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Transfer rumors, news: Spurs eye Sancho to replace Son

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Manchester United winger Jadon Sancho is on the radar of Tottenham Hotspur, while Newcastle have joined the race to sign Barcelona attacking midfielder Fermín López. Join us for the latest transfer news, rumors and gossip from around the globe as the window closes on Monday, Sept. 1.

Transfers homepage | Done deals | Men’s grades | Women’s grades

TOP STORIES

Sources: Newcastle on verge of signing Woltemade in £64.9m deal
Sources: Tottenham set to sign Simons after €60m fee agreed
Sources: AC Milan agree €42m transfer for Chelsea’s Nkunku

TRENDING RUMORS

Tottenham Hotspur are considering a move to sign Manchester United winger Jadon Sancho as a replacement for Son Heung-Min, says the Manchester Evening News. Sancho, 25, is out of favor at United and has been linked with a host of clubs from Serie A, most notably Roma, though his club could take the option to extend his contract by another year to protect his transfer value. United signed Sancho from Borussia Dortmund for €85 million in 2021, but are now looking to move him on for around €25m.

– Newcastle have joined the race to sign Barcelona attacking midfielder Fermín López, according to El Chiringuito. As they close on an €80m deal for VfB Stuttgart and Germany striker Nick Woltemade, the Magpies are prepared to make an offer worth €100m to sign the 22-year-old Fermin and are willing to quadruple his salary. Previous reports have indicated that the Blaugrana would be willing to accept €90m for the transfer of their La Masia academy graduate, who has been capped by the Spain senior national team on two occasions. He has also recently been linked with Chelsea.

– PSG goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma could soon get his move to Manchester City, as the European champions have lowered their demands over his fee to €30m, according to RMC Sport. Donnarumma, 26, is set to leave Paris after the club signed Lucas Chevalier as his replacement, but has a contract which expires in 2026. City are waiting on Éderson to depart for Galatasaray before moving for the Italy international, but this one could rumble on until January.

Juventus are keeping tabs on the situation of Chelsea striker Nicolas Jackson, says Gianluca Di Marzio. The Bianconeri are keen to add a forward before the transfer window closes, and they have lined up a move for the 24-year-old as a potential alternative if they fail in their pursuit of Paris Saint-Germain‘s Randal Kolo Muani. It is reported that Bayern Munich are leading the race for Jackson amid reports that a loan deal to the Allianz Arena has been agreed.

Al Ittihad midfielder N’Golo Kanté is looking to return to Europe, according to L’Equipe. The 34-year-old’s representatives are reportedly in talks with Ligue 1 sides Monaco and Paris FC, who have “not closed the door” on a potential swoop for him. Kante made the switch from Chelsea to Saudi Arabia in the summer of 2023, but despite scoring four times in 31 Pro League matches last season, he is yet to secure a call up to the France senior national team this year.

CONFIRMED DEALS

– West Ham have signed midfielder Mateus Fernandes from Southampton for a fee of £8m, plus £2m in add-ons.

Shakhtar Donetsk have signed 18-year-old Brazilian attacking midfielder Isaque Silva from Fluminense for €10m.

– Australia and Tottenham winger Hayley Raso has signed a contract with Eintracht Frankfurt until 2027 for an undisclosed fee.

EXPERT TAKE

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2:05

What can Newcastle expect from Nick Woltemade?

Archie Rhind-Tutt explains what Stuttgart striker Nick Woltemade could provide Newcastle amid links to the Premier League side.

ESPN’s resident scout Tor-Kristian Karlsen on what Nick Woltemade could bring to Newcastle.

In his breakthrough season, Woltemade scored 10 Bundesliga goals after January and then exploded onto the international scene with a sensational European Under-21 Championship for Germany where he finished as the tournament’s top scorer (6 goals), registered the most assists (3) and key passes (3.0 per 90 minutes).

His all-round offensive abilities are impressive but standing taller than Sesko at 6-foot-6, Woltemade is notably less mobile, which limits his threat in transitional moments. Also, curiously for someone of his size, he won just 33% of his aerial duels in 2024-25 — which is 17% lower than Sesko (50%).

That said, Woltemade’s recent goal return and remarkable shot accuracy (62% of his efforts land on target) suggest he could make a real impact.

OTHER RUMORS

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1:44

What signings do Manchester United need before the transfer deadline?

Ian Darke and Rob Dawson believe Manchester United still need to sign at least two players as the end of the summer transfer window approaches.

– Liverpool are preparing to go “all-in” to sign Newcastle striker Alexander Isak. (Fabrizio Romano)

– Talks are ongoing between Liverpool and winger Cody Gakpo over a new contract, (Eindhovens Dagblad)

– Newcastle set to make a third bid of £60m to sign Wolves striker Jorgen Strand Larsen, but it will be rejected. (Telegraph)

– Discussions are continuing between former Leicester City striker Jamie Vardy and Serie A side Cremonese over a free transfer. (Corriere dello Sport)

– After Real Madrid midfielder Dani Ceballos put the brakes on a move to Marseille, he can either stay, move to another club, or “wait for the miracle” that boyhood club Real Betis find a way to sign him. But Betis would struggle to make a deal work financially, both in terms of wages and a transfer fee, as they work elsewhere trying to bring back Antony from Manchester United. (Diario AS)

– Atletico Madrid would only accept an offer of over €42m to sign midfielder Conor Gallagher, with Tottenham interested. (Marca)

– Tottenham are also interested in Manchester City defender Nathan Ake, 30. (GMS)

– Aston Villa have made a €15m offer to sign Paris Saint-Germain attacking midfielder Marco Asensio, which is short of PSG’s €20m valuation. (L’Equipe)

– Villa are also looking at West Ham’s Lucas Paqueta, 28, as a potential replacement for Morgan Rogers should he leave Villa Park, but any deal is expected to require an offer worth at least £60m. (Footmercato)

– Wolves are in advanced talks with Genk regarding a move to sign striker Tolu Arokodare. (Mirror)

– West Ham are closing in on signing two midfielders, with the Hammers hopeful of getting deals over the line for Southampton’s Mateus Fernandes and Monaco’s Soungoutou Magassa. (Guardian)

– Negotiations between Lyon and Villarreal are underway over the signing of signing Georgia international striker Georges Mikautadze. (L’Equipe)

– Free agent defender Cesar Azpilicueta is set to sign for Sevilla, with a medical scheduled on Friday. He has agreed to a one-year contract. (Diario AS)

– A loan deal has been sanctioned by Tottenham Hotspur for 18-year-old defender Luka Vuskovic to join Hamburg. (Daily Mail)

– Clubs in the MLS, as well as Wrexham, have seen their interest in defender Andrea Carboni dismissed by Monza. (Nicolo Schira)

– Bournemouth are closing in on a move to sign AC Milan defender Alex Jimenez. (Gianluca Di Marzio)

– Talks are ongoing between Leeds United and Brighton regarding a loan move for attacking midfielder Facundo Buonanotte. (Ben Jacobs)

– An enquiry has been made by Lyon for Internazionale striker Mehdi Taremi. (Fabrizio Romano)

– Multiple Premier League clubs as well as Sevilla are interested in Eintracht Frankfurt midfielder Junior Dina Ebimbe. (TEAMtalk)

Josh Hall on Christina Haack Divorce Settlement

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Josh Hall is glad to be done with his divorce from Christina Haack.

Over a year after the 44-year-old filed to end his two-year marriage with the Christina on the Coast star, he felt elated that the divorce was signed off on by a judge Aug. 26.

In fact, Josh celebrated the official end of his marriage with Christina—who is currently in a relationship with Christopher Larocca—with a scathing message about his ex.

“Excited to spend Labor Day weekend in the real reality,” he wrote on Instagram Aug. 28. “Finally, legally divorced and a free man. I’ve always worked hard, kept what’s mine, and declined hand outs, and I’m keeping it that way.”

The realtor added, “Lesson learned: don’t marry someone who needs constant public validation and will use your personal drama for attention.”

Ultimately, a source close to Josh told E! News that he feels the divorce settlement was very “fair,” saying, “Josh agreed to split everything he and Christina earned together, and they each walked away from the divorce with everything that they had made prior to the marriage.” 



Low Carb High Protein Cookbook: Healthy, Quick, and Flavorful Low-Carb, Protein-Rich Recipes to Lose Weight and Build Muscle with Ease in Just 28 Days | Includes Expert Advice & a 60-Day Meal Plan

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Price: $16.97
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Nottingham Forest’s Elliot Anderson set for first England call-up

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Nottingham Forest midfielder Elliot Anderson is set for his first England call-up when Thomas Tuchel names his squad at 12:00 BST.

Anderson, 22, has impressed since his move to the City Ground from Newcastle and will be rewarded with a call-up for the World Cup qualifying games against Andorra and Serbia.

Jude Bellingham will miss the squad through injury and Anderson is set to replace the Real Madrid star.

Meanwhile, England assistant manager Anthony Barry attended last week’s Premier League match between Everton and Brighton to run the rule over midfielder Jack Grealish.

Grealish has not been selected in either of Tuchel’s two squads since his appointment in January.

Collins 'alarmed' by Trump firing CDC head

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GOP Sen. Susan Collins (Maine) on Thursday said she was “alarmed” by the firing of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Susan Monarez as ordered by the Trump administration. 

Monarez was originally asked to resign but ultimately chose to hold firm to the post until the White House informed her of the removal. 

Various senior agency officials have decried her ouster, and four of them followed her by resigning. 

“I am extremely alarmed at the firing of the CDC director,” Collins told reporters following an appearance with the Maine Sheriffs Association, according to Spectrum News

“I know her. I have met with her several times and talked with her on the phone, and I see no basis for her firing.”

Her comments come as Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) called for a bipartisan investigation into the removal of the CDC head.

Former Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Xavier Becerra on Wednesday said the departures will increase the death tolls from infectious disease. 

“I worked alongside the three leading scientists at the CDC who resigned tonight,” wrote Becerra, who served in the Biden administration, in a statement on the social platform X.

“They were essential public health leaders who helped our country get out of the pandemic,” he continued. “Politicians don’t do science well. It is dangerous to put politics over public health. People will die.”

Monarez’s attorneys Abbe Lowell and Mark Zaid released a defiant statement following her termination.

“When CDC Director Susan Monarez refused to rubber-stamp unscientific, reckless directives and fire dedicated health experts she chose protecting the public over serving a political agenda. For that, she has been targeted,” their Wednesday statement said.

It added that the ousted director is “a person of integrity and devoted to science.”

Despite criticism, current HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who’s previously spoken out against vaccines, said firings will continue to mold the agency under President Trump’s agenda. 

“It’s going to require getting rid of some people over the long term in order for us to change the institutional culture,” Kennedy said on Thursday, Spectrum News reported.

The Hill has reached out to Collins’s office for additional comment.

Oil settles higher as traders await Trump statement on Russia-Ukraine

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By Shariq Khan

NEW YORK (Reuters) -Oil prices settled higher on Thursday, bouncing off early losses after the White House said U.S. President Donald Trump was not happy when he learned that Russia attacked Ukraine with missiles and drones overnight.

Brent crude futures settled up 57 cents, or 0.8%, at $68.62 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures rose 45 cents, or 0.7%, to close at $64.60 a barrel.

Russia hit Ukraine with deadly missiles and drone strikes early on Thursday, killing at least 21 people in Kyiv, city officials said. Meanwhile, the Ukrainian military said it used drones to hit two Russian oil refineries overnight.

Trump will make a statement on the situation later on Thursday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters. Both oil benchmarks were down about 1% earlier in the session, but turned positive after her comments.

Traders are also watching for India’s response to pressure from the U.S. to stop buying Russian oil, after Trump doubled tariffs on imports from India to as much as 50% on Wednesday.

Russian oil exports to India are set to rise in September, dealers said, defying the U.S. pressure.

Oil prices were under pressure earlier in the session as traders braced for lower fuel demand after the U.S. Labor Day long weekend.

Crude oil supply is also set to rise due to an OPEC+ plan to raise September output by 547,000 barrels per day.

Weaker demand and higher supply will cause oil inventories to rise, Ritterbusch and Associates said in a note.

“That will be weighing on energy futures across the spectrum as summer turns into fall, and as gasoline demand tapers off and refiners shift to the lower-priced winter grade product,” they said.

Further pressuring oil prices, Russian crude supplies to Hungary and Slovakia through the Druzhba pipeline have restarted after an outage caused by a Ukrainian attack in Russia last week, Hungarian oil company MOL and Slovakia’s economy minister said on Thursday.

(Additional reporting by Sam Li in Beijing and Siyi Liu in Singapore; Editing by Louise Heavens, Ros Russell, David Gregorio and Diane Craft)

Microsoft fires two more employees for participating in Palestine protests on campus

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Microsoft has fired two more employees who participated in recent protests against the company’s contracts with the Israeli military and government. The two employees, Nisreen Jaradat and Julius Shan, were fired “in connection” with demonstrations that saw protesters set up encampments at Microsoft’s headquarters, according to Hossam Nasr, an organizer with the No Azure for Apartheid group.

Two other Microsoft employees were fired last night for their involvement with a protest that saw members of the group gain access to a company building and live stream themselves inside the office of Microsoft president Brad Smith. Jaradat had previously sent a mass email around Microsoft saying she was “fed up” with the company’s treatment of her as a Palestinian worker, bypassing the company’s restrictions on language around Palestine and Gaza internally in order to do so.

The No Azure for Apartheid group has been taking public actions against Microsoft throughout the year. The group interrupted Microsoft executives during live streamed presentations on multiple occasions this spring. More recently, the group attempted to occupy a plaza on Microsoft’s headquarters. After being removed, they returned the next day with tents and tables and poured red paint across a Microsoft sign; 18 people were arrested.

Protesters returned again on Tuesday for the demonstration in Smith’s office. Afterward, Smith held a press conference saying that Microsoft is “working every day” to investigate potential misuse of Azure in Israel. But he said the protesters’ actions were “not ok.”

Microsoft declined to provide an attributable statement to The Verge.

Jose Mourinho: Fenerbahce manager leaves

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Jose Mourinho has left his role as Fenerbahce boss after just over a year.

The Portuguese’s departure comes two days after the Turkish club were eliminated from the Champions League play-offs by Benfica.

In a statement, Fenerbahce said Mourinho had “parted ways” with the club, before thanking the 62-year-old for his efforts.

“We wish him success in his future career,” the statement added.

Mourinho, who has managed 10 clubs including Chelsea, Manchester United and Tottenham, guided Fenerbahce to second in the league during his sole season in charge, but his tenure was punctuated by controversy.

Champions Galatasaray said they would “initiate criminal proceedings” against Mourinho, after accusing him of making “racist statements” following a 0-0 draw in February.

Mourinho denied the allegations, saying he is the “opposite” of racist, and filed a lawsuit against the club seeking damages worth 1,907,000 Turkish Lira (£41,000).

Mourinho was a frequent critic of the standard of officiating in Turkey, and was handed a four-match ban – later reduced to two matches – for his comments about referees after the match against Galatasaray.

GOP senators express unease over RFK Jr.’s CDC shake-up

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Two influential GOP senators are expressing unease over Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s firing of Susan Monarez as director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which led to the resignations of four other high-ranking CDC officials.

The strongest pushback among Republicans on Capitol Hill came Thursday from Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.), the chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.

He called on the department’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) to indefinitely postpone a Sept. 18 meeting in the aftermath of the staff shake-up at CDC.

“Serious allegations have been made about the meeting agenda, membership, and lack of scientific process being followed for the now announced September ACIP meeting,” Cassidy said in a statement.

Separately, Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) said she was “alarmed” by Monarez’s firing and echoed Cassidy’s call for congressional oversight over the decision to terminate her less than a month after her Senate confirmation.

“Susan Monarez is a highly capable scientist who brought a wealth of experience to the agency. While I recognize that the CDC Director serves at the pleasure of the President, I am alarmed that she has been fired after only three weeks on the job,” Collins said.

“Last night I talked with former Director Monarez about her removal. I agree with Chairman Bill Cassidy, who heads the Senate committee with jurisdiction over the CDC, that this matter warrants congressional oversight,” she added.

Cassidy warned the panel’s recommendations would “directly impact children’s health” and emphasized that “the meeting should not occur until significant oversight has been conducted.”

“If the meeting proceeds, any recommendations should be rejected as lacking legitimacy given the seriousness of the allegations and the current turmoil in the CDC leadership,” he said.

It’s unclear how far Cassidy, Collins or other GOP senators will go in challenging the moves, however.

The overwhelming majority of GOP senators have repeatedly sought to downplay major differences of opinion with President Trump and the most controversial members of his Cabinet this year, knowing that any criticisms of the president or his administration are certain to be met with a rebuke on Truth Social, Trump’s favorite instrument for keeping GOP lawmakers in line.

And both Cassidy and Collins are up for reelection in 2026.

GOP sources on Thursday predicted that Cassidy will be cautious in his approach to the controversy as he faces a conservative primary challenger, Louisiana Treasurer John Fleming, ahead of his 2026 reelection race.

Cassidy wants Trump’s endorsement and needs to tread carefully after he was one of seven Republican senators to vote to convict Trump on the impeachment charge of inciting insurrection during Trump’s 2021 Senate trial.

Collins, who also voted to convict Trump in that impeachment trial, is running for reelection in a state that voted for former Vice President Kamala Harris for president in 2024. That puts her in a different position from Cassidy.

The senators issued their statements after four senior CDC officials resigned from the agency following Monarez’s firing.

The four officials who resigned were Dr. Debra Houry, the CDC’s chief medical officer; Demetre Daskalakis, the agency’s top respiratory illness and immunization officer; Daniel Jernigan, a senior official who helped oversee responses to infectious diseases; and Jennifer Layden, who handled public health data.

Republican strategists warned the shake-up could underscore concerns that Kennedy is attempting to bend policy to fit a political narrative regardless of scientific reality.

One Republican strategist and former Senate GOP aide, who requested anonymity to comment candidly on the matter, said the shake-up at the agency in charge of protecting the nation’s health is proving to be an “epic” blunder.

“It’s a huge problem for CDC, for the country and for Kennedy’s credibility,” the strategist said. “He talked as if he just wanted transparency and to engage in a conversation and he’s clearly trying to cook the [books] on this point,” referring to Kennedy’s attempts to rewrite the nation’s vaccine policies.

“It seems like he’s planning on using very selectively curated, relatively opaque studies that don’t [meet] any type of normal standard of science to promulgate his view of what causes autism,” the source added.

Tom Frieden, who served as CDC director from 2009 to 2017 and is now president and CEO of Resolve to Save Lives, a global health organization, called Kennedy’s efforts to overhaul the agency an “assault” on science and sound health policy.

“It’s unprecedented. We’ve never seen the firing of a CDC director and the firing appears to have been triggered by the CDC director saying that they would not just put a rubber stamp on anything that [ACIP] said,” Frieden told The Hill in an interview.

“What we’re seeing here really is the use of ideology to make life-and-death decisions for our children. That’s unprecedented and it’s really dangerous,” he said. “I never thought I would see the day when we couldn’t rely on the CDC website for fact-based information and transparency about how it got put there, what it’s recommending and why.”

At the same time, the GOP strategist who spoke to The Hill downplayed how far any GOP resistance will go, though they predicted that Republicans could hold hearings that give Democrats a chance to get tough with Kennedy.

The strategist said Republicans can “thread the needle” by showing serious concern over Kennedy’s controversial moves without picking a fight with Trump over a core piece of his health care agenda.

One way to do that is to “have public hearings where Kennedy has to come and explain himself and put his science in public and let the world see and pick it apart,” the GOP source said.

Kennedy told Fox News’s “Fox & Friends” on Thursday that the CDC’s leadership “needs to execute Trump’s agenda” and said the agency “is in trouble” and “needs to be fixed.”

“CDC has problems. We saw the misinformation coming out of COVID, they got the testing wrong, they got the social distancing, the masks, the school closures that have done so much harm to the American people today,” he said.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt later on Thursday defended Trump’s decision to fire Monarez and said the president would nominate a new person to head the agency “very soon.”

Leavitt said that Trump “was overwhelmingly reelected on Nov. 5” and “this woman,” referring to Monarez, “has never received a vote in her life.”

“The president has the authority to fire those who are not aligned with his mission,” she said.

The administration on Thursday evening said Deputy Health and Human Services Secretary Jim O’Neill had been picked to serve as acting CDC director.

Daskalakis, who headed the center that issues vaccine recommendations, accused the political leadership at the Department of Health and Human Services of treating the “CDC as a tool to generate policies and materials that do not reflect scientific reality.”

The former senior health official criticized Kennedy’s decision to fire all 17 members of ACIP and replace them with people more aligned with his agenda.

In his resignation letter, which he posted on social media, Daskalakis said the reconstituted panel put “people of dubious intent and more dubious scientific rigor in charge of recommending vaccine policy to a director hamstrung and sidelined by an authoritarian leader.”

“Their desire to please a political base will result in death and disability of vulnerable children and adults,” he warned.

Listen to the the Nvidia Earnings Call

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Listen to the the Nvidia Earnings Call