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Jackson and Summerville Linked to Aston Villa, Plus World Cup Revenue Record Looms
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Jackson and Summerville Linked to Aston Villa, Plus World Cup Revenue Record Looms

6 hours ago·2 min

Villa eye attacking reinforcements

Aston Villa are exploring options in the attacking third, with Chelsea striker Nicolas Jackson and West Ham winger Crysencio Summerville both reportedly on their radar, according to the Daily Mail. Villa have made direct contact regarding Summerville, while Jackson has been put forward as a candidate following Chelsea's move for Morgan Rogers.

Elsewhere in the Premier League, Manchester United and West Ham are both interested in Leicester City's Ben Nelson, who has informed the Foxes of his desire to leave. Leicester, however, are holding firm and demanding £10 million for the defender, the Daily Mail reports.

Leeds United and Everton face a £25 million price tag if they wish to acquire Lyon midfielder Pavel Sulc, per the Daily Mail. Liverpool, meanwhile, are on the verge of securing Colombian youth international Samuel Martinez from Atletico Nacional in a deal worth approximately £750,000.

Ipswich Town are closing in on a £3.4 million agreement for FC Volendam goalkeeper Kayne van Oevelen, the Daily Mail adds. In a separate development, Shakhtar Donetsk have approached Chelsea, Fulham, and Brentford about using their stadiums to host UEFA Champions League matches next season, according to The Athletic.

Real Madrid rule out Rodri move

Real Madrid have made clear they have no plans to pursue Manchester City midfielder Rodri, The Athletic reports, ending speculation over a potential switch to the Bernabéu.

World Cup revenues set to break records

FIFA are expected to announce revenues of $15 billion — roughly £11.2 billion — generated by this summer's World Cup, a figure that substantially surpasses pre-tournament projections, according to The Guardian. The announcement is set to mark a historic financial milestone for world football's governing body.

Security around the tournament final has reached unprecedented levels, with F-16 fighter jets and military marksmen deployed as part of what The Telegraph describes as the largest sporting security operation in United States history — prompted by Donald Trump's attendance at the final.

Off the pitch, the governor of New Jersey has publicly criticised FIFA for selling sections of turf from the stadium hosting the final, arguing the facility was funded by taxpayers and its assets should not be commercialised in such a manner, per The Athletic.

Braga content at Hearts

In Scottish football, Claudio Braga has moved to quash transfer speculation, stating he is fully committed to Hearts despite reported interest from Lyon and Trabzonspor, the Daily Record reports.

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