The Premier League Outcasts who are Flourishing across Europe this Season

Florian Thauvin. (AFP)
Florian Thauvin. (AFP)
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The Premier League Outcasts who are Flourishing across Europe this Season

Florian Thauvin. (AFP)
Florian Thauvin. (AFP)

Football clubs can be quick to write off foreign imports as flops if they do not settle into their new surroundings immediately. One only needs to look at the two standout candidates for the top individual awards in England this season to recognize that players often deserve a second shot at success.

Mohamed Salah and Kevin De Bruyne have shown that succeeding at a club often comes down to more than talent. Players can suffer from bad timing, working with managers who do not bring out the best in them or just arriving at a club too early in their development to make an immediate impact. Indeed, numerous players who have been cast aside by Premier League clubs are now flourishing following abroad.

Lyon have won their last seven league games to take second spot in Ligue 1 from Monaco largely due to the efforts of two former Premier League players. Bertrand Traoré, once of Chelsea, has scored in four consecutive matches for the club, but Memphis Depay has been even better – the former Manchester United forward has scored in all seven of those victories.

There were great expectations for Depay when he arrived at Old Trafford and inherited the famous No7 shirt in 2015 but he failed to deliver for a number of reasons. He wasn’t really given the regular playing time he needed to acclimatize to the pace of the English game under fellow Dutchman Louis van Gaal and the pressure ultimately proved too much.

Out of the spotlight in France, Depay has been sensational of late, recently becoming one of only nine players in Europe’s big leagues to reach double figures for both goals and assists this season. He has scored 16 goals and provided 12 assists in Ligue 1 alone and, remarkably, has had a hand in 12 goals in his last six appearances. Depay, now 24, is once again considered a great hope for the Netherlands as they try to recover their reputation. He has a point to prove and was impressive in his country’s 1-0 defeat to England earlier this year.

Florian Thauvin, another player posting incredible numbers in Ligue 1 this season, may have played himself into the France squad for the World Cup, where he could even take the place of his Marseille team-mate Dimitri Payet. The idea that the one-time lesser-spotted Newcastle United winger might outshine one of the stars of Euro 2016 would have been laughable to most Premier League fans, but he has been Marseille’s star this season.

The 25-year-old’s form in both Ligue 1 and Europe has ensured that Rudi García’s side still have two possible routes to next season’s Champions League. He scored the opener in the Europa League semi-final first leg against Salzburg last week and has been even better in the league. Thauvin, like Depay, is also one of that elite group of players to have hit double figures for goals and assists this season. His goal – Marseille’s winner against Troyes on April 29 – was his 20th in Ligue 1 this season. Neymar only has 19.

Iago Aspas, the former Liverpool striker, has also just hit 20 league goals for the first time in his career. The 30-year-old has been in fantastic form for Celta Vigo for the past two seasons, so much so that he has a genuine chance of leading the line for Spain at the World Cup this summer.

His tenacious approach from the front is valued highly by Spain manager Julen Lopetegui. Aspas helps his teams win the ball high up the pitch and overload their opponents in the final third – and he also boasts a decent goal return at international level. Not only is he the top scoring Spaniard in Europe’s big leagues over the last two seasons with 39 league goals, but he has also scored four goals for his country despite starting just one of eight appearances.

Luis Alberto, who played with Aspas when they were both at Liverpool in the 2013-14 season, is showing he may just be the one who got away. He was just 21 when he arrived on Merseyside and he has blossomed a lot since the last of his nine appearances for the club. After a successful season on loan at Deportivo, Lazio signed the playmaker for just €4m in August 2016. He took a little time to settle in Rome but has been a revelation this season. Now 25, Alberto is excelling in support of lone striker Ciro Immobile, scoring 11 league goals and providing 13 assists – the most in Serie A – with another five assists in Lazio’s Europa League campaign. Alberto made his international debut last November and will also be hoping to make the Spain squad for the World Cup.

Staying on the topic of players who may have been sold too early, Serge Gnabry has also played himself into international contention after leaving Arsenal two years ago. The 22-year-old impressed at Werder Bremen last season and earned himself a move to Bayern Munich, who sent him to Hoffenheim this season to continue his development. The loan deal has been a winner for all involved.

The versatile forward has scored 10 goals and provided five assists in the league this season in just 22 appearances, with extremely healthy competition in attack from top scorer Mark Uth and Andrej Kramaric, another Premier League outcast. When Kramaric joined Leicester City for a club record fee of £9m in 2014, the Foxes were delighted that they had beaten a number of clubs for the promising Croatian forward’s signature. It didn’t work out for him, however, with Kramaric starting just six of his 15 league appearances for the club. Leicester didn’t exactly miss him when they loaned him to Hoffenheim in January 2016 – midway through their title-winning campaign – but they could use his quality in attack now.

Hoffenheim made that loan move permanent in the summer of 2016 and Kramaric has repaid the faith they showed in him, having a direct hand in 47 league goals having started 50 of his 71 league appearances. The 26-year-old will almost certainly be at the World Cup this summer he may even start for a very capable Croatia side.

The Guardian Sport



Bezzecchi Wins MotoGP Opener as Marquez Retires

 MotoGP - Thailand Grand Prix - Chang International Circuit, Buriram, Thailand - March 1, 2026 Aprilia Racing's Marco Bezzecchi in action during the MotoGP race. (Reuters)
MotoGP - Thailand Grand Prix - Chang International Circuit, Buriram, Thailand - March 1, 2026 Aprilia Racing's Marco Bezzecchi in action during the MotoGP race. (Reuters)
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Bezzecchi Wins MotoGP Opener as Marquez Retires

 MotoGP - Thailand Grand Prix - Chang International Circuit, Buriram, Thailand - March 1, 2026 Aprilia Racing's Marco Bezzecchi in action during the MotoGP race. (Reuters)
MotoGP - Thailand Grand Prix - Chang International Circuit, Buriram, Thailand - March 1, 2026 Aprilia Racing's Marco Bezzecchi in action during the MotoGP race. (Reuters)

Marco Bezzecchi won the MotoGP season-opening grand prix in Thailand from pole position on Sunday as defending world champion Marc Marquez retired late with a buckled wheel.

Aprilia's Bezzecchi led from start to finish to top the podium in Buriram, with KTM's Pedro Acosta second and Trackhouse's Raul Fernandez third.

Ducati's Marquez is chasing a record-equaling eighth world title this season, but he exited the race in dramatic fashion while in fourth place with five laps to go.

The Spaniard, who started from second on the grid, took a corner wide and the jolt to his bike dislodged the rear tire and badly damaged his wheel.

Bezzecchi returned to winning form after crashing out of Saturday's sprint race on the second lap.

The Italian was fastest in all three practice sessions and set a new track record in qualifying.

It was also his third straight grand prix win stretching back to last season.

Acosta beat Fernandez to second place to wrap up a successful weekend for the 21-year-old Spaniard.

Acosta won the sprint after Marquez was forced to let him pass on the final lap because of a penalty.

Marquez said earlier this week that he was still feeling the lingering effects of a shoulder injury that forced him to miss the final four races of last season.

The 33-year-old was picked off by a succession of riders as the race got underway but recovered to put himself back into podium contention.

He was priming himself for an attack on Acosta and Fernandez when he ran wide and did well not to be thrown from his bike, even though it did spell the end of his race.

Jorge Martin, the 2024 world champion, finished fourth after seeing the defense of his title wrecked by injury last season.

Trackhouse's Ai Ogura was fifth, followed by VR46's Fabio Di Giannantonio and KTM's Brad Binder.

Alex Marquez, last season's championship runner-up, did not finish the race after a late crash

Francesco Bagnaia, the 2022 and 2023 world champion, finished ninth after starting from 13th on the grid.


Asian Football Confederation Postpones West Region Champions League Games After Attacks on Iran

A plume of smoke rises following a reported explosion in Tehran on February 28, 2026. (AFP)
A plume of smoke rises following a reported explosion in Tehran on February 28, 2026. (AFP)
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Asian Football Confederation Postpones West Region Champions League Games After Attacks on Iran

A plume of smoke rises following a reported explosion in Tehran on February 28, 2026. (AFP)
A plume of smoke rises following a reported explosion in Tehran on February 28, 2026. (AFP)

The Asian Football Confederation has postponed continental club championship playoffs scheduled in the Middle East this week in response to the U.S. and Israel attacks on Iran.

Soccer's Asian governing body issued a statement Sunday saying the AFC Champions League Elite Round of 16 games scheduled for Monday and Tuesday in the West Region will be rescheduled.

The AFC Champions League 2 and AFC Challenge League quarterfinals scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday in the West zone will also be postponed. No new dates have been set.

Cristiano Ronaldo's Saudi club Al-Nassr is among the teams involved in the Asian Champions League Two competition.

Matches in the East Region across all of the AFC's continental championships will continue as scheduled, organizers said.

“The AFC will continue to closely monitor this rapidly evolving situation and remains resolute in ensuring the safety and security of all players, teams, officials, and fans,” the AFC said in a statement.

The AFC is hosting the Women's Asian Cup in Australia starting Sunday. Iran is among the 12 national teams competing.


Liverpool Leverage Set-piece Dominance in 5-2 Win over West Ham

28 February 2026, United Kingdom, Liverpool: Liverpool's Cody Gakpo celebrates scoring his sides fourth goal during the English Premier League soccer match between Liverpool and West Ham United at Anfield. Photo: Peter Byrne/PA Wire/dpa
28 February 2026, United Kingdom, Liverpool: Liverpool's Cody Gakpo celebrates scoring his sides fourth goal during the English Premier League soccer match between Liverpool and West Ham United at Anfield. Photo: Peter Byrne/PA Wire/dpa
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Liverpool Leverage Set-piece Dominance in 5-2 Win over West Ham

28 February 2026, United Kingdom, Liverpool: Liverpool's Cody Gakpo celebrates scoring his sides fourth goal during the English Premier League soccer match between Liverpool and West Ham United at Anfield. Photo: Peter Byrne/PA Wire/dpa
28 February 2026, United Kingdom, Liverpool: Liverpool's Cody Gakpo celebrates scoring his sides fourth goal during the English Premier League soccer match between Liverpool and West Ham United at Anfield. Photo: Peter Byrne/PA Wire/dpa

Liverpool exploited West Ham United's weakness at set pieces to secure a 5-2 win in their Premier League clash at Anfield on Saturday, but the hosts did not have it all their own way as they struggled to shake off the relegation-threatened Londoners.

The win takes the Merseysiders up to fifth, level on 48 points with fourth-placed Manchester United, who play on Sunday. West Ham stay 18th on 25 points, two points off Nottingham Forest in the safety zone and having played a game more.

All three of Liverpool’s first-half goals – Hugo Ekitike’s opener after five minutes, Virgil van Dijk’s header 19 ⁠minutes later and ⁠Alexis Mac Allister’s volley just before the break – came from West Ham’s inability to deal with corners effectively.

However, despite their handsome lead, Liverpool looked shaky in defense and disaster almost struck on the half-hour mark.

Goalkeeper Alisson played the ball straight to Jarrod Bowen as he played out from the back but the West Ham midfielder could not control it and it rolled back to the keeper who cleared.

Things began to ⁠unravel when Tomas Soucek pulled a goal back for West Ham early in the second half and the home side's nerves were apparent when Cody Gakpo missed a sitter in the 54th.

However, the Dutchman made amends after 70 minutes, cutting in from the left and driving a shot into the net at the foot of the far post to make it 4-1.

That should have killed the game off, but West Ham finally got a corner to work in their favor in the 75th as the ball sailed over the Liverpool defense, leaving Valentin Castellanos with the simple task of heading into the net to make it 4-2.

That was as ⁠close as West ⁠Ham got though and the visitors ran out of luck shortly afterwards when Liverpool substitute Jeremie Frimpong drove the ball in from the right-hand side of the box and Axel Disasi steered it into his own net.

Liverpool's Gakpo brushed off his side's struggles against a team who are now 13 places below them in the table and welcomed the home side's set-piece effectiveness.

"Step by step, we're getting a better team. We had a difficult moment during the season, but hopefully these last few games are the start of something beautiful," he told Sky Sports.

"There is a lot to play for. Hopefully, we can keep the momentum we have and end the season in a good way ... when the game is stuck and you know you can score from a set piece, we lacked that earlier in the season."