Thursday, 4 August 2022

Premier League preview: Haaland signing sends Man City clear

PREMIER LEAGUE PREVIEW 2022-23


▪️
ARSENAL @Arsenal
Last season 5th FA Cup Third round League Cup Semi finals
Last major trophy FA Cup 2020
Ownership Kroenke Sports & Entertainment (USA)
Head coach Mikel Arteta (since December 2019)
New signings Fabio Vieira, Marquinhos, Matt Turner, Gabriel Jesus, Oleksandr Zinchenko
Arsenal have reacted to missing out on Champions League football for a sixth season in a row with a splurge of transfer activity this summer. Gabriel Jesus and Oleksandr Zinchenko arrive from Manchester City while Fabio Vieira, from Porto, and Marquinhos, from Sao Paolo, freshen up the Gunners' attacking options following the departure of Alexandre Lacazette. Certainly, head coach Mikel Arteta cannot complain at the level of investment which, at £119 million, is the highest in the Premier League. At the same time, though, many Arsenal supporters are questioning if the club is backing the right man. Following three defeats on the spin to start last season, Arsenal were always playing catch-up - but, any time it looked as if they might consolidate a place in the top four, they hit another sticky patch such as the four defeats out of five in March and April. Arteta was regularly indebted to his younger players like Aaron Ramsdale, Bukayo Sako and Emile Smith Rowe - but a lack of consistency comes naturally with youth and further successive away defeats inside four days in May to Tottenham Hotspur and Newcastle United confirmed the end for the Gunners' top four hopes. The summer signings should relieve some of the pressure on the young Gunners players - but that pressure now lies firmly on Arteta to deliver. 
Prediction [7th]

▪️ ASTON VILLA @AVFCOfficial
Last season 14th FA Cup Third round League Cup Third round
Last major trophy League Cup 1996
Ownership Nasser Sawiris (EGY) and Wes Edens (USA)
Head coach Steven Gerrard (since November 2021)
New signings Philippe Coutinho, Diego Carlos, Robin Olsen, Boubacar Kamara, Ludwig Augustinsson*
Aston Villa lost exactly half of their Premier League matches last season as early progress following the appointment of Steven Gerrard in November proved to be something of mirage. Gerrard won his first two games in charge of the Villans to lift his side up to 13th - but, in the 25 matches which followed, Villa won eight, drew five and lost 12 to finish in 14th, three places lower than in 2020-21. Home form was particularly poor - there were eight defeats in B6 alone and the Holte End witnessed just two league wins in the whole of the second half of last season. This summer, Diego Carlos - a commanding centre-back - has arrived from Sevilla, Boubacar Kamara will add some steel to the midfield - and, with Philippe Coutinho signing permanently following a successful loan spell since January, there is much to be said for Gerrard's ability to attract top signings to the second city. For the most part, the appeal of working with the 42-year-old no doubt still largely owes itself to his playing days. Nevertheless, Gerrard's record at Rangers looks better with every passing week and he has also stamped his authority on the Villa Park dressing room by deciding to remove the captain's armband from the error-prone Tyrone Mings and hand it instead to John McGinn.
Prediction [8th]

▪️ BOURNEMOUTH @afcbournemouth
Last season 2nd in Championship (promoted) FA Cup Fourth round League Cup Second round
Last major trophy None
Ownership Maxim Demin (RUS)
Head coach Scott Parker (since June 2021)
New signings Ryan Fredericks, Joe Rothwell, Marcus Tavernier
Bournemouth are back, with the foundations of only their second ever promotion to the top flight laid between August and October when the Cherries enjoyed a club record unbeaten start to a season of 15 matches. Thereafter, though, the campaign became a real slog and three matches without scoring in April, including a woeful defeat to West Bromwich Albion, threatened to land Scott Parker's men in the playoffs. Indeed, it took until the penultimate match to seal the deal with a nervy 1-0 win over fellow-promotion hopefuls Nottingham Forest - and Premier League teams simply will not allow a team to get away with such profligacy. Dominic Solanke - once a promising prospect at Chelsea - will lead the line but, just like head coach Parker, he is unproven at the top level. Whatever happens, at least, Parker will no doubt appear sharply-dressed on the touchline in a tailored suit. But, with no real head-turning arrivals to the south coast, the smart money will be on Bournemouth to go down.
Prediction [20th]

▪️ BRENTFORD @BrentfordFC
Last season 13th FA Cup Fourth round League Cup Quarter finals
Last major trophy None
Ownership Matthew Benham (ENG)
Head coach Thomas Frank (since October 2018)
New signings Aaron Hickey, Keane Lewis-Potter, Thomas Strakosha, Yehor Yarmolyuk, Ben Mee
Brentford were dropping like a stone when they made the bold decision to bring Christian Eriksen in from the cold, only seven months after the Danish midfielder has suffered a cardiac arrest while playing at Euro 2020+1. True, the Bees had little to lose with that particular roll of the dice - an immediate return to the Championship looked more and more likely as early-season optimism faded in a bleak mid-winter run of 4 points out of 33 between Boxing Day and February. Nevertheless, having sparked a remarkable turnaround in form to secure safety, it feels rather galling that the 30-year-old will now turn out for Manchester United. Instead, Brentford head coach Thomas Frank must head back to the drawing board and attempt to plot a different escape route - but, unfortunately for Frank, his realistic options are extremely limited, perhaps merely just to keeping it tight at the back while hoping Ivan Toney enjoys a purple patch or two in front of goal.
Prediction [19th]

▪️ BRIGHTON AND HOVE ALBION @OfficialBHAFC
Last season 9th FA Cup Fourth round League Cup Fourth round
Last major trophy None
Ownership Tony Bloom (ENG)
Head coach Graham Potter (since May 2019)
New signing Julio Enciso
Brighton & Hove Albion achieved their highest league finish in club history last season as a blinding start and strong finish brought a placing in the top half. The Seagulls took 15 points out of their first 18 and finished by taking 18 points out of their last 24, a run which included a club record top-flight triumph with a stunning 4-0 win over Manchester United. But, in between the autumn and the spring, Graham Potter's outfit reverted to their long-held reputation as draw specialists with eight coming in 10 matches between late-September and early-December. A more worrying sequence of five successive defeats in February and March even threatened to suck Albion into the battle to avoid relegation - so, in other words, Brighton's historic finishing position hardly tells the whole story of their season. As ever, the Seagulls struggled to convert their neat possession into goals - and this campaign promises to be another exercise in frustration.
Prediction
[13th]

▪️ CHELSEA @ChelseaFC
Last season 3rd FA Cup Runners-up League Cup Runners-up Champions League Quarter finals
Last major trophy Champions League 2021
Ownership Todd Boehly, Clearlake Capital (USA)
Head coach Thomas Tuchel (since January 2021)
New signings Raheem Sterling, Kalidou Koulibaly, Carney Chukwuemeka
Chelsea were top of the Premier League on 1 December after beating Watford - but the 3-2 defeat to West Ham United three days later hit the Blues hard, and Thomas Tuchel's team never recovered the sort of consistency required to fight for the Premier League title. Losing both domestic Cup finals on penalties to Liverpool ended up adding to the frustration - but, as the season wore on, the football at Stamford Bridge took a back seat. The brutal Russian invasion of Ukraine led to former owner Roman Abramovich having his assets frozen - and left Chelsea unable even to sell a mug in the club shop. Officially at least, Abramovich has now cleared off and the Blues - now under the control of Todd Boehly and Clearlake Capital - have been able to operate quite normally this summer. Raheem Sterling has made a shock move from Manchester City for £47.5 million while centre-back Kalidou Koulibaly arrives from Napoli for £33 million as Chelsea seek to retain their place in the top four which they have now held for the last four seasons. Perhaps crucially, though, Tuchel lacks an out-and-out goalscorer - Mason Mount finished top of the charts last time at the club with just 11 in the league, and this is an omission which could easily come back to cost the West London club.
Prediction [5th]

▪️ CRYSTAL PALACE @CPFC
Last season 12th FA Cup Semi finals League Cup Second round
Last major trophy None
Ownership Steve Parish (ENG)
Head coach Patrick Vieira (since July 2021)
New signings Sam Johnstone, Cheick Doucoure, Chris Richards
Crystal Palace have given themselves a platform to build on after a 12th-placed finish and a second visit to Wembley in the FA Cup in six years. Most significantly, the Eagles' attacking presence - which was for so long restricted only to Wilfried Zaha - now extends to an array of talent including Zaha, youth talent Eberechi Eze, and French pair Odsonne Edouard and Jean-Philippe Mateta. Patrick Vieira has overseen the transformation as Palace finally tried something new in the Selhurst Park dug-out following a run of managers which - barring five disastrous matches in 2017 under Frank De Boer - reads: Ian Holloway, Tony Pulis, Neil Warnock, Alan Pardew, Sam Allardyce and Roy Hodgson. Frustratingly for Vieira, Palace were prone to too many draws, finishing the season with 15 in all, with 11 of those score draws. The Eagles held a lead at some stage in seven of those 11 matches so the area for improvement is fairly obvious. Any such progress will have to come without the effective Conor Gallagher, though, as he has returned to his parent club Chelsea for 2022-23.
Prediction [11th]

▪️ EVERTON @Everton
Last season 16th FA Cup Quarter finals League Cup Third round
Last major trophy FA Cup 1995
Ownership Farhad Moshiri (IRN)
Head coach Frank Lampard (since January 2022)
New signings James Tarkowski, Dwight McNeil, Ruben Vinagre*
Frank Lampard may have kept Everton up in May following the ill-starred tenure of former Liverpool boss Rafael Benitez - but the 44-year-old will not be sitting comfortably heading into the new season. In fact, Lampard is currently favourite to be the first Premier League boss to leave their post - and it is not difficult to work out why. The Toffees took just 10 points on the road in 2021-22 - and only four of them came in the nine away matches under Lampard. Effectively, Everton retained their top-flight status for a 69th consecutive season on the back of some strong form at Goodison Park from Richarlison and a bit of graft from youngster Anthony Gordon. Richarlison has now left for Tottenham Hotspur with his replacement Dwight McNeil arriving on the back of a terrible campaign at Burnley. In fairness, the goal-threat provided by Dominic Calvert-Lewin should be enough for Everton to survive as usual - but it also seems likely the cash-strapped Merseyside club will reach the finishing line in the spring with yet another new face in the dugout.
Prediction [16th]

▪️ FULHAM @FulhamFC
Last season 1st in Championship (promoted) FA Cup Fourth round League Cup Third round
Last major trophy None
Ownership Shahid Khan (USA)
Head coach Marco Silva (since July 2021)
New signings Joao Palhinha, Andreas Pereira, Kevin Mbabu, Bernd Leno, Manor Solomon*
The yo-yo existence for Fulham continues unabated, with the spring bringing a third promotion from the Championship out of their last three seasons at that level. But, while the promotion campaigns of 2018 and 2020 concluded with success in the playoffs, this time the Cottagers return under Marco Silva on the back of a convincing Championship title win in which they tallied 90 points and scored 106 goals. Indeed, Aleksandar Mitrovic helped himself to 43 of them personally to break a record held since 1993 by Guy Whittingham for the highest scoring English league season in the current 46-match format. Now, in his past forays in the top flight, the Serbian has struggled with his discipline - or, in the case of 2020-21, struggled full-stop - but he arrives in the Premier League this time with more confidence than ever. The departure this summer of attacking foil Fabio Carvalho to Liverpool is disappointing, if understandable - but, even without the Portuguese forward, Fulham still now carry enough threat to score when on top during games, something which was sorely lacking in their most recent survival attempt.
Prediction [14th]

▪️ LEEDS UNITED @LUFC
Last season 14th FA Cup Third round League Cup Fourth round
Last major trophy First Division 1991-92
Ownership Andrea Radrizzani (ITA)
Head coach Jesse Marsch (since February 2022)
New signings Brenden Aaronson, Rasmus Kristensen, Marc Roca, Tyler Adams, Luis Sinisterra, Sonny Perkins
Leeds United should be worried, really worried. Having survived by the skin of their teeth last season on the final day, the Whites have lost two of their better players this summer as Manchester City and Barcelona came sniffing around Kalvin Phillips and Raphinha respectively. Marc Roca - signed from Bayern Munich - covers the loss of Phillips from midfield but Jesse Marsch's men will sorely miss the skill and directness of the talented Brazilian. Following the departure of the enigmatic Argentine Marcelo Bielsa at the end of February, Marsch did pretty well to be fair, taking 15 points from the last 10 games to keep Premier League football in this part of Yorkshire despite a heavy dose of second season syndrome. However, with the squad now still weaker again, the American faces an even tougher survival challenge in his full Premier League campaign.
Prediction [18th]

▪️ LEICESTER CITY @LCFC
Last season 8th FA Cup Fourth Round League Cup Quarter finals Europa League Group stage
Last major trophy FA Cup 2021
Ownership Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha (THA)
Head coach Brendan Rodgers (since February 2019)
New signings None
There is a concerned mood around the King Power Stadium ahead of the new season despite the eighth place in May making it five top half finishes out of six since the Foxes' remarkable Premier League title win in 2015-16. The concern is understandable, though - displays throughout last season were far from convincing, particularly from a defensive perspective, as rather neatly demonstrated by the concession of 16 goals from corners alone. The Foxes' set-piece weakness contributed to Brendan Rodgers's men dropping 21 points from winning positions - and, with 34 matches played, Leicester were floundering down in 14th. It was only a late string of good results, in easy fixtures, against Norwich City, Watford and Southampton, which pushed Leicester into the top half - and a lack of as much as a single signing this summer has done nothing to allay the worries in this part of the East Midlands. With Kasper Schmeichel off to Nice, Leicester have spent most of the transfer window warding off interest in members of their team such as Wesley Fofana, Youri Tielemans, and James Maddison. Of those three, the loss of Maddison would serve as an especially critical blow following his efforts towards the back end of last season - and, without his talisman, it would be difficult to see Rodgers avoiding an early exit.
Prediction [12th]

▪️ LIVERPOOL @LFC
Last season 2nd FA Cup Winners League Cup Winners Champions League Runners-up
Last major trophy FA Cup 2022
Ownership Fenway Sports Group (USA)
Head coach Jürgen Klopp (since October 2015)
New signings Darwin Nunez, Calvin Ramsay, Fabio Carvalho
Liverpool drew first blood this season in the glorified friendly that is the Community Shield - but it will not mean much at all if the Reds miss out on the biggest prizes again in 2023. From a possible historic quadruple, the Reds had to settle for success in the two domestic cups only, with both finals decided on penalties after finishing 0-0. Much of the summer break was taken up by the rumour that the prolific Mo Salah was set to move on - and, with Sadio Mane already off to Bayern Munich, Jurgen Klopp will be pleased that contract negotiations with the Egyptian were successful. Even strong teams undergo transformation, of course - and Darwin Nunez has been signed from Benfica for the small matter of £65 million, while January signing Luis Diaz will look to build upon his encouraging start to life at Anfield. At the back, Virgil Van Dijk remains the Reds' most indispensible player - while the full-backs Trent Alexander-Arnold and Andy Robertson will again provide the attacking width. It is a very defined way of playing and extremely effective when done well. However, it can also leave the defence exposed - and fine lines are often the deciding factor in the biggest matches.
Prediction [2nd]

▪️ MANCHESTER CITY @ManCity
Last season Champions FA Cup Semi finals League Cup Fourth round Champions League Semi finals
Last major trophy Premier League 2021-22
Ownership Abu Dhabi United Group (UAE)
Head coach Pep Guardiola (since July 2016)
New signings Erling Haaland, Stefan Ortega, Kalvin Phillips
Much was made last summer of the failure of Manchester City to prise Harry Kane away from Tottenham Hotspur as Pep Guardiola prepared his team for life after Sergio Aguero - then, to add insult to injury, Spurs beat Man City on the opening day. Yet, despite that early setback, the defending champions stormed into a 12-point lead on the back of a run of 43 points out of 45 between November and February. Gradually, though, Liverpool ate into the advantage to the extent that only one point separated the teams heading into the final day. Certainly, it was a nervy run-in - Man City had trailed 2-0 at half time before coming back to draw level against West Ham United in their penultimate match, then fell 2-0 behind again to Aston Villa on the final day. Ilkay Gundogan inspired an amazing five-minute turnaround to make it four Premier League titles in five years at the Etihad Stadium, but the feeling persisted that Guardiola's men would have made life so much easier for themselves if they had signed Kane or another big-name forward. This year, Erling Haaland arrived nice and early - and, despite a difficult debut in the Community Shield at the weekend, the quality of service from Phil Foden, Bernardo Silva and Premier League player of the season Kevin De Bruyne should help the 22-year-old Norwegian settle in quickly.
Prediction [Champions]

▪️ MANCHESTER UNITED @ManUtd
Last season 6th FA Cup Fourth round League Cup Third round Champions League Last 16
Last major trophy Europa League 2017
Ownership Joel Glazer and Avram Glazer (USA)
Head coach Erik ten Hag (since May 2022)
New signings Tyrell Malacia, Christian Eriksen, Lisandro Martinez, Tom Huddlestone
Manchester United finished last season with a meek 2-0 defeat at Crystal Palace for a sixth consecutive away league defeat for the first time since March 1981. This was also the first time the Red Devils failed to end a league campaign with a positive goal difference since 1989-90. New manager Erik ten Hag, who led Ajax Amsterdam to the Dutch title in May, has said the job is not a risk to his reputation - and there are already promising signs that the 52-year-old can succeed where the other five permanent or interim managers appointed since the Sir Alex Ferguson era have failed. The Old Trafford faithful seemingly will only settle for the return of the Premier League - and ten Haag's transfer business appears solid. For example, Christian Eriksen showed at Brentford last season that he has lost none of his magic, while 24-year-old Argentine defender Lisandro Martinez could be a rock at the back for years to come. At the same time, though, the Red Devils have now fallen too far behind their city rivals Manchester City and eternal rivals Liverpool to be considered as serious title challengers in 2022-23.
Prediction [4th]

▪️ NEWCASTLE UNITED @NUFC
Last season 11th FA Cup Third round League Cup Second round
Last major trophy UEFA (Fairs) Cup 1969
Ownership Public Investment Fund (KSA)
Head coach Eddie Howe (since November 2021)
New signings Matt Targett, Nick Pope, Sven Botman
Newcastle United made Premier League history last season by becoming the first top division team since Sheffield United in 1990-91 to fail to win any of their first 14 matches and still stay up. Even as late as January, when the Magpies suffered their latest FA Cup embarrassment at home to Cambridge United, hopes of survival looked slim - especially when Joao Pedro towered over Jamaal Lascelles at the Gallowgate End to head in a stoppage-time equaliser for Watford. But January also brought a first transfer window under new Saudi Arabia-backed ownership. Already action had been taken in October to replace the ruinous Steve Bruce with former Bournemouth boss Eddie Howe - and near enough a new defence was next to be sorted. Matt Targett's loan from Aston Villa was followed by the signings of Kieran Trippier and Blyth-born Dan Burn - but it was Bruno Guimaraes, a £33.3 million arrival from Lyon, who really got Tyneside buzzing. Howe's refreshed outfit won 12 times in the second half of the season and took 37 points in 18 matches to find a top-half finish only just beyond them. There have been further defensive reinforcements this summer with the permanent signing of Targett and the arrival of Sven Botman, while Nick Pope will provide competition for Martin Dubravka between the sticks. However, there are also concerns about a lack of depth up front and the continued over-reliance on injury-prone Callum Wilson has somewhat tempered expectations on Tyneside.
Prediction [9th]

▪️ NOTTINGHAM FOREST @NFFC
Last season 4th in Championship (promoted) FA Cup Quarter finals League Cup Second round
Last major trophy League Cup 1990
Ownership Evangelos Marinakis (GRE)
Head coach Steve Cooper (since September 2021)
New signings Taiwo Awoniyi, Giulian Biancone, Moussa Niakhate, Omar Richards, Neco Williams, Wayne Hennessey, Brandon Aguilera, Harry Toffolo, Lewis O'Brien, Jesse Lingard, Orel Mangala, Dean Henderson*
A big welcome back to the Premier League for Nottingham Forest who are gearing up for a first season in the top flight in the 21st Century. When Forest were last among the elite, Tony Blair was still Prime Minister and Bill Clinton was US President - and, in the meantime, the twice former European Champions even dropped to the third tier for three seasons between 2005 and 2008. Only last year, another visit to that level looked a distinct possibility with Forest taking just a single point from their first seven games under Chris Hughton. But the arrival of Steve Cooper brought about a massive turnaround as Forest then won 23 and lost only six of the following 39 matches to qualify for the playoffs. All four of the Tricky Trees' previous end-of-season escapades had ended in failure - but Cooper's side defied this record, winning promotion by beating Huddersfield Town at Wembley. Surprisingly, that was the last game for the club for goalkeeper Brice Samba who has moved to Lens in France, while Djed Spence - who was on loan from Middlesbrough - has opted instead to sign for Tottenham Hotspur. Highly-rated keeper Dean Henderson comes in on loan between the sticks and the signing of Jesse Lingard can be considered as something of a coup. The next 10 months will be a struggle at times but, if the City Ground becomes the fortress which it could be, Cooper can defy the odds again.
Prediction [17th]

▪️ SOUTHAMPTON @SouthamptonFC
Last season 15th FA Cup Quarter finals League Cup Fourth round
Last major trophy FA Cup 1976
Ownership Sport Republic (SRB)
Head coach Ralph Hasenhüttl (since December 2018)
New signings Gavin Bazunu, Mateusz Lis, Armel Bella-Kotchap, Romeo Lavia, Joe Aribo, Sekou Mara
For just how much longer are Southampton happy to tread water? The Saints' last five Premier League finishes have been 17th, 16th, a relatively creditable 11th, and then two 15th placings. Certainly, it is a long way off from the successive top seven places under Ronald Koeman in 2014-15 and 2015-16. Additionally, in the meantime, there have also been some humiliating results - the two 9-0s, at home to Leicester City in October 2019 and away to Manchester United in February 2021 - and a 6-0 home defeat to Chelsea last season. As such, it basically feels like Southampton are back to where they constantly were during the 1990s when club legend Matt Le Tissier did enough to save his team from the drop year after year. The equivalent contribution now comes from an arguably even more talented player, James Ward-Prowse - but this over-reliance on a single player is not exactly a sustainable approach.
Prediction [15th]

▪️ TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR @SpursOfficial
Last season 4th FA Cup Fifth round League Cup Semi finals Conference League Group stage
Last major trophy League Cup 2008
Ownership ENIC International Limited (ENG)
Head coach Antonio Conte (since November 2021)
New signings Ivan Perisic, Fraser Forster, Richarlison, Yves Bissouma, Djed Spence, Clement Lenglet* 
Without ever really threatening actually to win something, Tottenham Hotspur have actually had a pretty good last 52 weeks. Last August, Harry Kane snubbed Manchester City to stay in North London - then, at the start of November, Spurs finally got around to appointing the man who they should have brought in last summer when Antonio Conte's arrival put Nuno Espirito Santo out of his misery. In January, Spurs recruited well, signing Rodrigo Bentancur from Juventus and agreeing an 18-month loan for Dejan Kulusevski from the Italian giants - and their influence, along with the goals of Kane and Premier League joint-top scorer Son Heung-min, pushed Conte's men over the line in the race for the fourth Champions League spot. This summer, there have been some more smart signings such as Richarlison, Yves Bissouma and Ivan Perisic who, despite being past his very best, still has much to offer - and, as such, Spurs head into a campaign in their strongest position for quite a few years. Of course, that does not necessarily mean Tottenham are actually going to win anything - after all, the cup defeats to Chelsea and Middlesbrough were, for rather different reasons, both as Spursy as it gets.
Prediction [3rd]

▪️ WEST HAM UNITED @WestHam
Last season 7th FA Cup Fifth round League Cup Quarter finals
Last major trophy FA Cup 1980
Ownership David Sullivan (WAL), Daniel Kretinsky (CZE) and David Gold (ENG)
Head coach David Moyes (since December 2019)
New signings Nayef Aguerd, Alphonse Areola, Flynn Downes, Gianluca Scamacca
West Ham United secured a second successive season of European football with a seventh-placed finish last season - but it looked as if it could have been so much better for David Moyes's men. Instead, the Hammers won only one of their last seven matches - against Norwich City - and consequently dropped away from the Champions League race into a Europa Conference spot. The Londoners' final chance of a Champions League place came via their run in the Europa League - but their semi final defeat ended badly with Moyes forced to apologise after his full-pelt volley at a ballboy in Frankfurt. But, despite that lack of discipline - and the lack of nerve shown by his team - the Scotsman has had some decent backing in the transfer market. Indeed, the arrivals of defender Nayef Aguerd from Rennes and the highly-rated striker Gianluca Scamacca from Sassuola should ensure the Moyes's men challenge towards the top end of the table again.
Prediction [6th]

▪️ WOLVERHAMPTON WANDERERS @Wolves
Last season 10th FA Cup Fourth round League Cup Third round
Last major trophy League Cup 1980
Ownership Fosun International (CHN)
Head coach Bruno Lage (since June 2021)
New signings Hwang Hee-chan, Nathan Collins
Wolverhampton Wanderers finished last season with as many league defeats (17) as relegated Burnley after taking just eight points out of the last 36 - and so a promising first season for Bruno Lage at Molineux can be considered to have badly petered out. The reason behind it was obvious: a lack of goals. Wolves finished the 38-match league campaign with exactly one-per-game - and, sadly, Mexican striker Raul Jiminez has only shown odd glimpses of his previous form since his comeback from a horrific head injury in November 2020. Hwang Hee-chan produced some promising moments - and the Korean forward has now signed permanently from Red Bull Leipzig. Meanwhile, the retention so far of Ruben Neves and Pedro Neto will have the Old Gold safely in the middle of the pack once again.
Prediction [10th]

*refers to loan signing

Wednesday, 27 July 2022

Stuck in the middle with you


CONSERVATIVE Party members will decide whether Rishi Sunak or Liz Truss becomes their next leader - and British Prime Minister - as an already brutal leadership contest meanders towards its end in the first week of September.


Former Chancellor of the Exchequer Mr Sunak - who brought about the downfall of current PM Boris Johnson with his resignation from that role on 5 July - had been the early favourite with the bookmakers.

However, the MP for Richmond in North Yorkshire does not have a majority of the support from the Tory rank-and-file after his failure to deal with the cost-of-living crisis.

Instead, it is Ms Truss who now leads the polling and the betting market.

The contest effectively began on 7 July when Mr Johnson finally caved in after the resignations of Mr Sunak and Health Secretary Sajid Javid were followed by an excruciating day in Westminster amid pressure from his own Conservative MPs.

First, Mr Johnson faced criticism from all sides of the House of Commons in a brutal session of Prime Minister's Questions - then, shortly afterwards, the PM's whole tenure was torn apart by members of the Liaison Committee.

Indeed, it became apparent on social media during the meeting that Nadhim Zahawi, the new Chancellor appointed less than two full days previously, was among several members of the Cabinet waiting at Downing Street for Mr Johnson so that they could tell him he needed to resign.

Meanwhile, Huw Merriman - who was around the table in the Committee room - sent out his resignation letter on Twitter while sat just yards from the PM.

In all, there were more than 50 ministerial resignations, the most ever suffered by a Prime Minister - although this also shows just how bloated the government payroll had become under Mr Johnson.

The resignations included Brandon Lewis, the Northern Ireland Secretary, whose scathing letter read: "A decent and responsible Government relies on honesty, integrity and mutual respect.

"It is a matter of profound personal regret that I must leave Government as I no longer believe those values are being upheld."

Michelle Donelan, the Education Secretary, who again had been appointed less than 48 hours earlier, also stepped down.

Bizarrely, another Education minister Will Quince quit - then, following the resignation of Mr Johnson and the reshuffle which followed, the Colchester MP reversed this decision and accepted the role at Education again.

Michael Gove was branded "a snake" by a Downing Street insider after he was sacked from his position as Levelling Up Secretary - a flagship, if ineffective, policy of the government.

Altogether, though, it was a humiliating day for Mr Johnson.

Yet, as usual, his eventual downfall came from a situation which the Prime Minister could have easily avoided.

Former Deputy Chief Whip Chris Pincher was reappointed to that position by Mr Johnson in February 2022 - despite the Prime Minister having been warned about his past sexual misconduct on at least five separate occasions.

Until 5 July, Mr Johnson denied being aware of these prior concerns - but then he sheepishly admitted he had made a "bad mistake" by not acting on information which he had received.

Mr Johnson had been caught out completely - and, for many Conservative MPs, including those who had supported Mr Johnson in a Vote of No Confidence on 6 June prompted by Partygate, this was the final straw.

Of course, it should not have taken anywhere near as long as this.

Arguably, the Conservative Party as a whole started losing its moral compass a few years ago - and lost it completely after their selection of Mr Johnson in July 2019.

In fairness, Mr Johnson, in contrast to his extremely wealthy background, was portrayed as a man of the people - electoral gold dust who had been Mayor of London for two full terms despite the distinctly leftward shift taken by the capital during that time.

Moreover, Mr Johnson - having calculated back in 2016 that it was in his best interests to oppose his old Eton chum David Cameron by supporting Britain leaving the European Union - vowed to get Brexit done following the stalemate at Westminster under Theresa May.

This promise delivered an 80-seat majority to the Conservatives in a General Election in December 2019 as Labour under Jeremy Corbyn was crushed in its heartlands in the North, Midlands and Wales.

Immediately afterwards, it seemed like this might set up a decade or more of dominance for the Conservatives - but, in March 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic struck.

From then onwards, nothing felt particularly normal anymore.

The Tories spaffed billions of pounds of taxpayers' money, wasting as much as £37billion on a grossly ineffective track-and-trace system in a period that only their friends and donors will look back upon with any affection.

Subsequently, to the despair of many of their low tax-supporting backers, the Conservatives raised National Insurance to pay for their profligacy.

Nevertheless, even as late as June last year, the Tories enjoyed a comfortable lead in the polls following the successful roll-out of the COVID-19 vaccine.

Little by little, though, the bad news began to trickle through - and, in late 2021 through to 2022, that trickle turned into a flood of Tory sleaze and scandal, worse than anything which engulfed the John Major government of the 1990s.

There was bullying, bribery, and an unnamed MP who has been banned from the House of Commons after being arrested on suspicion of rape.

On the same day, 23 June, the Conservatives lost two by-elections as the so-called Red Wall seat of Wakefield returned to Labour while the Liberal Democrats took Tiverton and Honiton on a swing of almost 30%.

The seat in the Devon heartlands was subject to a by-election after former MP, Neil Parish, resigned after admitting to watching pornography in the Commons chamber.

More scandalously, the former MP for Wakefield, Imran Ahmad Khan, caused a by-election after he was convicted of child sexual assault and jailed for 18 months.

Standards in public life have never been lower, something which was also quite apparent during the fiasco which has become known as Partygate.

In all, the Metropolitan Police issued 126 fixed penalty notices to 83 individuals whom the police found had committed offences under COVID-19 regulations, including one each to Mr Johnson, his wife Carrie Johnson, and Mr Sunak.

Civil Servant Sue Gray's final report in May 2022 described multiple events of excessive drinking and a lack of respect shown to cleaning and security staff.

One such event which incurred fines was on the eve of the funeral for Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, at which the Queen sat alone on a pew in line with social distancing restrictions as she said goodbye to her husband.

Many other people did the same - and then there were the even less fortunate, whose relatives died in care homes, unable to be visited by those who loved them most.

COVID-19 ravaged care homes in particular after perhaps the most ill-thought out policy of them all during this period as patients were released from hospital back into care despite still being infectious.

For this alone, Mr Johnson should have resigned or been asked to resign.

Better late than never? Ask those who have suffered in any way over the past 18 months since Mr Johnson gained his mammoth majority...


Onto the contest for the new leader then - and, with 11 initial candidates, the Conservative Party had the appearance of a directionless, destructive mess.

Mr Javid, Transport Secretary Grant Shapps, and complete outsider Rehman Christi withdrew before the contest actually officially began, with Gillingham and Rainham MP, Mr Christi, also knocked out after receiving absolutely no support at all.

At the first proper ballot, Mr Zahawi and former Cabinet minister Jeremy Hunt were eliminated.

However, only clueless lawyer, Attorney General Suella Braveman, went out in the second round, leaving five candidates remaining ahead of a series of fiery debates on 15 July (shown by Channel Four) and 17 July (shown by ITV).

Following the first debate, backbencher Tom Tughendhat failed to get through the third ballot - then, after the second debate, another round of voting took place resulting in the end of the ambitions of Kemi Badenoch.

A third debate was due to occur and be televised by Sky News on 19 July - but this was cancelled at short notice.

Instead, a further ballot was held and spelled the end of the road for Ms Mordaunt even though she had placed in the top two in each of the first four votes.

Ms Mordaunt's lead over Ms Truss had narrowed considerably in the third and fourth ballots, however, after she had struggled in the debates.

As a result, Mr Sunak and Ms Truss have emerged as the top two - and it would be fair to say that they are not exactly massive fans of each other.

On the economy, for instance, Mr Sunak accused Ms Truss in the debate on Monday of risking a huge increase in interest rates with her plans to cut tax immediately.

For her part, Ms Truss responded by suggesting Mr Sunak was "scaremongering" and providing a "Project Fear" forecast in a term lifted directly from the Brexit referendum.

In that vote, Ms Truss - although now a Brexit supporter - campaigned for Remain, while Mr Sunak backed Leave.

Of course, this was something which he swiftly pointed out to his rival after that "Project Fear" barb from Ms Truss.

The candidates are scheduled to take each other on in a further televised exchange on 4 August (Sky News), at around the same time 160,000 members' ballot papers will be distributed.

In the meantime, Mr Johnson has actually continued to wield a reasonable amount of power over his government, even his since resignation.

Tobias Elwood lost the Conservative whip last week, after he confirmed he had refused to back the Prime Minister in a House of Commons confidence vote.

Mr Elwood, a former Lieutenant Colonel in the British Army who gave mouth-to-mouth resuscitation to police officer PC Keith Palmer after the terrorist attack on Westminster in March 2017, deserves better.

However, the Bournemouth East MP is probably happy enough no longer to be tarnished by this administration and this Prime Minister.

In his final appearance at PMQs last Wednesday, Mr Johnson defiantly declared "Hasta la vista, baby" and received a standing ovation from most of the Tory MPs.

It is difficult to decide which was more cringeworthy - and so, unlike the risible Nadine Dorries, please do not weep for Mr Johnson.

The Prime Minister may seek sympathy after failing badly in his dream job - but he will no doubt use his privilege to get another highly-paid role elsewhere.

Hopefully, we will not be seeing him any time soon.


REMAINING CANDIDATES
 Rishi SUNAK
- MP for Richmond (Yorks) since 2015
- Chancellor of the Exchequer until July 2022
 Liz TRUSS
- MP for South West Norfolk since 2010
- Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs, and a former Secretary of State for International Trade

CONSERVATIVE LEADERSHIP ELECTION 
 Round-by-round

 (1)

 (2)

(3)

(4)

 (5)

 Rishi SUNAK
88
24.6%  101+1328.2%  115+1432.1%  118+333.1%  137+1938.3%
 Liz TRUSS
50
14.0%64+1417.9%71+719.8%86+1524.1%113+2731.6%
 Penny MORDAUNT
67
18.7%83+1623.2%82-122.9%92+1025.8%105+1329.3%
 Kemi BADENOCH
40
11.2%49+913.7%58+916.2%59+116.5%


 Tom TUGENDHAT
37
10.3%32-58.9%31-18.7%




 Suella BRAVEMAN
32
8.9%27-57.5%






 Nadhim ZAHAWI
257.0%









 Jeremy HUNT
18
5.0%










Wednesday, 6 July 2022

Sainz shines at Silverstone in maiden F1 win


CARLOS SAINZ Jr kept his cool to achieve a maiden Grand Prix victory at the 150th attempt after a crazy race at a packed Silverstone.


The Spanish pole-sitter had fallen behind Ferrari team-mate Charles Leclerc ahead of a restart with only nine laps left following a late interruption by the Safety Car.


But, following a brief tussle, Sainz - on fresher soft tyres - used his big advantage with Leclerc left like a sitting duck on the hard compound.


That was far from the most incredible racing after the second restart, though.


Instead, the best of the action came from Leclerc, Sergio Perez and Lewis Hamilton as the British seven-time world champion moved from fourth place to second then was forced back down to fourth in the space of just five corners.


Hamilton eventually passed the struggling Leclerc but will rue a slow pit-stop by his Mercedes team which prevented him from making more of a run at a ninth win at his home circuit.


Nevertheless, the 37-year-old did set the fastest lap and made it onto the F1 podium at Silverstone for a 13th time, a record for any driver at a single track.

Now, the top three in this race does not tell half the story after the drama on the first lap and especially the first corner.

Immediately at lights out, Max Verstappen stormed past Sainz - but the real mayhem erupted behind the front-runners as contact between George Russell and Pierre Gasly diverted Russell's Mercedes towards Zhou Guanyu, resulting in a massive shunt.


In a terrifying moment, the Alfa Romeo of Chinese driver Zhou was flipped over on impact, skidded upside down through a gravel trap and over a tyre wall, only coming to a halt in a catch fencing right in front of grandstand of spectators.


The cockpit halo was a controversial addition to these open-seater cars when made mandatory by the FIA in 2018 - but it had undoubtedly made yet another remarkable intervention.


In fact, Zhou's accident came just a few hours after the halo had
prevented Roy Nissany from being decapitated by Dennis Hauger's car in the F2 feature race.

Following a worrying delay, Zhou was confirmed to be conscious and on his way to the medical centre, where Alex Albon was also sent for a check-up.


Several other cars also sustained damage as a domino effect took hold through the midfield - and, after a delay of almost an hour, it came as something of a surprise that 17 of the 20 drivers were still in the race.


Along with Zhou and Albon, Russell was the only other driver to retire despite not actually being stricken.


Mercedes man Russell had dashed out of his cockpit from a safe position at the side of the track towards Zhou - but received outside assistance, albeit unwanted help, from a tow truck which took his car back to the pits.


Regardless, the 24-year-old deserves huge commendation for his response - but, from a regulatory perspective, it was frustratingly impossible to argue against.


Russell should console himself with the fact that he will have many more chances to make a big impression at Silverstone - and, most importantly, that he had still done the right thing.


Back to the racing and a standing restart was taken in grid order because the accident had come so early.


Ferrari fared better second time around as Verstappen and Leclerc went wheel-to-wheel behind Sainz, and Perez sustained damage to his front wing.


However, Verstappen kept second place and closed in on Sainz to put himself in the perfect position to seize on a mistake by the Spaniard on lap 10.


The lead did not last long, though. On lap 12, the Dutchman picked up some debris
along the Wellington Straight and damaged the floor of his car, leaving him with performance issues for the rest of the afternoon.

At the same time, though, the 24-year-old will be satisfied enough with a seventh-placed finish after another difficult day at the Northamptonshire circuit, a venue at which he has never won.


After all, the Dutchman still leads the World Drivers Championship on 181 points, ahead of team-mate Perez (147), with Leclerc in third place on 138.

It is a rather different picture to the early part of the season when reliability issues for Red Bull allowed Leclerc to build a lead of 46 points over Verstappen.


Since then, though, Leclerc has suffered two engine failures while leading in Spain and Azerbaijan - before a strategic error in Monaco turned a likely home win into fourth place.


In Canada, the number of engine replacements forced the
Monegasque to start from the back of the grid in Canada - and, to complete the set, a mistake by Leclerc himself in Imola dropped him down from third to sixth.

So, instead, it is Leclerc who has much to ponder as this campaign speeds towards its four-week summer recess in August.


Perhaps, the race at Silverstone will signal a shift against Verstappen like it did last year - and it would be fair to say that Leclerc is due something of a change in fortune.


Unlike the seemingly favourable situation for Verstappen at Red Bull, though, Ferrari boss
Mattia Binotto is resistant to the imposition of team orders on his drivers.

That cost Leclerc on Sunday when, despite leading and showing quicker pace than Sainz in the first part of the race, he was left to finish the race on the rapidly degrading hard compound while the Spaniard was able to pit for soft tyres.


Such are the stated terms of engagement at Ferrari that it seems distinctly possible that the same approach could happen and cost Leclerc again later this year.


More critically, though, Verstappen's title win in December has given him supreme confidence with the extremely controversial circumstances leaving him with no doubt or regrets.


The Dutchman has won his six races in 2022 already - in Saudi Arabia, Imola, Miami, Barcelona, Baku, and Montreal - with no other driver winning more than two.

🏁

◾️ 2022 GRAND PRIX RACE CALENDAR ◾️


Date  

Winner | Venue
(1)20-March
BAHRAIN
Charles Leclerc
(2)27-March
SAUDI ARABIA
Max Verstappen
(3)10-April
AUSTRALIACharles Leclerc
(4)24-April

EMILIA ROMAGNA
Max Verstappen
(5)08-May
MIAMIMax Verstappen
(6)22-May
SPAINMax Verstappen
(7)29-May
MONACOSergio Pérez
(8)12-June
AZERBAIJANMax Verstappen
(9)19-June
CANADA
Max Verstappen
(10)03-July
GREAT BRITAIN
Carlos Sainz Jr

(11)

10-July


AUSTRIA

Red Bull Ring, Spielberg
(12)24-July
FRANCE
Circuit Paul Ricard, Le Castellet
(13)31-July
HUNGARY
Hungaroring, Mogyoród
(14)28-August
BELGIUMCircuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Stavelot
(15)04-September
NETHERLANDSCircuit Zandvoort, Zandvoort
(16)11-September
ITALY
Monza Circuit, Monza
(17)02-October
SINGAPOREMarina Bay Street Circuit, Singapore
(18)09-October
JAPANSuzuka International Course, Suzuka
(19)23-October
UNITED STATES
Circuit of the Americas, Austin, TX
(20)30-October
MEXICO
Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez, Mexico City
(21)13-November
BRAZIL
Interlagos Circuit, São Paulo
(22)
20-November

ABU DHABI
Yas Marina Circuit, Abu Dhabi

🏁

FIA F1 DRIVERS WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2022



Points
1Max Verstappen (NED)Red Bull181(6 wins)
2Sergio Pérez (MEX)Red Bull147(1 win)
3Charles Leclerc
Ferrari138(2 wins)
4Carlos Sainz Jr (ESP)
Ferrari
127(1 win)
5George Russell (GBR)
Mercedes111
6Lewis Hamilton (GBR)
Mercedes93
7Lando Norris (GBR)
McLaren-Mercedes58
8Valtteri Bottas (FIN)
Alfa Romeo-Ferrari
46
9Esteban Ocon (FRA)Alpine-Renault
39
10Fernando Alonso (ESP)Alpine-Renault28
11Pierre Gasly (FRA)
AlphaTauri-Red Bull PT
16
12Kevin Magnussen (DEN)
Haas-Ferrari
16
13Sebastian Vettel (GER)
Aston Martin Aramco-Mercedes
15
14Daniel Ricciardo (AUS)
McLaren-Mercedes
15
15Yuki Tsunoda (JPN)
AlphaTauri-Red Bull PT11
16Guanyu Zhou (CHN)
Alfa Romeo-Ferrari
5
17Mick Schumacher (GER)
Haas-Ferrari4
18Alexander Albon (THA)
Williams-Mercedes
3
19Lance Stroll (CAN)
Aston Martin Aramco-Mercedes3
20Nicholas Latifi (CAN)
Williams-Mercedes0
21Nico Hulkenberg (GER)
Aston Martin Aramco-Mercedes0

FIA F1 CONSTRUCTORS WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2022



Points
1Red Bull (AUT)
Verstappen | Pérez 328(7 wins)
2Ferrari (ITA)Leclerc | Sainz Jr
265(3 wins)
3Mercedes (GER)
Russell | Hamilton
204
4McLaren-Mercedes (GBR)
Norris | Ricciardo
73
5Alpine-Renault (FRA)
Alonso | Ocon 67
6Alfa Romeo-Ferrari (SUI)
Bottas | Zhou51
7AlphaTauri-RedBullPT (ITA)
Gasly | Tsunoda
27
8Haas-Ferrari (USA)
Magnussen | Schumacher
20
9Aston Martin Aramco-Mercedes (GBR)
Vettel | Stroll | Hulkenberg18
10Williams-Mercedes (GBR)
Albon | Latifi
3

Wednesday, 15 June 2022

Bairstow stokes the fire for recovering England


ENGLAND v NEW ZEALAND • ENGLAND WON THE SERIES 3-0
2-6 June1 England 141 & 279-5 beat New Zealand 132 & 285 by five wicketsLord's
10-14 June2 England 539 & 299-5 beat New Zealand 553 & 284 by five wicketsTrent Bridge
23-27 June3 England 360 & 296-3 beat New Zealand 329 & 326 by seven wicketsHeadingley

JONNY BAIRSTOW obliterated New Zealand on the final day of the second Test at Trent Bridge yesterday as England secured a first Test series victory for 17 months. 

Bairstow struck 136 off 92 balls and, along with new skipper Ben Stokes, launched a ferocious attack on the Black Caps' bowlers.

England resumed after tea on the final day requiring 160 off 38 overs - and, at this stage, a win for either side was still possible.

Perhaps, instead, the match would drift towards the draw to which it had appeared to be meandering for most of the first four days on a pitch which played true throughout.

Immediately, though, that concept was dismissed by Bairstow and Stokes - though especially Bairstow.

Sixes and fours, fours and sixes. England smashed 59 runs off the first 24 balls after the interval - but this was no short-term assault.

In the first over after tea, the required rate fell below four per over for the first time. 

Fours and sixes, sixes and fours. By 4.22pm, only 22 minutes after the break, the requirement was below three per over. 

Even then, when "normal" Test batting might have sufficed, England did not let up - and this match set a Test record for the most boundaries with 250 in total.

There was an unexpected interruption to this complete battering in the 46th over when Bairstow was caught behind having earlier missed the opportunity to become the fastest Test century scorer for England by a single ball.

Gilbert Jessop - who still holds that record after his ton off 75 balls against Australia at the Oval in 1902 - will sleep easily tonight... particularly as he died in 1955.

In the absence of Bairstow, Stokes himself stepped up and ended up hitting an unbeaten 75 off 70 balls.

Indeed, at 5.06pm - just an hour after tea - the required rate had been reduced, rather ridiculously, to below one run per over. 

During the closing stages of this incredible chase, England remained fluent, if not quite as fierce as when Bairstow was at the crease - and wi
cketkeeper Ben Foakes played calmly in protection of England's long tail. 

Appropriately, though, it was skipper Stokes - with a magnificent cut through extra cover - who secured successive excellent wins under his short tutelage.

Of course, Bairstow will get the plaudits - and deservedly so for his unforgettable knock.

But, while former captain Joe Root is still a massive key part to this team with the bat, there is little chance under his leadership that England will have made such a concerted effort to go after 299 in 72 overs.

The evidence of that came just 12 months ago in June 2021, also against New Zealand, when England crawled to 170-3 off 70 overs having been set a target of 273.

Former skipper Nasser Hussain bemoaned the total lack of intent shown from England who failed to win either home series last year.

Hard on the back of a difficult summer came another away Ashes mauling - and a miserable series defeat in the West Indies when, after two draws, England were bowled out for 120 in their second innings in Barbados.

Consequently, ahead of the first Test at Lord's in this series, England had won only one of their past 17 Test matches in a sequence dating back to February 2021.

Root, with huge regret and frustration, stepped down from the position of skipper - and he can be forever proud that he never let his own standards drop. Ever.

The 31-year-old regularly produced his best with the bat while captain - a rare thing indeed, considering many of his predecessors have struggled with the additional pressure automatically piled upon them by the position.

Moreover, Root was badly undermined by a lack of support from the English Cricket Board (ECB) which, quite frankly, fell apart during his period as captain. 

By the end of the tour of the Caribbean in the spring, rudderless England were without
a full-time chairman, a full-time director of cricket, or a full-time head coach. 

Furthermore, Root had to deal with COVID-19 bubbles - months of uncomfortable isolation as international cricket did its best to stage matches in an alien world.

In short, although the Yorkshireman clearly lacked a killer instinct tactically, he also got a pretty raw deal - and it was perhaps little wonder that his tenure finished on a low ebb.

By contrast, New Zealand came into this series as the current World Test champions after beating India in the Final in June 2021.

However, the Black Caps played nothing like world champions with the bat in the first Test as Durham fast-bowler Matty Potts took 4-13 on debut in their first-innings total of 132.

Old habits die hard for England, though - and the hosts were bowled out themselves for 141 before lunch on the second day for a meagre lead of nine runs.

Just after lunch, New Zealand were 56-4 in their second innings and a two-day Test became a distinct possibility.

But Daryl Mitchell (108) and wicketkeeper Tom Blundell (96) combined in a stand of 195 for the fifth wicket and, at 251-4, the match had threatened to drift away from England.

Then Stuart Broad produced one of *those* special overs to account for Mitchell and bowl Kyle Jamieson for a golden duck.

In between, the hapless Colin de Grandhomme - who would later dismiss Root off a no-ball and suffer an injury - was also out from his first ball, run out by Ollie Pope after dozing outside of his crease following a lbw appeal. It was a team hat-trick, if you like. 

All of a sudden, New Zealand had gone from 251-4 to 251-7 and, although the evergreen Tim Southee attempted to hold England up for a bit, the Kiwis' tail was wrapped up by lunch.

Faced with a fourth-innings target of 277, this looked like a stern task for an England team so prone to collapsing under pressure - and they swiftly fell to 69-4.

By then, though, the irrepressible Root was at the crease and set about constructing a match-winning innings of 115 which brought him his 10,000th Test run and his 26th Test century.

Root was ably assisted by Stokes (54) and Foakes (32 not out) as England ended up making remarkably light work of the chase, especially considering this is a team which is not used to winning.

In the second Test this week, England again won in the second half of the match after both teams' first innings were pretty much even - but the similarities ended there.

New Zealand, in fact, carried a narrow lead of 14 runs after their mammoth total of 553 in which Mitchell (190) and Blundell (106) again did the damage.

In reply, the struggling Zak Crawley was out to a beauty of a ball from Trent Boult - but the rest of the England top order stood firm.

Alex Lees saw off the new ball and made 67 while new number three Pope made a magnificent 145 in a stand of 187 with Root for the third wicket.

Stokes thumped 46 off 33 balls before a more considered approach by Root, with an outstanding 176, and Foakes (56) pushed England beyond 500.

Their two wickets left the tail exposed - and, having resumed on 473-5, England added only 66 more runs before being dismissed for 539.

Usually 553 against 539 on first innings would have signalled a certain draw - but both teams had batted so positively that there was still the best part of two days to play.

New Zealand did not exactly struggle in their second innings of 284 - seven players made double figures - but, critically, none of them managed to progress to a three-figure score.

In reply, England initially struggled to combine keeping up with the required rate and keeping wickets - and looked in trouble at 56-3 when Root gave a caught-and-bowled to Boult with a leading edge for just three.

But then Bairstow came to the fore to win match and series with one of most magnificent innings in Test history.


THE 10000 CLUB

Runs100s50sAvg.
1Sachin Tendulkar1989-2013 India15,9215168 53.78
2Ricky Ponting1995-2012Australia13,378416251.85
3Jacques Kallis1995-2013South Africa 13,289455555.37
4Rahul Dravid1996-2012India13,288366352.31
5Alastair Cook2006-2018England12,472335745.35
6Kumar Sangakkara2000-2015Sri Lanka12,400385257.40
7Brian Lara1990-2006West Indies11,953344852.88
8Shivnarine Chanderpaul1994-2015West Indies11,867306651.37
9Mahela Jayawardene1997-2014Sri Lanka11,814345049.84
10Allan Border1978-1994Australia11,174276350.56
11Steve Waugh1985-2004Australia10,927325051.06
12Joe Root2012-2022* England10,194*275349.97
13Sunil Gavaskar1971-1987India10,122344551.12
14Younis Khan2000-2017Pakistan10,099343352.05