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Tottenham hit by mass sickness bug outbreak as several stars in Ange Postecoglou's depleted squad miss training just one day ahead of tough test against Newcastle

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Tottenham's preparations for the visit of Newcastle have been disrupted by illness within the squad, manager Ange Postecoglou has confirmed.

Spurs head into the clash in the bottom half of the Premier League table after a dismal run of form has left them 11 points off the top four.

They face a Newcastle side who have won their last five matches in all competitions, only conceding one goal in that run.

Postecoglou's team have been riddled with injuries this campaign, with key defenders Micky van de Ven and Cristian Romero missing the festive period after going off in a 4-3 loss to Chelsea in early December.

And now the Australian boss will potentially have to deal with some more absentees after a sickness bug forced some players to miss training.

'None of the injured ones are back yet,' said Postecoglou. 'We've had a bit of an illness bug around the squad so a few were missing from training but we'll be alright.'

While Tottenham will be without both Van de Ven and Romero this weekend, Postecoglou did confirm that they are expected back in training next week.

He continued: 'At this stage, Richy and Mikey Moore are the two next cabs off the rank, hopefully next week at some point.

'Ben [Davies], Micky van de Ven, Romero all around the same time, the back end of January they're slated to return.

'Destiny obviously with his hamstring looks around the six-week mark for him missing.'

Spurs will also be without Rodrigo Bentancur this weekend due to suspension after the midfielder picked up his fifth yellow card in his second game back following a seven-match league ban.

However, Saturday lunchtime will see the return of Djed Spence, who missed the Wolves draw through suspension.

Tottenham have won just one of their last seven Premier League matches, picking up just five points in that time.

The string of poor results has ramped up the pressure on Postecoglou. Nevertheless, Mail Sport understands Postecoglou’s position remains safe for now.

Despite knowing his job is secure for the time being, Postecoglou admitted how much the bad run is affecting him.

'It hurts me because I'm responsible ultimately,' said Postecoglou after Tottenham's draw at home to Wolves. 'I'm the person in charge. So of course, it hurts.

'When I see how hard they are trying, it hurts even more because you want them to get a reward and I think they deserved a reward for their efforts even though they were dipping into their reserves of energy.

'I wanted them to get a reward for their efforts. So of course, it hurts. It hurts immensely. At the same time, it's my responsibility for where we're at right now and it's my responsibility to try to get us out of it.'

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Football manager Joe Kinnear leaves massive amount to his wife in will after his death at 77 following lengthy dementia battle

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Legendary football manager Joe Kinnear has left a hefty six-figure sum to his wife after passing away at the age of 77.

The former Wimbledon and Newcastle manager died last April, having endured a long battle with vascular dementia since he was diagnosed in 2015.

Now court records have revealed the father-of-two has left his £840,000 fortune to his wife Bonnie, probate documents show. After fees, debts and costs were deducted, the total amount was £833,000.

Kinnear's grieving daughter, Russ Duffman, previously blamed his death on heading the ball throughout his 11-year footballing career.

The Dubliner revealed he was fighting the degenerative brain condition in 2021.

An autopsy confirmed that his brain had chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a brain disorder which is caused by repeated head injuries and leads to dementia.

His family donated his brain for research and an autopsy was carried out by Dr Willie Stewart, consultant neuropathologist at Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow.

'Dr Stewart intimated to me that CTE was the cause of his dementia and his death,' Ms Duffman told BBC Sport. 'He was a defender, so it was from heading the ball.'

'The autopsy] gives you closure, but thinking about it, we just feel angry again because I feel like his career has killed him. We learned a lot, but weren't surprised by the outcome. It does give you clarity.'

Following his death, his family said in a statement: 'We are sad to announce that Joe passed away peacefully this afternoon surrounded by his family.'

As a manager Kinnear was known for his cheeky humour and profanity-laced rants, but he had a colourful career as a player before that.

Born in Dublin to a father who worked in the Guinness brewery, Kinnear moved with his family to Watford at the age of seven.

After captaining Watford and Hertfordshire Schoolboys, then impressing at junior level at St Albans City, he was signed by Spurs in 1963 as a promising right-back.

Kinnear made his senior debut in 1966 and played 258 games for Tottenham, winning the FA Cup, the League Cup twice and UEFA Cup. He also received 26 international caps for Republic of Ireland.

He went on to play one season for Brighton before retiring aged 30 - and it was as a manager that he really made his name.

After initially owning a pub, The Stag, Kinnear took his coaching badges and began his management career at Al Shabab Al Arabi Club in Dubai alongside former Spurs colleague Dave Mackay.

After short stints coaching the Nepal and India national teams he returned to assist Mackay at Doncaster Rovers.

But it was his role at Wimbledon, where he arrived in 1992, that cemented his managerial legend.

After leading them to a sixth place finish in the Premier League in the 1993–94 season, he was voted Premier League Manager of the Month three times as his team finished above the likes of Liverpool, Aston Villa, Everton and Tottenham Hotspur.

Kinnear continued in the role until he suffered a heart attack before a league game in March 1999. He stood down in June of that year and Wimbledon were relegated from the Premier League.

After spells at Luton and Nottingham Forest, he returned to management with Newcastle in 2008 after a four-year hiatus in a famously defiant spell.

Kinnear made headlines in 2008 after conducting a profanity-laden press conference.

He began by launching a verbal tirade at the the roomful of journalists before him, reeling off more than 500 swearwords in the first five minutes of the briefing.

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Revealed: The Premier League fixture where Thomas Tuchel will make first scouting trip as England manager this weekend

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Thomas Tuchel's first scouting assignment as official England head coach will be at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium this weekend.

Mail Sport can reveal that the England boss will attend the Saturday lunchtime clash between Spurs and Newcastle, where he will hope to catch sight of Dominic Solanke, James Maddison, Anthony Gordon, Tino Livramento and Lewis Hall.

Tuchel will watch the Premier League encounter from the directors box as he starts to ponder his squad selection for his first games in charge against Latvia and Albania in March.

The former Chelsea boss is also expected to attend Liverpool versus Manchester United on Sunday, where Trent Alexander-Arnold, Curtis Jones, Jarrell Quansah, Kobbie Mainoo and Harry Maguire will be hoping to impress.

The former Chelsea boss has appointed fitness coach Nicolas Mayer to his staff alongside assistant Anthony Barry, goalkeeper coach Henrique Hilario and analyst James Melbourne.

Mayer has worked with Tuchel, who will hold a series of meetings at St George's Park next week, at Paris Saint-Germain and Bayern Munich.

Tuchel formally started work on January 1, becoming Gareth Southgate's permanent successor by signing an 18-month deal.

Meanwhile, Villa Park is emerging as a contender to host England's clash against Andorra in September.

The qualifier on September 6 cannot be played at Wembley because it clashes with a Coldplay concert.

But Aston Villa are among the options being considered by the Football Association for the game.

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Ange Postecoglou looks lonely at Tottenham - but Newcastle's Jason Tindall could show him an unlikely route to success, writes IAN LADYMAN

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There is an account on X called ‘Jason Tindall desperate to be centre of attention’ and it has more than 50,000 followers. It does what it suggests it does, which is poke fun at the Newcastle United assistant manager for never being far away from a camera lens on match day.

It is pretty gentle stuff. Jason Tindall hugging Jurgen Klopp while Eddie Howe – the Newcastle manager – waits patiently for a pre-match handshake. Tindall at the front of a dressing room celebration squad lineup while Howe is hard to see right at the back. And on it goes.

It plays to what we think we know about Tindall. He looks after himself. He dresses sharply. He always seems to have a suntan. He has perfect hair. It's easy to have a bit of a laugh about it. Howe has even been asked about it and admits he finds it funny.

But the truth is that without Tindall, Howe believes he would not be the same manager. They have been together for most of the last 15 years. At Bournemouth (twice), Burnley and now Newcastle. If Howe were ever to become England's head coach, Tindall would undoubtedly go there too. So when people are laughing at Tindall, Howe is not. Not on the inside.

'It's crazy how the internet and social media can create these things,' said Howe of his friend's viral fame. 'But to understand these things is to go back to where we started. That gives you a little bit of context to the reason he's in those situations.

'We started at Bournemouth with no money, no facilities, working with a group of players, and it was just the two of us and we did everything together. You name it, we did it.

'We travelled to watch the opposition five hours away in the car together. Just us. And we've never changed that approach throughout our journey together.'

That, to a degree, is the perfect summation of how so many manager-assistant relationships work. The guy front of house and the one standing nearby watching his back. A relationship based on trust, mutual understanding but also honesty. If the guy picking the team and doing the tactics is getting it wrong then somebody needs to be able to tell him.

Which brings us to the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Saturday where Newcastle – five wins on the spin, with one goal conceded – will play Spurs – two wins out of 10.

Tottenham – as we know – are a must-watch under Ange Postecoglou. Open, exciting and vibrant. But we also know that Postecoglou is under pressure and in need of results. At times it's hard not to think that he maybe needs a little help and it's interesting that he chooses to eschew the manager-coach relationship so prevalent across the Premier League.

Postecoglou never takes staff from club to club with him. He never has done. For example, he won five trophies in two seasons in Scotland with Celtic but chose to leave his winning formula behind when he came to England.

'If I am going to have longevity I have to make sure my message stays relevant and I need to evolve my ideas and beliefs,' is how Postecoglou explains it. 'Bringing in new coaches forces me to make sure the message is still relevant. I look for people who are brave and willing to go into the unknown.'

Few would doubt Postecoglou's courage or his individuality. Both are admirable. But this is not some kind of social experiment platform, it's the Premier League.

The more you look at the Tottenham manager looking stressed agitated and a little lonely on the touchline and in post-match interviews, the more you wonder whether he would benefit from someone standing next to him who really knows him, can judge his moods and choose which of his buttons to press and when.

None of this is to denigrate Tottenham's coaching staff, a group of young men with different backgrounds. Postecoglou chose them when he arrived at the club and he may point out that we would not be having this conversation if his team was winning. But Spurs are not winning anywhere near enough, so it's fair that every little piece of what he does is under scrutiny.

Football's past is littered with great managerial partnerships and we know who they are. And though things have changed since the days of the Liverpool boot room, certain principles have endured. That Postecoglou chooses to stand almost alone does make him different.

His is a model that has worked for him wherever he has been. He is a serial winner. But the Premier League is a uniquely challenging environment and it's hard not to look at him at times and wonder if he would not benefit from a tried and trusted ally standing right behind him.

Or – in the case of Howe and Tindall – right in front of him in the glare of the flashlights.

Macari omission is scandalous

If everyone who has ever struck a cricket ball in anger now has letters after their name then nobody should be surprised that Gareth Southgate has a knighthood.

But still there is nothing for Lou Macari despite his years of selflessness and time given to helping Stoke-on-Trent's homeless community.

Macari – once of Manchester United and Scotland – does not ask for thanks or recognition. That's not what the Macari Centre is about.

But the fact his devotion and work towards easing one of his adopted town's greatest ills continues to go unheralded is scandalous.

Rooney unlikely to manage in England again

Wayne Rooney's sacking at Plymouth has several layers to it and my colleague Simon Jordan put it pretty well when he suggested that there really was scant justification for the Championship club appointing him in the first place.

Rooney's record since returning from America where he coached in the MLS to join Birmingham City in October 2023 is a pretty miserable six wins from 38 Championship games.

There are always mitigating circumstances and Rooney's half season at Devon was beset by injury issues.

But the sad truth is that over time the 39-year-old has shown himself to be short of the mark and the pertinent question now revolves around what happens next.

It is unlikely Rooney will manage in this country again. He would be an excellent TV pundit and will not be short of offers.

But there must be a way for the game in this country to ensure that all those years of accrued knowledge, experience and football wisdom are not lost.

Currently the options for the many great players who reach the end of their playing road seem to be management or bust and surely it should not be that way.

Still English football dallies and prevaricates

The VAR check for Liverpool's second goal against Leicester seemed to last forever and that's because it did. Three minutes and more.

We were supposed to be using the semi-automated system favoured by the Champions League and the big summer tournaments by now. That's the technology that really works.

But we aren't using. Not yet. Still we dally and prevaricate. English football continues to view itself as different to the rest. And it is. Just not in a good way.

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PLAY TEAMSHEET: Can YOU remember the Tottenham side that thrashed Fulham 5-1 on Boxing Day in 2007?

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HOW TO PLAY

The aim of the game is to score as few points as possible!

If you guess a player at the first attempt you score one point - so the lowest score for guessing every player at the first attempt is 11.

Guess a correct letter in the right position, and it'll turn green. Guess a correct letter but in the wrong position, and it'll turn yellow.

You have six guesses for each player - and if you fail, we'll reveal their identity for 11 points! You can also ask for a free letter, but it costs you a point.

So play on to see if you'll score the best possible total of 11 - or fail on every player and score 121.

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Surprise Premier League side 'enter race for PSG striker Randal Kolo Muani' - after Man United and Tottenham showed interest in wantaway French star

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Interest in wantaway Paris Saint-Germain star Randal Kolo Muani is ramping up with a third Premier League team reportedly entering the race for the striker.

The Frenchman joined the Champions League side from Eintracht Frankfurt in 2023 for £79million having scored 26 goals and assisted 17 in 50 matches.

He had also starred for his national team at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, coming off the bench to score in the semi-final against Morocco before starting in the final versus Argentina.

Things have not clicked for him at PSG, however, with the forward enduring a disappointing maiden campaign at the Parc des Princes, finding the net just nine times in 40 games.

This season Kolo Muani's stock has dropped even further, with boss Luis Enrique limiting the 26-year-old to just two league starts so far.

Now the striker is on the radar of a shock Premier League side after Manchester United and Tottenham Hotspur showed interest last month, L'Equipe reports.

Aston Villa already have England international Ollie Watkins and emerging star Jhon Duran as forward options but are exploring the idea of a move for Kolo Muani.

Unai Emery's men have suffered a dip in form after an exhilarating start to the season which peaked with a 1-0 win over Bayern Munich in the Champions League.

They currently sit in ninth place with 29 points from 19 matches and Duran is facing a three-game suspension after his angry reaction to being sent off against Newcastle.

Asked about Muani's future at PSG last month Enrique insisted: 'I could speak about it but I won't because my decisions say it all, even if as I have said, all of my decisions can be changed.'

Muani has three-and-a-half years left on his contract with Les Parisiens, with the deal reportedly worth upwards of £200,000-per-week.

Arsenal are reportedly set to be offered the chance to sign the PSG forward on loan to serve as cover for Bukayo Saka, who went off injured against Crystal Palace.

The Premier League sides in for Kolo Muani face competition from AC Milan and Juventus in Italy, and Red Bull Leipzig and Bayern in Germany. It has previously been reported that Germany is the most likely destination for the talent.

In the 2022 World Cup final the forward had the chance to win the tournament for France but was denied by Argentina goalkeeper Emiliano Martinez's 'save of the century'.

France have been able to get more out of Kolo Muani than PSG, with the striker scoring three goals in his last five outings for Les Bleus.

However, he has managed just three starts all season for PSG and has failed to make the squad for their last two league games.

The French giants have reportedly spoken with Kolo Muani's delegation and are willing to let him start afresh elsewhere in the new year.

The 26-year-old, who rose from the French third tier to the World Cup final in three years, is commended for his electric pace and strength.

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Referee who appeared to elbow Andy Robertson in the jaw to meet Liverpool star again in Carabao Cup tie against Tottenham - as official handed first Reds game in 21 months

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Constantine Hatzidakis, who appeared to elbow Andy Robertson in the jaw in April 2023, has been given his first Liverpool match since the controversial incident.

The official was suspended while his encounter with the Reds defender was investigated by chiefs.

However, the he was cleared of any wrongdoing by the Football Association after television footage appeared to show him apparently elbow the player at half-time of a 2-2 draw with Arsenal at Anfield.

Hatzidakis was understood to have apologised to Robertson on a Zoom call, with the Scotland captain accepting his explanation for what happened, and the FA choosing to take no further action.

Manchester United's clash with Aston Villa two weeks later marked Hatzidakis's return to the pitch for a Premier League fixture. He had officiated a Championship fixture between Preston North End and Blackburn Rovers shortly before.

In the 21 months that followed, the Englishman's encounters with Liverpool were limited to three matches in the VAR seat, but now he is set to meet Robertson once again in his first on-field Reds game since the incident.

Arne Slot's men face Tottenham Hotspur in the first leg of the Carabao Cup semi-final on January 8 and Hatzidakis will be running the line on that night.

James Mainwaring will join the official as an assistant referee, while Stuart Attwell is set to be the referee for the cup tie. Tim Robinson will be the fourth official.

Robertson claimed Hatzidakis elbowed him in the face after he approached the official as he walked off during Liverpool's Premier league match against Arsenal at Anfield earlier this month.

The clash was caught on camera – with Robertson and his team mates protesting furiously to the match referee over the incident. However, the FA conducted an investigation of their own, drawing the conclusion that no further action was required.

'We have thoroughly reviewed all of the evidence in relation to the recent incident at Anfield involving the Liverpool defender and match official, and we will be taking no further action,' read an FA statement.

'Our comprehensive process involved reviewing detailed statements from Liverpool and PGMOL, as well as multiple angles of video footage, in relation to both the incident and its surrounding circumstances.'

Meanwhile, Hatzidakis released a statement after his conversation with Robertson, stating his excitement at the prospect of returning to action, as well as highlighting that it was not his 'intention' to make contact with the player.

'I have discussed the matter directly with Andy Robertson during an open and positive conversation,' his statement read.

'It was not my intention to make any contact with Andy as I pulled my arm away from him and for that I have apologised.'

The return of Hatzidakis is unlikely to faze Slot, who has unflappably led Liverpool to a six-point lead at the top of the Premier League with a game in hand.

The Reds also find themselves at the summit of the Champions League and in the semi-finals of the Carabao Cup, having lost just one match all season.

Slot arrived at Anfield in the summer and was not in the dugout for the incident in April 2023. Jurgen Klopp was Reds boss that day but announced his departure nine months later.

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Watch moment Hwang Hee-chan played a key role in stopping his South Korean team-mate Son Heung-min from scoring his penalty in Tottenham's 2-2 draw with Wolves

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Footage has emerged of Wolves striker Hwang Hee-chan playing a decisive role in stopping his international team-mate Son Heung-min during Sunday's 2-2 draw with Tottenham.

Hwang and Son have 200 international caps between them and have come together to produce some big moments for South Korea over the years.

But they were on opposite sides this weekend, and that worked against Son just before half time when he stepped up to take a penalty for Spurs.

Brennan Johnson had been brought down in the area, and Son had the chance to put Tottenham 2-1 up after Rodrigo Bentancur earlier cancelled out Hwang's opener.

But as the Spurs captain waited to take his spot-kick, Hwang could be seen frantically waving his arms to get Jose Sa's attention and tell him to dive to his right.

Radu Dragusin tried to stop Hwang, but to no avail as the Wolves star managed to get his message across. Sure enough, when Son did step up, he went to the side that Hwang predicted, but so did Sa, and he parried the effort to safety.

It was a huge moment in the game, and further dampened the mood at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium as the home fans grew more restless amid their team's struggles in the first half of the season.

Spurs did still manage to go into the break in front when Johnson netted deep into added time, but Sa's save ensured that Wolves remained within touching distance.

They refused to give in throughout the second half, and finally got their reward with three minutes remaining when Jorgen Strand Larsen fired home an equaliser.

His late goal stretched Wolves' unbeaten start to life under new manager Vitor Pereira to three matches, and moved the Midlands club two points clear of the bottom three.

And it was all possible thanks to Hwang's intervention to deny his fellow countryman Son.

Meanwhile, Tottenham were made to rue Son's miss, and will now enter 2025 in the bottom half of the table.

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RB Leipzig 'fear Tottenham will send Timo Werner BACK' to the Bundesliga club - with the on-loan forward still yet to score for Spurs in the Premier League this campaign

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Spurs agreed purchase option worth almost £10million in Timo Werner's loan

But RB Leipzig fear Tottenham will send Werner back at the end of the season

LISTEN NOW: It's All Kicking Off! New formation, some new faces, but the optimism has gone at Old Trafford

RB Leipzig fear Tottenham will send Timo Werner back to the Bundesliga after his dismal loan spell in north London is complete, according to reports in Germany.

Spurs signed the German forward on loan in January before deciding to extend his stay until the end of the 2024-25 season, agreeing a purchase option worth almost £10million in his deal.

Werner was once viewed as one of the hottest strikers in European football during his first spell with RB Leipzig, but his form has knack for scoring goals has fallen off a cliff in recent seasons — beginning with his ill-fated £47.5m move to Chelsea in 2020.

The 28-year-old star has yet to score a single goal in the Premier League so far this campaign, despite playing 19 matches in the competition.

Of those appearances, only three have been starts — with Ange Postecoglou not naming him in a Premier League starting lineup since March, despite Spurs' ongoing injury problems.

Now, according to German outlet Bild, RB Leipzig are concerned that Tottenham will reject the £10m buy option at the end of June and place him on the first plane back to Saxony.

Werner has fallen further down Postecoglou's pecking order this season with Dominic Solanke, Son Heung-min, Dejan Kulusevski, James Maddison and Brennan Johnson all clearly favoured in attacking areas.

Meanwhile, Brazil international Richarlison and exciting 20-year-old prospect Wilson Odobert, who are both currently injured, will also be options in attack when available.

The German newspaper claims, however, that Tottenham will not send Werner back to Leipzig before the end of his loan spell in June, describing that eventuality as 'out of the question'.

It is understood Leipzig do not want to pay Werner's annual salary of almost £10m anymore and would consider his return a 'painful' reunion.

Postecoglou savaged Werner after hauling the Germany international off at half-time against Rangers earlier this month.

'He wasn't playing anywhere near the level he should,' said Postecoglou when asked if the substitution, which saw Werner come off for Kulusevski, was tactical.

'When you've got 18-year-olds out there, it's not acceptable to me. I said that to Timo.

'He's a senior international, he's a German international. In the moment we're in right now, it's not like we've got many options.

'I need everyone to at least be going out there trying to give the best of themselves. His performance in the first half wasn't acceptable.'

When asked how Werner had taken the criticism, the manager said: 'It's not really of great concern. We need everybody including him to be contributing. Because we don't have the depth to leave people out if they're performing poorly.'

Tottenham's poor December continued on Sunday with a disappointing 2-2 draw against Wolves in north London.

Spurs slipped to 11th in the Premier League and will finish 2024 in the bottom half if Brentford win or draw against Arsenal on Monday.

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Man City January transfer briefing: JACK GAUGHAN reveals the seven players on City's radar, the latest on Jack Grealish and Kyle Walker's futures and what their spending could reveal about 115 charges

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It could be worse. The last time Manchester City saw in the new year outside the top four was only four years ago, when they were all the way down in eighth, with Liverpool riding high at the top - and they still came back to win the title by 12 points.

Of course, the gap to Liverpool then was only seven points, where it is now 14. And City were nowhere near as lost as they look this season, even after snapping their winless run with a 2-0 win at Leicester on Sunday.

Very few would bet on them turning this around to claim a fifth-consecutive league title, but if anyone was going to do it...

What do City need?

City were due for a squad refresh over the coming windows but the need for that has accelerated after the form of the past two months.

Pep Guardiola intimated in recent weeks that any fresh faces would have a short-term benefit to an ailing team at the moment but has since stressed that potential signings must be made with a view to being successful over a number of years rather than just in the here and now.

It's obvious that City require new blood in central midfield and, given the carousel of injuries in the back line, some defensive reinforcement. The onus on Erling Haaland is greater than ever before and they are also on the lookout for a forward. There is also talk within the industry of a search for a goalkeeper.

Do they have money to spend?

The short answer is yes. City's latest annual report, published earlier this month, revealed a £73.8million profit from last year - and that doesn't include the £64m initial fee received from Atletico Madrid for Julian Alvarez in August.

City's net spend on transfers over the last five years is significantly lower than their rivals and, given a rebuild was already on the cards, there is money set aside for business.

Figures within the game are eagerly awaiting to see how much is spent given the backdrop of a hearing with the Premier League over alleged financial breaches and believe it will offer some indication on City's confidence regarding the case - something the club themselves would understandably deny.

Which players are they interested in?

January is not a market City usually shop in, with Aymeric Laporte the last big winter addition back in 2018. And the reason for that is it's a tricky window from a value point of view.

That said, they know work has to be done. Versatile midfielder Joshua Kimmich, out of contract at Bayern Munich in the summer, has long fancied a move to the Premier League. Mail Sport has reported that Atalanta's Brazilian Ederson has been watched by City. Adam Wharton at Crystal Palace has admirers.

While both Martin Zubimendi and Bruno Guimaraes have also been discussed, City last week moved to rule out their possible January arrivals. City also knocked down the idea of a deal for Atletico Madrid's Pablo Barrios, although they are thought to have previously debated moving for the Spain international.

There is a buyback clause in Liam Delap's contract at Ipswich Town, with Lille striker Jonathan David also linked having scored 19 goals in 28 games for club and country this term. Omar Marmoush, 25, at Eintracht Frankfurt is possibly one to watch after the Egyptian netted 18 goals in 24 appearances for the Bundesliga side so far.

Wharton's Palace team-mate Marc Guehi is well liked at centre half but is likely to be out of any Premier League club's reach in January.

Claudio Echeverri is linking up with Guardiola's squad at the end of the month after playing in the Under 20s Copa America with Argentina, having sealed a switch from River Plate. He's seen as a talent to be coached rather than immediately impacting the team.

Who might leave?

Guardiola is on record as saying he doesn't expect anybody to depart next month. City's squad is thin by design and any flaws in that are exacerbated by the never-ending injury list.

Tottenham and Newcastle United are believed to be monitoring Jack Grealish's situation, however, while Ederson had a huge offer from Saudi Arabia on the table last summer that has not disappeared entirely.

Kyle Walker is thought to be assessing his options moving forward as well as Matheus Nunes. Academy graduate James McAtee may think his future is best served elsewhere after a lack of games but any departures ought to be contingent on incomings.

Any unexpected moves to keep an eye on?

Teenage centre half Juma Bah, currently on loan at Real Valladolid from AIK Freetong in Sierra Leone, is a name from left field.

He's 6ft 4in and has impressed in LaLiga. He'd be seen in a similar vein to Echeverri.

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