Manchester United are reportedly keen on bringing Tottenham star Harry Kane to Old Trafford in the summer.

Kane, 29 has spent the entirety of his senior career in North London but has no major honours to show for it, leading to growing frustrations for the player.

And with Spurs struggling to keep pace with the Premier League’s top four this season, the England captain could initiate another attempt to force his way out of the club.

Kane tried to push through a move to Manchester City two seasons ago, but chairman Daniel Levy refused to sanction a transfer for anything less than £120million.

But reports from The Daily Mail suggest that Levy would not stand in the striker’s way should he ask to leave again this summer.

The No10 has a contract that expires in the summer of 2024 and despite hints of a new deal earlier in the season, it seems unlikely that Kane will renew under the current regime.

Therefore, this summer will likely be the last opportunity for the club to cash in on the talented goalscorer.

Erik ten Hag is said to be keen on bringing an established No9 to Manchester — after Wout Weghorst’s six-month loan deal has expired.

However, Spurs are notoriously tough negotiators so any deal in the coming months will require patience and flexibility on both sides.

In other news

Reports from The Evening Standard claim that Arsenal could launch a surprise loan move for Real Madrid midfielder Eduardo Camavinga to help bolster their squad until the end of the season.

Chelsea winger Hakim Ziyech is keen to leave the Blues this month and would prefer a move to Spanish giants Barcelona, according to sources.

Transfer guru Fabrizio Romano reports that Liverpool are still in talks with Roberto Firmino over a new contract, despite the arrival of Cody Gakpo this month.

Vincent Aboubakar is poised to join Besiktas for a third time after the January transfers of Cristiano Ronaldo and Wout Weghorst set up a Super Lig opportunity for the Cameroonian.

Al Nassr announced Aboubakar’s exit, before Besiktas on Saturday confirmed they were in talks with the striker.

A pair of transfers involving Manchester United have paved the way for the deal.

Al Nassr pounced when United released Ronaldo in November, and the Premier League club then plumped for Weghorst as they sought a replacement, prising him away from his loan from Burnley to Besiktas.

With Besiktas seeking a player to take Weghorst’s place, they struck on Aboubakar as the man for the job, knowing exactly what he will bring.

Now 30, Aboubakar spent a season on loan from Porto to Besiktas in 2016-17, and he joined the Istanbul giants again in September 2020 after leaving Portugal.

He left at the end of the 2020-21 season after Saudi club Al Nassr came in for him, but his Pro League stint has come to an end following Ronaldo’s arrival.

Besiktas confirmed in a statement that they are in the process of signing Aboubakar.

“Negotiations have started with the player regarding the transfer of professional footballer Vincent Pate Aboubakar,” Besiktas said.

Aboubakar captained Cameroon at the World Cup in Qatar. He was sent off after tearing off his shirt when celebrating his winning goal in a group game against Brazil, with the result not enough to carry the Indomitable Lions through to the knock-out stage.

Liverpool are enduring a tough season and Jurgen Klopp needs to turn things around fast. 

The Reds sit ninth in the Premier League table, 10 points off the top four and 19 behind league leaders Arsenal. 

They have also lost each of their last two top-flight matches — at Brentford and Brighton — conceding three times on both occasions. 

Ahead of Liverpool’s clash with Chelsea, we take a look at the Merseysiders’ issues and how they can fix them.

A complex problem

Klopp has insisted that he has no plans to step down, despite Liverpool’s poor league form and that more January signings may not be the answer to his side’s struggles. 

The German boss, 55, said: “Either the manager’s position changes or a lot of other things change. So, as far as I am concerned, unless someone tells me, I will not go. 

“So that means maybe there is a point where we have to change other stuff. We will see but that is something for the future. Like summer or whatever. Not now. 

“I have space and time to think about it. We have to play better football now. 

“I am loyal [to my players]. I think everybody should be loyal but I am not too loyal. 

“The problem is too complex. You have a good player who did a lot of good things in the past and then in your mind [you think] maybe that’s it for him. 

“If you can, then go out and bring in another player to replace [him] — that makes sense. [But] if you cannot bring anybody in, you cannot bring anybody out. That is the situation.”

The ex-Borussia Dortmund coach will at least have been buoyed by his team’s 1-0 FA Cup victory at Wolves on Tuesday night, though his players will need to greatly improve on that performance in Premier League fixtures before confidence returns to Anfield.

Wasteful

The good news for Liverpool fans is that their side are still creating plenty of good opportunities — the bad news is that they are not taking enough of them. 

Missing a large volume of big chances is not unusual for teams that create at a high rate. After all, Manchester City and Manchester United both rank inside the league’s bottom four for this metric.

However, Klopp’s men are missing significantly more than their counterparts. The Reds have squandered 44 big chances, which is the most in the division and 10 more than the second-highest tally of 34, recorded by both City and Newcastle. 

That would be palatable if the ratio of significant opportunities converted to those missed was closer together but it is not. The Anfield outfit have scored just 16 of their 60 big chances.

Keeping composure

Liverpool’s collective profligacy is reflected in the numbers of their key forwards.

Marquee summer signing Darwin Nunez has missed a league-high 15 big chances, converting just four, while talisman Mohamed Salah has failed to convert 12 of his 17 such opportunities.

Both players are getting into good positions and are being found by team-mates, they just need to show more composure in front of goal.

The pair’s quality is not in question but the Merseysiders need their star duo to gain confidence and belief, whether that comes from repetition on the training ground or a couple of morale-boosting goals in their next few games.

Costly mistakes

Liverpool have conceded 25 Premier League goals this season, a number that does not appear to be overly concerning at first glance.

However, the underlying data paints a far more worrying picture.

The Reds have kept just four clean sheets — only Southampton, West Ham and Leeds have managed fewer. The former two are in the relegation zone and the latter are just two points better off.

In some ways, Klopp will feel his side have been harshly punished when they have made mistakes.

They have made four errors leading to a goal — only Tottenham have made more (six) — but those have come from a total of just seven errors leading to a shot.

Chelsea, meanwhile, have made the same number of total mistakes (seven) but have only conceded once from those situations.

Sloppy defending

Bad luck is an excuse that can only carry Liverpool so far, however.

The reigning FA Cup and Carabao Cup winners are famed for their pressing prowess but they currently rank joint-13th in the Premier League for possessions won in the attacking third. That is level with Southampton on 86, 36 behind City’s total of 122, the highest in the competition.

Furthermore, the Reds sit 15th in the league for challenges lost, with 121. As players lose their duels, they are taken out of the game and the team’s solidity is compromised, leaving gaps in the defence.

Liverpool are losing key battles across the pitch and the knock-on effect is clear. Every one of the 25 goals they have conceded have come from shots taken inside the box. Newcastle, who boast the best defence in the league this term, have only shipped 10 such goals.

It is difficult to pinpoint the root cause of these alarming numbers. It could be that fatigue after a long 2021-22 campaign is dulling the players’ ability to press with aggression, or it may be that the spaces between defence, midfield and attack are too large and the team must be more compact.

Whether Klopp changes the way his side defends to combat tiring legs, or uses time on the training ground to tighten up their shape, change must come quickly if they are to have any chance of salvaging something from this Premier League campaign.

Newcastle have been rock-solid at the back this season and the Magpies have the brilliant performances of Sven Botman to thank. 

The Dutchman has been imperious in the air and impeccable on the ground since arriving from Lille for around £35million in the summer. 

His displays have helped the Tynesiders mount a surprise challenge for Champions League qualification, sitting inside the top four ahead of Matchday 21. 

As Newcastle prepare to face Crystal Palace later today, we look at what Botman brings to Eddie Howe’s side.

Landing from Lille

Newcastle were forced to battle hard in the transfer market in order to bring Botman to St James’ Park. 

Serie A champions AC Milan were also believed to be keen on the centre-back but the Magpies flexed their financial muscles to compete with the Rossoneri — and ultimately won the race for his signature. 

The Badhoevedorp native had enjoyed an impressive two-year spell in France with Lille, turning heads across Europe with his eye-catching performances. 

That Ligue 1 experience, coupled with his Ajax academy training, has helped the 23-year-old become the well-rounded defender he is today.

No ceiling

Ahead of Newcastle’s 4-1 win over Southampton in November, Howe refused to rule out the possibility of Botman developing into one of the Premier League’s best-ever central defenders. 

He said: “I would not be here saying Sven can’t do anything, because that would be wrong of me. 

“He has the tools to be as good as any other centre-half talked about in Premier League history. 

“I’m not saying those names, I’m just saying I wouldn’t put a ceiling on what he can achieve. He’s got everything, in my view, I don’t see a weakness in his game. 

“Of course, he’s very young, he’s only had a handful of games in the Premier League, so he hasn’t had the longevity that he needs to say that over a longer period of time and that’s the challenge for him, to hit those consistent levels that he needs to. 

“On the ball, he is outstanding. Technically, he is very high level and can play short and long passes. He has all the tools. 

“He has got an understanding very quickly and picked up the pace of the Premier League very quickly, the physicality.”

Clean sheets

Newcastle currently boast the Premier League’s best defensive record — and it has been five matches since their rearguard was breached. 

The Magpies have only conceded 11 goals in their 19 top flight fixtures, keeping 11 clean sheets in the process. 

Eight of those 11 clean sheets were kept with Botman on the pitch, while his team have only shipped eight goals in his 17 appearances. 

Howe’s side have defended well as a unit — but Botman certainly deserves credit for his contribution to the cause.

An imposing figure

Botman may not be quite as large as team-mate Dan Burn — whose 6ft 6in frame earned him the moniker ‘Big Dan Burn’ — but the Dutchman is still an imposing figure at 6ft 4in. 

The Netherlands Under-21 international uses his height to great effect, recording 20 headed clearances and winning 31 aerial duels in league matches to date. 

Those numbers paint a picture of a defender who is both adept at using his head and capable of holding his own in physical battles. 

He is also unafraid to simply get the ball out of the danger zone when required, as evidenced by his 53 completed clearances.

Ball-playing centre-back

Despite his willingness to clear the ball, it would be remiss to style Botman as anything other than a technically proficient, ball-playing centre-back. 

No Newcastle player can boast a better passing accuracy in the Premier League than his 86.54%. 

And that statistic is not skewed by a low sample size — the Dutchman has attempted 743 passes so far this season. 

As a naturally left-footed player, he brings balance to the Magpies’ approach play from deep. 

Add these technical qualities to his rugged, defensive ones and it is clear to see why Newcastle pushed so hard to secure his signature. 

There is little doubt that Botman has been one of this season’s shrewdest acquisitions.

Manchester United are reportedly planning an audacious move for Tottenham star and England captain Harry Kane at the end of the season.

Kane, 29, has put together a spectacular goalscoring resume during his time at Spurs. He is one goal away from tying Jimmy Greaves as the club’s all-time leading scorer, while he has already tied Wayne Rooney for the most goals in an England shirt, and is third all-time for Premier League goals.

This season has been more of the same, as Kane has started all 20 of Antonio Conte’s side’s league fixtures and hit 15 goals, trailing only Manchester City’s Erling Haaland (22) in the race for the golden boot.

Tottenham have no interest in parting ways with their frontman, but his contract situation could force their hand.

TOP STORY – KANE INTERESTED IN A MOVE TO OLD TRAFFORD

According to the Daily Mail, United boss Erik ten Hag has put Kane at the top of his recruitment plans at the conclusion of the season, when the 29-year-old will have only 12 months remaining on his contract.

Crucially, the report states Kane “is open to joining United”, providing further indication that he is unlikely to sign an extension to remain at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

Spurs will demand a fee of at least £85million, while Bild adds both Bayern Munich and Real Madrid remain interested.

ROUND-UP

– The Guardian is reporting Liverpool will look to pursue 24-year-old Chelsea midfielder Mason Mount at the end of the season if he does not sign an extension at Stamford Bridge.

– According to the Evening Standard, Arsenal are hoping to bring in 20-year-old Real Madrid midfielder Eduardo Camavinga on a short-term loan.

– Calciomercato is reporting West Ham have proposed a loan with a mandatory £30m (€34m) buy clause for Roma midfielder Nicolo Zaniolo, but the Italian side want an immediate permanent deal.

Roma will look to replace Zaniolo with 23-year-old Sassuolo midfielder Davide Frattesi, who is valued at €30m, per Gazzetta dello Sport.

– The Daily Mail is reporting Leicester City have returned with a second offer for 24-year-old Stoke City and Australia centre-back Harry Souttar after their initial £10m bid was rejected.

Julian Nagelsmann was happy to trust the referee’s decision despite the fury of Bayern Munich’s players after RB Leipzig’s equaliser on Friday.

Marcel Halstenberg restored parity early in the second half at Red Bull Arena, cancelling out Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting’s opener with a scrappy close-range finish.

That goal was enough for Leipzig to claim a 1-1 draw in the first Bundesliga match of 2023 following a 68-day mid-season break – the longest the competition has been halted for during a season since the 1996-97 campaign (69 days).

However, Bayern’s players were unhappy Leipzig’s equaliser was allowed to stand, with Joshua Kimmich claiming he had been dragged down by Andre Silva in the build-up, while Leon Goretzka also had previously had a goal disallowed for Matthijs de Ligt straying offside.

Those appeals fell on deaf ears, with the VAR not deeming the referee had made a clear error, and Nagelsmann said he was satisfied enough, even though he suggested Kimmich did not go down of his own accord.

He told reporters: “Kimmich won’t fall on his own, but in the end I trust the referee.”

Nagelsmann instead claimed his team must have done better to defend in the first place.

“I think we can resolve the situation more clearly beforehand, then this scene won’t happen at all,” he added.

The draw ended a 10-match winning run for Bayern in all competitions, but Nagelsmann was content enough to come away from his former club with a point.

“In the end, you have to take the result as it comes. It was a very wild game at times, but that’s normal after such a long time,” he told Sat1. 

“We did many things well and many things badly. We can improve certain things. We gave away good opportunities, so the point at the end was fair.”

Frank Lampard said he has “given it everything” at Everton as he aims to claim a crucial victory that might ease the pressure on his job.

On Saturday, Everton face fellow strugglers West Ham, managed by former long-time Toffees boss David Moyes, in a huge clash at the bottom of the Premier League, with both teams level on 15 points.

A win could see Everton – who have lost seven of their past 10 games in all competitions and last won a match in October – rise to 14th.

However, defeat at London Stadium, combined with Southampton avoiding a loss against Aston Villa, would see them head into a two-week break propping up the table.

Lampard has been backed by Everton owner Farhad Moshiri, but he along with the club’s board is facing increasing scrutiny. The Toffees have not yet signed a player in January despite their manager acknowledging they wish to reinforce their squad, though the Chelsea great is not looking for excuses.

“That’s a tough one. I’ve absolutely given it everything that I can and it’s not one for me to analyse all the circumstances,” Lampard told reporters when he was asked if he would feel he had been able to fulfil the role to the best of his ability should he be sacked.

Asked if he felt Everton’s issues with recruitment were restricting him, Lampard added: “I can’t answer that question and I don’t want to answer in a way.

“I’ve been given an opportunity to work at a great club. I had one of the most amazing nights of my footballing career against Crystal Palace [last season], learned a lot about myself, about coaching, about living in this area.

“I’ve got my own opinions on those things obviously but I also had an understanding of what the job was, the size of the club, all the positive things and then some things that were maybe going to be taxing.

“Some things I can’t control on that front so I just work. Part of the responsibility of the job is to keep certain things private and keep working out of respect.”

Everton are reportedly close to signing forward Arnaut Danjuma on loan from Villarreal, and Lampard reiterated he hopes to add fresh faces to his squad.

“You want to help the squad and that [new players] would help me as a coach, no doubt,” he said. “None of us, as coaches, are geniuses.

“Some are probably closer to being geniuses than others but we are not absolute geniuses. And recruitment to get players is generally what will help you have relative success.

“Until that point, there is a responsibility to work with what you have got. There is also my own capacity – can I get better? Can they get better? We have to focus on what we have got here.”

Everton’s loss to Southampton last week was further marred by the fact that the club’s four-person board did not attend the game due to safety concerns.

It was subsequently claimed, through club sources, that chief executive Denise Barrett-Baxendale had been manhandled after a 4-1 defeat to Brighton and Hove Albion on January 3.

Merseyside Police confirmed no complaints had been filed by the club but they were working with Everton to ensure any threats were dealt with.

On Friday, the HerGameToo campaign announced they had been in contact with Everton over fears of the safety of female fans at Goodison Park.

A statement from the campaign confirmed Everton had provided reassurances that “robust procedures and reporting processes” were in place.

Jurgen Klopp reaches 1,000 games as a head coach and manager on Saturday when Liverpool tackle Chelsea, and it has been quite a ride.

From a relegation battle with Mainz in the German second division to the heights of Champions League glory with Liverpool, Klopp has achieved more than anyone expected of a man whose playing career was distinctly modest.

It would be stretching it to say the signs were there from day one, but they were certainly there from day two.

Klopp was named as an interim replacement for Eckhard Krautzun when Mainz decided on a change of leader on February 27, 2001.

One day later, Klopp made his debut as a coach in the second tier of the Bundesliga. He had been a player in the team until that point, but this marked the beginning of a new chapter.

Club president Harald Strutz, quoted in the Rheinische Post at the time, voiced the suggestion the interim boss could stake a claim for the full-time job.

“Maybe that will be a permanent solution,” Strutz said, presciently.

Midfielder Christof Babatz, who would be a significant figure in Mainz’s rise to the Bundesliga under Klopp, then said after the first game resulted in a 1-0 win over Duisburg: “The coach teased that certain something out of us.”

And so began the story of Klopp’s touchline career, one centred on teasing out the very best from the talent at his disposal, nurturing prospects into polished performers, and tallying trophies along the way. From Mainz, to Borussia Dortmund, and eventually to Liverpool, Klopp has delivered on that initial leap of faith.

There have been league titles, cup triumphs and big European final nights with Liverpool and Dortmund, plus promotion and even a relegation during his formative Mainz days.

Here, Stats Perform looks at those first 999 games, as Opta data shows some essential numbers behind one of the 21st century’s great coaching careers.

Pep, Howe, Hecking and Magath – Klopp’s rivalries

Klopp has faced Pep Guardiola more than any other rival manager, going head-to-head with the Catalan 27 times across their careers.

There have been notable defeats along the way, including the 2014 DFB-Pokal final, when Klopp’s Dortmund went down 2-0 to Guardiola’s Bayern, and the 5-0 and 4-0 thrashings meted out by Manchester City to Liverpool in September 2017 and July 2020, both of which rank among the top nine heaviest defeats Klopp has had to stomach.

However, Klopp has the overall upper hand across their meetings, winning 11, drawing seven and losing nine of those games.

He has faced only one other boss more than 20 times: German Dieter Hecking, against whom Klopp pitted his wits 21 times, winning 11, drawing five and losing five. Hecking bossed Lubeck, Alemannia Aachen, Hannover, Nurnberg and Wolfsburg during Klopp’s time in the German leagues.

Klopp certainly has a happy record against Newcastle United’s former Bournemouth boss Eddie Howe, achieving 11 wins from their 13 meetings.

This shows the most wins Klopp has had against any boss is 11, against Guardiola, Hecking and Howe, while it can be revealed the team he has beaten the most are Freiburg (13 times), followed by Crystal Palace, Nurnberg and Arsenal (all 12).

His real nemesis appears to have been Felix Magath, the former Stuttgart, Bayern, Wolfsburg and Schalke coach. In 14 games against Magath teams, Klopp won only three times, losing eight.

Bayern have had the most wins against Klopp, with 16. No other team have reached double figures, with Hamburg, Schalke and Wolfsburg (all nine) next on the list.

The milestones, the biggest and the best… and the games he’d rather forget

Klopp won that first match of his career against Duisburg, and to date he has never lost on each 100th game on his way towards 1,000 as a boss.

There have been wins against the way against Bochum (200th game), Werder Bremen (300th), his old club Mainz (400th), Freiburg (500th) and Southampton (600th), and draws on his 700th, 800th and 900th games, against Newcastle, Chelsea and Real Madrid, respectively. Klopp’s 100th game was also a draw, against Unterhaching with Mainz.

His biggest win was the 9-0 trouncing that Liverpool dished out to Bournemouth in August of this season, and his Liverpool team have also hit seven in a game five times (Maribor, Spartak Moscow, Crystal Palace, Lincoln City and Rangers), while his biggest win as a boss in Germany was Dortmund’s 6-0 crushing of Arminia Bielefeld in May 2009.

Klopp has suffered four defeats by five-goal margins, the worst he has had to endure, with Aston Villa inflicting two of those: 7-2 in October 2020 and 5-0 in December 2019 – albeit the latter with Klopp and his frontline Liverpool stars out of the country on Club World Cup duty. There was also a 6-1 torching for Mainz at the hands of Werder Bremen in October 2006, and Liverpool’s 5-0 whipping by Guardiola’s City.

When it comes to promoting young talent, Klopp has rarely hesitated. His youngest player was Harvey Elliott, now a first-team squad regular at Liverpool, who faced MK Dons in the EFL Cup at the age of 16 years and 174 days in September 2019.

Klopp has fielded five 16-year-olds for Liverpool, plus seven 17-year-olds, while he also gave chances to the 17-year-old Mario Gotze at Dortmund, and Mario Vrancic, also 17, during his time at Mainz. Gotze went on to become a World Cup final match-winner.

His oldest player was Peter Neustadter, a Kazakh defender who was older than Klopp himself, aged 37 years and 176 days, when he turned out for Mainz against Alemannia Aachen in the Bundesliga’s second tier in August 2003.

Warhorse midfielder James Milner could yet break that record as the oldest Liverpool player to have appeared for Klopp, aged 37 years and 13 days when he played in the recent FA Cup replay win against Wolves this week.

James Woodburn remains the youngest scorer for Klopp after hitting the net against Leeds in an EFL Cup clash in November 2016 at the age of 17 years and 45 days, while Sebastian Kehl ranks as his oldest scorer – 35 years and 53 days old when he bagged for Dortmund against Hoffenheim in a DFB-Pokal quarter-final in April 2015.

Klopp’s kingpins

Roberto Firmino has played more games for Klopp than anyone, racking up 341 outings for Liverpool under the manager, with Milner (301) next on the list.

When it comes to starters, though, we get a different picture, with former Dortmund goalkeeper Roman Weidenfeller top of the list with 280 games, followed by another BVB stalwart, Neven Subotic (278), and then Firmino (277 starts). Milner is a long way down that list, with 112 of the veteran’s appearances for Klopp having come as a substitute.

Mohamed Salah has made 282 appearances and 261 starts for Klopp, and when it comes to scorers for the Reds manager, the brilliant Egyptian is the untouchable number one.

His 173 goals put him streets ahead of Klopp’s next highest scorer, Sadio Mane (120), with Firmino (107) and former Dortmund supreme finisher Robert Lewandowski (103) being the only other players to reach three figures.

Among players with 10 or more goals for Klopp teams, Salah has also scored at the fastest rate, netting once every 133 minutes, with Lewandowski in a tie for second place with Darwin Nunez, both scoring at one per 139 minutes. Nunez scrapes onto the list, having scored 10 times so far.

Lewandowski hit four hat-tricks for Klopp’s Dortmund, while Salah has managed five for Liverpool under the German.

Both men once hit four in a game for Klopp, with Lewandowski doing so in a Champions League semi-final against Real Madrid, and Salah in a Premier League match against Watford.

The manager teased plenty out of those two down the years, and Klopp will doubtless look to Salah, a former Chelsea player, to ensure his 1,000th game brings cause for celebration.

Juventus have confirmed they intend to appeal against their 15-point deduction as they consider it “a clear injustice towards millions of fans”.

The Italian Football Federation (FIGC) confirmed the punishment on Friday following an investigation into the 36-time Italian champions’ past transfer dealings.

Juve have slipped from third in Serie A to 10th and are 12 points off the Champions League places with 20 matches left to play.

The FIGC also hit the club’s former president Andrea Agnelli and former chief executive Maurizio Arrivabene with two-year bans from Italian football.

Former sporting director Fabio Paratici, who is now at Tottenham, has been given a 30-month ban.

However, the Bianconeri have always denied any wrongdoing and hope the sanctions will be overturned on appeal.

A statement by the club’s lawyers read: “Today’s acceptance of the appeal for revocation by the Federal Court of Appeal seems to us to constitute a clear unequal treatment to the detriment of Juventus and its managers compared to any other club or registered player.

“We are waiting to carefully read the reasons for presenting the appeal before the Sports Guarantee College. However, we point out, as of now, that only Juventus and its managers are attributed the violation of a rule, which the sports justice itself had repeatedly recognised did not exist. 

“We believe that this is a clear injustice also towards millions of fans, which we trust will soon be remedied in the next level of judgement.”

Turin Public Prosecutor’s Office had been seeking a nine-point deduction following a hearing earlier on Friday.

But the FIGC announced a harsher punishment after Juve were found to have used transfers to artificially boost their balance sheet.

The sanctions come on the back of chairman Agnelli and the rest of the Bianconeri’s board resigning en masse last year.

That came in the wake of an investigation being launched into financial violations during their time in charge.

A separate ruling made last year acquitted Juve and other clubs of their financial conduct within Serie A, with a case centred on player values in exchanges and transfers.

But football prosecutors reopened the case against Juve after seeking new documents collected by public prosecutors in Turin surrounding the club’s conduct.

Leicester have confirmed the signing of Danish left-back Victor Kristiansen from Copenhagen.

Kristiansen, a Denmark Under-21 international, has signed a five-and-a-half-year deal, with Leicester reportedly paying Copenhagen £17million (€19m).

The Foxes were in need of defensive reinforcements, particularly at full-back, with James Justin and Ricardo Pereira both out with long-term injuries, though the latter could return to action soon. Ryan Bertrand, meanwhile, has been out of action for over a year.

Kristiansen, 20, told the club’s official website: “It feels amazing. It’s really exciting to be here and I’m so excited to meet everyone at the club, as well as the fans.

“The Premier League is probably the best league in the world, and Leicester is a top team, so of course, I was excited. It was a no-brainer for me to say yes to this great opportunity.”

Leicester might be a “top team” in Kristiansen’s eyes, but they are struggling this season.

Brendan Rodgers’ team sit 15th, just two points above the bottom three, ahead of Saturday’s home game against Brighton and Hove Albion.

Leicester have lost all four league games since the competition restarted after the World Cup, having gone on a run of four wins from five matches prior to the break.