Monday, 16 October 2017

Bayern part company with Carlo Ancelotti


Bayern Munich President Uli Hoeness claims that a number of players turned against Carlo Ancelotti in the build-up to the manager's departure from the club.
Carlo Ancelotti left his post as coach of Bayern Munich in the wake of the Bundesliga champions' 3-0 defeat to Paris St Germain in the Champions League.
In an interview with German publication Westfalenpost, Hoeness said that certain dressing-room tensions contributed to the end of Ancelotti's reign at the club.
"There were five players against Ancelotti," he said. "It was impossible to get out of that."
The departure of the 58-year-old Italian, who has also managed Juventus, AC Milan, Chelsea, PSG and Real Madrid, was announced by the Bavarian club on Thursday afternoon.
He leaves with Bayern third in the Bundesliga table behind Borussia Dortmund and Hoffenheim after four wins from six games and second behind PSG in Champions League Group B after defeat to the French side in Paris.
Ancelotti had been in charge at Bayern since the summer of 2016.
Assistant coach Willy Sagnol has taken charge of the team, who return to Bundesliga action at Hertha Berlin on Sunday, on an interim basis.
Ancelotti's backroom team of Davide Ancelotti, Giovanni Mauri, Francesco Mauri and Mino Fulco have also left the club.
A statement on the club website said Ancelotti had left after "internal analysis" following the defeat to PSG.
Bayern CEO Karl-Heinz Rummenigge said: "The performance of our team since the start of the season did not meet the expectations we put to them. The game in Paris clearly showed that we had to draw consequences.
"(Bayern sporting director) Hasan Salihamidzic and I had an open and serious discussion with Carlo today and informed him of our decision.
"I would like to thank Carlo for his co-operation and regret this development. Carlo is my friend and will remain (so), but we had to make a professional decision for FC Bayern.
"I now expect the team to have a positive development and absolute performance, so we can reach our goals for this season."

Atletico fall short of ending a seven-year drought against Barcelona


Luis Suarez's 82nd-minute header denied Atletico Madrid a first LaLiga win over Barcelona in seven years.
Barca's perfect start to the league campaign ended with a 1-1 draw in the capital, though they were on course to leave empty-handed when Saul Niguez fired home after 21 minutes.
Atleti have knocked Barcelona out of the Champions League twice in recent years but a success over them in their domestic division has proved elusive since Valentine's Day 2010, and so it proved again as Suarez rose at the back post to head in substitute Sergi Roberto's cross.
The visitors nearly went ahead inside 30 seconds, when Saul made his first key contribution in front of his own goal.
Lionel Messi cut in off the right flank, played a one-two with Suarez and shrugged off Filipe Luis only for Saul to poke the ball behind as Barcelona's key man prepared to pull the trigger.
Atleti woke up and dominated the rest of the first period, with Marc-Andre ter Stegen brilliantly denying Antoine Griezmann on two occasions.
The first was a fine one-handed save at his near post after Andres Iniesta gave the ball and Ter Stegen thwarted Griezmann again, this time with his left leg, after the Frenchman had driven into the box by nutmegging Gerard Pique.
Ter Stegen would be beaten in the 21st minute when Saul unleashed an unstoppable attempt beyond him from 25 yards. The 22-year-old drifted off Ivan Rakitic to collect Yannick Carrasco's pass and fired a right-footed shot that swerved past Ter Stegan and into the net.
Suarez, who had left for international duty having scored just twice, did not initially seem buoyed by his midweek double for Uruguay as he pulled out of a header from a Messi free-kick when unmarked.
This was an Atleti side who had conceded just once in the league since August and their defensive resolve was evident when Stefan Savic blocked a Suarez shot just before the break.
The former Liverpool forward had the best chance of the early second-half exchanges when he breezed beyond Diego Godin and rifled in a try that Jan Oblak was behind.
Home fans inside the Wanda Metropolitano feared the worst when Messi won a free-kick 25 yards out. However, Barcelona's number 10, so often Atleti's nemesis, curled his dead-ball effort onto the outside of the post.
Suarez wanted a set piece inside the box when the ball may have come up and struck Savic's arm, though the referee was disinterested and the replays were inconclusive.
Messi fired just wide as Barcelona's confidence grew and Suarez nearly levelled when free inside the box only for a poor first touch to precede a weak attempt at Oblak.
Yet opportunities continued to come his way and Suarez peeled away from Savic to reach Roberto's cross and nod down past Oblak.
Andre Gomes almost reached Suarez again and the final kick of the game was Messi's free-kick from the edge of the box which Oblak managed to hold on to.

Madrid match a marker Of Tottenham's progress under Pochettino

When Tottenham Hotspur line up at the Bernabeu on Tuesday night, they will be greeted by two familiar faces in the Real Madrid ranks.

Luka Modric and Gareth Bale both made their name in Lilywhite, before swapping London for the Spanish capital.

Both played for Spurs on their last visit here, in the 2011 Champions League quarter final.
They epitomised Harry Redknapp’s swashbuckling side – Bale’s pace and power, Modric’s guile and artistry.

Yet when the two Madrid players look at this Spurs side, they will see a very different team to the one they left.

That side, vaunted at the time for its attacking flair, was also erratic.
In a season memorable for the 3-1 'Taxi for Maicon' victory over Inter Milan at White Hart Lane, and a backs-to-the-wall two-legged victory over their city rivals AC, they also lost at home to Wigan Athletic, and away at Bolton Wanderers and Blackpool.

That Champions League campaign, which ended with a tame 5-0 aggregate defeat at the hands of Real, arguably marked the apex for Redknapp’s Spurs, and put their best players firmly in the shop window.

Bale’s heroics papered over the cracks of Modric’s departure in 2012.
Almost single-handedly, the Welshman took Spurs to the brink of a return to the Champions League, only to miss out on the final day of the 2012/13 season.

When Madrid returned that summer with a world-record bid, Bale left, and Spurs, now under the stewardship of Andre Villas-Boas, withered.
A side that had been built around Bale, and that had failed to replace Modric, floundered without them. It seemed that Spurs' quest to establish themselves as a Premier League and European force would fall short.

Under Mauricio Pochettino, they have risen from the ashes of that former side, a younger, more rounded, and arguably more talented force.
The Argentine has delivered Premier League era-best finishes of 3rd and 2nd in consecutive campaigns.

Last season, Spurs amassed 86 points, comfortably surpassing the previous club record of 72 set, incidentally, in Bale's final season.
This is a side bristling with talent, but one also endowed with a steeliness and work-ethic that eluded its predecessors.

The attacking flair remains - the team led the Premier League scoring charts last season - but it is now underpinned by a miserly defence that has conceded the fewest goals in the league for two years running.
There are certain similarities in personnel.

Harry Kane has taken on the talismanic role once occupied by Bale. The England captain has scored at least 25 goals for the club in each of the last 3 seasons – the first player to achieve that feat since Martin Chivers in the early ‘70s.
Christian Eriksen is the heartbeat of the team, much as Modric was.
He exerts a more attacking influence than the Croat – only Kevin De Bruyne registered more assists than the Dane in the league last season – but as was often said of Modric, Spurs are a better side when Eriksen is on form.

Dele Alli, too, bears a certain resemblance to Rafael van der Vaart in his spatial awareness and talent for arriving, unmarked, in goal-scoring positions.
Yet where Redknapp’s squad thinned noticeably beyond those stars, the current side boasts a remarkable parity of talent throughout.

Jan Vertonghen and Toby Alderweireld have formed an imperious partnership at the back.
Together with Hugo Lloris, and often supplemented by a third centre-back in the shape of Eric Dier or new signing Davinson Sanchez, they provide an assured bedrock that was often lacking with popular but error-prone players such as Michael Dawson, Heurelho Gomes, or William Gallas.

Mousa Dembélé and Victor Wanyama bring bite and drive to the midfield, equally adept at breaking up opposition attacks or starting their own, and are clear upgrades on the likes of Wilson Palacios and Tom Huddlestone.

Heung-Min Son, who has struggled to get into the starting XI in the opening weeks of this campaign, scored 14 times in the league last season – more than any Spurs player managed in 2010/11.

This wealth of talent has brought with it an added resilience when the team faces setbacks.
Many suspected that Spurs would fall apart when Harry Kane suffered injuries last season.


Manchester City's Gabriel Jesus ‘the best young striker since Lionel Messi’, Danny Murphy tells talk SPORT

Manchester City’s Brazilian star Gabriel Jesus is ‘the best young striker since Lionel Messi’, believes talkSPORT regular Danny Murphy.

The 20-year-old has been a revelation since joining the Blues from Palmeiras in his homeland for just £27million in January.
Impressing alongside Sergio Aguero and on his own in the Argentine's absence, Jesus has netted 13 Premier League goals in 17 games for the club, including a fine brace in Saturday’s 7-2 victory over Stoke.
He has starred at international level, too, with seven goals in 11 games for Brazil.
Murphy has been blown away by the youngster’s talent and believes Jesus is on his way to becoming one of the best footballers to emerge ‘in a long, long time’.
“He’s the best young player I’ve seen since Messi at that age,” the former Liverpool midfielder told talkSPORT host Jim White.
“I’m not comparing him and saying he’s like Messi – no one is like Messi, he is a phenomenon.
“But at 20 years old, to be doing the type of things he does, is incredible.
“He’s scored 13 goals in 15 games for City, seven goals in 11 games for Brazil and he’s only just turned 20 – that’s ridiculous in itself.
“But take away those stats, I’ve watched him live and he is an unbelievable footballer for a man of his age.
“He demands the ball, he closes down people, he’s tough, he’s strong, his hungry, he’s quick. He’s got two feet, he doesn’t mind having a little bit of a tussle when the ball’s in the air – there’s nothing he hasn’t got.
“Time will tell, but I believe he could go on and be as good as we’ve seen for a long, long time.
“There’s nothing missing for his game. I don’t see a weakness and I have not seen him play badly.
“He is years ahead of where he should be at. Mentally he’s 26 or 27 and that means he’s only going to get better.”

Read more at https://talksport.com/football/manchester-citys-gabriel-jesus-best-young-striker-lionel-messi-danny-murphy-tells-talksport#a6LZwr47QoyvoF7M.99

Tuesday, 10 October 2017

With Atletico Madrid facing Barcelona this weekend, the club have confirmed Sime Vrsaljko's hamstring injury.


Atletico Madrid have confirmed Sime Vrsaljko will not be out for an extended period, after suffering a hamstring scare on international duty.
Vrsaljko was forced off due to hamstring tightness on Monday as Croatia held on for a 2-0 win over Ukraine.
Club doctors performed a spectroscopy upon his return to Spain, and a statement confirmed no significant muscular damage.
Only just coming off an anterior cruciate ligament injury, the 25-year-old asserted as much immediately following the match, saying his substitution was precautionary.
"It is not an injury," Vrsaljko said. "I just felt a discomfort in my hamstring and I think it was right for the team to bring on a fresher player, so that we were not weaker on the left side."
Having already gone with a different back four in each of the opening seven games this LaLiga season, Diego Simeone will likely rotate this Saturday against Barcelona.

Read more at https://www.fourfourtwo.com/news/vrsaljko-cleared-major-injury#yuUdGAZEWO8Ww6P8.99

Messi: It would've been crazy if Argentina missed World Cup




There was joy and relief for Lionel Messi, whose three goals sent Argentina through to the 2018 World Cup in Russia.

Hat-trick hero Lionel Messi said it would have been "crazy" if Argentina did not qualify for the World Cup after he guided the two-time champions to next year's tournament.
Outside of the CONMEBOL qualification places and on the brink of elimination, Messi scored three goals as Argentina overcame Ecuador 3-1 in Quito and secured a berth at Russia 2018 on Tuesday.
Occupying sixth position prior to kick-off, Argentina's hopes of at least claiming a play-off spot were dealt a major blow when they conceded after just 38 seconds.
But five-time Ballon d'Or winner Messi saved the day, scoring twice in the first half and again just past the hour-mark to see Argentina – runners-up in 2014 – to their 12th successive World Cup.
"There was always the fear of coming here to play. Luckily, we could react and we managed to play well," Messi told reporters after Argentina finished third.
"We were calm, we achieved the goal and that is the most important thing. Thanks to God, we fulfilled the objective.
"It would have been crazy not to be in the World Cup. The group deserved to qualify.
"There has been criticism despite having played three consecutive finals and today was an important day for all, especially for those who have been here longer."
Messi continued: "We were away from the press for a while and the people. I think it served to get us closer. If we all go hand in hand, everything will be easier.
"It was unfair what happened in the World Cup and the two Copa Americas. We ended up suffering to enter this World Cup and hopefully we will get it once and for all.
"Enjoy the qualification and prepare little by little. The team will change, there will be another and it will grow."

Read more at https://www.fourfourtwo.com/news/messi-it-wouldve-been-crazy-if-argentina-missed-world-cup#kOFeqBq2YLaJRQgS.99

Watch Lionel Messi bag stunning hat-trick to lead Argentina to 2018 World Cup in Russia


When his country most needed him, Lionel Messi did the business.
Questions have been asked of the Barcelona superstar again and again with regards his influence on Argentina's fortunes - particularly with the Albiceleste struggling for a spot at next year's finals in Russia.
But Messi answered his critics with arguably his greatest ever/most important performance, putting the weight of a country on his shoulders and carrying them to the 2018 World Cup finals.
Argentina's greatest-ever goalscorer scored all three goals - a 44th career hat-trick - as Jorge Sampaoli's men ran to a 3-1 victory over Ecuador, in the altitude of Quito.
Having fallen behind inside a minute thanks to Romario Ibarra, Argentina bit back, with Messi scoring twice in eight first-half minutes to put the visitors in front.
Source: http://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/football/news/watch-lionel-messi-argentina-hattrick-11322938