf to short fine leg before the same bowler found Graham Clark's inside edge. Short then miscued a pull off Sanderson to mid-on and Northants had the early wickets they needed.
"I thought 160 might be a good score," said Wakely. "It wasn't the usual wicket we expect here: it was a bit sticky and a bit slow and it spun.
"But we defended brilliantly. We haven't always scrapped very well in the past few years but we fielded superbly and took our catches well."
The effort in the field proved Wakely's innings to be match-winning knock as he clawed Northants to 145 for 6.
The visitors' spinners were also very effective. Left-armer Liam Trevaskis opened the bowling and his four overs went for only 16 and D'Arcy Short's four claimed 1 for 27.
Northants again lost wickets in the Powerplay as Adam Rossington slapped Brydon Carse to cover-point before Josh Cobb pulled Matty Potts to deep-square. Keogh, promoted to number four to provide some stability, could only make 16 before he dragged Short into his stumps trying to pull.
Richard Levi finally made his seasonal T20 bow having recovered from a neck injury. He punched Carse for his first boundary over cover, flicked Potts backward of square and viciously pulled Nathan Rimmington. But having made a run-a-ball 29, slog-swept Steel to deep midwicket where Short claimed the catch, threw the ball in the air as he tumbled over the boundary, before stepping back into play and completing the dismissal. It left Northants 67 for 4 after 11 overs.
Dwaine Pretorius provided some impetus. He was twice dropped at deep midwicket - the second miss went for the night's first six - and he took advantage to drive Rimmington inside long-off and guide another boundary past short-third man in the 17th over. But the third catch he offered to deep midwicket was finally held and he fell for 37 from 24 balls. Potts then took another wicket in the 18th over as Matt Coles lifted his second ball to long-on.
Wakely worked the bowling around to help cobble something together for Northants and his final over burst took the momentum into the second innings. He lifted Potts for a huge six over midwicket before driving to long-off where the fielder missed the ball and flicked the final delivery wide of long-on.
Wakely's unbeaten 47 in 35 balls nudged the asking rate over seven, and it proved a crucial innings.
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Gloucestershire 131 for 5 beat Kent 125 for 8 (Bell-Drummond 62) by five wickets
Kent Spitfires suffered a jolt to their previously excellent Vitality Blast South Group campaign with a five-wicket defeat by Gloucestershire at the Bristol County Ground.
The visitors could post only 125 for 8 after losing the toss on a slow pitch, Daniel Bell-Drummond contributing almost half the runs with 62. There were two wickets each for David Payne, Chris Liddle and Andrew Tye.
In reply, Gloucestershire reached 131 for 5, winning with 7 balls to spare, Jack Taylor and Benny Howell seeing them home. Fred Klaassen claimed 2 for 15 and Hardus Viljoen 2 for 30.
"It was an important toss to win because Kent didn't know what a good score would be on that pitch and 125 wasn't enough," said Howell.
"It was tough to hit through the line on that wicket, but we knew that if we kept the required run-rate under control, which wasn't too difficult, we could reach our target."
Kent scored only 33 from their six-over powerplay, losing Zak Crawley for a first-ball duck, caught at midwicket off the fifth delivery of the match from Payne and Ollie Robinson, who holed out to deep midwicket in the fourth over, bowled by Liddle.
Several other balls in the air just eluded fielders as the Spitfires batsmen, Bell-Drummond apart, failed to come to terms with deliveries sticking in the pitch.
Gloucestershire employed their familiar tactics of taking pace off the ball in the middle overs through Benny Howell's bag of tricks and the left-arm spin of Tom Smith. Together they ensured the halfway point was reached with Kent becalmed on 51 for two.
Heino Kuhn broke the shackles with a swept six off Smith. But when he attempted to hit Howell over wide long-on he only found the safe hands of Tye and departed for 23.
Mohammad Nabi, on three, was next to loft a catch, Michael Klinger brilliantly accepting the chance off Liddle, running away from the pitch as the skied ball came over his shoulder at midwicket.
Gloucestershire's excellent fielding continued when Jack Taylor ran out Alex Blake for two with a direct hit sprinting in from deep cover as the batsmen attempted a second run.
Only Bell-Drummond showed the necessary degree of patience, moving to 50 off 48 balls, with four fours. But wickets continued to tumble at the other end and when he fell to Tye in the final over the Spitfires' total looked well below par.
Soon Gloucestershire's batsmen were having their own problems with the pitch, Miles Hammond and Klinger, who could make only five, falling attempting boundaries in the powerplay, which ended at 42 for 2.
There was no pressure to play big shots. But James Bracey perished to one, caught at cover for 22 off Nabi, who came on for the seventh over.
At 58 for 3 in the ninth over, Gloucestershire had to exercise a degree of caution. That became even more the case when Ian Cockbain, on 15, picked out cover with a mistimed shot off Fred Klaassen to make it 73 for four.
Ryan Higgins lofted only the game's second six over deep square off Hardus Viljoen and Taylor followed suit with a big hit over cow corner from Nabi's last ball, which saw him finish with one for 26.
Higgins then drove a catch to mid-off to give Viljoen his second wicket. But Kent simply did not have enough runs to defend and three Howell boundaries in succession off the 17th over, sent down by Milne, ended any doubt about the outcome.
Howell then ended the game with a six and claimed the man-of-the-match award.
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Babar Azam leads the way as Somerset hammer Essex
Published in
Cricket
Wednesday, 07 August 2019 14:49

Somerset 225 for 6 (Babar 56) beat Essex 111 (van der Merwe 5 for 32) by 114 runs
Babar Azam pumped his third fifty of the Vitality Blast as Somerset steamed back to form with a 114 run victory over Essex Eagles at Chelmsford.
After scores which have included 95 not out, 83 and 43, the Pakistan superstar collected 56, his first half-century away from Taunton.
Babar was accompanied with full-blooded contributions from Tom Banton, skipper Tom Abell and in-form hitter Eddie Byrom, 39, 54 and 44 respectively, as Somerset crashed their joint-sixth highest T20 total of 225 for 6.
In reply, Roelof van der Merwe snatched three wickets in an over to stunt the Eagles, on his way to his maiden format five-wicket haul, as they were eventually skittled for 111.
The result sees Somerset overtake Essex into sixth in the South Group of the Blast.
Somerset won the toss and let Banton and Babar loose on Essex's bowling attack - with the former destroying Aaron Beard's first over by taking 22 runs, including a trademark reverse-flick, off it.
The formidable opening pair put on 51 for the first wicket in 26 balls before Ravi Bopara entered the match after two games left in the dressing room.
Firstly, he found Banton scooping to fine leg before James Hildreth was caught thanks to an outrageous snaffle by Paul Walter at midwicket.
The two wickets slowed the run-rate down for around seven overs before Tom Abell scooped a six and 24 was taken off a Simon Harmer over.
Babar was quickly, but quietly, going about his business from the other end as he continued his impeccable Blast form with a 37-ball fifty, to go alongside scores of 95 not out, 83 and 43.
But the Pakistan superstar and Abell departed in bang-bang style following a 79-run stand, the former caught off Bopara - the only Essex bowler to come out the innings with creditable figures, 3 for 18.
With four overs to go, Somerset were on 156 for 4 and floundering in their bid to find the par 200, but Eddie Byrom saw Chelmsford's small boundaries and picked spots along the perimeter to blitz.
Having been dropped on 10, the Zimbabwean cracked three maximums off a Mohammad Amir over, which went for 18, then plonked Adam Zampa for 16 in three balls before picking out long-off.
Van der Merwe departed, but Craig Overton fired a further two sixes to take the visitors to 225 for 6 - the joint-fourth T20 score on the ground - after 96 had been mullered in the final 24 balls.
In reply, Essex openers Cameron Delport and Tom Westley kept at around the rate for four overs before both fell in consecutive - caught at cover and mid-on respectively.
After a limp start, Adam Wheater and Dan Lawrence compared six-hitting skills but fell to catches at midwicket.
Ryan ten Doeschate, Bopara and Walter all departed in a single van der Merwe over, and he ended with career-best figures of five for 32.
Harmer, Beard and Amir also departed in tame style as Essex lost eight wickets in 31 balls to fall well short of the required runs.
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Part-timer Colin Ackermann takes first-ever T20 seven-for on astounding night
Published in
Cricket
Wednesday, 07 August 2019 14:59

Leicestershire 189 for 6 (Swindells 63, Hill 58) beat Birmingham Bears 134 (Hain 61, Ackermann 7 for 18) by 55 runs
Colin Ackermann went into this match with 31 wickets in 90 T20 matches, a few gathered now and then in England and South Africa. Now he can add the best bowling figures in the worldwide history of Twenty20 cricket to his record. On an astounding night at Grace Road, he returned 7 for 18 in four overs against Birmingham Bears, looking upon the gifts bestowed upon him with a growing sense of wonderment.
More than 30 bowlers have taken six wickets in a T20 tie but nobody had ever taken seven. When he came on six overs from the end to bowl his third over, with only one wicket to his name, nothing could have been further from his mind. But Birmingham, still 72 short with six wickets intact, capitulated in extraordinary fashion to lose by 55 runs.
Ackermann, Leicestershire's T20 captain, just planned to be a solid pro doing an intelligent job, but the naivety of a young Bears batting line-up was evident as he banged his off-breaks in short of a length in search of turn and bounce and reaped the benefit, taking three wickets in each of his last two overs. They failed to work him for singles; they flailed him to eager fielders in the deep. They could not have got it more wrong.
"I'd never have believed this in a million years - I count myself as a batting allrounder," Ackermann said. "It was the first time it has turned at Grace Road so I tried to use my height and get a bit of bounce. Even if it turns a couple of centimetres it's an advantage. I tried to get the batters to hit into the biggest part of the field into the wind and just mix my pace up a little."
Leicestershire deserved such a night. They are the T20 side that will not lie down. Rank outsiders at the start of the Blast season, they have no high-profile overseas players to lift expectations and one of the most tranquil crowds in the country is not about to gain a mention on an ECB PowerPoint presentation about the future of T20 cricket. Yet rouse themselves they have, with Birmingham Bears the third county to come a cropper against them this summer.
By the time Birmingham's innings crashed to a halt, they had moved from eighth to fourth in one night. Presumed to be no hopers at 6.30pm; in the quarter-final positions in the North Group less than three hours later. "I'm delighted because times are tough," said their indefatigable coach, Paul Nixon.
Worcestershire, last year's winners, Nottinghamshire and now Birmingham, all at sea as they faced Leicestershire's 189 for 6, have now fallen to the Blast's least-fancied side. Nixon experienced two Championships and three T20 triumphs within nine years as a player with Leicestershire and, even if the odds seemed more heavily stacked against them these days, such nights will fire his belief that anything is possible.
Ackermann's first wicket might never have materialised. Michael Burgess was splendidly caught at short extra cover by Harry Dearden, only for the fielder's obvious reluctance to claim the catch to cause the umpires to turn to TV replays with umpire David Millns even giving a soft signal of not out. Patently, the catch was clean and the first stage of a world-record night was reached.
Three wickets in Ackermann's third over then confirmed Leicestershire's victory after Birmingham had prepared the ground for an assault that never materialised with a third-wicket stand of 91 off 58 balls between Sam Hain and Adam Hose. Ackermann bowled Will Rhodes and Alex Thomson and held a return catch from Liam Banks, all of them attempting nothing more ambitious than trying to get Hain back on strike.
Then three more wickets in his final over: Hain's 61 from 44 balls was a forlorn cause by the time he was caught at long-on. Henry Brookes charged through his own red mist and was bowled. Jeetan Patel, knowing the game was up, swung the last ball of Ackermann's spell to long-on. Patel, a superior offspinner, who had bowled three overs for 42 on the same pitch, was gracious in his praise. "He asked the ball to do things," he said.
From the moment that Ackermann replaced Paul Horton as Leicestershire's one-day captain in May, Leicestershire's accent has been on youth. That reaped dividends against Birmingham with the bat as Harry Swindells and Lewis Hill made maiden T20 half-centuries. Swindells' 63 from 50 balls at the top of the innings was a spirited affair and Hill's assault in the second half was even more profitable as he whacked 58 from 28.
It is not often that Patel, so often Birmingham's matchwinner, fails to complete his spell, but that was the outcome as Hill dispatched him for 17 off four balls. He dealt well with Fidel Edwards' pace, too, taking 26 from 10. A short ball from Brookes silenced him as he hauled a short ball to midwicket.
When Brookes yorked Dearden with his next ball, he belied his tender years with a show of satisfaction that was all jutting jaw and angular, don't-mess-with-me strut. He had dropped Swindells on 37 at long off, off Rhodes, and every affronted delivery from then on sought retribution. He relied predominantly on a mix of short balls and yorkers and finished with 3 for 26.
Birmingham will need that spirit in the weeks ahead. They had suffered two injury blows on the day of the match, with England pace bowler Olly Stone ruled out with a recurrence of a back injury, quickly followed by confirmation that Australian spinner Ashton Agar would miss the remainder of the tournament after breaking an ankle at Headingley on Sunday.
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Kaepernick tweets he's 'still ready' for NFL return
Published in
Breaking News
Wednesday, 07 August 2019 13:16

Colin Kaepernick has made another statement that he is continuing to pursue an NFL job despite not having played in the league since 2016.
In a video posted to Twitter and Instagram on Wednesday, Kaepernick is shown working out in a gym, saying he has been doing so for the past three years and that he is "still ready."
5am. 5 days a week. For 3 years. Still Ready. pic.twitter.com/AGczejA1rM
— Colin Kaepernick (@Kaepernick7) August 7, 2019
The video starts with a counter saying he has been "denied work for 889 days." The total comes from the Twitter account @KapWatch, which has kept track of Kaepernick's ongoing free agency since he opted out of his contract with the San Francisco 49ers in March 2017.
In October 2017, Kaepernick filed a grievance against the NFL under the collective bargaining agreement, alleging collusion against signing him to a contract. Both his grievance and that of current Carolina Panthers safety Eric Reid were settled in February, with the Wall Street Journal reporting they would receive less than $10 million total.
Kaepernick drew national attention in 2016 when he knelt during the national anthem to protest racial injustice and police brutality in the United States.
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Source: AB suffered frostbite during cryotherapy
Published in
Breaking News
Wednesday, 07 August 2019 09:13

Oakland Raiders star receiver Antonio Brown's mysterious foot injury is the result of extreme frostbite caused by a cryotherapy machine, a source confirmed to ESPN on Wednesday.
Brown was not wearing appropriate footwear when he entered the cryotherapy chamber last month in France and burned his feet, leaving them frostbitten, according to the source.
The cause of Brown's injury was first reported by ProFootballTalk.
Brown, 31, has missed a significant portion of his first training camp with the Raiders and has not practiced since July 30, when he left the team to visit a foot specialist.
Raiders coach Jon Gruden told ESPN's Sal Paolantonio on Wednesday that Brown was "still collecting information" on the injury, and that the team would know more in the next few days.
"You know me, it is like waiting for Santa Claus," Gruden said of anticipating Brown's return. "I have been really excited to coach this man. I think he is a great player and he is a great competitor. We need his life in this offense and on this football team. We will just cross our fingers. I will make no speculation whatsoever. He has to get it evaluated. He has to get the information he needs, and when he does, he will be back."
A source told ESPN's Adam Schefter this past weekend that the injury is not believed to be long term.
Brown posted photo on Instagram last week that showed the soles of his feet blistering and peeling.
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