Author Archives: Windy

‘Leicester’s midfield trio as good as any out there’ – Souness salutes high-flying Foxes

The Foxes displays in the centre of the park have attracted plaudits with their group now considered among the best around.

Photo by Getty Images

Former Liverpool midfielder Graeme Souness believes Leicester City’s central trio is among the best in the Premier League.

Youri Tielemans, James Maddison, Wilfred Ndidi have all impressed this season as the Foxes have mounted an unlikely title challenge.

The Sky Sports pundit was speaking after Leicester’s 4-1 win at Aston Villa on Sunday, which keeps them in second place ahead of Manchester City and eight points off leaders Liverpool.

Brendan Rodgers’ side has been one of the most impressive outfits in the Premier League this season. Striker Jamie Vardy added to his tally with a brace against Villa, and tops the goalscoring charts with 16 so far this season.

The midfield three have also drawn many plaudits, with Souness the latest to sing their praises.

“I would suggest that Tielemans, Ndidi and Maddison, those three in midfield are as good as any three out there,” Souness said.

“The blend of them, the hard work, clever passing from Ndidi and Tielemans, and Maddison — he is a real craftsman.

“I’ve said many times he should be a regular in the England team. I think he has the quality to deliver cute and clever passes, he puts a shift in. You’ve got the guy up front [Vardy] who just wants to run forward all the time.

“I would suggest in this team, more than the team that won the league, when he runs forward, he knows he has a better chance of getting on the end of something because there are better kickers of the ball playing with him now.”

On top of the attractive attacking football that Rodgers was known for during his time at previous clubs Swansea, Liverpool, and Celtic, Leicester also has the best defensive record in the league having conceded just 10 goals so far this season.

Souness was full of praise for a side that has become as effective at stopping goals at one end as it is at scoring them at the other.

“Extremely impressive,” he said of the Foxes. “When you look through their team they have a lovely mix of different types of players. Every one of them has their own qualities.

“I say that because for the first 20 minutes in the first half they had to dig in and go to war, Villa were up for it and they had to weather that storm.”

Source – Goal.com

Vietnam national futsal team drawn to an easy group of AFC Futsal Championship 2020

On the 6th of December, AFC deployed the draw of AFC Futsal Championship 2020. This is also the qualification round of World Cup 2020 as 5 highest teams will win the tickets to the global scale competition.

 

Vietnam futsal team was drawn to group A where hosts Turkmenistan, Tajikistan and Omen present.  These three teams are considered not too much strong comparing to Vietnam. Turkmenistan used to attended World Cup final round for 6 times (2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2012) but they have not been able to enter into the knockout round. In the recent 3 times hosting, (2014, 2016, 2018), they could not pass through the qualification round.

Tajikistan have presented at World Cup final round for 11 times but their best achievement was once qualifying for the quarter-final in 2007, while this was the first time a representative of Oman presenting at the competition.

Draw result

In order to go far in the AFC Futsal Championship through which making the target to win a ticket to World Cup 2020 become true, Vietnam national futsal team need to lead group A. Because according to the branching for the knockout round, the leaders of group A will confront the runners-up of group B and reverse.

If finishing second in group A, Vietnam national futsal team may much possible confront a very strong team – Japan in the quarter-final. Meanwhile, Minh Trí and teammates may just face medium opponents (much possible Lebanon) if standing first in Group A.

4 teams entering the semi-final will gain tickets to World Cup 2020. The fifth ticket will be identified after the play-off round with the presentation of 4 losers in the quarter-final. The AFC Futsal Championship 2020 will take place in Turkmenistan from February 26th to March 8th, 2020.

At present, Vietnam national futsal team are gathering at Thái Sơn Nam gymnasium to prepare for an international friendly competition in Thailand. After coach Miguel Rodrigo resigned, Vietnam national futsal team has been managed by coach Phạm Minh Giang.

It’s interesting the in the upcoming friendly competition, Vietnam national futsal team will confront with their opponents at AFC Futsal Championship 2020 Oman.

Source – bongdaplus.vn

Fred hits out at ‘backward society’ as he confirms he was hit by lighter in Man Utd’s derby win

The Manchester United midfielder was allegedly abused and struck by an object at the Etihad Stadium on Saturday.

Fred has said that racist incidents, such as the abuse he suffered in Saturday’s Manchester derby, are evidence of “a backward society.”

Television footage showed a fan apparently making a monkey gesture toward the Brazilian midfielder and Manchester United team-mate Jesse Lingard . Soon after the incident Fred was hit by at least one object thrown from the stands.

Manchester City have said that any fan guilty of racism in the ground will be banned for life.

“Unfortunately we are still in a backwards society,” Fred told  ESPN Brazil . “[It’s a shame] we still have to live with that in 2019. On the field I didn’t see anything, I saw it only in the locker room afterwards.

“The guys showed me. He even threw a lighter and it hit me. I try not to care about that. I try to look ahead.”

The player, who joined United from Shakhtar Donetsk in 2018, acknowledged that the problem happens elsewhere, but said giving the abusers attention only served their interests.

He also called for unity, such as his team-mates demonstrated in the dressing room after the game, a 2-1 win for his team.

“Unfortunately, this is happening in some stadiums. It happened here, it happened in Ukraine with some friends. It’s sad, but we have to keep our heads up and forget about that.

“We can’t give them any attention because that’s all they want. I spoke to the referee after the match, they will do something about it and that’s all.

“We are all the same regardless of skin colour, hair and gender. We came from the same place and we all go to the same place when it’s all said and done.

“Thank God I have a lot of friends here in the locker room who hugged me, like Lingard.

“I don’t want to think about it. I just want to move on.”

Fred enjoys the support of his manager, Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, who called the incident “unacceptable” and opposing boss Pep Guardiola, who said he thought the club would “take the right decision so it doesn’t happen again.”

The FA’s anti-discrimination campaign, Kick It Out, said they hoped “swift action” would be taken.

Source – Goal.com

Make it seven! Ballon d’Or winner Messi hits treble as ‘MSG’ ignite against Mallorca

The Argentine star was at his scintillating best on Saturday as he set his sights on more silverware.

 

No sooner had Lionel Messi finished presenting his sixth Ballon d’Or to the adoring Camp Nou than he started paving the road to his seventh.

Messi scored a hat-trick as Barcelona romped to a 5-2 win over Mallorca on Saturday to move top of La Liga on goal difference ahead of Real Madrid, who temporarily usurped them with a win over Espanyol earlier on.

Fans roared as Messi, accompanied by his three children, held aloft the golden ball he won in Monday’s gala in Paris, a token of his quality and uniqueness.

Messi had been level with Cristiano Ronaldo on five, but the sixth puts him on a level of his own. The best player in the world, now and ever.

Of course, those who regularly see him in the flesh already knew that, with the thousands of Barcelona fans present on a chilly evening in Catalonia knowing they were in for a treat.

And it wasn’t only Messi determined to put on a show, with the “MSG” attack – the No. 10, Luis Suarez and Antoine Griezmann – enjoying their best performance together so far.

Marc-Andre ter Stegen and Griezmann set out Barcelona’s stall early on, with the German goalkeeper’s perfect long ball pass sending the Frenchman through on goal.

Griezmann hared into the box and dinked the ball over Manolo Reina to break the deadlock after seven minutes.

It looked like Barcelona were going to get a lot of joy against the visitors and, with Messi in the mood – he rarely isn’t – he proved unstoppable.

The Argentine took his first goal brilliantly, curling into the top corner from distance, and the second was nearly as good, another effort from outside the area which left Reina with no chance.

Messi’s brace took him to seven goals from outside the box this season, with only BordeauxManchester City and RB Leipzig managing more as entire teams – Barcelona have 10.

In between Messi’s two goals he appeared to be riled by something Mallorca coach Vicente Moreno said. It’s never a good idea to upset Barcelona’s captain.

Ante Budimir, who struck a brace for Mallorca, pulled a goal back but Barcelona were flowing forward with so much vim that more goals seemed inevitable.

Luis Suarez converted the fourth with a remarkable backheel finish, after excellent build-up play by Frenkie de Jong. The Dutchman, behind Messi and Ter Stegen, has arguably been his team’s best player this season, but rarely gets the credit as Barcelona’s leader rightfully draws so much of the attention.

It was Messi who made the difference last week against Atletico Madrid, settling a nervy, tight game, at his most decisive, while this match was the forward at his most fluid.

With countless flicks, interchanges, passes and lay-offs, Messi dazzled as Barcelona strolled through the second half.

Only some less than efficient finishing from Suarez and Griezmann stopped the Catalans from adding to their lead, as the chances kept flowing like cava at Christmas in these parts.

Eventually Messi completed what had long seemed inevitable – his hat-trick – taking him to 12 La Liga goals, the division’s top scorer.

Having missed the start of the season injured, he had no goals after seven matches. By the 15th, Messi leads the way, one goal ahead of Real Madrid’s Karim Benzema.

It was also his 35th La Liga hat-trick, a record, moving one ahead of Ronaldo’s 34, just as in Monday’s glitzy Ballon d’Or ceremony.

All goals which, in 2020, may well prove stepping stones on the way to Barcelona’s glory – and more of Messi’s own.

Source – Goal.com

Women’s Champions League: Group stage to be introduced from 2021-22 season

The Women’s Champions League will feature a group stage for the last 16 from 2021-22 season onwards, Europe’s governing body Uefa has confirmed.

England’s Lucy Bronze helped Lyon defend their European title last term

The format change means three English teams will take part in the competition – an increase on two existing places.

The top six countries by ranking will all receive three qualification spots.

Since 2009, the competition has used groups in the qualifying rounds but, from the last 32 onwards, has seen a two-leg, knockout format.

The new format will see four groups of four in the last-16 stage, with teams playing each other home and away before the top two sides in each group qualify for the quarter-finals.

Some clubs will have to progress through two rounds to reach that group stage, depending on where they finish domestically, but the champions from the top three rated divisions in Europe – including the WSL – would progress straight to the last 16.

The format for the 2020-21 campaign will remain the same as the existing structure, which has seen Arsenal and Scottish champions Glasgow City progress to March’s quarter-finals.

Speaking in November, Gunners boss Joe Montemurro said: “In the Champions League, in my opinion, you want to see a lot of the top teams playing against each other more regularly.

“We want the top three teams from England competing in the Champions League. We want the big games. We want the top three teams from France to be there, to showcase the level of the game and how fantastic the women’s game is at the moment.”

Scotland lost a qualification spot for next season after dropping to 14th in the rankings.

But, under the new format, the country’s second spot would be restored for 2021-22 if Scotland remains in the top 16 nations.

Wales and Northern Ireland would be set to continue having one club – their domestic champions – entering the qualifying rounds.

‘The time is right’

Announcing the changes on Wednesday, Uefa said the move was “designed to boost competitiveness and increase exposure of women’s club football”.

Director of competitions Giorgio Marchetti added: “There is a clear increase of interest in the women’s game. We see it from everywhere.

“It’s been a long process. The talks about changing the format and creating a group stage started several years ago. We pushed it back because we felt the conditions were not yet met.

“But now we see that, with the investment of Uefa and the investment of the national associations and the investment of the clubs, the game is growing. Certainly, there is more interest also from the market and the media.

“So we think the time is right to do for women what we did for men many years ago.”

Will the changes mean more competitive games?

French club Lyon have won the European title four times in a row and six times since 2011

This season has seen a large proportion of the knockout ties in the last 32 and last 16 won by huge aggregate margins.

Holders Lyon beat Russian club Ryazan VDV 16-0 on aggregate and German side Wolfsburg defeated Mitrovica 15-0, while Manchester City were 11-1 winners over Lugano of Switzerland.

But City – England’s domestic league runners-up last term – were knocked out by Atletico Madrid after the Spanish league champions had been unseeded for the last-16 draw.

In the same round, Arsenal were 13-2 aggregate winners over Czech Republic outfit Slavia Prague and those are the kind of scorelines that Uefa hope will become less frequent after the changes come into force.

Source – BBC News

Liverpool name strong Fifa Club World Cup squad

Liverpool have named a strong 23-man squad for the Fifa Club World Cup – which clashes with their Carabao Cup quarter-final at Aston Villa.

Liverpool beat Arsenal 5-4 on penalties in the fourth round of the EFL Cup after a 5-5 draw

Eighteen of the 19 players named in Jurgen Klopp’s two Premier League matchday squads over the past week will travel to Qatar.

Youngsters Rhian Brewster, Curtis Jones, Harvey Elliott and Neco Williams have also been named in the party.

It means the quartet are set to miss the cup match at Villa.

The selection confirms that Liverpool are concentrating their senior player resources on the Club World Cup as they deal with a schedule clash.

Klopp’s side will play at Villa on 17 December at 19:45 GMT and will compete in the Club World Cup semi-final in Qatar the following day at 17:30 GMT.

The Premier League leaders are fielding different teams in two separate competitions within 24 hours because they said alternative dates were not considered “suitable without compromising the scheduling of the competition itself or placing an undue strain on our playing staff”.

Goalkeeper Caoimhin Kelleher, named on the bench as Liverpool beat Everton 5-2 on Wednesday, is the only player to have featured in a Liverpool first-team matchday squad this week who will not be at the Club World Cup. Andy Lonergan is instead travelling to the tournament as one of three goalkeepers alongside Alisson and Adrian.

Centre-back Joel Matip and midfielder Fabinho are both injured and have not been included in the Club World Cup squad.

Liverpool squad: Alisson, Van Dijk, Wijnaldum, Lovren, Milner, Keita, Firmino, Mane, Salah, Gomez, Adrian, Henderson, Oxlade-Chamberlain, Lallana, Lonergan, Shaqiri, Brewster, Robertson, Origi, Jones, Alexander-Arnold, Elliott, Williams.

Source – BBC News

Everton sack Marco Silva after 18 months in charge

The Portuguese pays the price for a poor start to the season that has seen the Toffees fall into the bottom three.

Photo by Getty Images

Everton have sacked manager Marco Silva following a dreadful start to the 2019-20 Premier League season that has seen the Toffees drop into the relegation zone after Wednesday’s evening’s 5-2 battering at the hands of Liverpool.

Former Toffees striker and current first-team coach Duncan Ferguson has been placed in caretaker charge for Saturday’s game against Chelsea at Goodison Park.

Goal understands that former Toffees boss David Moyes is in contention to make a shock return to Goodison Park, six-and-a-half years after he left the club for Manchester United.

A statement on the club’s website read: “Everton Football Club can confirm that manager Marco Silva has left the club.

“Majority shareholder Farhad Moshiri, chairman Bill Kenwright and the board of directors would like to thank Marco for his service over the last 18 months and wish him well for the future.

“Duncan Ferguson has taken temporary charge of the first team and will manage the side for the game against Chelsea on Saturday.

“The club aims to confirm a new permanent manager as swiftly as possible.”

The Merseyside club has made significant investments in players in recent times, adding the likes of Alex Iwobi, Moise Kean, Jean-Philippe Gbamin and Andre Gomes to their permanent roster in a bid to push on from mid-table finishes and start competing regularly in Europe.

Silva guided the club to an eighth-place finish in the Premier League last season and that investment in the playing squad over the summer raised hopes of a sustained challenge for the European places this campaign.

However, the Toffees have won just four times in the Premier League so far and Wednesday’s thrashing at Anfield was their eighth defeat in their previous 11 league games.

Silva was appointed Everton boss in the summer of 2018 following the departure of Sam Allardyce. The Toffees originally wanted to appoint the 42-year-old in November 2017 when he was still head coach at Watford, but the Hornets rejected their approach.

Watford later blamed Everton’s interest in Silva for the team’s dramatic loss of form that led to him being sacked two months later and reported the club to the Premier League for alleged ‘tapping-up’ of the former Hull boss.

In February the Merseyside club agreed to pay Watford compensation in order to settle the case.

Prior to his spell at Vicarage Road Silva spent six months at Hull, where he failed to prevent the club from being relegated from the Premier League at the end of the 2016-17 season.

His managerial career has also taken in spells at Estoril, Sporting and Olympiakos.

Source – Goal.com

New coach, same old story! Abject Arsenal sinking fast

The Gunners have now gone nine games without a win after losing 2-1 to Brighton at Emirates Stadium.

 

Photo by Getty

Freddie Ljungberg was just a month old the last time Arsenal went nine games without a win.

But tonight, in his first home match as interim boss, the Swede saw his side equal their worst run in 42 years following a 2-1 defeat to Brighton.

You have to go back to March 1977 to find a run as wretched as the one Arsenal are on right now. That’s how bad things have got.

Ljungberg has overseen the last two games and although there have been some signs of promise in both, it’s tough to really say there has been a marked improvement since the sacking of Unai Emery.

If the Arsenal hierarchy had hoped Ljungberg’s appointment would bring with it the famed ‘new manager bounce’ they will have been left disappointed.

The hosts were awful for large parts of tonight’s game, just as they have been all season. There was no energy, no desire and very little quality.

The introduction of Nicolas Pepe at half-time for the dismal Joe Willock did lead to a slight improvement and when Alexandre Lacazette’s header from Mesut Ozil’s corner looped in at the back post to cancel out Adam Webster’s first half opener, it looked like Arsenal might go on to claim a first win since beating Bournemouth 1-0 in October.

But Brighton rode their luck for a 15-minute spell, with David Luiz seeing a goal cancelled out by VAR for offside, and then snatched the winner through Neal Maupay’s fine glancing header.

It was the Seagulls’ first ever win at Arsenal and it was one they thoroughly deserved. They arrived here having lost their last four away games and were without a win in six on their travels, but they largely dominated an Arsenal side who now sit 10th in the Premier League, just five points above the relegation zone.

Ljungberg will have known the size of the task facing him when he took this job on, but even he will have been surprised by the lack of reaction from his players during the past seven days.

Brighton had 20 shots tonight, Arsenal just 12. The visitors could have, and probably should have, won by more.

Publicly Arsenal have said they will not be rushed into appointing a permanent successor for Emery. “It’s about finding the right candidate, not the first candidate,” said Josh Kroenke.

But what the past two games against Norwich and Brighton have shown us is that Arsenal desperately need a strong coach to come in and fix the mess that year’s of stagnantion have left behind.

t feels unfair to ask Ljungberg to deal with this. He is a club man and will give it his all, but a decisive decision needs to be made because this is a ship that is sinking fast.

Arsenal go to West Ham next before starting a run of five games which includes Manchester CityEvertonChelsea and Manchester United.

Things are bad now, very bad – but they could get even worse. You sense that Arsenal haven’t even hit rock bottom yet and that should be a very scary prospect for those in the corridors of power at Emirates Stadium.

Source – Goal.com

VAR to be used in Euro 2020 play-offs and 2022 World Cup qualifying

VAR will be used in qualifying play-offs for the European Championship next year and is set to be introduced in qualifiers for the 2022 World Cup.

Video assistant referees were used at the World Cup in Russia last year

Video assistant referees were trialled at the 2017 Confederations Cup before being used at the World Cup in Russia.

However, VAR was not present during Euro 2020 qualifying matches.

Uefa, European football’s governing body, agreed on Wednesday to introduce it for March’s play-offs but Fifa needs to approve it for World Cup qualifiers.

Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Republic will all be involved in the play-offs.

The system has been used for the first time in the Premier League this season.

Source – BBC News

Mourinho flops on Man Utd return to gift Solskjaer vital victory

The Portuguese had hoped to prove a point against the club that sacked him but he got it all wrong during Tottenham’s tame 2-1 defeat at Old Trafford.

Photo by Getty

Jose Mourinho finally got the best out of Marcus Rashford. And, for that matter, Jesse Lingard.

On his return to Old Trafford, the newly-installed Tottenham manager simply gave the game away.

Not only was his own selection baffling – leading to an error-strewn display against, frankly, one of the most average teams in the Premier League – but he permitted Ole Gunnar Solskjaer to do a job on him without offering very much in return.

Mourinho’s decision to play with Moussa Sissoko as the closest player to Serge Aurier was a disaster from the get-go. Solskjaer could hardly have believed his luck, with his game plan of getting the ball into the Spurs right-hand channel paying dividends immediately.

It appeared as though Rashford, Lingard and Mason Greenwood were taking it in turns to appear in that gap to receive the ball. It was no surprise that Manchester United’s goals – and their other good chances – came from that sector.

The problems with Mourinho’s line-up bled into other areas of the team. He fielded Sissoko beside Harry Winks for the first time in a midfield pivot. By choosing Dele Alli up alongside Harry Kane he lost a third midfielder.

With Lingard rotating in and out of the strike-line in the absence of Anthony Martial, he and Scott McTominay and Fred had plenty of time and space to find their passes in and around the centre of the field.

What’s more, Mourinho never corrected it. At half-time he had the option of turning to Tanguy Ndombele, Christian Eriksen or Eric Dier to alleviate the pressure on his midfield but he did not take it.

Within seconds of the restart, United had moved the ball to Rashford. He blitzed both Aurier and Sissoko to win his penalty.

The lack of identity in the Spurs play – and the carelessness they demonstrated in possession – is alarming, especially for a team under a manager so hellbent on proving a point to his former employers.

Solskjaer won this battle hands down and United were unlucky in that they found themselves level at the break and that they didn’t score more.

Paulo Gazzaniga was overworked in the Spurs net, even if he should have done better with Rashford’s first goal. He made two other good saves from the England man, who is beginning to grow into the burden of shouldering the United attack.

Spurs scarcely had a threatening touch although Alli’s goal deserves its praise as a world-class effort. But that it took something so magic to get Spurs into the game should give Mourinho pause for thought.

There was no great plan behind it; it was off-the-cuff brilliance by a man who has found his form with three goals in three games for this manager.

Kane was starved of service but failed to do much of note when he had the ball. Mourinho has spent Ballon d’Or week praising Son Heung-min but his Korean forward fared no better than Kane on the night.

Lucas Moura was a disappointment again, with Mourinho left with no option but to withdraw him in the end.

His selection allowed no manoeuvrability. Without a recognised left-back – although Danny Rose sat on the bench – Jan Vertonghen could not shuffle across into a three because there would be no one to replace him. Similarly, Dier has a dexterity to move around that is simply not available to Sissoko or Winks.

Perhaps Mourinho is suffering the side effects of a lopsided squad bequeathed to him by Mauricio Pochettino. But he’s got it right by and large up to now and flopped on his big night to impress.

Solskjaer, meanwhile, deserves the credit. His game plan worked and his team took his chances. With this positive result and performance – not to mention four homegrown players in the starting XI – you can see what he is trying to achieve.

No one is going to mistake McTominay’s skill-set for Paul Pogba’s but he is proving on a game-by-game basis what Mourinho suspected from the beginning: that he can do the dirty work that the World Cup winner cannot.

His cause to continue in the job long-term has not been helped by a sequence of shocking results and abject performances but in a week which ends with a trip to Manchester City he has done his prospects no harm at all.

Greenwood coped well and showed his versatility. One chance in the first half which ended with a Gazzaniga save from the teenager began with the ball at Greenwood’s feet in midfield. Lingard had his best game of the season, delivering smart link-up play with his friend Rashford, and rotating in and out of a false 9 berth.

There were jitters in the end, maybe a lack of self-belief to see the job through. Rashford missed two injury-time chances to kill the game and Spurs might have rescued something with their late rally.

But Mourinho left without making a point. There were no fingers to the lips. There were no marches down the touchline. The biggest effect Mourinho had on the game was when Dan James’s head made contact with his shin.

He had to stand there and take his medicine as Manchester United demonstrated they could move onwards and upwards.

Source – Goal.com