Juan Cabal is one of the players Juventus added to their squad during this transfer window, and the Bianconeri unveiled him yesterday.
The Colombian has improved since he moved to Serie A in 2022 where he played for Hellas Verona until this summer.
After missing out on Riccardo Calafiori, Juventus quickly snapped Cabal up and has made him one of their summer arrivals.
The 23-year-old would be eager to impress under Thiago Motta when the season begins and has spoken to the media.
He spoke about several things, including his Juve idols, and when asked about what he brings to the group, he said on the club’s website:
“I want to bring to Juve all my skills and my way of being as a person, on and off the pitch; I am ready to do everything the Coach asks of me. My characteristics? In one word: ” resilience “, I have fought and fight to make my dream come true; I have many Juventus references, from Cuadrado to Alex Sandro, and I would like to become one of them.”
Juve FC Says
Cabal has been one of the finest defenders in the league, and adding him to our squad makes it significantly stronger.
The defender has a lot of work to do to become our first choice and he knows that being signed by Motta does not guarantee him anything, so he must work hard.
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Mohammed Kudus is one of the new signings of Tottenham Hotspur this summer, and a lot will be expected of him Tottenham Hotspur have seen many ups and downs in the Premier League over the past few years. Once far from European qualification, Spurs are now back in the UEFA Champions League. Even after the departure of Harry Kane, the team did not give up, and under the leadership of Thomas Frank, we are once again preparing ourselves for a new era. From the Conference League to the Europa League and then finally a ticket to the 2025/26 Champions League — all this show that Tottenham are on the rise again. Meanwhile, the acquisition of Mohammed Kudus in a historic £55m deal against West Ham seemed to be the boldest move in this rebuild. In the last two seasons, Tottenham have shown faith in many new faces. The entry of Kudus breathed new life into the squad. After the era of Antonio Conte and Ange Postecoglou, Spurs look to return to the path of high pressing and attacking football. Also, winning a trophy by beating Manchester United in the Europa League final, and then making it to the Champions League, didn’t happen by chance. The club are now chasing a trophy mentality, and players like Kudus also carry this mindset forward. Kudus’s new role and Frank’s trust Meanwhile, the 24-year-old told football.london that Thomas Frank has clearly told him that he was brought to Spurs not just for dribbling and creativity but for his overall playing style and traits. Kudus said that he grew up in the art of outsmarting the opposition in 1v1, but now he is building himself as a midfielder who can press and track back relentlessly, even against big teams like Arsenal. The Ghana international cited Jay-Jay Okocha as his inspiration and said his Ghanaian connection has helped him bond with Kevin Danso. Kudus believes he can take Spurs to the next level, not just with goals and assists but also with off-the-ball hard work. “I have always seen the game as trying to be different. We have a lot of passes and less guys who want to take people on and dribble and that’s how I’ve always grown to play. Try to entertain the fans as much as I can. So it has always been a part of my game.” “A lot of players but from Africa it was Jay-Jay Okocha. I really liked how he was playing. We all know my abilities in 1v1s, trying to create and help the team so that’s what I am here to try and do but defensively try to add to my game as well.” “I offer a lot offensively but defensively too I want to make the team feel like they can depend on me because the football also needs me with stuff like that. Especially in games like that where we are going to have to be defending sometimes.” “Everybody has helped me a lot. The guys try to speak to me to get the connection on and off the pitch. So far it has been smooth. [Danso] is a Ghanaian so we speak our local dialect (Twi) so it has been easier to connect. We talk about everything. Football, life. He just tries to help me because he has been here before me.” Mohammed Kudus has everything a modern Spurs attacker should have — flair, strength, unpredictability and hunger. With the departure of Son Heung-min, Spurs need a charismatic leader who can not only trouble the opposition with the ball but also fight without it. If Kudus maintains his fitness, he can create chaos against Premier League defences. On the big stage of the Champions League, Spurs will need goals, and this is when Kudus will have to take Harry Kane-level responsibility. He has the ability to lift fans out of their seats, but consistency will be the biggest test of his career. We think with Frank’s coaching and creative partners like Tel, Maddison, the Ghana international will be a difference-maker for Tottenham next season. If he continues to improve his defensive duties, Spurs will play like trophy contenders for the first time, and we Tottenham fans will finally be able to say, “This is our time.”
The New York Jets opted to cut Aaron Rodgers and sign Justin Fields to replace him during the offseason. This kind of commitment to Fields should bolster his confidence, but it could also place a lot of pressure on his shoulders. To this point, Fields has looked solid in training camp, aside from a scary toe injury that was quickly resolved in July. Justin Fried of the Jet Press recently reported that Fields' training camp may have reached a new low over the weekend as the young signal caller struggled. "Justin Fields put together his best practice of the summer to this point on Friday, completing his first 12 passes en route to an excellent all-around performance. The same can't be said about his showing on Saturday, however," Fried wrote. "Fields finished the day an abysmal 2-of-10 in the air, including a drop from rookie tight end Mason Taylor. "Some of his incompletions were catchable balls, but the Jets' passing game struggles on Saturday can largely be blamed on No. 7. Fields did flash his running ability with a 25-yard rushing score on the first play of red-zone drills, but the Jets would like to see more consistency in the air from the starting quarterback. Saturday's scrimmage was far from his best showing of the summer." Fields is a runner first at the NFL level, but his arm is nothing to scoff at. For most of training camp, his arm talent has been better than advertised, but during Saturday's scrimmage, it just wasn't there. A 2 for 10 performance is unacceptable for a $40 million quarterback who was signed to take over the team. The running game should open up the passing game for the Jets, which is going to need to be the case if Fields is going to struggle like this. However, it's just one day of camp. It's nothing to be too concerned about. Just because Fields lost this specific practice doesn't mean he's heading in the wrong direction as a whole.
When the San Antonio Spurs traded for De'Aaron Fox midway through last season, their guard rotation appeared to be wide open. Stephon Castle was the only other long-term ball-handling prospect on the roster and, despite a strong year, was still a rookie. However, the NBA Draft has seen the addition of Dylan Harper, another young guard with All-Star potential, and the ability to one day lead the Spurs franchise next to Victor Wembanyama. Harper's addition and Castle's emergence as the 2025 Rookie of the Year raised questions about Fox's fit and long-term future in Texas. The problem was that Fox was eligible for an extension this summer. On Monday the Spurs inked Fox to a four-year $229M deal, with no player option for the final year. The new contract, which will see Fox earn approximately $57.25M per year, will kick in next summer. Suddenly, San Antonio has a young guard rotation of Harper, Castle and Fox, all of whom struggle to score on the perimeter, and have shown issues when letting shots fly off the dribble. "The Spurs already had two point guards who struggled from distance in Stephon Castle, whom they spent the No. 4 overall pick on in 2024, and De'Aaron Fox, whom they acquired in a deal with the Sacramento Kings ahead of the February trade deadline," Bryan Toporek wrote for Forbes on Saturday. "Castle shot 28.5% from deep on 4.1 attempts per game as a rookie, while Fox is a career 33.0% three-point shooter who has shot 32.5% or worse from downtown in five of his seven NBA seasons." Fox's new salary will ensure teams will think twice about trading for him. He is, after all, a high-level talent, but not one capable of spearheading a roster. In truth, San Antonio may have repeated the Chicago Bulls' error from when they paid Zach LaVine $215M over five years back in 2022. We saw how difficult it was for Chicago to move on from LaVine. Fox is a tertiary star on a contending roster. And now, he's being paid like one of the top talents in the NBA. The Spurs would have been wiser to cut their losses with Fox and build around Castle and Harper as their guard rotation. Still, the decision has been made, and Fox is now cemented as the lead guard for the next half a decade (once you include the upcoming season), giving Castle and Harper room to grow as two guards who can complement Fox's play style and add some grit or explosiveness to the rotation. San Antonio is a franchise that rarely puts a foot wrong. However, the decision to pay Fox may come back to haunt it as a costly misstep. In the modern NBA, you can't have three non-shooting guards in the same rotation. Yet, somehow, head coach Mitch Johnson must figure out how to make it work. Not the greatest task for a young coach heading into his first full season with the franchise.
A five-year deal completed nearly a year ago is still shaping the way NBA teams and agents are approaching restricted free agency. According to ESPN front office insider Bobby Marks, the contract that Raptors guard Immanuel Quickley signed last July has become a major sticking point. The deal, which includes $162.5 million in guaranteed money and another $12.5 million in incentives, averages $32.5 million per season and could reach $35 million annually. “The Immanuel Quickley contract has totally screwed up restricted free agency,” Marks said during an appearance on ESPN’s YouTube channel. “Because that’s where agents are looking at like the benchmark. Certainly, [Bulls guard] Josh Giddey’s like, ‘I want that contract.’ That number has screwed up a lot of things.” Marks said agents are citing Quickley’s deal in negotiations for other young guards with similar production and upside, but teams haven’t been willing to match the price tag. “I don’t think Toronto got enough heat for that number,” he added. “Because Immanuel Quickley is not a $32, $33 million guy.” Clarkson Still a Wild Card for Knicks The Knicks are hoping Jordan Clarkson provides a spark off the bench, but there is uncertainty about what exactly he brings at this stage of his career. As one Western Conference scout told The New York Post’s Stefan Bondy, Clarkson hasn’t played meaningful basketball in quite a while and remains a bit of a mystery heading into the 2025–26 season. Still, one Knicks source believes the veteran scorer is “exactly what we needed,” and sees him as a strong fit off the bench. A veteran coach who spoke with Bondy sees upside but also concerns. “High-level shooter. Good going right,” the coach said. “Wild-card-type player. Throw him out there and see if he can get hot. But there’s not much else from a production standpoint. And it’s ugly on defense.” Maxey Gives Back in Philly Tyrese Maxey continues to make an impact beyond the court. The 76ers guard hosted a free youth basketball camp over the weekend and donated $60,000 through his foundation, per The Philadelphia Inquirer’s Keith Pompey. Maxey’s community efforts have become a regular part of his offseason work in the Philadelphia area. More NBA News Rumors
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