Author Archives: Windy

Man Utd: Anthony Martial to return to training before Liverpool match

Manchester United forward Anthony Martial will return to training this week, raising hopes he could be fit to face rivals Liverpool on Sunday.

Anthony Martial scored in Manchester United’s opening Premier League game of the season against Chelsea, adding another the following week in the draw at Wolves

Martial has missed eight games with a hamstring injury after scoring twice in the opening three games of the season.

Providing the 23-year-old France international suffers no reaction, he will come into contention to face Jurgen Klopp’s league leaders.

Liverpool go to Old Trafford having won their opening eight league games.

United are just two points above the relegation zone, have only won two league games this season and have not scored more than once in any game since the 4-0 win against Chelsea on 11 August.

Martial’s absence has been a huge blow for manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, who wanted him to fill the number nine role following the summer exits of Romelu Lukaku and Alexis Sanchez to Inter Milan.

‘I personally did not hear’ – Bulgaria coach Balakov questions racism incidents against England

Racist chanting twice brought a halt to the match but the home coach looked to avoid condemning his team’s fans.

Photo by Getty

Bulgaria head coach Krasimir Balakov claimed not to have heard racist chanting during his team’s 6-0 loss to England in Sofia and accused the travelling supporters of ‘unacceptable’ behaviour.

Ross Barkley and Raheem Sterling each hit braces as Gareth Southgate’s men bounced back from defeat to the Czech Republic in style, bringing qualification for Euro 2020 within touching distance.

But the contest was sullied by abuse directed towards some of the travelling players, which was reported to the match officials and resulted in two delays to the action before half-time.

Before the match, Balakov accused England of having a bigger problem with racism in football than his own country, and he once again sought to share the blame after the widely condemned scenes that stained Monday’s match.

“I personally did not hear the chanting that you are most probably referring to. I saw that the referee stopped the game,” he told ITV.

“But I also have to say that the unacceptable behaviour was not only on behalf of the Bulgaria fans but also the English fans, who were whistling and shouting during the Bulgarian national anthem.

“During the second half they used words against our fans, which I find unacceptable.”

Balakov said he felt an increased focus upon the potential of racist incidents before the game made them more likely, while he called for the abuse to be ‘proven’ despite audible monkey chants during the contest and the spectacle of some Bulgaria fans being ejected.

“We’ve had this problem ever since England were about to come to Bulgaria. All I’ve heard for three weeks is people talking about anything else but football,” Balakov said.

“I don’t think this was the proper manner to prepare and to play a football game. For three weeks, everyone was talking about one thing.

“If this turns out to be true, we are truly sorry and we as the Bulgarian national team and the Bulgarian Football Union are working very hard.

“Nobody wants to see this but let me tell you that this really has not happened in our games up until now. This happened now in the England game.

“If something can be proven then we are sorry but we cannot speak on behalf of some fans here.”

Marcus Rashford opened the scoring for England and tweeted after the match to praise Bulgaria captain Ivelin Popov for remonstrating with supporters at half-time.

Popov’s move was widely interpreted as a call for discriminatory chants to stop but Balakov told a post-match news conference he felt the Rostov midfielder was responding to complaints over a poor performance.

“I have no idea about this. If our captain spoke to the fans it is probably because they were unhappy about the way in which the team were performing,” he added.

“The whole topic in the build-up to the game – the fans are emotional. You want me to say this and I have to say this, if something happened I’m sure it really was a small group of people who really were out of their minds because this is unacceptable… if it happened, of course.”

Source – Goal.com

‘I don’t look for records, they look for me!’ – Ronaldo credits ‘obsession’ following 700th goal

The Portugal star hit the 700-goal mark for club and country on Monday, but had mixed feelings following a 2-1 loss to Ukraine.

Portugal and Juventus forward Cristiano Ronaldo insisted he is not obsessed with breaking records as they come naturally for him after scoring his landmark 700th career goal.

Ronaldo bagged a consolation penalty in the second half of Portugal’s 2-1 Euro 2020 qualifying defeat to Ukraine in Kiev on Monday.

The 34-year-old superstar made no mistake from 12 yards after Taras Stepanenko was penalised for handling the ball inside the box, but it was not enough for Portugal as they lost for the first time since the 2018 World Cup.

Defeat for Portugal at the Olympic Stadium made the occasion bittersweet for Ronaldo, who is now part of an elite list of players to have reached the milestone figure.

“Not just anyone can reach this figure,” he told reporters. “Thank you to my team-mates, colleagues and coaches who have helped me to become the player I am.

“I am disappointed that we didn’t win, but proud of the team.”

Reflecting on his personal achievement, Ronaldo added: “How many records do I have? I don’t know. I have to enjoy the moment and thank those who helped me reach this impressive mark.

“The last time I played at this ground I won the Champions League, a beautiful moment that is in the past. Today we played well but couldn’t win.

“Records come naturally – I don’t go looking for them; records are looking for me! Without having an obsession, they happen naturally.”

Portugal entered Monday’s clash with Group B leaders Ukraine on the back of a 13-match unbeaten run in all competitions, including victories in their last five matches.

The European and Nations League champions were two goals down inside half an hour, however, with Roman Yaremchuk and Andriy Yarmolenko ensuring Ukraine’s place in the Euro 2020 finals.

Fernando Santos’ men may now need victories over Lithuania and Luxembourg in their final two matches to hold off third-placed Serbia, but Portugal’s head coach claimed his side were hard done by.

“We started well with a couple of chances, then they went and scored,” Santos told RTP. “We tried to react, but whenever Ukraine went forward we had difficulties.

“At half-time I tried to rectify things and we improved, but we went into the break with an unfair scoreline – it should have been 2-1 and not 2-0.

“We played a lot with our hearts and less with our heads. I asked them to play more with their heads [in the second half] and be stronger defensively, while keeping our concentration.

“Now we have to win our next two games, which are like finals.”

Source – Goal.com

Southgate warns Maddison about casino incident during England’s defeat

The Leicester City star was pictured in a casino during England’s 2-1 defeat to the Czech Republic, after pulling out of the squad due to illness.

Photo by Getty Images

England boss Gareth Southgate has sent a thinly-veiled warning to James Maddison after the Leicester City playmaker was pictured in a casino on Friday.

The Foxes midfielder, 22, had withdrawn from the Three Lions squad because of illness but made headlines after being seen in the venue during the Three Lions’ shock 2-1 defeat to the Czech Republic.

Southgate addressed the situation ahead of Monday’s trip to Bulgaria, where England will be looking to get their Euro 2020 qualifying campaign back on track.

“He sent a message to say the story was going to be in the paper,” Southgate said.

“My focus has to be with the players here in Sofia – getting the reaction that we want and everybody in the right place for the game.

“I don’t want to discuss individuals but I know pretty much everything about all my players. I watch every minute of their football.

“I speak to their club managers, the coaches of the junior teams.

“We never know absolutely everything but we have a very clear picture. That’s the due diligence you have to do.”

Maddison has been in excellent form for Brendan Rodgers’ Foxes side this season, but is still yet to make his senior international debut.

Though he has played nine times for the Under-21 side, the former Norwich man wasn’t brought on against Bulgaria and Kosovo during the last international break and is reportedly frustrated at Southgate’s failure not to hand him a first cap.

“I’m sure he recognises now that when you are with England, there’s a different sort of spotlight on you and your private life,” Southgate added.

“Young players probably aren’t as aware of that. That goes with the territory. It’s a high-profile position.

“I don’t like losing money so the casino is not the place for me. We’ve focused on getting a response. Everything else is back to the office at the end of the week.”

Following Friday’s game, England are level on 12 points with the Czech Republic in Group A, though Southgate’s side are ahead on goal difference and have a game in hand.

Third-placed Kosovo still have a chance of qualifying, four points behind the top two having played the same number of games as England.

The Three Lions’ final two qualifying games for next summer’s tournament will be against Montenegro and Kosovo during the next international break in mid-November.

Source – Goal.com

Ottmar Hitzfeld Stadium: What’s it like to play at Europe’s ‘highest’ football stadium?

It’s so high that in winter it becomes a ski run and so remote that the pre-match journey has to be done by two cable cars.

The Ottmar Hitzfeld Stadium is the home of FC Gspon in Switzerland

It’s remarkable the Ottmar Hitzfeld Stadium even exists at all.

The pitch is perched 2,000 metres above sea level, surrounded by peaks twice that high, in the Swiss Alps close to the resort of Zermatt.

“It is the most beautiful place you can play football,” says FC Gspon defender Diego Abgottspon, who has played here for 18 years.

“You see the mountains, the glaciers, the trees – it is fantastic.”

FC Gspon are an amateur team who play in the Swiss Mountain League and they proudly call their home ground the highest football stadium in Europe.

The village of Gspon – inaccessible by road – is made up of around 70 wooden chalets and in winter becomes a small ski resort. The air is thin and breathing can be more difficult than at your usual football ground.

“We are used to it,” says Abgottspon, who plays for the club around being a ski instructor turned salesman.

“For the opponents it is harder. If we are 5-0 down at half-time we know we can come back and win.

“We are a team that is extremely strong in our home town.”

The artificial pitch, smaller than your standard size because of the unsurprising lack of flat land, was built in 2009, 35 years after the club was formed.

The reasons for wanting to play here are clear, but it is not without its downsides.

A large net spans one side of the pitch and while it stops the ball disappearing down the mountainside most of the time, accidents can happen.

The estimation is the club has lost 1,000 balls in 40 years.

Gspon is in the Saas Valley, close to the ski resorts of Zermatt and Saas Fee

“Most of the time the balls travel about 100 metres down the hill – sometimes they’re 200 or 300 metres further down,” says defender Alfons Brigger.

“Sometimes there are games when you won’t lose any balls or maybe one, then there are others when 10 balls go out and before our next training we have to go down there and look for them.

“It’s quite annoying.”

From October onwards the pitch is covered by thick snow – that is until the worst kind of pre-season training begins in late spring.

“We have to clear the pitch because up here it doesn’t melt so good,” Brigger says. “We have to put it all to the side of the pitch. That is the players’ job.

“Normally there is half a metre on the pitch and we have to get it all off.

“It is really annoying and hard work.”

Crowds at FC Gspon games range from as low as three or four in extreme weather to 40 or 50 in the height of summer, with spectators coming from Gspon or Staldenried, the larger, more developed village at the start of the five-minute cable ride below.

“Every time it is good weather it is really special to play here,” says captain and midfielder Sebastian Furrer.

“My father also played here. I used to come up and watch him play and it is nice to be able to play where he played. It is a very special place.”

The stadium is named after German former Switzerland and Bayern Munich manager Ottmar Hitzfeld, who took the ceremonial opening kick-off when it hosted the inaugural European Mountain Village Championship in 2008.

The tournament runs alongside the conventional European Championship every four years, with “mountain teams” representing nations from across the continent, and will return to Gspon in 2020.

Almost all who visit leave stunned by the ground’s beauty.

“It is your hometown and it makes you proud that a lot of people think it is beautiful,” Brigger says. “And of course it is – a beautiful view and beautiful village.”

Gundogan lifts 10-man Germany to win over Estonia

Germany overcame an early red card to Emre Can and eventually eased to a 3-0 victory away to Estonia on Sunday in a Euro 2020 qualifier to go joint-top of Group C.

Germany beat Estonia despite going down one man after Emre Can’s red card. Martin Rose/Bongarts/Getty Images

Joachim Loew’s side had hammered Estonia 8-0 at home back in June but got off to a rocky start in Tallinn when midfielder Can was shown a straight red card in the 14th minute for a studs up challenge.

Estonia put Germany under pressure for large parts of the first half but could not capitalise on their numerical advantage, while Marco Reus hit the post for Germany.

The visitors came out far stronger after the interval and Ilkay Gundogan gave them the lead in the 51st minute with a shot from outside the box which took a deflection off Reus.

Gundogan also helped double Germany’s advantage in the 57th as his shot took a big deflection off Karol Mets and was given as an own goal, while substitute Timo Werner rounded off the scoring in the 71st minute.

“The decisive factor was that we increased the tempo in the second half and kept calm,” Germany coach Loews told reporters.

“I’m happy we got the job done. It was tough out there but we did well in the second half.”

Captain Manuel Neuer added: “We were down to 10 men after 15 minutes, which makes everything more difficult as you have to reset. It was always going to be a matter of time before we took our chances and the goals arrived.”

The victory takes Germany second in of Group C with 15 points after six games, while the Netherlands, also on 15, are top.

Northern Ireland are third on 12, with Estonia bottom on one point after seven games.

Source – ESPN

Cech named Man of the Match on ice hockey debut wearing Chelsea and Arsenal-inspired helmet

The goalkeeper, who retired from football this summer, put in a match-winning performance as Guildford Phoenix beat Swindon Wildcats 2 on penalties.

Photo by Getty Images

Petr Cech was named Man of the Match in his first game since signing for ice hockey side Guildford Phoenix on Sunday.

The former Arsenal and Chelsea goalkeeper, now 37, was the star man in Guildford’s win over Swindon Wildcats 2 in the NIHL 2, after a game tied 2-2 went to a penalty decider.

Cech, who holds the record for the most Premier League clean sheets by any goalkeeper, caused a stir on social media when he announced the beginning of his professional ice hockey career.

With Guildford having already played and won two games, Cech’s efforts in the penalty shoot-out helped his new side maintain their 100% record for the season. The 124-cap former Czech Republic international saved two penalties to secure the win.

He wore a helmet featuring the badges of both Chelsea and Arsenal after spending 15 years plying his trade in London.

When he announced his move, Cech noted that he had played ice hockey as a child before his football career kicked into gear.

“I am delighted to have the opportunity to play with the Phoenix to get match experience,” he said in a club press release.

“I hope I can help this young team to achieve their goals for the season and try to win as many games as possible when I have the chance to play.

“After 20 years of professional football this is going to be a wonderful experience for me to play the game I loved to watch and play as a kid.”

Despite reigniting his old ice hockey flame, Cech will continue in his backroom role at Chelsea, having returned to Stamford Bridge this summer following his retirement at Arsenal.

“Some people seem to think I changed my job. No I didn’t,” Cech said on Twitter. “Luckily my job as the Technical and Performance adviser at Chelsea FC doesn’t stop me in my spare time from playing the game I loved as a kid and which I’ve been playing for years.

“While being [a] professional footballer I couldn’t play the games for obvious reason[s] … now I can.”

Cech will be hoping to feature again in Guildford’s next fixture, away from home at Bristol Pitbulls on October 19.

Source – Goal.com

Man Utd winger James: I didn’t get knocked out in Wales’ draw with Croatia

The wideman looked to have been knocked unconscious, but he and manager Ryan Giggs said there was no need for concern.

Photo by Getty Images

Manchester United winger Daniel James says he was not knocked out in Wales’ 1-1 Euro 2020 qualifying draw with Croatia on Sunday evening.

There was concern for the 21-year-old early on as he lay on the turf after receiving a blow to the head from Croatia defender Domagoj Vida, shortly after former Everton winger Nikola Vlasic had opened the scoring.

James got up and played on to full-time as Gareth Bale secured an impressive draw for Wales against last year’s World Cup finalists.

“[I’m] fine,” James told Sky Sports after the game. “He caught me in the head. I didn’t get knocked out.

“We knew it was going to be tough. It was a quick turnaround. We started well, although we conceded.

“To get the goal back showed character. There were a few tackles flying in but you expect that in these games.

“We’ve shown what a great team we are. It was about bouncing back.”

With images of James lying motionless on the pitch quickly circulating on social media, there was both concern for his welfare and disappointment that Wales manager Ryan Giggs opted not to take him off.

“Dan James went down and stayed down,” Giggs said. “A bit of acting really. The medical staff went over. He was compos mentis. We did tests at half-time and he passed them. He’s fine.”

Head injuries have been under the spotlight in football as in other sports in recent years. UEFA’s most recent guidelines state that the match referee should stop the game for up to three minutes if concussion is a concern, allowing the player to be properly checked.

Their official protocol reads: “A player suffering a head injury that requires assessment for potential concussion will only be allowed to continue playing after the assessment, on specific confirmation by the team doctor to the referee of the player’s fitness to do so.”

The result means Wales still have a chance of qualifying for next summer’s European Championship, though they will require two of the teams above them to drop points in order to do so.

Croatia sit top of Group E with 14 points from seven games, with Hungary two points behind in second.

Slovakia and Wales each have two games remaining, with Slovakia on 10 points and Wales on eight. Wales’ final two qualifiers see them face bottom side Azerbaijan away from home and Hungary in Cardiff.

Source – Goal.com

Vietnam national team receive a “rain’ of bonus after Malaysia win

Vietnam national football team have received several congratulations together with a “rain” of bonuses after beating Malaysia.

Playing against Malaysia home, coach Park Hang Seo and his players brought audiences at Mỹ Đình stadium an eye-catching match. The goal of Nguyễn Quang Hải in the first half was the inspriration for Vietnam to block Malaysian “tigers” and had final victory with 3 precious points.

Right after the match ended, Deputy Culture-Sports and Tourism, Chairman of VFF Lê Khánh Hải sent his congratulation to Vietnam national team. He also show his expectation that coach Park Hang Seo and the players would keep this spirit to continue to bring happiness to Vietnamese fans in the upcoming away game against Indonesia, attaching a bonus worth VND1 billion.

Vietnam national team got a spiritual gift after Malaysia win

According to sources, beside the reward of VFF, Quang Hải and his teammates have also received special gifts from sponsors. The total rewards of nearly VND4 billion will be a very big motivation for Vietnam to overcome difficulties in Indonesia.

Right in the night, coach Park Hang Seo and his players moved to Nội Bài airport to be present in HCMC in the early morning. Vietnam national team had a direct air route to Bali and will play against Indonesia on October 15th. The hard trip to Indonesia will surely have a bad influence on the players’ stamina, thus, coach Park Hang Seo have soon had a plan for the players to recover. Earlier, the national team of the “land of thousand islands” decided to change playing location from capital Jakarta to Bali island for security worry.

Vietnam’s players relaxed in cold water

At present, Vietnam have 4 points, 2 points less than UAE and are just inferior to Thailand in goal difference. If getting a win over Indonesia, the chance will be wider for Vietnam. Besides, there is also a good news, that is Tuấn Anh’s health is normal, he just has a light pain and will be able to play in the next match

Source – thehthaohcm.vn

Petr Cech: Ex-Chelsea and Arsenal goalkeeper joins ice hockey team Guildford Phoenix

Former Chelsea and Arsenal goalkeeper Petr Cech has swapped grass for ice by signing for National Ice Hockey League team Guildford Phoenix as a goaltender.

Petr Cech won four Premier League titles with Chelsea

The Czech, a big fan of the sport, has got his skates on after working on his game since retiring from football.

“I hope I can help this young team achieve their goals,” Cech, 37, said.

“After 20 years of professional football, this is going to be a wonderful experience for me to play the game I loved to watch and play as a kid.”

Cech, who arrived in Britain in 2004 having signed for the Blues, adopted top-flight Elite Ice Hockey League side Guildford Flames as his team.

Guildford Phoenix play in the second tier of British ice hockey.

Cech, who made 124 appearances for the Czech Republic, won four Premier League titles, five FA Cups, three League Cups, the Champions League and Europa League during his time as a footballer in England.

He will be the Phoenix’s third-choice keeper, and will train when his Chelsea schedule allows.

Posting on Twitter on Wednesday night after the announcement, he said: “Some people seem to think I’ve changed my job. No I didn’t.

“Luckily my job at Chelsea doesn’t stop me in my spare time from playing the game I loved as a kid and which I’ve been playing for years. While being a professional footballer I couldn’t play the game for obvious reasons. Now I can.”

Andy Hemmings, Guildford’s head coach, said: “The signing of Petr is massive for the Phoenix, he is a great guy who trains hard and I cannot wait to see him make his debut.”

Guildford Phoenix face Swindon Wildcats 2 in their next National Ice Hockey League fixture on Sunday.

Source – BBC News