Rodri has just given Man City a boost in their transfer search
Manchester City need a defensive midfielder this month. Rodri is out for the season and the decision in the summer not to buy support for him has been exposed. City were confident in Mateo Kovacic and the returning Ilkay Gundogan to offer alternative options, with John Stones, Manu Akanji and Rico Lewis all able to invert. The problem has been keeping those players fit as well, as injury problems have ravaged the squad and exposed any weakness while brutally ripping open the reliance on Rodri. January is a chance to put some sticking plasters on that huge number-six-shaped hole and try to restore some control in midfield.
Finding a candidate to replace Rodri, or act as a back-up, will be no easy search, however. Especially if City are not expected to move for Martin Zubimendi or Bruno Guimaraes.
They need someone to fix the injury crisis straight away this season in a way Rodri would, but then be happy to act as number two to the Ballon d'Or winner next season. Maybe that's why they didn't find the ideal candidate in the summer.
The search will be harder now.
So it is welcome to hear Rodri talk about next season and how his recovery is going. He's already said he hopes to be back before the current campaign is over but that feels both foolish and ambitious.
Pep Guardiola has warned that Rodri may not return the same player, or at least may take time to get his rhythm back. Kevin De Bruyne spent much of last season out and has struggled this season from follow-on issues. There will also be a smaller pre-season next summer given the Club World Cup, or no pre-season at all.
But Rodri and City's medical team don't think that will be as much of an issue. "I'm not afraid [of not reaching the same levels again]. I know the player I am," he said.
"I know that these kinds of injuries are not the same as they were 30 years ago. Also, the medical team has given me infinite peace of mind in that sense, that I shouldn't worry, that I can come back without anything that will hinder me."
It's hard to guarantee such a prediction, yet it's reassuring to hear nonetheless. If Rodri can hit the ground running at the start of next season, it takes some pressure off finding the perfect short-term replacement this month. Focus can turn to the best long-term solution to manage Rodri's minutes so he isn't playing 70-game seasons every year while also reassuring whoever arrives that they will get plenty of games too.
The quicker Rodri is back to full fitness, the less of a risk City have to take in the January window.
David Beckham’s sensational strike for Manchester United from inside his own half on the opening day of the 1996-97 season at Wimbledon was always regarded as the best of its kind.
That is until Wednesday afternoon.
Picking the ball up just outside his own penalty area, Sheffield Wednesday’s attacking midfielder Josh Windass drives forward before attempting an outrageous attempt from just outside his own centre circle.
Remarkably, the ball travels more than 50 yards in a perfect arc and drops over retreating Derby County goalkeeper Jacob Widell Zetterstrom before falling perfectly into the corner of the goal.
It was Windass’s 50th goal for Wednesday and his fifth in his past five games as his team recorded a comfortable 4-2 victory over Derby County at Hillsborough.
His previous claim to fame was scoring the only goal in the last minute of the League One play-off final against Barnsley to gain Wednesday promotion to the Championship in 2023.
Josh is the son of former striker Dean Windass, who played for Bradford and who helped hometown club Hull City earn promotion to the Premier League in 2008.