Premier League Fans’ January Transfer Window Wish Lists

 Clockwise from far left: James Maddison, Paulo Dybala, Michy Batshuayi, Leigh Griffiths, Emil Bohinen, Nathan Ferguson, Sam McCallum, Wilfried Zaha and João Pedro. Photograph: Getty Images, Reuters and Shutterstock
Clockwise from far left: James Maddison, Paulo Dybala, Michy Batshuayi, Leigh Griffiths, Emil Bohinen, Nathan Ferguson, Sam McCallum, Wilfried Zaha and João Pedro. Photograph: Getty Images, Reuters and Shutterstock
TT

Premier League Fans’ January Transfer Window Wish Lists

 Clockwise from far left: James Maddison, Paulo Dybala, Michy Batshuayi, Leigh Griffiths, Emil Bohinen, Nathan Ferguson, Sam McCallum, Wilfried Zaha and João Pedro. Photograph: Getty Images, Reuters and Shutterstock
Clockwise from far left: James Maddison, Paulo Dybala, Michy Batshuayi, Leigh Griffiths, Emil Bohinen, Nathan Ferguson, Sam McCallum, Wilfried Zaha and João Pedro. Photograph: Getty Images, Reuters and Shutterstock

Arsenal

Forgive the cynicism, but it’s hard not to think Arsenal’s suits went for Mikel Arteta because, unlike some of the more experienced options, he was happy to take the job without demanding a massive war chest up front. So, while the squad is gossamer thin and injury-struck, it won’t be a surprise if not much is spent next month. Especially since Emery seemingly wasted £72m on Pépé – that experience suggests the board are unlikely to risk £80m on another show pony in Palace’s Wilfried Zaha. Mikel might well be forced to rely on kids instead, hoping Saka, Maitland-Niles, Smith-Rowe, Nelson and Willock will flourish.

Aston Villa

I’d be surprised if we didn’t spend heavily: these owners aren’t the types to die wondering. Despite my faith in Wesley we clearly need alternatives up front: he can’t play every second, and an ageing sniffer would be good off the bench. And while we have lots of defensive midfield options, nobody has really convinced. Sadly we’ll also need an answer to the McGinn problem: he’s out for three months.

Bournemouth

A strong centre-half to work closely with Nathan Aké would be great – someone like Ben White from Leeds. A striker would also be welcome – Chelsea’s Michy Batshuayi, for example – but the noises coming from the club suggest there won’t be big moves made in January. Instead it sounds like it’ll be more a case of trying to hold on to Aké and Callum Wilson. We’re resigned to losing Ryan Fraser sooner or later.

Brighton

Above all else we would love Aaron Mooy to stay – he’s still on a season‑long loan from Huddersfield as it stands. Another striker would be good, and we’ve also been linked with Emil Bohinen, a 20-year-old Norwegian winger from Stabæk, who sounds like a real prospect.

Burnley

The rule at our club is to not expect too much from transfer windows, then you won’t be disappointed. There are areas where we need work: a good right-back to start competing with Phil Bardsley and Matt Lowton, plus a strong and powerful midfielder. But whether we can find either with the money we’re able to pay remains the big question. We’ve learned not to get too excited about transfers, especially in the January window when there’s not a great deal of business done more widely. All that said, if Santa could leave us a couple of late presents, they’d be gratefully accepted.

Chelsea

Frank Lampard dropped hints last week about squad-building: it has to happen. We need a left-back – I’d be happy with Aké returning from Bournemouth – and another striker so Tammy Abraham doesn’t burn out. Olivier Giroud has been written off and Michy Batshuayi isn’t good enough, bar a solid five‑minute cameo every now and then. Another goalscoring midfielder/winger would help, too. It’s great to have so many kids pushing for places, but you still need quality and experience to challenge for trophies. Roman, get your chequebook out.

Crystal Palace

After being injury-free for most of the season, we’ve been struck down by a huge number of long-term knocks that have thrown into sharp focus the immediate needs for a left-back and a right-back. Nathan Ferguson from West Brom has been mentioned, but I’d expect us to try to pick up an overseas bargain. We lack options on the flanks, too, so another winger may be targeted. And we still, of course, need to add a striker who can score goals – relying on Jordan Ayew for the rest of the season would be another giant gamble. Whether we take a chance and spend big on someone like Fyodor Chalov or look to get Rhian Brewster or Michy Batshuayi on loan remains to be seen.

Everton

Ancelotti’s big overhaul will surely wait until the summer, but it’s still the case that we need a proven scorer, another central midfielder and a central defender – the spine of the team has been lacking and the problems weren’t addressed during the close season. Maybe we’ll just see a loan or two in January: Marcel Brands is a reluctant spender.

Leicester

The first XI is performing like a dream – so it’s about adding depth and options for us. Another winger would be nice: Harvey Barnes and Demarai Gray don’t have enough to carry the workload on their own. And a reliable scorer would be appreciated too – just in case Vardy gets injured.

Liverpool

We’ve already signed Japan midfielder Takumi Minamino from Salzburg, who looked great against us in the Champions League – and scored at Anfield. It’s no secret we’ve been looking for a left-back, brought into focus recently when Robertson picked up an injury. There’s paper talk we’re interested in Mathieu Gonçalves from Toulouse, but he’s young and inexperienced. We might be better off with 19-year-old Sam McCallum, who is at Coventry and also being touted.

Manchester City

We need a centre-half, but I really don’t see it happening. It’d most likely have to be a deal that’s already been earmarked for the summer, but is capable of being moved forward, just as Aymeric Laporte’s was thanks to his release clause. On Laporte, thankfully it sounds as if he’ll be back fit by the end of January, just in time for the Champions League knockouts. But either way, we’re still short after Kompany’s departure.

Manchester United

A good window would involve James Maddison, a player who’d really add the guile and inventiveness we’re lacking. We should have signed him in the summer – he’d cost double now what we would have paid then. Erling Braut Haaland sounds like he’s on his way from Red Bull Salzburg – he should bring variety to our attack as a big, robust and remarkably mobile target man. [Haaland in fact joined Borussia Dortmund on Sunday] And swapping Paul Pogba for PSG’s Marco Verratti would be a real lift: he’s the all-round midfielder that we have been after for so long.

What do we need? Just a striker who can score goals – maybe someone like Joselu, who we sold in July and is now a star in La Liga … Our forward line has been under‑strength for years and this hasn’t remotely been addressed in the last two windows, despite us making two record signings. It’s telling that we’re relying on our defenders to carry our goal threat.

Norwich

We won’t be spending big. That much we do know, but given that we’ve operated for much of the season with one fit, bona fide centre-back, Ben Godfrey, who spent the festive buildup with his knee in a brace, I wouldn’t be surprised to see a central defender on Daniel Farke/Stuart Webber’s list. Hopefully they will also look to address the physicality, or lack of it, in the centre of the pitch. We ask a lot of our centre-mid pairing but too often they’ve been bullied, so a technician who can also mix it would be my wish. And, of course, everyone needs another scorer ….

Sheffield United

We’re in such a strong position for this season that we can afford to try to sign players for the future rather than ones that need to make an instant impact. Backup for George Baldock and Oli Norwood, along with the next Chris Basham, are probably our top priorities.

Southampton

A centre-back who can actually win a header would be nice – is that too much to ask? Also a right-back – Cédric is going through the motions ahead of his contract expiring and Yan Valery’s career has gone into reverse gear. If there was time and space I’d also add a central midfielder with a bit of actual bite, rather than just “get booked because you were the wrong side AGAIN” cynicism.

Tottenham

It’ll be interesting to see what type of player-pressies are on Mourinho’s post-Xmas list and how he responds when Daniel Levy refuses to grant his wishes. A recent poll revealed the player Spurs fans most want is Argentinian striker Paulo Dybala, who almost signed in the summer. No denying his qualities but he says he’s content at Juventus and the image-rights issues remain. Adama Traoré of Wolves might be a more realistic and cheaper attacking option and is clearly somebody the manager respects judging from the choreographed rotational fouling he was subjected to at Molineux earlier in the month. Another rumoured Serie A aspiration is centre-back Kalidou Koulibaly of Napoli but he doesn’t match the club’s signings profile (too old and too expensive) – and it’s full-backs we really need. Ricardo Pereira would fit the bill. As for Gareth Bale ... think more Marouane Fellaini unless Levy pulls off some crazy swap-plus-cash deal with Eriksen.

Watford

The near legendary Brazilian teenage striker João Pedro will arrive with all sorts of lunatic expectations, but another attacking weapon in the continuing absence of Danny Welbeck would be a plus. A big ugly centre-back wouldn’t hurt either.

West Ham

We need a box-to-box midfielder who might eventually replace Mark Noble. A new reserve keeper, too, for obvious reasons, along with a striker to back up Haller and Antonio. On top of all that, we need a full-back and centre-back to provide competition in defence, and an Adama Traoré-style winger. Oh, and we could do with Diangana returning from his West Brom loan, too.

Wolves

Nuno likes to have a tight-knit squad but has admitted we need new signings. This is a season when we could establish ourselves, both domestically and in Europe, so, while it’s a notoriously difficult time to sign players, a central defender – Kristoffer Ajer? – a central midfielder – Franck Kessié? – and a winger – Hwang Hee-chan? – are areas that would add depth and quality to our ever-improving squad.

The Guardian Sport



From Rocafonda to the World Cup: Lamine Yamal’s Meteoric Rise

Football - Euro 2024 - Quarter-final - Spain v Germany - Stuttgart Arena, Stuttgart, Germany - July 5, 2024 Spain's Lamine Yamal celebrates after Dani Olmo scores their first goal. (Reuters)
Football - Euro 2024 - Quarter-final - Spain v Germany - Stuttgart Arena, Stuttgart, Germany - July 5, 2024 Spain's Lamine Yamal celebrates after Dani Olmo scores their first goal. (Reuters)
TT

From Rocafonda to the World Cup: Lamine Yamal’s Meteoric Rise

Football - Euro 2024 - Quarter-final - Spain v Germany - Stuttgart Arena, Stuttgart, Germany - July 5, 2024 Spain's Lamine Yamal celebrates after Dani Olmo scores their first goal. (Reuters)
Football - Euro 2024 - Quarter-final - Spain v Germany - Stuttgart Arena, Stuttgart, Germany - July 5, 2024 Spain's Lamine Yamal celebrates after Dani Olmo scores their first goal. (Reuters)

Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo will play at a record sixth World Cup in 2026, but years from now the tournament may instead be remembered as Lamine Yamal's first.

From the concrete square in Mataro the Spanish 18-year-old used to play in, to the biggest stages in world football, his rise has been dazzling.

His uncle Abdul Nasraoui used to keep a small replica World Cup trophy in his bakery in the humble neighborhood of Rocafonda, a 20-mile (32-kilometer) crawl up the Catalan coast from Barcelona, telling people it was for when his nephew wins it.

Abdul had the trophy before Yamal even debuted for Spain, because he knew something special was coming. Many claim they did, in Rocafonda, but importantly for Barca it was Jordi Roura who got there first.

Alerted to Yamal by a scout, Barcelona's then youth football chief Roura and close colleague Aureli Altimira pounced. In the chaos of a trial match, Lamine stood out.

"We were there with Aureli and at the beginning we saw him and he looked a bit odd, kind of scrawny, he moved a bit strangely, and we said, 'hmm let's see...'," Roura tells AFP.

"Then once they start playing, it's difficult, right? Because imagine 20 kids of seven, eight years old, all chasing the ball.

"Even so, Lamine would sometimes do something where you'd go, 'Damn!'. Instead of just running after the ball, sometimes he would find space, wait, look for his left foot, execute really quickly."

One attribute, honed on the square where if your feet aren't fast enough to swerve defenders you can end up on the concrete, marked out little Lamine.

"Dribbling might be the most innate technical action, right?" says Roura. "It's hard to train a dribbler. He had that. He would feint, do things which made you say 'wow'.

"We thought this kid had something special, even if he looked a bit slight, and decided to sign him."

Negotiations were quick with Lamine's father Mounir Nasraoui from Morocco, and his mother Sheila Ebana, from Equatorial Guinea.

He was a quiet, even shy child, who loved to play football and spent a lot of time with his paternal grandmother, Fatima.

She was the first of the family to move to Spain, arriving on a ferry from Tangier in 1990 and slowly bringing across her children in the following years.

Fatima settled in Rocafonda and remains there, although Mounir, after being stabbed during an altercation in 2024, has since relocated to the upmarket Barcelona neighborhood of Sarria.

After Lamine's parents split up when he was three, he also lived with his mother in Roca del Valles, north of Mataro, but Rocafonda was always home.

It is represented in his goal celebration, using his hands to show the numbers 304, the last digits of the neighborhood's postcode.

Now even in the more well-to-do parts of Mataro the number appears.

Rocafonda is north-east of the elegant center, a neighborhood with a negative reputation for crime and poverty, although now it is famous for being where Lamine came from.

Glance down the right street and you can catch a narrow glimpse of sweet Mediterranean blue.

The winger and his father are spotted less frequently there now, but the games go on, with players duking it out in front of a mural of Lamine, painted in 2025.

"With all these great players... they're capable of doing the same, or more than they did when they were children, and that's very difficult, very rare, and that's why they're the chosen ones," said Roura.

"(Lamine) enjoys playing, and I think that even when he was very little, when the challenge was greater, when a game was harder, that's when he liked it the most, you know?"

- 'No limits' -

Not everyone has the accuracy of the neighborhood's "idol" and an "example" as youngsters sitting and waiting for a chance to play describe him.

The ball is lashed high over the fence that divides the concrete pitch from the road, to howls of frustration.

The kids call to a passer-by, before one player zips past on an electric scooter to retrieve it.

But for the interception, it may have rolled down the road and past the bar run by Lamine's uncle, "Familia LY 304", since he gave up his bakery.

Over the past three years Abdul has answered plenty of questions about Lamine, but with concerns over the winger's fitness heading into the World Cup, he doesn't feel like speaking for now.

On a shelf behind the bar, sits his replica trophy. Abdul's dream, just three years after Lamine made his professional debut aged just 15, could come true remarkably quickly.

"When you see the resume he already has at 18, it's scary, so what this kid can achieve has no limits," added Roura.

Yamal was still studying for his exams during Spain's run to Euro 2024 glory, where he captured the world's attention with a sensational strike against France.

That moment is memorialized on one wall of the bar, along with others from the winger's short yet glittering career for club and country, along with two framed shirts.

Nearly three decades after arriving from Morocco, Abdul is still happy working. He sits and eats a few mouthfuls of vegetables before a shout comes from the kitchen and he is on his feet again, bringing dishes, olive oil and bread to customers.

"Ojala -- I hope -- ojala," he says on the prospect of Lamine bringing the real thing back to Rocafonda. "If we win the World Cup, then I'll talk."


AI Unearths Football Talent Beyond Scouts’ Radar

Brazilian football player Leonardo Veiga is seen on the screen of the Foot Bao app, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on April 22, 2026. (AFP)
Brazilian football player Leonardo Veiga is seen on the screen of the Foot Bao app, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on April 22, 2026. (AFP)
TT

AI Unearths Football Talent Beyond Scouts’ Radar

Brazilian football player Leonardo Veiga is seen on the screen of the Foot Bao app, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on April 22, 2026. (AFP)
Brazilian football player Leonardo Veiga is seen on the screen of the Foot Bao app, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on April 22, 2026. (AFP)

Brazilian teenager Leo Veiga had almost given up on his dream of becoming a professional footballer when artificial intelligence helped him secure a spot in the youth ranks of an Italian club.

Tech companies promising to "democratize" football are launching apps that allow young players to upload videos recorded on their phone of them showcasing their ball skills.

AI is then used to analyze and score their performance, which is sent to scouts and clubs.

The 18-year-old Veiga was stuck playing for a small club in his home state of Santa Catarina in southern Brazil when he discovered one of these apps, from Swiss company Footbao.

A YouTube video offered the highest-scoring users to train for a few days with the Italian club Lecce. Veiga was selected and caught the eye of a scout, who decided to take a chance on him.

"AI opened a new door," he told AFP from Italy, where he is now under contract with the youth academy of the club Spezia, which plays in Italy's second division.

"I thought, 'I'm going to download the app and give it a try. If nothing happens, it doesn't matter because nothing else is working out for me. But what if something does happen?'" he said.

Footbao works with videos from matches and training sessions, while another tech company in the field, German firm CUJU, uses videos of drills suggested to users through the app.

- Untapped potential -

Around 120,000 players have used the Footbao app, most of them in Brazil, the world's largest exporter of football talent.

"There are probably between 14,000 and 15,000 players with the potential to join clubs or academies," chief executive Nick Rappolt told AFP.

The company, founded in 2023, also operates in Colombia and Argentina and plans to expand into other South American countries.

According to Rappolt, AI can "democratize" football by helping identify talent that lies outside the radar of major development centers.

CUJU's app, meanwhile, was launched last year and has been downloaded around 160,000 times.

"Professional clubs have huge databases, but they mostly contain players who have already been scouted. There is no reliable data on talent at the earliest stages," Sven Muller, CUJU's marketing director, told AFP.

The goal, he said, is to turn "simple videos recorded on a phone" into "reliable performance data."

- Boost to women's football -

In Sao Paulo, Marcela Geremias de Lima repeatedly kicks a ball against a wall, one of the exercises proposed by CUJU, which focuses on technical skills such as ball control and speed.

After using the app, Marcela was invited to youth tournaments organized by the company in front of scouts.

She eventually earned a place in the Under-15 side of Corinthians, a powerhouse of South American women's football with six Copa Libertadores titles.

The exercises "help you improve" and mean "you can be seen from anywhere in the world," she said.

Brazil will host the 2027 Women's World Cup, an event that could help drive the recruitment of young female players.

The Brazilian club Santos, associated with star players like Pele and Neymar, in December announced a deal with Footbao to help identify young prospects.

It is a way to "expand our search for athletes," club president Marcelo Teixeira said.

Top prospects are usually recruited from a very young age, but AI can give a boost to players who might otherwise go unnoticed, according to Joao Paulo Sampaio, head of youth development at Palmeiras, where international talents such as Endrick and Estevao came through the ranks.

"I receive between 30 and 40 videos every day," Sampaio told AFP, adding that tech companies that carry out "a first round of pre-selection" represent "a new tool," although the Sao Paulo club does not currently work with these firms.


For Roland Garros Youth, Quarter-Final Moment of Truth

Rafael Jodar of Spain during his Men's 4th round match against Pablo Carreno Busta of Spain at the French Open Grand Slam tennis tournament at Roland Garros in Paris, France, 31 May 2026. (EPA)
Rafael Jodar of Spain during his Men's 4th round match against Pablo Carreno Busta of Spain at the French Open Grand Slam tennis tournament at Roland Garros in Paris, France, 31 May 2026. (EPA)
TT

For Roland Garros Youth, Quarter-Final Moment of Truth

Rafael Jodar of Spain during his Men's 4th round match against Pablo Carreno Busta of Spain at the French Open Grand Slam tennis tournament at Roland Garros in Paris, France, 31 May 2026. (EPA)
Rafael Jodar of Spain during his Men's 4th round match against Pablo Carreno Busta of Spain at the French Open Grand Slam tennis tournament at Roland Garros in Paris, France, 31 May 2026. (EPA)

The young kings of tennis have been deposed and as the French Open reaches its quarter-finals on Tuesday, the sport's even younger princes will be strutting on the clay.

Between them 24-year-old Jannik Sinner, and 23-year-old Carlos Alcaraz have won the last nine majors. But the Spaniard is injured and Sinner could not stand the Paris heat and lost in the second round.

In their place are three striplings playing a first Grand Slam quarter-final.

The next in the line of Spanish clay monsters, 19-year-old Rafael Jodar, faces the top remaining man, Alexander Zverev.

The honor of ending the first day when all the main-draw matches can be fitted onto Court Philippe Chatrier, has been handed to 20-year-old Czech Jakub Mensik and the phenomenon of the tournament, 19-year-old Brazilian Joao Fonseca.

The third 19-year-old in quarter-final action on Tuesday is, by comparison, a grizzled veteran of Grand Slam late rounds.

Eighth-seeded Mirra Andreeva will be playing her third straight Roland Garros quarter-final when she faces Romanian Sorana Cirstea.

Of all the majors, the French Open most favors young men. Of the five youngest men to have won majors in the Open era, Michael Chang, Mats Wilander, Rafael Nadal and Bjorn Borg all did it at Roland Garros.

Of 16 women who have won majors in their teens, Monica Seles, Arantxa Sanchez Vicario, Steffi Graf, Iga Swiatek, Chris Evert and Evonne Goolagong all did so in Paris.

Chang and Wilander were at Roland Garros on Monday for an annual reunion of former champions.

The American, who won aged 17 in 1989 and now coaches rising American Learner Tien, said youth gave advantages.

"I think it can be easier on some aspects if you're not dwelling too much on it," he said before adding that for some the spotlight was already bright.

"I think there's also a lot of pressure for some of these young guys because there are expectations. That doesn't necessarily give them freedom to go out there and play.

"When I was 17, nobody expected me to win. So I had the freedom to be the underdog... in the second week."

Wilander, who won the first of his three French Open crowns at 17 in 1982, was clear the youngsters had a mental edge.

"You find me a 19-year-old that does have the fear. None of them do," the Swede said.

"No pressure, no nerves. I don't think, I know."

"They don't have any history of losing," the Swede said. "So you're losing the quarter-finals? It's not gonna hurt, and then they realize that it hurts to lose. And then suddenly things change."

Wilander is a fan of Fonseca who is "going to be a great player".

Fonseca came from two sets down to beat first Dino Prizmic and then tennis titan Novak Djokovic, before conquering Casper Ruud.

"It's great to have new generations," the Brazilian declared after beating Djokovic.

"The next generation is doing pretty well. Not only Jodar and Mensik and me, but also Learner, (Alex) Michelsen. There is (Martin) Landaluce... It's good to have them around, pushing me for sure, doing some great battles."

- 'Margin of development huge' -

Chang has been impressed by Jodar.

"On the clay, he just took off," said Chang.

"He's just he's just riding a wave of great tennis right now. I don't think he's thinking a whole lot. He's going out there and playing some great tennis."

Jodar is full of confidence.

"I am trying to develop that game," he said after reaching the last eight. "But, overall, I think I still have a margin of development huge, you know?"

The other match of the day changes the focus as 31-year-old Elina Svitolina takes on 23-year-old compatriot Marta Kostyuk.

Svitolina said that she believed two Ukrainians had never met so late in a Slam.

Kostyuk said the older player had a lot to do with that happening.

"She's a legend of Ukrainian tennis... she's paved the way."