Scattergun Signings, Lazy Thinking, Now the Drop – What Next for Fulham?

Fulham’s Tom Cairney looks dejected as they slip to defeat against Watford. Photograph: Peter Cziborra/Action Images via Reuters
Fulham’s Tom Cairney looks dejected as they slip to defeat against Watford. Photograph: Peter Cziborra/Action Images via Reuters
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Scattergun Signings, Lazy Thinking, Now the Drop – What Next for Fulham?

Fulham’s Tom Cairney looks dejected as they slip to defeat against Watford. Photograph: Peter Cziborra/Action Images via Reuters
Fulham’s Tom Cairney looks dejected as they slip to defeat against Watford. Photograph: Peter Cziborra/Action Images via Reuters

Let’s start with the goalkeepers. Marcus Bettinelli was Fulham’s No 1 during last season’s promotion challenge. He had waited patiently for his chance and started when they beat Aston Villa in the Championship play-off final. He was a key member of a winning team; the shirt was his to lose. Then they signed two experienced Spaniards just before the start of the new campaign.

Fabri was the first to arrive, joining from Besiktas for £5m, and Sergio Rico followed him after signing on loan from Sevilla on the final day of the transfer window. Two days before their opening Premier League game, Fulham had three senior goalkeepers. All they had to do next was work out who was first-choice. No sweat, right?

Maybe not. Bettinelli was not on the bench when Fulham lost to Crystal Palace and Tottenham. Fabri started both games, but the defeats convinced Slavisa Jokanovic to drop him. Not for Rico, though. That would have been too logical. Instead Bettinelli came in from the cold, played in the 4-2 win over Burnley and he kept his spot until the 4-2 defeat by Cardiff on 20 October, at which point he made way for Rico. Fabri, meanwhile, has not played a minute since 18 August.

Confused? Don’t worry. Common sense went out the window at Fulham a long time ago. It has been a mess from start to finish and the saddest part for this soft and naive side, whose fate was sealed by the 4-1 hammering at Watford, is that relegation seemed so avoidable. Unlike Huddersfield, relegated last Saturday, Fulham had money to burn. Everything seemed positive when they spent more than £100m on seven players and made five loan additions last summer. They never imagined they would go down with a whimper at the start of April.

Yet the arrival of 12 players disrupted a young team’s confidence and cohesion. Stalwarts were sidelined but none of the newcomers impressed. Jean Michaël Seri, signed for £25m from Nice, has not been up for the fight in midfield. André-Frank Zambo Anguissa, who cost a record £30m from Marseille, has made 11 league starts, scored no goals, made no assists and received one red card. Maxime Le Marchand has been a disaster in defense. Joe Bryan has toiled at left-back. Alfie Mawson has struggled with injuries.

Of the loanees, only Arsenal’s Calum Chambers has emerged with credit after battling hard in defensive midfield. Timothy Fosu-Mensah is unlikely to be part of the Ole Gunnar Solskjær revolution at Manchester United. Luciano Vietto failed to adapt after joining from Atlético Madrid and André Schürrle will not be missed when he returns to Borussia Dortmund.

Fulham never looked ready for the hard graft required to stay in the Premier League. They never earned the right to use such open tactics. It is possible for promoted sides to play expansively, but Fulham were too much of a mish-mash to make it work.

An inability to perform the basics made them easy to beat and Jokanovic, who was unwilling to compromise on his ideals, became despondent and desperate. By November he was openly questioning his team’s attitude. Fulham responded by sacking him.

Yet replacing Jokanovic with the “risk-free” Claudio Ranieri merely compounded the blunders. His reputation as a miracle worker was built on winning the Premier League with Leicester in 2016, but nothing suggested he was capable of pulling a team out of the mire. Appointing him was the result of more lazy thinking and Fulham continued to make errors in the January transfer window. Havard Nordtveit has made four starts, Lazar Markovic has made one substitute appearance and Ryan Babel has three goals in 11 games.

Divisions appeared because of Ranieri’s tedious football, ruining the mood in the home stands, where disgruntlement at expensive ticket prices led to a “Stop The Greed” protest during last Saturday’s defeat by Manchester City. Supporters were alarmed to see the Italian ostracise Tom Cairney, so instrumental in the No 10 role last season, and Ryan Sessegnon, who is bound to leave in the summer given that he only has a year left on his contract.

Ranieri, who won three of his 17 games, was replaced by Scott Parker in February. Damningly, he had not come close to fixing the awful defending. They have the leakiest defense in the league, having conceded 76 goals in 33 games, and have rolled over too often.

The three goals Fulham conceded in 12 second-half minutes against Watford summed up their plight. “We just cannot weather a storm,” said Parker, who has lost his first five games in caretaker charge. He has another five to show that he deserves the job on a permanent basis.

Yet the damage was done long before he took over and Fulham’s task now is to discover some humility and regain their identity. Shahid Khan, the owner, and his influential son Tony must dispense with the scattergun approach. It would help if whoever leads them into next season knows who to pick in goal.

(The Guardian)



Sublime Sinner Secures Safe Passage at US Open as Swiatek Rolls On

Italy's Jannik Sinner plays a return to Australia's Christopher O'Connell during their men's singles third round match on day six of the US Open tennis tournament at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York City, on August 31, 2024. (AFP)
Italy's Jannik Sinner plays a return to Australia's Christopher O'Connell during their men's singles third round match on day six of the US Open tennis tournament at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York City, on August 31, 2024. (AFP)
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Sublime Sinner Secures Safe Passage at US Open as Swiatek Rolls On

Italy's Jannik Sinner plays a return to Australia's Christopher O'Connell during their men's singles third round match on day six of the US Open tennis tournament at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York City, on August 31, 2024. (AFP)
Italy's Jannik Sinner plays a return to Australia's Christopher O'Connell during their men's singles third round match on day six of the US Open tennis tournament at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York City, on August 31, 2024. (AFP)

Jannik Sinner avoided the fate of his top rivals, reaching the fourth round of the US Open while fellow top seed Iga Swiatek gained momentum in her quest for a sixth Grand Slam title after a pep talk from Serena Williams on Saturday.

With defending champion Novak Djokovic forced out by a shock loss to Alexei Popyrin in the third round on Friday and another title contender, Carlos Alcaraz, sent crashing by Botic van de Zandschulp in round two a day earlier, all eyes were on Sinner.

The Italian, who has managed the intense scrutiny following a doping controversy in the build-up to the tournament, thumped Christopher O'Connell 6-1 6-4 6-2 to underline his credentials as the outright favorite at the year's final major.

"This sport is unpredictable, no? Whenever you drop a little bit of your level, you know, if it's mental, if it's tennis-wise or physical, at the end it has a huge impact on the result," Sinner said about the exits of Djokovic and Alcaraz.

"Both opponents who they lost against played incredible tennis. And it happens.

"So I just watch on my side what I have to do, you know, that I guess I've done, and then we'll see what I can do."

Up next for the Australian Open champion is Tommy Paul, who is among a group of players keen to end a 21-year American wait for a homegrown major winner, since Andy Roddick claimed the title in New York.

Paul, the 14th seed, recovered from a first-set wobble to overcome Canadian Gabriel Diallo 6-7(5) 6-3 6-1 7-6(3) and hoped to counter Sinner's "bang-bang tennis" when they clash.

"He's probably the best ball striker on tour and I'm not," Paul said. "I don't want to go toe to toe just banging on the baseline with him. I want to try and mix things up."

Paul's compatriot and sixth seed Jessica Pegula advanced in the women's draw with a 6-3 6-3 win over Jessica Bouzas Maneiro, but Ashlyn Krueger fell 6-1 6-1 to Liudmila Samsonova.

‘Positive energy’

French Open champion Swiatek later swatted aside Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 6-4 6-2 with a near-flawless performance after a chat with 23-times major winner Williams, who returned to the US Open as a fan having stepped away from tennis in 2022.

"It was really nice to see her. She has a lot of positive energy. It's nice that she came onsite and she was chatting with the players," a star-struck Swiatek said.

"It was nice that she approach me, because I wouldn't, for sure, find the courage to do that if it was the other way round. But, yeah, she's really nice and really positive.

"I'm happy she's following tennis and my game, because she told me she's cheering for me."

Roland Garros and Wimbledon runner-up Jasmine Paolini beat Yulia Putintseva 6-3 6-4 as the diminutive Italian continued to fly under the radar, but she could face a big hurdle with Czech Karolina Muchova up next.

Muchova, who is rediscovering her best form after 10 months out with a wrist injury, outclassed Anastasia Potapova 6-4 6-2.

Australian Alex de Minaur's injury problems are more recent, but the 10th seed shrugged off a frustrating hip issue that has dogged him since Wimbledon to outlast Briton Dan Evans 6-3 6-7 (4-7) 6-0 6-0.

Evans beat Karen Khachanov in the longest US Open match of the professional era on Tuesday at five hours and 35 minutes but finally ran out of gas.

Caroline Wozniacki showed she had plenty left in the tank since her comeback in 2023 after a three-year break following the births of her two children as the 34-year-old Dane eased past Jessika Ponchet 6-3 6-2.

Briton Jack Draper, who is carrying the torch for his nation following the retirement of Andy Murray this summer, beat Van de Zandschulp 6-3 6-4 6-2.

Daniil Medvedev, the only former New York champion left in the men's draw, breezed past Flavio Cobolli 6-3 6-4 6-3 and set his sights on going all the way, as he did in 2021.

"It's the only Grand Slam where I have that chance," fifth seed Medvedev said.

"I for sure didn't expect to have this in the fourth round when Novak and Carlos are here. It's a fun feeling from one side but from the other side it's a new tournament.

"I need to play my best to try to win it again."