"After the goal there was a situation I felt his elbow in my face in two metres, so his arm has to be really high," Woltemade told Sky Sports. "I don't know I just said it to the referee that I felt something in the face and I think it's not right to feel something in the face. "But I'm not the type of player to fall down for this."
Isidor is someone I really admire. When he was playing in the Championship, I was thinking, This boy's got all the credentials to play in the Premier League'. I'm glad to see him in the Premier League now. I'm glad to see him scoring for Sunderland. Three goals? At the moment, you'd have to say him, wouldn't you? Woltemade has done nothing at the moment. He's scored one goal in his first season. He needs to play more.
The forward is sitting on the top points tally and looks every part of a season defining pick, combining goal threat with consistency. What really adds to Semenyo's appeal is the growing sense that he might also be in line for first-choice penalty duties, giving him yet another route to points. With form, fixtures and confidence all lining up, he's not just a decent option but one of the best assets in the game at present.
Bayern Munich themselves feel they had a very good summer transfer window, in part because they finalised the Luis Diaz deal from Liverpool. They now have another striker in the squad in the form of Chelsea loanee Nicolas Jackson. On top of that, they have the free transfers of a young national player like Tom Bischof and a boss in the defence in Jonathan Tah. So, you can see how Bayern are pleased with this business.
Newcastle United suffered a turbulent transfer window, but there were some winners among the chaos. It centred around Alexander Isak, who effectively went on strike to force through a move to Liverpool, a saga which rumbled on right until the end of the window. The Magpies were adamant they would not sell without a suitable replacement coming in, and when that came to fruition, they allowed Isak to leave for 125m.
Jackson joined Bayern in a deadline day loan move with an obligation to make the signing permanent for £56.2million if he hits an appearance quota. That deal came after a protracted saga in which Chelsea appeared to cancel Jackson's loan following an injury to Liam Delap, before then allowing him to move to the Allianz Arena. Hoeness, though, insisted there is no hope of Jackson meeting that appearance quota, with the Bayern board member also disputing the reported loan fee.
We are delighted to get Nick's signing over the line so quickly. He fits the profile for exactly what we have been looking for to add to our attacking options. He's strong in a lot of areas he has great technical ability and has proven himself to be a real threat in one of Europe's top leagues but he's also still at an age where he has plenty of room to develop and grow here.