Showing posts with label sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sports. Show all posts

Monday, 27 February 2017

Yanga will not be carried away - Coach


YOUNG Africans will not get carried away by the mammoth 5-1 first leg win over Comoro side Ngaya Club de Mde in their African Champions League preliminary round tie, assistant coach Juma Mwambusi has said.


The Mainland envoys in the continental premium club competition returned home yesterday from Moroni, where they made the light of the Comoro minnows over the weekend. Goals from Justin Zullu, Simon Msuva, Obrey Chirwa, Amissi Tambwe and Thaban Kamusoko apiece wrapped a massive win for George Lwandamina’s side at the Stade de Moroni.
The Tanzanian champions now have a comfortable lead to take into what appears to be a mere formality return fixture next weekend at the National Stadium in Dar es Salaam. However, Mwambusi insisted that they will not rest on their first leg success and promised a solid performance in the reverse game.
“We have won the first leg and there is another match to play, it is important that we get the right preparations so that we get the job done and get into the next round,” Mwambusi told reporters at Julius Nyerere International Airport (JNIA).
“It is not over yet, we beat them at home and they can come with a different approach. What we need is to make sure we play well and defend our lead, we have one leg in the next round, but we must finish off the job,” he added. Hundreds of jubilant Young Africans supporters turned at the JNIA yesterday afternoon to welcome their team back home.
The Mainland champions will face the winner of the tie between Zambia’s Zanaco and APR of Rwanda. The first leg played in Lusaka ended in a barren draw. The first round fixtures will be played on the weekends of March 11-13 and 17-19.

US Soccer President Sunil Gulati Defends The Lack Of Pro/Rel In America

Promotion and relegation remains a hot-button issue in American soccer. While the vast majority of soccer fans tend to not think about the division pyramid and whether the Pittsburgh Riverhounds can play in MLS without paying upwards of $100 million, the debate has been kept alive by one dedicated zealot and his merry band of Pro/Rel Truthers. Their greatest enemy, as they will happily explain to you (whether you want them to or not), is an entrenched corporatized establishment in American soccer that prioritizes big business over fans and community-minded clubs. 

These league structure clerics may be feeling a bit more agitated than usual today.

That’s because of recent comments by USSF president Sunil Gulati addressing the lack of promotion and relegation in American soccer. In an interview with Grant Wahl for Sports Illustrated, Gulati tackled the issue head-on and offered an assessment of how likely it is that pro/rel would finally come to America. His take, in essence: “don’t hold your breath.”

”There are a number of issues that come up with that particular format of competition, but the biggest one is it’s not the rules of the game that people bought into when they made investments, whether it’s in the USL, the NASL or MLS. It’s not the rules that we set out when teams came in. And so whether that happens or not, is it possible? Sure. Is it going to happen in the next few years? I don’t think it is, but it’s not going to be that we dictate it should happen or shouldn’t happen. You’ve got investments that have been made. And so if the leagues get together and say we should look at this, are we willing to help facilitate that discussion? Sure, we’d be willing to. But if you make an investment today and the next day the government—in this case, us—changes the rules completely and changes the value of your investment? That’s going to lead to some serious problems. That’s point one.” 

But wait— there’s more.

”Point two: I’ve seen a lot of the empirical evidence on it, and there’s not a lot of empirical evidence on the benefits and costs of a promotion/relegation system. Yes, there was the Deloitte study, and I’ve met with the author of that and we’ve talked about it. But for example, one of the benefits that comes out there is that teams that are at the bottom in a particular first division, let’s say, will do whatever they have to to make investments to stay up, so that increases the competition. O.K., that’s true. But in a salary cap world, is that true? The answer is no. It can’t be.” 

You can catch Gulati’s full comments at the link above. It’s definitely worth a listen, regadless of whether or not you agree with his appraisal.

Barcelona and Luis Enrique: Is there any way back from this humiliation?




“We tried to score to get back into the tie but they got the third goal and then the fourth,” the Barcelona manager, Luis Enrique, said at the end of his darkest night. His words were telling but not even entirely true.
It was not that Paris Saint-Germain had scored a goal; it was that they had scored a third and then a fourth, and anyway it was not as if the visitors had been caught chasing the game, a quick counter or some fluke goal cruelly ending it. When Ángel Di María curled in the third, the finish was as calm and precise as the move that led to it, a portrait from the Parc des Princes, a portrait of Barcelona, too.



There were many of them, defining images. Lionel Messi losing the ball, stopping and then watching PSG escape to score was the most seized upon. But there was also the ease with which they were overcome, one after the other all the way to Andrés Iniesta, for the third on 55 minutes.
Barcelona’s resistance had not been broken there, their rebellion suddenly over, as Luis Enrique implied, and it did not continue thereafter; it never truly began. Ten minutes earlier the second half had started, a second chance. Instead there was another portrait, perhaps most powerful of all. Barcelona had the kick-off and immediately lost the ball. They had not even escaped the centre circle, still less PSG.
Overwhelmed, unable to react, Barcelona were taken apart. Nor was it only pace or intensity, although this was their 13th game in 41 days and Iniesta certainly was not fully fit. Sergio Busquets, moreover, never fast, looked slower than ever and is enduring the worst season of his career.
No, it was their play. The third PSG goal came out from the back, something that is supposed to define Barcelona’s style but something they were never able to do during Tuesday’s Champions League tie.
At the end Iniesta said Barcelona did not have “clear ideas”. At pitchside Busquets talked about “tactics and planning”. Barcelona had been surprised, he admitted, although Luis Enrique, who ended up confronting a reporter, disagreed. This is the end for him – and not just because of this dreadful night.
Barcelona had only one shot on target. Isolated, Messi had fewer touches in the first half than in any half for the past eight years. Neymar ran at PSG but ran alone. At the other end Marc-André ter Stegen made six saves. This was the worst defeat Barcelona have suffered under Luis Enrique but the best thing about it might have been the score. It could have been greater. The manager called it a “disaster” – the word El Mundo Deportivo splashed across its front page. Its counterpart, Sport, went for “This is not Barça”.

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But here is the thing: it is. The debate about Barcelona’s identity has never gone away – even in good times – and it has grown louder, more extensive, of late. Luis Enrique does not appreciate being told but he cannot say he was not warned. In fact, the warnings have been repeated. This result was coming: not a 4-0 but a defeat and the manner of it. Unai Emery could not fail to spot Barça’s vulnerability; the PSG manager’s success was in exploiting it so completely, leaving Barça so utterly exposed.
Barcelona stand second in La Liga, trailing Real Madrid despite having played two games more. Some opponents have waited deep, Alavés and Málaga both earning points at the Camp Nou that way, but others have begun pressing them. Barcelona have struggled to overcome an approach that they once welcomed, unsure of their ability to play through the pressure. Celta Vigo overwhelmed them; for much of the game so did Sevilla and Betis.
They reached the Copa del Rey final but had to hang on against Atlético.
There will be those who blame Messi for Tuesday night but for much of the season he has disguised Barça’s flaws, of which there are many.
Those run from the club to the coach and the squad. There is a self-destructive nature to Barcelona that never goes away and emerges ever stronger in moments like this, a mutual mistrust that magnifies the fault lines and widens the divide. Trust in the board is falling; there have been five directors of communication now. Signings have not convinced and the ecosystem does not comfort. There is no recognised right-back, an ageing midfield, fewer youth-team players making it through and the strength in depth they claimed to have brought in does not look strong at all.

All of which feeds into something deeper: Barcelona have the players but what is the plan? The answer often offered up is Messi. But even Messi – heading towards the final year of his contract, a new deal still unsigned – cannot always rescue them. And in Paris he, too, was stopped.
There is a puritanical streak to much of the criticism and there will be a backlash against the front three of Neymar, Luis Suárez and Messi, as if this defeat is the fault of their best players, footballers who led them to a treble and then a double. That is unfair and ignores the culpability of other players but there is something in the idea that the evolution that they allowed, the faith in their talent, was potentially a regression. Instead of being a variation on a theme it became the theme. In El Pais Ramon Besa one of the most important “ideologues” of a particular Barcelona faith, claimed that the club had “sold its soul to the tridente”. Their ability enables other, systemic issues to go unaddressed.
Above all there is criticism of Luis Enrique, the visible representative of a club in which some do not believe and a man who they think does not believe in them – a man Besa accuses of having “no respect” for the club’s “essence”. The criticism is fierce and he feels it. On Tuesday night he spat: “We could have done handstands and the same would have happened.”
Sport described Barcelona as a “shipwreck without a manager”. El Mundo asked readers if they remembered that team who “respected the ball”, that reigned through an “endless series of indecipherable passes” and “cared for and nurtured the midfield”. The verdict was damning: “It no longer exists.” Juan Jiminez lamented in AS: “Barcelona used to be something else, something healthier.”
His colleague Santi Giménez wrote : “Barcelona lost more than a football match in Paris. They were stripped bare, leaving exposed the sad reality of a team that is a mess tactically, physically and emotionally. There is no plan, no youth system, a lack of leadership, the style has been trampled upon, there’s no direction at all, and all the coach can cling to is his record [but] he sold a story that was guillotined in Paris, where the emperor stood naked. It is not that Barcelona are out of Europe; it is that Barcelona are out of Barcelona.”

Barcelona and Luis Enrique: Is there any way back from this humiliation?


“We tried to score to get back into the tie but they got the third goal and then the fourth,” the Barcelona manager, Luis Enrique, said at the end of his darkest night. His words were telling but not even entirely true.
It was not that Paris Saint-Germain had scored a goal; it was that they had scored a third and then a fourth, and anyway it was not as if the visitors had been caught chasing the game, a quick counter or some fluke goal cruelly ending it. When Ángel Di María curled in the third, the finish was as calm and precise as the move that led to it, a portrait from the Parc des Princes, a portrait of Barcelona, too.



There were many of them, defining images. Lionel Messi losing the ball, stopping and then watching PSG escape to score was the most seized upon. But there was also the ease with which they were overcome, one after the other all the way to Andrés Iniesta, for the third on 55 minutes.
Barcelona’s resistance had not been broken there, their rebellion suddenly over, as Luis Enrique implied, and it did not continue thereafter; it never truly began. Ten minutes earlier the second half had started, a second chance. Instead there was another portrait, perhaps most powerful of all. Barcelona had the kick-off and immediately lost the ball. They had not even escaped the centre circle, still less PSG.
Overwhelmed, unable to react, Barcelona were taken apart. Nor was it only pace or intensity, although this was their 13th game in 41 days and Iniesta certainly was not fully fit. Sergio Busquets, moreover, never fast, looked slower than ever and is enduring the worst season of his career.
No, it was their play. The third PSG goal came out from the back, something that is supposed to define Barcelona’s style but something they were never able to do during Tuesday’s Champions League tie.
At the end Iniesta said Barcelona did not have “clear ideas”. At pitchside Busquets talked about “tactics and planning”. Barcelona had been surprised, he admitted, although Luis Enrique, who ended up confronting a reporter, disagreed. This is the end for him – and not just because of this dreadful night.
Barcelona had only one shot on target. Isolated, Messi had fewer touches in the first half than in any half for the past eight years. Neymar ran at PSG but ran alone. At the other end Marc-André ter Stegen made six saves. This was the worst defeat Barcelona have suffered under Luis Enrique but the best thing about it might have been the score. It could have been greater. The manager called it a “disaster” – the word El Mundo Deportivo splashed across its front page. Its counterpart, Sport, went for “This is not Barça”.
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But here is the thing: it is. The debate about Barcelona’s identity has never gone away – even in good times – and it has grown louder, more extensive, of late. Luis Enrique does not appreciate being told but he cannot say he was not warned. In fact, the warnings have been repeated. This result was coming: not a 4-0 but a defeat and the manner of it. Unai Emery could not fail to spot Barça’s vulnerability; the PSG manager’s success was in exploiting it so completely, leaving Barça so utterly exposed.
Barcelona stand second in La Liga, trailing Real Madrid despite having played two games more. Some opponents have waited deep, Alavés and Málaga both earning points at the Camp Nou that way, but others have begun pressing them. Barcelona have struggled to overcome an approach that they once welcomed, unsure of their ability to play through the pressure. Celta Vigo overwhelmed them; for much of the game so did Sevilla and Betis.
They reached the Copa del Rey final but had to hang on against Atlético.
There will be those who blame Messi for Tuesday night but for much of the season he has disguised Barça’s flaws, of which there are many.
Those run from the club to the coach and the squad. There is a self-destructive nature to Barcelona that never goes away and emerges ever stronger in moments like this, a mutual mistrust that magnifies the fault lines and widens the divide. Trust in the board is falling; there have been five directors of communication now. Signings have not convinced and the ecosystem does not comfort. There is no recognised right-back, an ageing midfield, fewer youth-team players making it through and the strength in depth they claimed to have brought in does not look strong at all.

All of which feeds into something deeper: Barcelona have the players but what is the plan? The answer often offered up is Messi. But even Messi – heading towards the final year of his contract, a new deal still unsigned – cannot always rescue them. And in Paris he, too, was stopped.
There is a puritanical streak to much of the criticism and there will be a backlash against the front three of Neymar, Luis Suárez and Messi, as if this defeat is the fault of their best players, footballers who led them to a treble and then a double. That is unfair and ignores the culpability of other players but there is something in the idea that the evolution that they allowed, the faith in their talent, was potentially a regression. Instead of being a variation on a theme it became the theme. In El Pais Ramon Besa one of the most important “ideologues” of a particular Barcelona faith, claimed that the club had “sold its soul to the tridente”. Their ability enables other, systemic issues to go unaddressed.
Above all there is criticism of Luis Enrique, the visible representative of a club in which some do not believe and a man who they think does not believe in them – a man Besa accuses of having “no respect” for the club’s “essence”. The criticism is fierce and he feels it. On Tuesday night he spat: “We could have done handstands and the same would have happened.”
Sport described Barcelona as a “shipwreck without a manager”. El Mundo asked readers if they remembered that team who “respected the ball”, that reigned through an “endless series of indecipherable passes” and “cared for and nurtured the midfield”. The verdict was damning: “It no longer exists.” Juan Jiminez lamented in AS: “Barcelona used to be something else, something healthier.”
His colleague Santi Giménez wrote : “Barcelona lost more than a football match in Paris. They were stripped bare, leaving exposed the sad reality of a team that is a mess tactically, physically and emotionally. There is no plan, no youth system, a lack of leadership, the style has been trampled upon, there’s no direction at all, and all the coach can cling to is his record [but] he sold a story that was guillotined in Paris, where the emperor stood naked. It is not that Barcelona are out of Europe; it is that Barcelona are out of Barcelona.”

Stars coach plots CHAN success


NATIONAL soccer team, Taifa Stars interim head coach Salum Mayanga has presented a six-month programme, which seeks to prepare the side for the 2018 African Nations Championship (CHAN) qualifiers.


The Tanzania Football Federation (TFF), Information and Communication Officer, Alfred Lucas, said yesterday in Dar es Salaam that the programme provided by the former Mtibwa Sugar coach also comprises the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) 2019 Cameroon qualifiers.
“Mayanga has presented his programme ready for the CHAN campaign, whose finals will be hosted in Kenya and we have started working on it,” said Lucas. Lucas said that the six-month programme presented to the federation by coach Mayanga, comprises the team’s training camps and friendly matches ahead of the CHAN tournament, which strictly involve players featuring in local leagues. He also said that the former Mtibwa Sugar coach is tasked to recommend on whether the trial matches will be played at home or outside the country.
“We have received the six-month programme from Coach Mayanga, but where the trial matches should take place that will depends on the coach’s recommendations to the federation,” Lucas said.
Mayanga, who replaced Charles Boniface Mkwasa after the latter’s contract ended is facing a daunting task to revive Taifa Stars which have found themselves rocked in lowest FIFA ranking positions in recent months.
Taifa Stars have dropped two spots to 158th in the latest world rankings, released by FIFA in Zurich, Switzerland. Following a period of inactivity the Taifa Stars have found themselves occupying 49th spot on the continent out of 55 nations.
The Tanzanian outfit collected 152 points, a drop of two points from the previous 154. Taifa Stars recorded their worst position at the end of the year in a decade after they finished the year 2016 in 156th position.
Their poor ranking owed to Taifa Stars’ inability to post positive results in AFCON and World Cup qualifiers. And, the task ahead for Mayanga is monumental and his programme should help turn around the team’s fortunes.
Taifa Stars will kick off its campaign for the 2018 CHAN finals against Rwanda ‘Amavubi’ between July 14 and 16 at home and the return leg match will be held in Kigali between July 21 and 23 this year. The winner of the two legged match will cruise into the third round of the qualifiers, whereby it will face the winner of the match between Uganda and South Sudan or Somalia, who are scheduled to play in the preliminary round.
Tanzania under Brazilian tactician Marcio Maximo managed to qualify for the CHAN finals for the first time in 2009 in Ivory Coast.
Unfortunately, the team was eliminated in the preliminary stage. In the AFCON 2019 qualifiers, Tanzania has been pooled in group L alongside Uganda, Cape Verde and Lesotho. Winners from each group of the 2019 AFCON qualifiers will book a ticket for the AFCON finals to be hosted in Cameroon, who are the tournament defending champions.
Cameroon beat Egypt ‘Pharaohs’ 2-0 in this year’s finals held in Gabon to be crowned the new continental champions. The last time Tanzania qualified for the AFCON finals was in 1980 in the finals held in Nigeria.

Asamoah Gyan is among the 40 footballers whose hair cuts don't conform to the laws of the UAE where they ply their trade.

Asamoah Gyan is among the 40 footballers whose hair cuts don't conform to the laws of the UAE where they ply their trade.

The captain of the senior national team of Ghana, Asamoah Gyan is part of a group of 40 players in the United Arab Emirates whose hair styles are deemed ‘unethical’ according to the laws of the land.

 

The United Arab Emirates Football Association guidelines permits to a certain degree, the kind of haircut a player gets before taking to the field. One of the most significant stories relating to this issue is when Saudi Arabia goalkeeper Waleed Abdullah was asked by a referee to cut his ‘un-Islamic hairstyle before he was permitted to play.
READ MORE: Michael Essien demands €651,000 compensation from Panathinaikos
Asamoah Gyan, captain of the Black Stars has a trademark Mohawk hairstyle where he designs his favourite number 3 on either sides of his head.
The player has had the look during his days in England with Premier League club Sunderland. Gyan has also previously played for Al Ain and Shanghai SIPG with the same look.
Gyan, who is on loan at Arabian Gulf League club Al Ahli is expected to make amends to his haircut as some Islamic teachings ban ‘Qaza’ hairstyles which includes the 31-year-old’s preferred style.
Asamoah Gyan was recently with the Ghana Black Stars team who placed fourth at the 2017 Africa Cup of Nations in Gabon.

Simba, Lyon lock horns in last 16


GIANTS Simba face a banana-skin test as they entertain unpredictable African Lyon in the last 16 tie of Azam Sports Federation Cup (ASFC) round at the National Stadium in Dar es Salaam this afternoon.



The draw for the round of 16 of the ASFC produced some exciting all premier league fixtures and this would be fascinating one to watch given recent meetings between the two sides.
The fixture was initially scheduled for March 1, but the Tanzania Football Federation (TFF) brought it forward for technical reasons, a move approved by the two clubs
. Simba, who are desperate to return to international football, cannot underestimate the magnitude of today’s fixture and importance of the Federation Cup, which provides one of the two tickets to represent the country in continental competitions.
The Msimbazi Street Reds crashed out at the quarter-final stage last season after crashing 2-1 to Coastal Union, but will be keen to avoid such embarrassment this time around and try to win the competition, whose winner represents the country in the CAF Confederation Cup.
But they will be aware of the kind of opposition they’re up against having already faced African Lyon in the league this season, when the Reds succumbed to their first defeat of the season, losing 1-0. That gives Lyon confidence going into today’s fixture.
A superb defensive performance and well-calculated attacking display saw Lyon seal a memorable win with a last-gasp winner against a formidable Simba side, ending their 13-match unbeaten run. Would the same tactic produce similar result in favour of Lyon or would Fernando Tavares’ side take a different approach? Whatever way they choose, it would need a heroic performance to outsmart Joseph Omog’s demolition gang.
One of Simba’s main undoing this season has been their goal-shy striking force but recently, they appear to have finally found that cutting edge. Two 3-0 league wins over Majimaji and Tanzania Prisons have demonstrated notable improvements in the Reds’ offensive game. Key to Simba’s newly found attacking verve is the return to form of striking duo Ibrahim Ajib and Laudit Mavugo. The two strikers scored a goal apiece in both fixtures and produced overall impressive performances.
Simba have injury concerns with key defenders Method Mwanjali and Abdi Banda unlikely to feature against Lyon, while Ugandan defender Juuko Murshid is yet to return to the club since his participation in the African Cup of Nations finals with Uganda Cranes.
The Federation Cup’s round of 16 matches are set to continue on February 24 when last season’s runners-up Azam will play host to Mtibwa Sugar at Azam Complex in another gripping all-premier league encounter. Elsewhere, Kagera Sugar will welcome Stand United at Kaitaba Stadium in Bukoba.
Two more matches will be played on the day whereas Ndanda FC will visit the Mighty Elephant at the Majimaji Stadium in Ruvuma, whilst Arusha’s Madini FC will be up against JKT Ruvu at Sheikh Amri Abeid Stadium in Arusha.
Other matches will be played on February 26. Mbeya dwellers will be treated to a mouthwatering derby pitting Mbeya City against their city rivals Prisons. Mwanza residents should also brace for a thrilling derby between Mbao FC and Toto Africans at the CCM Kirumba stadium on the same date.
In the last of the eighth ties, defending champions Yanga will be expected to make an easy work of Kiluvya United when the Premier League leaders face the Dar es Salaam minnows on March 7 at the National Stadium.

Wayne Rooney could leave Man Utd, says Paul Scholes

Wayne Rooney could look to leave Manchester United due to his lack of playing time under manager Jose Mourinho, according to Paul Scholes.
The United captain has fallen down the pecking order since Mourinho arrived at Old Trafford last summer and has not started a Premier League match since December 17.
Rooney, who became United's all-time record goalscorer last month by surpassing Sir Bobby Charlton's total, was linked with a move to China during the January transfer window.
He has two years to run on his current contract, but his former team-mate Scholes is unsure whether Rooney will see out his deal at United.

"If it carries on going the way it is, I can't [see him staying for two more years]," Scholes told the Daily Mail.
"Maybe it will be reassessed at the end of the season if he's in and out of the team. I don't see him as a player who will accept that. He will want to be at a team where he's playing every week.
"No one will be more frustrated than Wayne at not playing. Being a sub will be driving him up the wall.
"It will be killing him just coming in for the Europa League or the FA Cup. But it's up to him to get his head down and prove he can play in the big games."
Rooney and his team-mates sit sixth in the Premier League with 13 games left but Scholes backed Mourinho to lead the club to a top-four finish.
"It's been a massive improvement from what we've seen in the last couple of years," the former England midfielder said about Mourinho's reign.
"I watch them now and have no doubt they'll finish in the top four. They're playing the best out of the top six with Chelsea and you have to fancy them to finish second or third."

Scholes: Man Utd can win Europa League and finish in top four


The United legend told Goal that Jose Mourinho's side have the quality and depth to battle on multiple fronts
Paul Scholes believes Manchester United can win the Europa League and finish in the top four, despite the heavy workload they have between now and the end of 2016-17.
United prepare to host Saint-Etienne in the last 32 of the Europa League on Thursday amid a close-fought race in the Premier League for one of the four available Champions League spots.
Club legend Scholes insists Jose Mourinho’s men have the ability and the depth to deal with the extra games involved in competing for a place in the May final in Solna.
Arsenal set unwanted CL record

“It’s not just Europe, with the League Cup, the FA Cup and the league. It’s going to be difficult for them but I think they’ve got a squad big enough to handle it,” Scholes told Goal.
“The players at this stage of the season are fit enough, they don’t need to be doing much training. I think training will just be a token gesture really and they’ll just focus on games now, playing Saturday-Wednesday-Saturday-Wednesday or whatever it may be and just getting on with the games and hopefully going on a good run and winning the games.
Scholes, 42, played 718 times for United over a 20-year career, scoring 155 goals and playing a part in 11 league title wins. And he emphasised that it is when games are coming thick and fast that winners and losers can be separated.
Neymar writes off Barca's CL chances
“Each game at this stage of the season is so important because it’s the busiest, and this is where you win your trophies: from February to May. This is the business end of it really, and you just go from one game to another. Whether it’s the FA Cup or League Cup or Europa League it doesn’t really matter, you’re just trying to win all the games.”
The former England midfielder says there are some sides left in the competition to be wary of, but believes United should have too much for any side they face.
“Roma I would say are probably the other big team in it, they’re a good side. There are some Spanish teams in it too, Celta Vigo and Athletic Bilbao. Bilbao are always a decent team, but I think United are capable of beating any of these teams and going all the way.
“With the league not looking nailed-on, although I do think they’ll finish in the top four, it’s a great chance of getting to the Champions League. The Europa League has become a big competition purely because of the Champions League status it has at the end of it. I don’t think it will come down to that, I think United will finish in the top four anyway, but it’s something to fall back on. At the end of the day it’s nice to win a trophy as well.”

The bookmakers clearly agree with Scholes, making United favourites to win the Europa League, and the Class of ’92 member says it is a tag Mourinho’s side have earned with their performances so far this season.
'Zlatan a dream signing for Napoli'
“I think when they were favourites at the start of the season that was possibly to do with the name, but now I think there’s a real genuine belief that they can win it not just because of the teams that are left in it but because of the way they’ve been performing of late: they look like a team that can score goals, like a team that can beat most teams, especially the teams that are left in the Europa League.
“The squad’s massive and that big squad is going to be needed because they’re going to have so many games with the league games, they’ve got the final in the League Cup which will be done and dusted in a couple of weeks, and if they stay in the FA Cup they’ve got FA Cup games so there’s going to be games every week. But I think that’s why they spent so much money to have a squad capable of dealing with that.”
United’s first-leg clash with Saint-Etienne at Old Trafford gets underway at 20:05GMT on Thursday.

Tuesday, 21 February 2017

Simba, Lyon lock horns in last 16

Blues have moved to secure Ethan Warnock from Glentoran

Everton look set to complete the signing a young Irish star this summer.
Ethan Warnock, 16, says he will join the Blues Academy at the end of the season, linking up with the club’s under-18s side.


The Glentoran left-back became the club’s youngest ever outfield player when he made his debut in December at the age of 15 years and 306 days.
Warnock is ready to put pen to paper on a two-year scholarship deal at Goodison.
Warnock told the Belfast Telegraph: “Everton were keen for me to join them after they played our Club NI side two years ago and they have been very good with me.
“The coaching over there is different class.
“I can’t wait to go over there and push on. It was an opportunity that I could not turn down and we’ll see what develops.”

Yanga out to hit CAF ground running


MA I N L A N D c h a m p i - ons Young Africans will be targeting to hit the ground running when they face Comoros champions Ngaya de Mde in their CAF Champions League preliminary round tie today in Moroni.
Yanga jetted off yesterday morning to Moroni in time for the first leg clash at the Stade de Moroni. A total of 20 players and eight members of the technical bench plus two officials left ahead of the match.
The club’s General Secretary, Charles Boniface Mkwasa, told journalists on Friday that seven players have not been included in the list of 30-strong contingent to Moroni due to various reasons. Zimbabwean striker Donald Ngoma and defender Vincent Bossou have not been included in the trip to Comoro.

He said Zimbabwean striker, Ngoma and Malimi Busungu will not travel with the team because they are sick, while defender Vincent Andrew is serving three yellow cards suspension picked last year during the CAF Confederation Cup campaign. Togolese central defender, Bossou, holding midfielder, Pat Ngonyani and goalkeeper Beno Kakolanya will also not make the trip and will wait for the return leg encounter.
In Ngoma’s absence, Yanga Head Coach George Lwandamina will look to fellow country-mate youngster Obrey Chirwa who will partner Burundian striker Amissi Tambwe to find the back of the net against the islanders.
In central defence, skipper Nadir Haroub is expected to be restored to partner Kelvin Yondani, while Juma Abdul and Haji Mwinyi will complete the back four to protect goalkeeper Deogratius Munishi. Zimbabwean Thaban Kamusoko and gifted Rwandese Haruna Niyonzima will take control of the midfield.
The Jangwani Street side will target to better their last season performance, where they were eliminated in the second round by Egyptian side Al Ahly 3-2 on aggregate before dropping to the CAF Confederation Cup where they fell short in the group stages finishing fourth in Group B.
Lwandamina’s side will be eyeing nothing but a clear victory against the dark horse to put themselves in a comfortable zone in the return leg match at home. Yanga are scheduled to face their opponents in the return leg match at the National Stadium in Dar es Salaam two weeks later.
Niyonzima said, “We learnt a lot from last year’s edition of the Champions League. Now we know that it is important for us to start well especially because we are playing away first.”
“We do not know much about the team but we shall be looking to get the best result which is a win and if that does not happen, at least we should get a draw so that we do not have a lot of pressure in the return leg” he said. Yanga were expected to attend light training session yesterday evening at the venue where the match will be played.
Last year, Yanga defeated Cercle de Joachim from Mauritius 3-0 on aggregate in the preliminary round and will be hoping to avoid a shocker in Sunday’s match. Should Yanga progress to the next round, they will face the aggregate winner of another preliminary tie between Rwanda’s APR and Zanaco of Zambia in the first round match in March, this year.
The overall winner of the twolegged match will proceed into the tournament’s group stage.

Scholes: Man Utd can win Europa League and finish in top four

The United legend told Goal that Jose Mourinho's side have the quality and depth to battle on multiple fronts
Paul Scholes believes Manchester United can win the Europa League and finish in the top four, despite the heavy workload they have between now and the end of 2016-17.
United prepare to host Saint-Etienne in the last 32 of the Europa League on Thursday amid a close-fought race in the Premier League for one of the four available Champions League spots.
Club legend Scholes insists Jose Mourinho’s men have the ability and the depth to deal with the extra games involved in competing for a place in the May final in Solna.
Arsenal set unwanted CL record

“It’s not just Europe, with the League Cup, the FA Cup and the league. It’s going to be difficult for them but I think they’ve got a squad big enough to handle it,” Scholes told Goal.
“The players at this stage of the season are fit enough, they don’t need to be doing much training. I think training will just be a token gesture really and they’ll just focus on games now, playing Saturday-Wednesday-Saturday-Wednesday or whatever it may be and just getting on with the games and hopefully going on a good run and winning the games.
Scholes, 42, played 718 times for United over a 20-year career, scoring 155 goals and playing a part in 11 league title wins. And he emphasised that it is when games are coming thick and fast that winners and losers can be separated.
Neymar writes off Barca's CL chances
“Each game at this stage of the season is so important because it’s the busiest, and this is where you win your trophies: from February to May. This is the business end of it really, and you just go from one game to another. Whether it’s the FA Cup or League Cup or Europa League it doesn’t really matter, you’re just trying to win all the games.”
The former England midfielder says there are some sides left in the competition to be wary of, but believes United should have too much for any side they face.
“Roma I would say are probably the other big team in it, they’re a good side. There are some Spanish teams in it too, Celta Vigo and Athletic Bilbao. Bilbao are always a decent team, but I think United are capable of beating any of these teams and going all the way.
“With the league not looking nailed-on, although I do think they’ll finish in the top four, it’s a great chance of getting to the Champions League. The Europa League has become a big competition purely because of the Champions League status it has at the end of it. I don’t think it will come down to that, I think United will finish in the top four anyway, but it’s something to fall back on. At the end of the day it’s nice to win a trophy as well.”

The bookmakers clearly agree with Scholes, making United favourites to win the Europa League, and the Class of ’92 member says it is a tag Mourinho’s side have earned with their performances so far this season.
'Zlatan a dream signing for Napoli'
“I think when they were favourites at the start of the season that was possibly to do with the name, but now I think there’s a real genuine belief that they can win it not just because of the teams that are left in it but because of the way they’ve been performing of late: they look like a team that can score goals, like a team that can beat most teams, especially the teams that are left in the Europa League.
“The squad’s massive and that big squad is going to be needed because they’re going to have so many games with the league games, they’ve got the final in the League Cup which will be done and dusted in a couple of weeks, and if they stay in the FA Cup they’ve got FA Cup games so there’s going to be games every week. But I think that’s why they spent so much money to have a squad capable of dealing with that.”
United’s first-leg clash with Saint-Etienne at Old Trafford gets underway at 20:05GMT on Thursday.

Sorry Barcelona Could Turn to Liverpool or Everton Boss to Succeed Under-Fire Luis Enrique


Barcelona have reportedly earmarked Premier League rivals Jurgen Klopp and Ronald Koeman as prime targets to replace Luis Enrique, in the wake of their shocking 4-0 Champions League defeat to PSG.

Barca also trail bitter rivals Real Madrid in the race for La Liga by a point but los Blancos will have the chance to extend that to seven points if they win their two games in hand.

According to Spanish outlet ​Don Balon, 2015 treble winner Enrique's future is now uncertain, and the club are targeting Klopp and Koeman as potential successors.

Klopp gained plenty of plaudits earlier on the season as his free-scoring Liverpool side went top of the Premier League table and looked like title contenders, but after a poor January the Reds now look to be in the battle for the Champions League places.

Koeman, who already has an affiliation to Barcelona having played for them during the early 90s, got off to a difficult start in his first season as Everton manager but his side have been in great form of late - the Toffees are unbeaten in their last eight league matches, winning five.
The Merseyside duo haven't been in their respective jobs for very long, meaning any approach from Barca could be in vain if their loyalties match their ambitions.

Don Balon also claim the Catalan club could make a move for Sevilla coach Jorge Sampaoli, Athletic Bilbao manager Ernesto Valverde, with Borussia Dortmund boss Thomas Tuchel the outside bet.

Worrying signs: The sad confession of one Barcelona star

The frustrating situation transmits itself to the pitch, where Barcelona have gone various weeks playing with fire

It is worrying that Andres Iniesta and Sergio Busquets publicly criticised the strategy Barcelona employed in their 4-0 defeat by PSG but also that another important player in the squad has told his intimate circle "I have not been enjoying football for a while".
It is a comment that makes you think abou the situation that the team are in. It's clear that the tactical demands of Luis Enrique's blackboard don't allow anyone to relax, with each role split between attack and defence. A problem, without doubt, for players who are more used to thinking about the opposition goal than their own.
The frustrating situation transmits itself to the pitch, where Barcelona have gone various weeks playing with fire, in some games they have come out alive without knowng how. For example the league clash at Anoeta or against Atletico Madrid in the Copa del Rey.
Sadly it had to be in Paris on Valentine's Day that everything fell apart.

Neymar thinks Barcelona has pretty much no chance of coming back against PSG


No team has ever come back from four goals down in a Champions League knockout stage tie, so the task facing Barcelona is as tricky as they get.
The Catalan club was rocked by PSG 4-0 on Tuesday in their Round of 16 clash, leaving the team on the brink of a elimination.
You would hope the team, with unbelievable goal-scoring ability, still had confidence despite how unlikely it is that they come back. Star winger Neymar has faith, but he doesn’t seem to like his team’s chances.

Neymar said Barcelona has a one percent chance of advancing. So he is 99 percent sure his team is headed home?
On Instagram, Neymar wrote “While there is a one percent chance, we have 99 percent faith.”

So, I like this and I don’t. He seems confident by saying how much faith there is, but don’t put the chances at one percent. Maybe it is lost in translation, but it would be better to tell the fans to believe and that the team will give all it has for every second. This isn’t throwing in the towel, but this also isn’t the best way to give fans hope.

Real Madrid play highlights of PSG 4-0 Barcelona at the Bernabeu ahead of Champions League match vs Napoli

Those cheeky scamps from the Bernabeu knew the perfect way to get their fans up for the last-16 clash - taking the mick out of Barca

It has been a good week for Real Madrid.
The La Liga giants maintained their lead at the top of their domestic table at the weekend, and on Wednesday they established a 3-1 first leg lead in their Champions League last-16 tie against Napoli. 
But for many of their supporters, that wasn't even the best result of the week.

Nope, that honour would go to Barcelona's 4-0 hammering at Paris Saint-Germain the night before. 
Barca were torn apart by a rampant PSG, who established a dominant lead in the tie to all-but secure a place in the last eight at the expense of Luis Enrique's side.
And Real wanted to keep the celebrations going ahead of their game, so they played the highlights of Barca's loss on the big screen at the Bernabeu ahead of facing Napoli.
he sight of the goals going in against Barca whipped the Madrid crowd up into a frenzy before the game, and it obviously worked as they went on to win. 
Not everyone was as happy to see what Real had done, though.

Barcelona Transfer News: Latest Aleix Vidal Replacement Rumours After PSG Defeat


Barcelona are reportedly no longer in the market for a right-back to replace the injured Aleix Vidal, after their shock 4-0 defeat to Paris Saint-Germain on Tuesday left the club on the brink of Champions League elimination, per Luis F. Rojo for Marca.
The Catalan club's hierarchy had compiled an eight-man shortlist, including Villarreal duo Antonio Rukavina and Mario Gaspar, per Sport, but their urgency has been cooled now that Luis Enrique's team are likely to have fewer games remaining this season.Vidal is set for five months on the treatment table after dislocating his ankle during the club's 6-0 win over Alaves on Saturday. Here, he is filmed leaving hospital:



Elimination from the Champions League would mean Barcelona only face midweek matches on three more occasions in 2016-17. Consequently, they believe that Sergio Roberto, with Javier Mascherano as a back-up option, is adequate squad depth to see them through to the summer, per Rojo.
The dramatic U-turn in transfer policy could partially be based on manager Luis Enrique's uncertain future. The Spaniard is yet to sign a new contract at the club and, according to Andy West for BBC Sport, he is now expected to have "little choice" over whether he is still at the Camp Nou in 2017-18.
Financially, it would make sense if Barcelona are unwilling to spend money on a new acquisition without first knowing who will be in control of the team in five months' time.
Sevilla's Jorge Sampaoli's brand of high-tempo attacking football would suit the Barcelona DNA, and he would be the "most popular option," according to West.
Right-back has been a problem area for Barca all season. Vidal's injuries have restricted the 27-year-old to just six La Liga appearances, leaving Roberto, who is usually a central midfielder, to fill in.
The Barcelona hierarchy clearly feel Roberto is good enough to see out the remainder of the season in the role.

Luis Enrique might not feel the same way. His squad is already thin defensively, and this latest decision may further scupper their faltering title bid. Barca sit one point behind Real Madrid, who have two games in hand on their rivals.
Arguably Luis Enrique's final chance of silverware, in the Copa del Rey final, is also under fresh jeopardy. Roberto will be suspended for the game, leaving the Barca boss without a right-back when they play Alaves on May 27.
Barca's abandonment of their shortlist is not a good sign for Luis Enrique's future. For now, he will have to make do with a smaller squad than he would have wished and hope that there are no fresh injuries between now and the end of the campaign.

Mascherano: I don't see any reason for a Messi-Barcelona divorce




The relationship between Lionel Messi and Barcelona hasn't changed at all, according to Argentine teammate Javier Mascherano, and he believes the Rosario native still has a lot to offer the Blaugrana.
If he were to leave, the ex-Liverpool man only sees Argentina as a possible destination, and that would only come at the end of Messi's career, not anytime before that.
"I don't see any reason for a Messi-Barcelona divorce," Mascherano said. "Like any other relationship, it is like a marriage that has brought a lot of joy for a long time and can bring even more happiness.

"Both benefit from this relationship and it should continue that way.
"I can't imagine Messi playing at another team at this level."
Mascherano admitted that last season he had doubts about whether he should continue at the Catalan club, but discussions with Roberto Fernandez and Luis Enrique convinced him otherwise.
"I spoke with Fernandez and the coach that maybe it'd be best to offer my hand and go my separate way, but the club believed I still had a lot to offer them."
Finally, the Argentine admitted that whereas other players might be more talented, he has made it as a footballer thanks to his work ethic, not due to any innate ability.
"I'm aware that my career and what I've achieved is because of my consistency," he concluded. "I am not a player that got to where I am now because of innate talent."