THE WORLD CUP DREAM: WHY ERIC DIER IS EYEING A PREMIER LEAGUE RETURN
Eric Dier is back on the radar! Discover why Nuno Espirito Santo wants to bring the former Spurs star to West Ham this January.
Eric Dier has a shot to get back into the Premier League, but it’s not exactly a soft landing. If he joins West Ham, he’s diving straight into a relegation fight.
He spent ten years at Tottenham before heading to Bayern Munich on loan in January 2024, then made that move permanent by season’s end. Not long after, Dier signed for Monaco on a free ahead of the 2025/26 season. He hit the ground running in France—started eight out of Monaco’s first nine games and even wore the captain’s armband twice.
Then everything stopped. A hamstring injury, followed by calf trouble in October, cut his momentum short and kept him out for the rest of 2025. He didn’t play again until January 10, when he came off the bench in Monaco’s Coupe de France win over US Orleans.
Now, reports say West Ham want him. Like plenty of English players abroad, Dier apparently wants to come back home and push for a World Cup spot this year. The timing’s tricky, though. West Ham sit 18th in the league, seven points adrift of safety.
Nuno Espirito Santo’s team hasn’t won a Premier League game since early November, when they edged Burnley 3-2. At least they finally snapped a ten-game winless streak in all competitions, scraping a 2-1 FA Cup victory over QPR last weekend.
After that game, Santo admitted he’s still “trying to rebalance the squad” and said they “still need bodies”—a clear hint at more signings in January.
If Dier joins, he’ll be the club’s third new arrival this window. Pablo already came in from Gil Vicente for £18.3m after bagging 10 goals in 13 Portuguese league games—Nuno’s first signing as coach. Then Taty Castellanos joined from Lazio for £21m, debuted the next day against Nottingham Forest, and wasted no time—he scored the winner against QPR in the FA Cup.
Dier and Santo already know each other pretty well from their Spurs days; Dier started 11 out of Santo’s 17 matches in charge. That history could give Dier a running start if he lands in East London.
REDEMPTION TIME: BOURNEMOUTH AIM TO FIX "TOUGHEST RESULT" AGAINST INJURY-HIT SUNDERLAND SQUAD NOW
Breaking Premier League: Sunderland travel to Bournemouth. Find out if Xhaka’s return can stop the Cherries' unbeaten run.
Sunderland head to Bournemouth for a Premier League clash on Saturday afternoon.
Bournemouth come into this one on a roll; they haven’t lost in seven league games, and they’ll want to keep that streak alive against Regis Le Bris’ Sunderland, who are dealing with a pile of injuries. The visitors are missing their main striker, Brian Brobbey, after he picked up a knock during last weekend’s 3-1 loss to Fulham. He’s out for at least a couple of weeks, maybe up to a month.
With Brobbey sidelined, Le Bris probably turns to either Isidor or Mayenda to lead the line. Bournemouth boss Andoni Iraola, speaking before the match, took a moment to talk about both players.
He said, “Both are quick, really fast. Isidor and Mayenda bring different things. Mayenda can play wider or as a second striker, while Isidor is more of a focal point up front. He started against us in the first game, too.
“Last season, Isidor was excellent for them. He’s a really good striker – strong, physical, and always a danger behind the defence. Mayenda’s got that threat too. He’s left-footed but still a real handful.
“Brobbey’s a different kind of threat, probably more dangerous in the box, stronger there. But Isidor and Mayenda? They’re serious problems because of their speed and athleticism. That’s the Premier League for you, always facing top strikers.”
Iraola also looked back at their last meeting, when Bournemouth let a two-goal lead slip and lost 3-2 at Sunderland. “That was one of the toughest results of the season,” he admitted. “We were playing in a tough place; they hadn’t lost at home at that point.
“We started really well, but after a penalty which I still don’t think was a penalty, they came back. Even then, we were ahead 2-1, but they turned the game around and punished us. Second half, two set pieces, a corner and a free kick, and that was it.
“We’ve got to handle those situations better this time because they’re dangerous, especially from set plays. Plus, they’ve got Granit Xhaka back now. He’s key for them, and you can tell when he’s not there. With him back, they’ll be stronger. But we need to be ready, and hopefully we put in a better first half than last time.”
FITNESS AT 40: THE SCIENTIFIC REASON JAMES MILNER STILL OUTRUNS PLAYERS HALF HIS AGE
James Milner breaks Gareth Barry’s record! Explore the 40-year-old's miracle recovery and his future at Brighton under Fabian Hurzeler.
When James Milner broke the Premier League appearance record last weekend, you could see how much it meant to him. Not just because of the number, but because, honestly, there was a time last season when it looked like he might never play again.
He’d limped off against Arsenal in August 2024. At first, people thought he’d be out for a few weeks, nothing serious. But things went sideways. A simple knee operation turned complicated, and six months later, he still couldn’t lift his foot or even wiggle his toes.
“Things change fast in football, especially at my age,” Milner said this week at Brighton’s training ground. He was sitting with a bunch of reporters, taking it all in. “Last year, I couldn’t lift my foot for six months. Most people – surgeons, physios, anyone who knew the injury – thought I was finished. I get it.”
Somehow, after nearly nine months of gruelling rehab, the 40-year-old came back. He stepped off the bench for Brighton in the closing minutes against Tottenham on the final day. That moment wasn’t just another appearance; it was the result of sheer stubbornness and a refusal to let his career end on someone else’s terms.
Last weekend, Milner made his 654th Premier League appearance, more than anyone else. Twenty-four seasons in a row. He’s a proper legend. There’s a photo of him at 16, making his debut for Leeds back in 2002-03. He played that match nearly three years before his current teammate, Jack Hinshelwood, was even born.
If anything sums Milner up, it’s that drive to prove people wrong. “That’s probably why I’m still playing,” he said. He only managed four appearances in 2024-25, but he wasn’t going to let injury decide when he stopped. “I wanted to prove I could come back, that I wouldn’t let my career finish in a way I couldn’t control. Not many thought I could return. But that pushed me.”
Milner passed Gareth Barry, his old England, Man City, and Aston Villa teammate, to take the record. He’s racked up 61 England caps and played for Leeds, Newcastle, Villa, City, Liverpool, and Brighton, and he even did a short loan at Swindon when he was 17.
You get why he’s so respected. When he hit the record, the tributes poured in. Fans from every club he’s played for had nothing but good to say about him. Milner joked his phone “blew up" with messages from all over, including Barry, who once convinced him to try yoga in the later years of his career.
At 40, Milner’s still in amazing shape. No grey hair, muscles straining under his training top. He laughs about how his ankles crack when he tries to sneak into his kids’ rooms at night. He’s genuinely funny, always quick with a self-deprecating joke.
That resilience, coming back from a career-threatening injury and pushing through doubts, has always been part of him. Even back when Graeme Souness, his manager at Newcastle, loaned him to Aston Villa, Souness said, “You won’t win the league with James Milners.” Souness didn’t last the season, and Milner went on to win three Premier League titles, two with City, one with Liverpool, and the Champions League.
Twenty-one managers, countless challenges, and still, that motivation to prove people wrong hasn’t faded. “There are always doubters, no matter what you do,” he said. He credits his dad, Peter, for that mindset. “You want to be the best, and proving people wrong has always been in my head.”
This week, Milner took home three Guinness World Records: most Premier League appearances (654), most consecutive seasons played (24), and the longest gap between first and last Premier League goals (22 years and 248 days). Not bad for a kid from Leeds who just wouldn’t quit.
James Milner has picked up three Premier League titles, even though plenty of people once doubted him. Now, at 40 years and 54 days old, he’s not done yet. He’s open to staying at Brighton for another season, and, honestly, he might even have his eye on breaking Teddy Sheringham’s record as the oldest outfield player in Premier League history. Sheringham was 40 years and 272 days old when he set that mark. Milner’s getting close.
His contract runs out this summer. Brighton’s new boss, Fabian Hurzeler, says he wants Milner to stick around for another year, but nothing’s official yet. So, what’s next? Nobody really knows, not even Milner.
“I’m very open to playing another year,” he says. “Whether I will or not, I’m not sure. I haven’t had any conversations with the club yet; they have to want me, too. Earlier in the season, I said, ‘Let’s get to February and see where we’re at.’ Well, we’re here now, so let’s see. For now, I’m just working every day, and, hopefully, the last few games showed I can still help out on the pitch.”
As for life after football, Milner’s not rushing into coaching. First, he wants to take a break, get some rest, and figure things out. He says he’s not worried about retiring, though he might miss the daily structure of football. Maybe he’ll run a few marathons just to keep pushing himself.
Looking back, Milner thinks his best season was at Aston Villa. But being there at the start of Manchester City’s rise and then helping bring Liverpool back to the top – those are the moments he’s proudest of.
Above all, Milner just feels lucky. “When I was younger, if we had a bad first half, you’d see teacups flying and people punching walls in the dressing room,” he says with a laugh. “Things have changed, but there’s a lot of good in the game now, too. I just feel fortunate that I’ve played through two different eras.”
It’d be a mistake to count Milner out. He’s still got plenty left.