Everton
Calvert-Lewin Agrees Terms to Join Leeds After Nine Years at Everton
Dominic Calvert-Lewin to join Leeds on a free transfer after nine years at Everton. Medical imminent
Leeds United have reached a deal in principle to sign Dominic Calvert-Lewin on a free transfer following his departure from Everton. “The 28-year-old striker is set to undergo a medical at training ground Thorp Arch imminently, with a view to completing the move,” reported David Ornstein in The Athletic .
The transfer closes a nine-year chapter at Goodison Park for Calvert-Lewin, who joined Everton from Sheffield United in 2016. He made 274 appearances and scored 71 goals, establishing himself as a central attacking figure for the club despite persistent injury setbacks. Everton offered him a new contract last summer, but talks failed to produce an agreement. In June the striker confirmed his decision to leave, writing on Instagram: “This isn’t something I chose lightly. Everton has been my home since I was 19 years old. It’s the place that saw potential in me, challenged me to grow, and shaped me both as a footballer and as a man.”
Leeds return to the Premier League after winning the Championship last season, and this recruitment underlines their intent to remain competitive at the higher level. Calvert-Lewin would be the club’s eighth signing of the summer, joining fellow striker Lukas Nmecha, who arrived from Wolfsburg. The England international has been capped 11 times and scored four goals for his country, with his last appearance coming in 2021. A move to a newly promoted side with an attacking approach could offer a platform to revive his international prospects.
There is a clear risk and potential reward. While his injury record is a concern, his aerial dominance, strong hold-up play and intelligent movement in the box are proven assets when fit. Leeds will be reliant on their medical and conditioning staff to manage his fitness and maximise availability. His experience in high-pressure matches and his ability to play as a lone forward or alongside another striker give the team tactical flexibility. Arriving on a free transfer reduces the immediate financial exposure, and his leadership could aid younger players. If he remains fit and finds form, this signing could prove decisive for Leeds in the season ahead.
Arsenal
From £75-a-week to millions: Rooney’s scholar pay compared with Max Dowman
Rooney earned the equivalent of $100 weekly as a scholar; Max Dowman can earn $465.60 now per rules.
Wayne Rooney’s early earnings as a scholar remain a striking reminder of how quickly a football career can change financially. Rooney has revealed he was receiving the equivalent of just $100 each week when he scored the famous goal against Arsenal in 2002. That payment came while he was still a scholar, four days shy of his 17th birthday.
The landscape for under-17 players is defined by rules that keep them on scholar terms until they are eligible to sign professional contracts. The recent emergence of Max Dowman, who scored for Arsenal against Everton 73 days after his 16th birthday, has brought those scholar payments back into focus. Dowman can earn up to $465.60 per week under current terms, an annual figure of $24,211.
Rooney recalled the difference between those scholar payments and professional wages on his BBC podcast. “When I scored against Arsenal, I think I was on £75 ($100)-a-week,” he said. “But then that was four days before my 17th birthday, so I was still a scholar [for the Arsenal game]. I used to borrow money off my mum and dad until I signed my pro contract.” The transition at 17 is decisive: a contemporary newspaper report noted that, upon signing his first professional contract, Rooney jumped to a weekly salary of $17,293 (at today’s rate), an amount that worked out at almost $900,000 a year.
The progression continued rapidly. By the time Rooney left Everton and joined Manchester United aged 18, he was being paid not far short of $3.5 million per season. Those figures underline the contrast between scholar allowances and professional terms, and they also reflect Rooney’s own modest upbringing. He admitted he used to exaggerate travel distances when reporting for England’s national youth teams. “I used to find the furthest place away and say that’s where we drove in from,” he laughed.
Chelsea
Three Standouts from Gameweek 29: Palmer, Wharton and Garner
Gameweek 29 standouts Cole Palmer, Adam Wharton and James Garner impressed in Premier League action.
Shock results dominated the midweek slate, none more notable than Wolverhampton Wanderers’s last-gasp win over Liverpool. The round was less chaotic than the weekend, but several individual displays caught the eye of statisticians at FotMob.
Cole Palmer (Rating: 8.6) was central to Chelsea’s response in the Midlands. Chelsea had looked likely to suffer a fourth Premier League match without victory after conceding early at Aston Villa, but they recovered to secure a 4–1 win and capitalise on slips from Liverpool and Man Utd in the race for Champions League qualification. As he’s so often been at Chelsea’s best, Cole Palmer was integral to an important win in the Midlands. The attacking midfielder returned to the scoresheet as he rattled beyond Emi Martínez for his side’s third of the evening, a rare non-penalty goal these days, and his general play laid the foundations for an impressive attacking display.
Adam Wharton (Rating: 8.6) returned to form for Crystal Palace as the Eagles recorded a significant 3–1 away victory at London rivals Tottenham Hotspur. Wharton offered a composed head amid a frenetic end to the first half, supplying two assists to complete Palace’s quick-fire comeback. The first was a simple pass to Jørgen Strand Larsen but the second was a sumptuous through ball poked home by two-goal Ismaïla Sarr.
James Garner (Rating: 8.7) continued a quietly excellent season in Everton’s midfield during their 2–0 win over Burnley. Garner’s set-piece quality provided the opening goal; a teasing free kick delivery to the far post led to James Tarkowski’s opener. He finished the game with more touches than anybody else on the pitch and a match-high 13 defensive contributions, underscoring how influential he has been in Everton’s engine room this campaign.
These three performances were among the brightest in Gameweek 29, each combining tangible statistical impact with decisive moments that helped their teams on the night.
Aston Villa
Premier League: Accounts Show PSR Compliance After Women’s Team Sales
All 20 Premier League clubs met PSR for 2024-25 as women’s-team sales shaped reported accounts. PSR.
All 20 Premier League clubs are reported to have satisfied Profit and Sustainability Rules (PSR) for the 2024–25 season, with a number of clubs using asset sales to parent companies to record revenue in their accounts.
Everton and Aston Villa are understood to have benefited from the sales of their women’s teams to parent companies, following Chelsea’s decision to do so in June 2024. Premier League rules permit the use of such sales when recording revenue, while UEFA does not allow them.
Aston Villa’s £55 million ($74.2 million) sale of their women’s team to their parent company is credited with helping the club avoid Premier League breaches. That transfer is not understood to have the same effect under UEFA’s financial regime. Unai Emery’s side are said to have broken UEFA’s squad cost rule, which restricts spending on player wages, transfers and agent fees to 70% of revenue.
Villa’s dispute with the squad cost rule has been ongoing. The club were fined £5.2 million last summer and another failure to meet UEFA requirements is expected to bring further financial punishment.
PSR regulations have become increasingly unpopular since their introduction in 2025, with the use of loopholes such as the sale of women’s teams and other club assets cited as factors that have eroded confidence in the system. As a result, Premier League officials are pursuing changes to the rules, with squad cost regulations among the areas under review.
England’s top flight will initially adopt a softer approach by restricting spending to 85% of revenue. Villa’s first breach of UEFA’s squad cost rule last summer occurred when the governing body’s limit was set at 80%. Discussions have also been held over a process known as “anchoring.” The reported accounts and the proposed reforms signal an active season of regulatory review and potential change within English top-flight governance.
