World Soccer – October 2021

Page 1

CHAMPIONS LEAGUE KICK-OFF 20 STARLETS SET TO BREAK THROUGH October 2021

TRANSFER ANALYSED 30 summer signings that have caught our eye

GE MULLE

SPECIAL TRIB TO DER BOMB

OLYMPI The full story from Japa REVIEW

TA orld Cup 20 alifying upd

PLUS

LIONEL MESSI TRANSFER SHOCK…

Barca bombshell New era at PSG La Liga fallout

DONNARUMMA BIO AFRICAN SUPER LEAGUE VENTSPILS GOLD CUP REVIEW ZAMBIA EUROPA LEAGUE BELARUS


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October 2021

FEATURES

24 Special report The fallout from La Liga’s CVC deal and Leo Messi’s exit

THE WORLD THIS MONTH People in the news...on and off the pitch

21

HEADLINERS

32

4 10 12 13 14 16 18

In pictures From the Editor Jim Holden Optimistic Old Trafford Obituaries Keir Radnedge African Super League Jonathan Wilson Messi at PSG Ins & Outs People on the move

20 21 22 23

Ventspils Munir El Haddadi Ligue1 Derby County

EYEWITNESS 28 Zambia 32 Turkey

CHAMPIONS LEAGUE

46

36 Preview 38 20 starlets breaking through

EUROPA LEAGUE

42 Preview 44 8 players to watch

PLAYER BIOGRAPHY

46 Gianluigi Donnarumma

64

FACE TO FACE

62 Seamus Coleman

WOMEN’S FOOTBALL

54 Transfer window analysed Focusing on 30-eye catching summer signings

64 Olympics review

MY BIGGEST GAME

98 Mark Lawrenson Follow World Soccer online

FOOTBALL 24-7

Exclusive subscription offer

58 Remembering Gerd Muller Our special tribute to the German goalscoring legend

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68

Exclusive reports from our worldwide network of correspondents PLUS

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78 The month in numbers 84 Global diary 92 Results, tables, fixtures

e o

aga ne

See page 8

2022 World Cup Qualifiers Belarus Olympics 2020 CONCACAF Squads WORLD SOCCER 3


THEWORLD

THIS MONTH

The global game caught on camera

4 WORLD SOCCER


France…Lionel Messi salutes the Paris Saint-Germain fans as he is welcomed to his new club

World Soccer 5


TheWorld

this month

Itay…lazi cac Mauizi Sai pss wit t cub’s masct, oimpia t ag

Gmany…rbt lwanwski cass wit fm tam-mat Mac rus in t Gman Sup Cup. T stik sc twic in a 3-1 Bayn win Agntina…Bca Junis an Agntins Junis pays cas n a watgg pitc

6 World Soccer


in Pictures Japan…Ivory Coast forward Aboubacar Doumbia is sent off after grabbing Saudi Arabia’s Ayman Al Khulaif

Northern Ireland…sub keeper Kepa Arrizabalaga celebrates after his decisive save wins the UEFA Super Cup for Chelsea

Japan…Brazil stars sink to their knees in elation at winning an Olympic gold medal, while Spain ace Pedri looks dejected World Soccer 7


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FROM THE EDITOR

Two of football’s greatest-ever goalscorers receive coverage in this edition of World Soccer. We pay our respects to the game’s original goal machine, Gerd Muller (page 58), with Keir Radnedge offering a glowing tribute to “Der Bomber”, whose many goal records still stand today. Another player who has his own set of incredible goalscoring feats is Lionel Messi, and his shock move to Paris Saint-Germain perhaps poses more questions than answers for the French giants (page 16) whilst simultaneously leaving a gaping hole in the Spanish game. The fallout in Spain from Messi’s exit, along with La Liga’s proposed deal with private equity firm CVC, has led to shockwaves within the domestic scene, and Colin Millar helps us digest the latest developments (page 24). It isn’t just goalscorers, though, who achieve headlines and stardom in today’s game. Another PSG signing, and Euro 2020 Player of The Tournament, Gianluigi Donnarumma looks set for a decade of dominance as the world’s best goalkeeper, and Nick Bidwell tracks his journey from teenage starlet to Two of worldwide superstar (page 46). football’s Steve Menary digs deep into the greatest-ever murkier side of the game, with clubs in goalscorers Latvia (page 20) and Belarus (page 79) making more headlines off the pitch than receive on it, while Ben Bocsak shines the light coverage in on a more inspiring story, with Zambian this edition of club Kafue Celtic providing a pathway for an abundance of promising African talents World Soccer to make their way in the game (page 28). On the pitch, congratulations are in order for the United States, who added the Gold Cup to their recent Nations League victory in what appears to be a power shift from Mexico to further north of the continent in CONCACAF (page 82), while Brazil’s men’s team (page 80) and Canada’s women’s team (page 64) arrived back from Japan with coveted Olympic gold medals around their necks. We provide full reviews, along with definitive squad lists (page 86), of all three competitions. With the 2022 World Cup now just over 12 months away, lots of countries will have similar aspirations for glory, and we provide an update on the “Road to Qatar” with the next round of qualifiers imminently underway in Europe, South America, Asia, Africa and CONCACAF (page 68). And on the club scene, the Champions League starts again in September. As usual we provide a preview and players to watch ahead of UEFA’s showcase competition (page where PSG will be hoping the signing of Messi finally helps the succeed in their quest to win the crown. Only time will tell if Leo can add another glorious chapter to his already iconic career. Stephen Fishlock, Group Editor 10 WORLD SOCCER

THEWORLD

THIS MONTH

CAMEROON

Draw made for delayed AFCON A month after the competition was originally

scheduled to kick-off – before being moved twice, firstly due to “unfavourable climatic conditions” and then COVID-19 – the draw for the 2021 Africa Cup of Nations has taken place. CAF had changed the timing of the tournament and, in July 2019, Algeria became the first-ever summertime winners in Egypt. However, 2021 hosts Cameroon could not commit to a summer tournament due to their rainy season, thus the competition was shifted to January 2021, before the pandemic led to a further year’s delay. The most eye-catching group will see holders Algeria face Ivory Coast, while AFCON debutants Comoros have a tough task in Group C against Morocco, Ghana and Gabon. The top two nations from each group will progress to the knockout stages, along with the four best third-placed teams. The tournament kicks off on January 9, 2022. Draw in full: GROUP A Cameroon, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Cape Verde GROUP B Senegal, Zimbabwe, Guinea, Malawi GROUP C Morocco, Ghana, Comoros, Gabon GROUP D Nigeria, Egypt, Sudan, Guinea-Bissau GROUP E Algeria, Sierra Leone, Equatorial Guinea, Ivory Coast GROUP F Tunisia, Mali, Mauritania, Gambia


GLOBAL FOOTBALL INTELLIGENCE

“A lifelong Liverpool supporter, Andrew continued to attend matches at Anfield when possible despite suffering life-changing injuries at Hillsborough”

Liverpool pay tribute to Andrew Devine, who recently passed away from injuries suffered at the Hillsborough disaster, making him its 97th victim

CAF president… Patrice Motsepe presents the draw from Yaounde

HEROES

VILLAINS

JUVENTUS WOMEN

The Italian club came under fire for a tweet that was described as “blatant racism”. The post was deleted just 25 minutes after being posted, with the club later releasing a statement: “We would like to express our deepest apologies… Juventus immediately realised that the club had committed an unforgivable mistake, and this mistake has seriously hurt the feelings of all people who oppose racial discrimination.” Bender twins…the former Bayer Leverkusen pair retired at the end of last season

ENGLAND

Heading restrictions introduced After a number of studies investigating the link

between football and dementia, professional footballers are to be limited to ten “higher force headers” per week in training under new guidelines for this season. According to a joint-statement by the FA, Premier League, EFL, PFA and LMA “higher force” describes headers which follow “a long pass (more than 35 metres) or from crosses, corners and free-kicks.” “This recommendation is provided to protect player welfare and will be reviewed regularly as further research is undertaken to understand more regarding the impact of heading in football.” Leading figures in the sport have come under increasing pressure to do more to address the alarming and disproportionate number of former professional players who go on to suffer from dementia. Just weeks after the guidelines were issued, former Manchester United and Scotland legend Denis Law became the latest former player to be diagnosed with the disease.

Diagnosed… Denis Law

COLOMBIAN FANS

The return of fans to stadiums in the Colombian capital of Bogota was marred by violence in BENDER TWINS the stands. Independiente Santa Fe v Atletico After retiring from top-flight football in the Nacional, the first match with a crowd in 513 summer, Lars and Sven Bender have returned days, was supposed to signal the return of fans, to the club where they made their names: but stadiums will continue to be empty after ninth-tier side TSV Brannenburg. “We still have violence in the stands spilled onto the pitch three or four players in the squad who played leading to seven people being hospitalised. with Lars and Sven,” says head coach Hans Nietzold. “They kept in touch and always said: TALKSPORT ‘If we stop, we’ll play again for Brannenburg.’” The UK radio station was forced to apologise after broadcasting an anti-Semitic comment DANI ALVES from a caller directed at Tottenham Hotspur The Brazil captain has cemented his status chairman Daniel Levy. Lee Clayton, head of as the most decorated footballer of all time, the station, said: “We are all appalled by the adding an Olympic gold medal to take his haul comment that was made by a caller during a live YouTube broadcast of The Sports to 43 trophies. The 38-year-old full-back Bar. We are deeply sorry to Tottenham played every minute of his team’s campaign, and, especially, to chairman Daniel Levy.” and was one of the outstanding performers. “He is an example to all Brazilian footballers,” SPARTA PRAGUE FANS said Brazil’s Olympics coach AndreJardine. Monaco midfielder Aurelien Tchouameni was CARLI LLOYD subjected to alleged racist chanting during The USA legend also starred at the Olympics, a Champions League qualifier in the Czech before announcing that she would be calling capital. The game was paused while a message time on her stellar career at the end of the was played on the public address system season. The 39-year-old scored twice in her warning that further abuse would lead to final competitive game for her country, to add postponement. “I won’t let hate win this a bronze medal to her collection of trophies, game,” said the 21-year-old afterwards. which also includes two gold medals, two World Cups and two FIFA World/Best Player of the Year awards, plus 312 USA caps.

CHRISTIAN ERIKSEN

At the start of August, the midfielder returned to the Internazionale training ground for the first time since his cardiac arrest at Euro 2020. “Eriksen is doing well and is in excellent physical and mental shape,” said a statement on the club’s website, although his future is still in doubt; Serie A rules prevent him from playing with the ICD device that he currently has fitted.

Abused…Tchouameni in action against Sparta Prague

WORLD SOCCER 11


THEWORLD

THIS MONTH

Jim HOLDEN

AT THE HEART OF THE GAME

Optimistic Old Trafford puts pressure on Ole

The most significant Premier League transfer deals in the past couple of years have been the purchase of world-class defenders. Liverpool’s thrilling rise to become European and English champions was founded on the rock of Virgil van Dijk’s arrival at centre-back. Ruben Dias was voted Player of the Year last season for his transformation of Manchester City’s previously fragile defence. Nobody doubts the truth of this, and certainly nobody can doubt that Manchester United will significantly improve their team with the purchase of France centre-back Raphael Varane for around £42 million from Real Madrid. It is a stunning deal, whichever way you look at it. Varane’s pedigree is absolutely exceptional – a World Cup winner and four Champions League trophies to his name. The financial numbers are equally impressive for United; the highly-regarded independent assessors at Transfermarkt reckon Varane’s actual market value is around the £63m-mark. After years of paying too much for too little, this is an outstanding transfer coup. The mood of optimism at Old Trafford has been further boosted by another excellent signing in young England ace Jason Sancho, whose rare talent has been underappreciated by football followers in his home country, and probably also by national team boss Gareth Southgate.

capture at least one trophy in this new season, the Norwegian will be shown to the exit door. He knows that well enough, saying: “It doesn’t matter if you have a ten-year contract; if you don’t do well, you go. You feel under pressure all the time. It’s not just about clinging onto your job, it’s about the responsibility in my hands. We’ve got millions of fans.”

United’s naturally ebullient manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer is full of hope, claiming that his team can now be credible challengers for the Premier League title. Varane, in particular, is seen as the crucial final piece in the jigsaw. Solskjaer absolutely needs that assessment to be correct. If he doesn’t

The intelligence, speed, perception and experience of Varane in defence alongside Harry Maguire will help Manchester United. But is this truly the game-changing deal, or is it merely another where the club are playing catch-up on their rivals, who have already cured their defensive problems?

Exciting…Sancho will be expected to light up Old Trafford

If [Ole Gunnar Solskjaer] doesn’t capture at least one trophy in this new season, the Norwegian will be shown to the exit door

12 WORLD SOCCER

It seems surprising to me that United have put so much faith in Edinson Cavani as their main striker when the summer transfer rumble has centred on the destinations of Harry Kane and Romelu Lukaku; two of the most prolific strikers in Europe, and two players at the height of their careers. Defenders are integral to a champion football team, but goalscorers are the most essential ingredient – and market value reflects this. Kane is rated at £110m and Lukaku at £92m by Transfermarkt, while Erling Haaland is at £120m. The number for Cavani is £6m. The low value factors in his age; Cavani is now 34. It is also influenced by his numbers last season. In all competitions he scored17 goals in 39 matches. Not bad, but far from compelling either. It was the first season in a decade since his early days at Palermo that the rangy Uruguayan had scored at less than a goal every two games. The very best football teams do not rely on veteran strikers. Juventus went one season too long leaning on the shoulders of Cristiano Ronaldo and lost their Serie A title to the goals scored by Lukaku for Internazionale. What about Robert Lewandowski you might say? Sure, he has just turned 33, but the Poland superstar is18 months younger than Cavani, and has a resilient market value of £55m. His record for Bayern Munich last year was beyond phenomenal, breaking the all-time Bundesliga record for goals scored in a season set by Gerd Muller 49 years ago. The numbers of Lewandowski merely emphasise the reality that goalscorers are the diamonds. So, while it is undoubtedly true that acquiring Varane for a relatively modest transfer fee represents a brilliant coup in the transfer market for Manchester United, the view here is that this will not be the defining deal of the summer of 2021 when the dust settles and all the money is banked.


GBA FBA EGECE

“Chelsea Football Club is shocked and saddened to learn of the death of Emilio Ballack at the terribly young age of 18. All our thoughts are with his father Michael and his family at this sad time” Chelsea pay their respects to Emilio Ballack, the son of former Blues and Germany midfielder Michael Ballack

OBITUARIES

Terry COOPER (1944-2021)

Terry Cooper dazzled at the1970 World Cup as an innovative rampaging left-back, and was an integral cog in the mighty Leeds United team of that era. He was forever an unassuming hero until his death this summer at the age of 77. When he reflected, last year, on the famous England v Brazil showdown in that1970 tournament, Cooper’s indelible memory was of the moments before kickoff. He recalled: “The bell went to walk out from the dressing rooms and I marched into the corridor, never too fussed where I stood. As it happened, I was opposite Pele. He turned and said to me in broken English, ‘All the best Cooper.’ “I thought I had a decent build but I looked at him and he was twice the size of me! They were proper athletes and tough boys. Then it dawned on me that Pele knew who I was, and I thought I must have done something in football if he recognised me. I never forgot that.” Pele knew, and Brazil knew, that Cooper was the best left-back in the world at that time, a defender who could tackle fiercely, but was also equipped with the speed, skill and panache to attack like a winger. Cooper’s fast-raiding style is how all the best full-backs play today, from Trent Alexander-Arnold to Leonardo Spinazzola. It was rare back in1970; Cooper was in

eeds legend… Cooper played 351 games in12 years at Elland Road

the vanguard of a football revolution. His talent was perfectly suited to the dominant Leeds side of the late1960s and early1970s, and brought Cooper a cascade of medals amid a tightly-knit team created by manager Don Revie. The first was a League Cup triumph in 1968 when Cooper scored the winning goal at Wembley with a left-foot volley. They won the European Fairs Cup the same season and a year later the league title. In1971 there was another victory in the Fairs Cup final, this time against a Juventus team featuring Fabio Capello, Helmut Haller and Roberto Bettega. Cooper was Man of the Match in the initial away leg, a 2-2 draw in Turin, when his attacking forays created goals and tormented Juventus into caution. It was the pinnacle of his career. He was just 26, in his prime, only to suffer a broken leg in a league match against Stoke City in1972. The injury effectively ended his elite status, and meant he won just 20 caps for England. His defiant character meant he never gave up hope of playing again, though, and he enjoyed three years at Middlesbrough followed by lower-league seasons with Bristol City, Bristol Rovers and Doncaster. Cooper’s best work as a manager was at Bristol City, where he was integral in reviving the club after three successive relegations, winning promotion and taking them to victory in the Freight Rover Trophy final. Fighting back tears as he clutched the trophy, he said: “I played for England but this is the best day of my life.” The Robins recently moved into a new training ground, and fans have called for it to be named in his honour. His final role in football was12 years working as Southampton’s European scout. His eye for a good prospect was razor-sharp, and Cooper recalled advising the club there was a young striker at French club Guingamp who could be bought for a nominal fee. Southampton demurred, and rather regretted neglecting the chance to sign Didier Drogba. He retired to Tenerife, but his heart never left Leeds and the mighty team of which he was one of the legends. So many have passed away in recent months – Norman Hunter, Jackie Charlton, Trevor Cherry, Peter Lorimer and Mick Bates. And now, also, the modest maestro who was once the best left-back in the world. Jim Holden

Gerd MER (1945-2021)

Bayern Munich and Germany legend. (Appreciation, page 58)

Tommy EM (1937-2021)

Wing-half and a key player for the Liverpool team that got promoted to the top flight under Bill Shankly in1962.

talo VO (1940-2021)

Match-winner in the1962 AFCON final, scoring in extra-time for Ethiopia v Egypt.

lly DwO (1958-2021)

Defender who spent12 years at Rangers and won five Scotland caps.

Milan ZVDOVC (1944-2021)

Serbian whose coaching CV included Yugoslavia, Iraq, Ghana and Myanmar.

Robbie COOE (1957-2021)

Forward and England C international whose clubs included Peterborough United, Brentford and Cambridge United.

Porfirio rmando BETCORT (1957-2021) Striker who scored five goals in nine international matches for Honduras.

ntonio DE  TORRE (1951-2021)

Part of Mexico’s 1978 World Cup squad and won 44 caps in defence for El Tri.

Mike MT (1937-2021)

The first non-Welshman to manage Wales, and also coached Hull City before guiding Egypt to AFCON glory in1986.

wales manager...Mike mith in December1994 WORLD SOCCER 13


THEWORLD

THIS MONTH

Keir RADNEDGE THE INSIDER

FIFA wants Super Leagues – starting in Africa

Did you really think the Super League project was dead and buried? Think again. It’s bouncing back. Not in Europe but, instead, on a roundabout route via Africa. This version also boasts the full-hearted, public support of FIFA and its president, Gianni Infantino. Infantino knows all about the gold-encrusted value of high-profile international club competition. He was, for seven years, general secretary of UEFA. That provided him with eye-popping evidence of the multi-million bids by broadcasters and sponsors for a slice of Champions League action. No surprise then that Infantino, on lifting the reins of power five years ago, was baffled by the club chasm in FIFA’s schedule of15 international competitions. An unspoken deal had left club games to the confederations while FIFA focused on national teams. FIFA’s only incursion was the deeply unattractive, unthreatening Club World Cup. But that was yesterday. For tomorrow, Infantino has his acquisitive eyes on new club riches. Florentino Perez recognised this. But the COVID-19-engendered cash crisis provoked his Real Madrid, plus Juventus and Barcelona, to jump the gun. Their crucial blunder was to launch their Super League without having FIFA formally on board. That

Infantino’s project now is the contentious idea of a World Cup every two years. Not that FIFA has discarded its club game ambitions. Proof is the dream of a worldwide Super League, with Africa as the declared test bed. Infantino put Super Leagues squarely on the agenda when he addressed FIFA Congress earlier this year. He told delegates from all 211 national associations: “We always have to think about the fans and all the countries in the world and about the players. We want to have 50 top national teams and 50 top clubs

top 30 clubs in terms of revenues there is not one club outside Europe.” The answer? Super Leagues of course. Starting not with Europe – that would be political dynamite now – but Africa. Why? Simple. This is the one continent over which FIFA wields almost absolute control. Two years ago, FIFA – at the engineered request of favour-seeking CAF directors – sent in secretarygeneral Fatma Samoura to sort out its administration and opaque media rights. This past spring Samoura’s house-cleaning was duly followed by the election of Infantino’s choice as new CAF president. Patrice Motsepe is one of Africa’s richest businessmen and the first CAF president from southern Africa. No secret about where his loyalties lie. has proved the point. He FIFA president Gianni Infantino, speaking in 2019 hasMotsepe revealed himself an enthusiastic left them up the UEFA creek without worldwide. Women and men alike. supporter for the concept of a World “The core principles of solidarity a financial paddle. Cup every two years (like Arsene Infantino’s initial project had been and equal opportunity are the pillars Wenger, now in FIFA’s employ as expansion of the Club World Cup into on which our sport is built. The development director) and for a 24-team close-season tournament existing model is not perfect. There is a continental Super League. a concentration of money and player every two years. This was to have FIFA Congress, to Infantino’s talent [in Europe], which does not been launched this past summer in satisfaction, voted for a feasibility study serve the game’s global interests. We China. But problems finding a cash for a biennial World Cup. Motsepe backer and then the pandemic kicked cannot ignore that. Is football really was a cheerleader of this “excellent global? The answer is no…out of the it into the long grass. Higher up resolution.” As he said: “Taking into African super club… Al Ahly of Egypt would be central to an African Super League

“We have to take the 20 best clubs in Africa and have them play in an African league…I want to lift African football to the top of the world”

14 WORLD SOCCER


Global football intelliGence

BOOKS THIS MONTH

account our serious financial challenges, lack of infrastructure and facilities, African football could probably be the biggest beneficiary of a World Cup every two years.” A few more weeks and (surprise, surprise!) the prospect of a FIFAapproved African Super League hove into view. Infantino had planted the seed during an African tour in November 2019. He had told a media briefing in DR Congo: “We have to take the 20 best clubs in Africa and have them play in an African league. Such a league can generate at least €200m in revenue, which would put it in the top ten in the world overnight. “We aim [for this] to raise €1 billion so that we can provide each African country with a real football stadium to FIFA and international standards. We will take the best African referees, we will pay them. We will professionalise refereeing in Africa. I want to lift African football to the top of the world.” As to whether a Super League would replace the African Champions League and Confederation Cup, he did not say. Enough to put the idea out there and whet his listeners’ appetite for new money. Motsepe was delighted with what he heard and set discussions in train. He also essayed a neat shaft at the patronising attitude of some European FAs by saying: “We have followed the attempt of certain big European clubs to set up such a competition and will try to learn from their failure.” Africa has plenty of major clubs, from Egypt, Morocco and Tunisia in the north down to South Africa itself, where Mamelodi Sundowns are owned by none other than Motsepe himself. No one will oppose an African Super League, though nailing the details will be complex. Presumably the launch date will depend on a projection of Africa’s emergence from the pandemic, whenever that may be. Then, should it involve 20 clubs, 24 or even 50? Should the format mix knockout and mini-leagues? Most important: how will the clubs

be selected? Every region will expect to be represented. After all, Infantino will not expect Motsepe to sow any seeds of voter unrest in his new kingdom. Progress will be watched intently in South America: CONMEBOL never needs any encouragement to create new club competitions; same again for CONCACAF in North and Central America. However that is as far as it goes for now. Oceania, missing Australia, lacks the numbers and cash for such a competition. As for pandemic-battered Asia, the AFC has enough problems right now in trying to stage its existing events. UEFA will keep a wary eye on this new direction of Super League attack. Real Madrid, Barcelona and Juventus have merely put their own project on hold, having conceded the political and diplomatic blunders of their premature breakaway advance. After all, Infantino was never going to approve any event created outside what predecessor Sepp Blatter always called, protectively, the “FIFA family.” FIFA’s lawyers are jealously alert to shoot down threats to its monopolistic authority. Their latest court victory has been celebrated in the United States courts. A case was brought by the agency Relevent, which organises the annual International Champions Cup. Relevent wanted to go one step further. This would have involved staging in the US one of Barcelona’s Spanish league matches – similar to

the scheme once considered by the Premier League as “the 39th match.” The Spanish federation said No. La Liga said No. The US Soccer Federation said No. Finally, FIFA said No. So Relevent looked to US anti-trust legislation to challenge FIFA’s monopolistic powers – in vain. Manhattan District Judge Valerie Caproni said Relevent had failed to show that FIFA’s refusal of permission demonstrated an illegal conspiracy. Relevent will be keeping a close watch on a separate challenge to the dominant power of international federations at the European Court of Justice. The Madrid Commercial Court wants to know whether UEFA’s disciplinary action against the European Super League clubs breaches European Union competition law. Is this important? Yes. Potentially this would be even more important than the revolutionary Bosman Verdict in1995, which blew away foreign player restrictions and created stratospheric inflation in transfer fees and wages. The Madrid court, Real Madrid, Barcelona and Juventus had hoped to jump the European Court queue for a quick ruling. No such luck. The delay was presented as a victory for UEFA. Nothing of the sort. The Spanish judge and the three clubs must wait. But so must UEFA – and FIFA. Perhaps not until next year will they discover whether they really do possess the powers they have always claimed. Patrice Motsepe…the CAF president also owns South Africa’s Mamelodi Sundowns

T AWAY LG Steve Menary and James Montague (Pitch Publishing, £12.99) From derbies in Brazil, Georgia and Israel to the momentous rise of the Iceland men’s national team, from Palestine and North Korea to a UEFA Cup final overshadowed by murder, the story of South America’s most remarkable Copa Libertadores final and an historic triumph by Arsenal in the UEFA Women’s Cup final, The Away Leg: XI Football Stories From On The Road takes your imagination on a trip around the world with remarkable tales from across the globe.

PROGRAMMS! PROGRAMMS! By Cliff Hague (Pitch Publishing, £16.99) A “must” for lovers of football nostalgia, with fascinating, funny and quirky tales galore, this is an archaeological dig through a collection of 2,000 programmes: from the bleak wartime era when players had to shelter from air raids, through to the glitz of today’s global stars and fan-owned clubs. The stories play out against a backdrop of economic, technological and social change, rekindling the memories of generations of fans. WORLD SOCCER 15


THEWORLD

THIS MONTH

Jonathan WILSON TECHNICALLY SPEAKING

Messi does not solve any of PSG’s problems

Players are not islands, entire of themselves. They exist as part of structures, in systems. They need players around them. A player may have extraordinary natural ability, but he will be able to exploit it fully only with the right players around him – and, of course, he also has a responsibility to others in his team, to fulfil his duties so that they too may get the best out of their abilities. Before this summer, 20 players had moved for fees of €80 million or more. Of those, only four can be considered clear successes: Cristiano Ronaldo’s transfer from Manchester United to Real Madrid, Luis Suarez’s switch from Liverpool to Barcelona, Romelu Lukaku’s move to Inter from Manchester United, and Virgil van Dijk joining Liverpool from Southampton. Some have been obvious failures – Barcelona’s signings of Philippe Coutinho and Ousmane Dembele, Kepa Arrizabalaga’s move to Chelsea. Many have not got going but may still come good – Joao Felix to Atletico Madrid, Eden Hazard to Real Madrid, Lucas Hernandez to Bayern Munich, Antoine Griezmann to Barca. Others are contested: Gareth Bale may have won four Champions Leagues with

cups. But they have not won the Champions League. Given the financial advantages PSG enjoy over their competitors in France, that really is the only competition that should mean anything. Losing

Real Madrid, but never seems to have been either happy nor central to their plans; Cristiano Ronaldo has scored 81 league goals in his first three seasons for Juventus, but at vast expense and without taking them any nearer to winning the Champions League; Manchester United are still waiting for Harry Maguire and Paul Pogba to deliver trophies. And then there are the big two at the top of the list: Neymar and Kylian Mbappe. Which is where Lionel Messi comes in. Neymar and Mbappe cost PSG a combined €402m and have brought three league titles, three Coupes de France and two league

the league title to Lille was a major humiliation. Does that represent a successful investment? In traditional terms probably not, but what signing Neymar and Mbappe did for PSG was to inflate the market. They dug the trap by activating Neymar’s release clause and Barcelona gleefully leapt in; just as they had after losing Luis Figo to Real Madrid in 2000, they felt the sting of rejection and, on the rebound, made two huge signings, neither of whom fitted the system. The ultimate consequence of that, allied to gross mismanagement, is that PSG are able to pick up Messi from Barca for free.

Welcome…Messi being presented with the No.30 shirt at the Parc des Princes

Messi brings attention and goals. But goals were never the problem for PSG

16 WORLD SOCCER

A forward line of Messi, Neymar and Mbappe is absolutely terrifying. They will, surely, score hatfuls of goals in Ligue1. There will be moments of brilliance, whether individual or from the three in combination. How meaningful that is against such limited opponents (Messi’s basic annual salary is only a fraction less than that of Lille’s for their entire squad) is questionable, but RC Paris’ record of118 goals

All-star cast…PSG’s summer signings (left-right): Achraf Hakimi, Gini Wijnaldum, Gianluigi Donnarumma, Sergio Ramos and Messi


Global football intelliGence

REPORTS WE COULDN’T MAKE UP

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for a Ligue1 season, set in1959-60, could be under threat. But that really should be almost a given. The real test of PSG will come in the spring, in the Champions League. And there, it really isn’t clear how much of a benefit Messi will be. PSG may be better equipped to win the Champions League this season than last, perhaps than ever before, but if they are it is because of the other signings they have made, not because of Messi. Full-back was an area of major concern; Achraf Hakimi will clearly be an improvement there. Sergio Ramos will add steel and a winning mentality, while Gianluigi Donnarumma and Gini Wijnaldum increase the options in goal and central midfield. All of them answer a clear need in the squad, and in Donnarumma’s case perhaps giving PSG a high-class keeper for a decade or more. Messi brings attention and goals. But goals were never the problem for PSG. A far bigger issue was the way the existing forward line left its midfield exposed. Against most sides, weight of talent will out, but PSG were comfortably beaten by Manchester City in the Champions League semi-final last season, just as the previous season they had been beaten far more comfortably by Bayern in the Champions League final than the1-0 scoreline suggested. Adding all the talent in the world won’t change that unless players are willing and able to press. Messi used to do that, but even in Pep Guardiola’s final season at Barca he was struggling. Barca’s recent Champions League history is a story of heavy defeats: 4-0 to PSG and 3-0 to Juventus in 2017, 3-0 to Roma in 2018, 4-0 to Liverpool in 2019, 8-2 to Bayern in 2020, and 4-1 to PSG in 2021. In part that is because of a slow midfield, but it’s because that deficiency was exposed by a dysfunctional system that began with the forward line. Lionel Messi may be the greatest player there has ever been, but that doesn’t make him the answer to PSG’s biggest problem.

1

FC HOLLYWOOD AFC Wrexham of the National League were taken over by film stars Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney earlier this year, with the actors hoping to transform the club on and off the pitch. One change that has been made is the arrival of a Hollywoodstyle Wrexham sign at a colliery tip overlooking the North Wales town. Who is behind the sign however, is a mystery; the club have denied being involved, with the culprit choosing to remain anonymous. SHEER TALENT Wrexham aren’t the only club with celebrity backers. Pop star Ed Sheeran proved his Ipswich Town-supporting credentials by sponsoring the League One club’s shirts for this season, and the club have decided to thank him by granting him a shirt number and place in the squad. Presumably Sheeran won’t actually be called upon in the Tractor Boys’ promotion chase, although he wouldn’t be the first musician to play for his boyhood club – One Direction star Louis Tomlinson has appeared for Doncaster Rovers’ reserve side. LISBON RIVALRY HEATS Up When Sporting soldJoao Mario to Inter in 2016, they inserted a “rivals” clause, stating that they would be due an extra €30m if the midfielder was later sold to a Portuguese club. To avoid this, it has been reported that Mario bought out his own contract for €7m, which was then reimbursed by Benfica. To add to the controversy, Mario even turned down a return to Sporting after winning last season’s title while there on loan, choosing to join their biggest rivals instead. The Portuguese champions are ready to fight for the money they believe they’re owed.

Wrexham…the source of the sign is a mystery

2 3

CHILEAN SENSATION If you weren’t aware that Blackburn Rovers striker Ben Brereton “Diaz” had switched his international allegiance to Chile, you could be forgiven for being confused by him starring in a Pepsi advert in the South American country. “Why not break the established?” asks the former England Under-20 man in the soft drink ad, before announcing to one of the Queen’s Guard that he is going to Chile, patting him on the shoulder as he leaves. #BATSMAN RISES Football clubs are always trying to find weird and wonderful ways to announce new signings, and Turkish champions Besiktas led the way this summer. After capturing Chelsea and Belgium striker Michy Batshuayi on loan, they filmed their own interpretation of The Dark Knight, with Batshuayi donning a Batman costume saying: “I score without trying...I’m the goddamn BAT-SHUAYI.” TWO-STAR QUARREL In what can only be described as a gloriously petulant dispute, FIFA have fallen out with the Uruguayan FA over how many stars they can include on their kit. Currently, the South American side have four, marking the two Olympic gold medals they won in the1920s, plus a pair of World Cups. Kit-makers Puma said that they’d been asked to remove the two Olympic stars, but AUF vicepresident Gaston Tealdi responded: “FIFA has always recognised that Uruguay has four World Cups, because in1924 and1928 it [the Olympic football tournament] was organised by FIFA.” The issue will need to be resolved by next year’s World Cup in Qatar.

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6 Two stars or four?…Uruguay’s current crest

WORLD SOCCER 17


TW

this month

“Wow! That’s made my day. That’s made my year actually” Jack Grealish discovers that he will be taking Sergio Aguero’s No.10 shirt at Manchester City

pp n T v SUMM2021 MAJTANSFS&ANS

eturning… degaard

Surprise move… anny Ings

uros star… enzel umfries

Swapped… rik amela

oan signing… Manuel ocatelli

18 World Soccer

£100m £97.5m £42.7m £34m £30m £30m £25.6m £25m £24m £22m £21.6m +Swap Swap £21.3m £17.1m £15m £15m £15m £14.9m £14.5m £13m £12m £11.9m £11m £10.6m £10.3m £10m £9.4m £8.5m £8.5m £8m

Jack Grealish Astn Via t Man. city Romelu Lukaku Intnazina t chsa Raphael Varane ra Mai t Man. Unit Tammy Abraham chsa t rma Martin Odegaard ra Mai t Asna Leon Bailey B. lvkusn t Astn Via Donyell Malen PSV t Bussia dtmun Danny Ings Suthamptn t Astn Via Aaron Ramsdale Shffi Unit t Asna Joe Willock Asna t Nwast Unit Bryan Gil Svia t Tttnham Erik Lamela Tttnham t Svia Arnaut Danjuma Bunmuth t Viaa Jhon Cordoba Htha Bin t Kasna Eldor Shomurodov Gna t rma Adam Armstrong Bakbun t Suthamptn Jannik Vestergaard Suthamptn t list city Joachim Andersen lyn t cysta Paa Myron Boadu AZ t Mna Toby Alderweireld Tttnham t A duhai Harry Wilson livp t Fuham Baptiste Santamaria Fibug t rnns Matias Vina Pamias t rma Denzel Dumfries PSV t Intnazina Jean Lucas lyn t Mna Christos Tzolis PAoK t Nwih city Gonzalo Montiel riv Pat t Svia Yoane Wissa lint t Bntf Luiz Araujo li t Atanta Unit Josh Sargent W Bmn t Nwih city £6.8m Matteo Lovato Vna t Ataanta

£6.8m £6.8m £6.4m £6m £6m £5.7m £5.1m £5.1m £4.7m £4.7m £4.7m £4.3m £4.3m £4.3m £4.3m £3.4m £3.4m £3.4m £3.4m £2.6m £2.6m £2m £1.5m £1m

ANS

Marco Richter Augsbug t Htha Bin Piero Hincapie Tas t B. lvkusn Ivan Ilic Man. city t Vna Amadou Onana Hambug t li Soualiho Meite Tin t Bnfia Stanley Nsoki Ni t cub Bugg Pablo Rosario PSV t Ni Ruan Gmi t Sassu Mario Lemina Suthamptn t Ni Kevin Danso Augsbug t lns Ludwig Augustinsson W Bmn t Svia Luis Maximiano Spting t Ganaa Maximilian Eggestein W Bmn t Fibug Henry Onyekuru Mna t oympiaks Metinho Fuminns t Tys Marko Arnautovic Shanghai Pt t Bgna Tin Jedvaj lvkusn t lkmtiv Msw Luca Netz Htha Bin t B. M’gabah Gianluca Busio Spting Kansas city t Vnzia Rachid Ghezzal list city t Bsiktas Kaio Jorge Sants t Juvntus Juraj Kucka Pama t Watf Kristoffer Klaesson Vanga t ls Unit Joe Hart Tttnham t cti

Manuel Locatelli Sassu t Juvntus Alphonse Areola PSG t Wst Ham Unit Michy Batshuayi chsa t Bsiktas Felix Correia Juvntus t Pama Ben Davies livp t Shffi Unit Emerson chsa t lyn Merih Demiral Juvntus t Ataanta

Conor Gallagher chsa t cysta Paa Jens Petter Hauge Mian t eintaht Fankfut Matheus Henrique Gmi t Sassu Kenedy chsa t Famng Viktor Kovalenko Ataanta t Spzia Takefusa Kubo ra Mai t Maa Troy Parrott Tttnham t MK dns Bailey Peacock-Farrell Buny t Shffi Wnsay Facundo Pellistri Manhst Unit t Aavs Marko Pjaca Juvntus t Tin Cristian Romero Ataanta t Tttnham Ruan Sassu t Gmi Axel Tuanzebe Man. Unit t Astn Via Joshua Zirkzee Bayn Munih t Anht Ozan Tufan Fnbah t Watf Alvaro Fernandez Husa t Bntf

F TANSFS

Lionel Messi Bana t PSG Edin Dzeko rma t Intnazina Pedro rma t lazi Aleix Vidal Svia t espany Vincent Koziello cgn t ostn Radja Nainggolan Intnazina t Antwp Stevan Jovetic Mna t Htha Bin Paulo Gazzaniga Tttnham t Fuham James McCarthy cysta Paa t cti Cristian Zapata Gna t San lnz Yasser Larouci livp t Tys Patrick van Aanholt cysta Paa t Gaatasaay Marcus Bettinelli Fuham t chsa Gary Cahill cysta Paa t Bunmuth Tim Sparv Ael t HJK Hsinki


GLOBAL FOOTBALL INTELLIGENCE

“I’m not going to be polite here, but it gives me a hard-on” Brest coach Michel Der Zakarian when asked how he feels about Lionel Messi’s arrival in Ligue1

Appointments, sackings and loans EUROPE Third time lucky…Louis van Gaal

from J1 League leaders Kawasaki Frontale, before being loaned out to Union Saint-Gilloise in Belgium.

SOUTH AMERICA

DIEGO COSTA returned to the county of his birth, joining Brazil’s Atletico Mineiro after being released by Atletico Madrid at the end of 2020. For the third time in his career, LOUIS VAN GAAL was named coach of the Netherlands national team following Frank de Boer’s departure after Euro 2020. His previous spells in charge of Oranje were 2000-02 and 2012-14. Arsenal signed18-year-old striker MIKA BIERETH from Fulham after the striker turned down a contract with the Championship club. In Italy, Juventus signed Norwegian teenager ELIAS SOLBERG from Ullensaker. Manchester United Women appointed form Orlando Pride boss MARC SKINNER to replace Casey Stoney as Red Devils manager. Defender FLORIAN LEJEUNE completed a move from Newcastle United to Alaves for an undisclosed fee following a loan at the La Liga club. LEE CARSLEY was confirmed as Aidy Boothroyd’s replacement as England Under-21s coach, with Ashley Cole joining as his assistant. Promoted… Carsley served as Boothroyd’s assistant

Talented Japan playmaker KAORU MITOMA joined Brighton & Hove Albion

EUROPE Chelsea sold four of their academy graduates to Premier League rivals for undisclosed fees: DYNEL SIMEU joined Southampton, CHARLIE WIGGETT went to Newcastle, MYLES PEART-HARRIS signed for Brentford, and Leeds United saw off competition from several clubs to land midfielder LEWIS BATE, while TINO LIVRAMENTO joined Simeu at Southampton for a fee of £5m. Ukraine’s ANDRIY SHEVCHENKO announced his departure as national team coach after five years in the role.

Returning… Diego Costa waves to Atletico Mineiro fans

Boca Juniors snapped up Peru international LUIS ADVINCULA from Rayo Vallecano for £1.7m.

CONCACAF

LA Galaxy confirmed the signing of Serbia striker DEJAN JOVELJIC from Eintracht Frankfurt.

ASIA

DICK ADVOCAAT came out of retirement just months after leaving Feyenoord to take charge of Iraq. J1 League side Vissel Kobe signed striker YOSHINORI MUTO from Newcastle United on a free transfer, as well as former Barcelona and Stoke City forward BOJAN KRKIC. EZGJAN ALIOSKI joined Saudi club Al Ahli after his departure from Leeds United, while West Bromwich Albion lost MATHEUS PEREIRA to Al Hilal. UAE outfit Sharjah FC completed the signing of Everton winger BERNARD. Reigning champions Mumbai City paid an Indian Super League record fee for NorthEast United midfielder LALENGMAWIA “APUIA” RALTE.

Ukraine legend… Shevchenko

JOHN TERRY quit his role as Dean Smith’s assistant at Aston Villa to pursue a managerial role for himself. Former England winger STEWART DOWNING announced his retirement from the game at the age of 37. Retiring… Downing last played for Blackburn Rovers

Crystal Palace released 34-year-old centre-back SCOTT DANN after seven years at Selhurst Park. WORLD SOCCER 19


Headliners

T

Ventspils Latvian club faces uncertain future after being handed seven-year European ban for match-fixing by UEFA

he downfall of Ventspils and their controversial owner Adlan Shishkhanov had been a long time coming. This summer, UEFA banned the six-time Latvian champions from European club competition for seven years due to the club’s involvement in a1-0 defeat in a Europa League qualifier in July 2018 to Ligue1 side Bordeaux, who were not implicated. UEFA also handed down a ten-year ban on Sergey Lapochkin, a Russian referee who had been on FIFA’s international list since 2013, and banned Ventspils’ sports manager Nikolajs Djakins from football for four years. Ventspils cannot return to European football until 2027-28 but that seems a long way off. After being banned, the club pulled out of this season’s Latvian top flight – Virsliga – and their results were expunged, but Shishkhanov is unlikely to ever return. UEFA has asked FIFA to extend its lifetime ban worldwide, which would end the controversial Chechen’s torrid journey through European football. Shishkhanov first emerged in 2007 when he tried to buy a 49 per cent stake of German football club Carl Zeiss Jena with partner Murat Luyanov, in return for a €25m investment made over five years through a Caribbeanbased company. That failed and a year later he surfaced in Moldova to take control of Dacia Chisinau. Under his ownership, the club won the title in 2011, but Shishkhanov subsequently left to take control of rivals, Zimbru, before returning to Dacia just over a season later. During this time, a swathe of friendly matches played by Moldovan clubs, many in Turkey, began attracting alerts due to suspicious betting movements from betting operators, many of whom stopped offering the matches as a result. Shishkhanov later stood down as president of Dacia again and, in April 2017, the Moldovan government began working on a case against him for tax evasion and money laundering. Months later, Shishkhanov fled Moldova and began looking for a new home and a new club.

20 WORLD SOCCER

at Ventspils, where respected English coach Paul Ashworth soon left and was then followed by players. In their place came players and back-up staff from Dacia. That summer, a Europa League qualifier with Albanian club Luftetari Gjirokaster attracted attention after Ventspils conceded a shambolic equaliser in injury time to draw 3-3. The Latvians had been 5-0 up from the first leg and went through 8-3 on aggregate before losing to Bordeaux in the next round. More games played by Ventspils Ventspils cannot return to European football generated alerts until 2027-28 but that seems a long way off. for suspicious betting After being banned, the club pulled out of this season’s Latvian top flight – Virsliga – and their movements, including a results were expunged 1-0 defeat to Norwegian match-fixing scheme that killed off third-division side Jerv during a training 2012 Latvian champions Daugava camp in Marbella in Spain in 2019. Daugavpils. “In the heat of the moment, it looked In March 2018, Dacia quit that as if Ventspils pushed every man into year’s Moldovan Championship and the attack, in an attempt to win,” Jerv a month later, after a police raid on coach Arne Sandsto told Bergensavisen the club, Shishkhanov was accused (BA). “This resulted in us having six big of tax evasion and money laundering, chances alone with the keeper in the including paying clubs in cash in last minute. The referees must have envelopes, which had avoided nearly reported it to UEFA as a possible 10m Moldovan Lei (£460,000) in tax. case of match-fixing.” In the 2019-20 Europa League, By now, the Chechen was in control For Ventspils, the timing was unfortunate. The club had won six Virsliga titles between 2006 and 2014 and qualified for the Europa League group stage in 2009-10, but the owner who had funded that success, Yuri Bespalov, died in 2012. The local council was funding the club and by 2017 wanted a buyer. Shishkhanov had a contact in Latvia in the Russian Oleg Gavrilov, who is also banned from football for life for his earlier involvement in an alleged

Banned…the Latvian club’s Olimpiskais Stadium


PEPLE AND PLACES IN THE NEWS

Munir El Haddadi Pressure is on the forward to deliver after his

M

long-awaited switch from Spain to Morocco

Ventspils reached the third qualifying round, which guaranteed €780,000 in UEFA prize money and were then thrashed 6-0 in Portugal by Vitoria de Guimaraes in another game marked by suspicious betting movements. Shishkhanov was often at odds with the Latvian Football Federation (LFF) and was banned twice for abusing match officials. In April 2020, he officially resigned as Ventspils president but a Europa League qualifier that summer between the club and Moldovan side Dinamo-Auto Tiraspol was removed from some betting markets before kick-off. In August 2020, Shishkhanov was put on a Latvian state blacklist for his involvement in a criminal case relating to allegedly hidden salary payments, and finally in June came UEFA’s lifetime ban. Shishkhanov will not be back but the match-fixing has not gone away in Latvia. A month after the Ventspils ban, the LFF suspended three players from Armenian-owned club Noah Jurmala for a year. The case has been passed to Latvian state prosecutors, who have tried to tackle the problem in the past, but the three banned players from Serbia, Ghana and the Ukraine are likely to be long gone from the Baltic before any prosecution arrives. Steve Menary

orocco’s bid Morocco then applied for Munir’s for a return to nationality to change, only for FIFA the World Cup to again reject it – not because of his finals will be single senior cap, but because he had spearheaded played for Spain’s Under-21s a few by the months after turning 21. SpanishMore furious lobbying, and some born Munir El Haddadi, the former political horse-trading around the Barcelona prodigy, whom the north Confederation of African Football presidential elections, then led FIFA Africans have invested much effort and resource in procuring. to decide that the rule on the age He has overcome several legal limit would only apply from the date blocks to make the switch from of the last Congress, therefore allowing Spain to Morocco, and will be the Munir to make his Morocco debut. lead attacker in Morocco’s African It came in an Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers for Qatar 2022 against qualifier against Mauritania, which Sudan, Guinea and Guinea-Bissau ended goalless, and was followed in Group I amid much expectation. four days later by a second cap in a The 26-year-old Sevilla forward match-winning performance against is among the first footballers to Burundi, where he scored the game’s profit from another tweak in FIFA’s only goal as Morocco finished the La Roja…Munir nationality laws, although not without on his only pain campaign top of their group. He has much drama and perseverance on the cap back in 2014 since featured in two June friendlies. part of his parents’ home country. Munir was a teenage sensation with It began before the last World Barcelona but has not yet lived up to Cup in Russia, when his early Morocco made a potential, [Munir] is among the first footballers cheeky bid to get going out to profit from another tweak in FIFA’s on loan to him into their squad for the 2018 finals. nationality laws, although not without Valencia Yet, because he had much drama and perseverance on the and then already played for Deportivo Spain in a European part of his parents’ home country Alaves Championship before qualifier against Macedonia in moving to Sevilla in early 2019. September 2014, when he came on Morocco might offer him the outlet that he failed to grab with Spain, but as a substitute and played less than he is under immense pressure to 15 minutes, this was not allowed. deliver on all the effort that the Then the FIFA rules on nationality football association have made switches were clear: you could change Morocco…Munir celebrates scoring allegiance only if you had not played his first international to get him into their team. a competitive full international. But goal against Burundi Mark Gleeson Morocco persisted to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, who kicked out their case. At the FIFA Congress one year ago, Morocco proposed a change to the rules in a direct bid to get Munir eligible. Their proposal, that players could switch countries if they have played no more than three internationals at senior level, with all the appearances coming before the player turns 21, was accepted. Appearances in World Cup finals or continental finals, such as the European Championship or Africa Cup of Nations would prohibit a change of eligibility, but appearing in a qualifier would not. WRLD SCCER 21


Headliners

F

Ligue 1 Financial disaster averted for both the league and Girondins de Bordeaux, but problems still remain

ollowing a year of uncertainty, legal battles and financial strife, streaming service Amazon Prime Video have finally ended Ligue1’s television broadcast rights debacle. At the start of last season, Spanish broadcaster Mediapro led a €1.1 billion per-season agreement – the secondbiggest domestic TV rights deal after the Premier League’s – that was seen as a watershed moment for Ligue1. But Mediapro’s streaming service, Telefoot, quickly collapsed, with subscriptions falling short of ambitious projections. Although a temporary arrangement was found with Canal Plus to cover the rest of the 2020-21 campaign, the final three seasons of the four-year block remained in flux as the LFP searched for a new lead broadcaster. Amazon’s last-minute bid secured broadcast rights for Mediapro’s initial 80 per cent share of Ligue1 and Ligue 2 matches. But their agreement to show eight games per week for €300 million per year reduced the overall package by 42 per cent, leaving Canal Plus paying €330m for just two games per round, an agreement left over from the initial deal with Mediapro. Canal, meanwhile, were furious to be locked into their original price in spite of what they saw as an obvious devaluation of the product, and initially refused to pay their share to beIN Sports, from whom they sub-licence the rights. A court battle ensued. Although Canal eventually agreed to respect their initial agreement, both broadcasters jointly made a complaint to the European Commission over the LFP’s handling of the saga. Amazon Prime, who have added Thierry Henry to their punditry team, will charge €12.99 per month for access to their share of Ligue1 games, on top of the €6 per month required to be a Prime customer. A marked decrease on the monthly €24.99 Telefoot charged last season. In a typical piece of bad timing for the LFP, a final agreement was sorted just days before Lionel Messi’s arrival at PSG, a move that should have boosted the price significantly. Nevertheless, the security of a broadcast deal will be a

22 WLD SCCE

relief to Ligue1 clubs who’ve struggled desperately in the last18 months, particularly Bordeaux, who ended last season on the verge of bankruptcy. Luxembourg businessman Gerard Lopez successfully rescued Les Girondins from financial oblivion last month, despite being forced out of Lille last Christmas for failing to pay debts to US investment fund Elliott Management. Following the sudden withdrawal of

top-flight status on the pitch last season, Bordeaux were even provisionally relegated by French football’s strict financial watchdog, the DNCG, due to the gaping hole in their budget, though Lopez was able to successfully convince the DNCG of his new project’s validity upon appeal and overturn the decision. His next move was to replace head coach Jean-Louis Gasset with Vladimir Petkovic, fresh from guiding Switzerland to the quarter-finals of Euro 2020. As well as The security of a broadcast deal will be a relief suggesting he to Ligue 1 clubs…particularly Bordeaux, who would rectify some ended last season on the verge of bankruptcy unpopular decisions by King Street, including restoring the club’s former badge and full name, support from previous investors King Lopez stated he wanted to instil a Street at the end of last season, “mindset and culture of winning. We will Bordeaux’s very survival was at stake, aim for the top half of the Ligue1 table having been placed under the protection and to play in Europe within three years.” of a commercial court pending Despite the security offered by the administration. new deal, Bordeaux and the majority Having barely maintained their of Ligue1 remain under significant financial strain due to the diminished nature of the agreement, with transfer expenditure heavily reduced this summer. PSG might have signed Messi and made him the highest-paid player New arrivals… Bordeaux’s new in the world, but the financial realities coach Vladimir of the clubs chasing them in Ligue1 Petkovic (left) remains markedly different. with club president Adam White for GFFN Gerard Lopez (right) Resolution…Amazon’s late bid provided a solution for the LFP


PeoPle and Places in the news

B

Derby County

Championship club face an uncertain future after a turbulent year

efore the season had even begun, some bookmakers had stopped taking bets on Derby County being relegated from the Championship. And who could blame them? The club has spent the summer in turmoil, dealing with fines, court cases and a transfer embargo. Last season they stayed up thanks to a points deduction for Sheffield Wednesday. It was a rare moment of fortune for a club that has suffered one crisis after another in recent years. The pandemic has been tough on every EFL team, but none have had their problems compounded by bad luck and bad decisions quite as much as Derby, whose issues predate COVID. How did things become so bad? It is difficult to know where to start. Owner Mel Morris has been trying to sell the club for at least12 months. His six years in charge have seen the club contrive to throw away promotion on multiple occasions, reaching the play-offs three times. At the start of this year, he told the Mail on Sunday that owning the club had cost him £200m – certainly not the first person to throw a fortune at chasing Premier League promotion, and not the last. The money has been running out for some time, with the club coming up with increasingly creative ways to continue spending. In 2018, Morris bought the stadium, Pride Park, for £80m and leased it back in order to boost income and account for the mounting debts. Then, when Wayne Rooney arrived in August 2019, he wore number 32 – a reference to betting site 32Red, whose sponsorship helped fund the signing. In November 2020, Morris agreed to sell the club to Sheikh Khaled, a cousin of Manchester City owner Sheikh Mansour. Things were going badly on the pitch, with manager Phillip Cocu replaced by Rooney, but the prospect of fresh investment offered hope. But by December, the takeover had stalled, and players’ salaries were not being paid. In January, Rooney deferred his own wages (believed to be around £90,000-a-week) to ensure his players were paid. By March, the deal was off and, when a second takeover bid fell

Fr jb...Ry k rg f drby  nvmbr 2020

t...drby r 12 ub f Mrr’ rr

through in May, the future looked bleak. Just to add to the financial woes, that month they were also ordered to pay £2.3m to former captain Richard Keogh for a breach of his contract. Having narrowly avoided relegation, the club were hit with a £100,000 fine for failing to comply with FFP rules, and ordered to resubmit their accounts for 2016, 2017 and 2018. A points deduction, which would have seen them relegated, was even on the cards, and the club was placed under severe transfer restrictions until the accounts were in order. Over the summer, the bad news didn’t stop. Rooney made it onto the front pages of several newspapers after a series of photos of him at a party in a hotel room were leaked. In the same week, he was all over the back pages for injuring one of his key players, Jason Knight, after joining in with training. The Republic of Ireland midfielder was ruled out for three months – bad news at the

best of times, but County’s squad was already severely depleted. During pre-season, Knight was one of just nine seniors players contracted to the club. Several free agents came in on trial and, just before the season started, many were handed contracts. The only problem was that no wages could be offered; until the club could confirm what they would be allowed to spend, the paper was left blank. Deals were eventually sorted for a number of players, including former Everton defender Phil Jagielka and Rooney’s old Manchester United team-mate Ravel Morrison. But in another twist, ex-Turkey forward Colin Kazim-Richards, who had extended his deal at the club in February for the 2021-22 season, tore his Achilles in just his second league game of the season. In spite of everything, the season did not start as disastrously as expected, with four points from the first three games. There have been encouraging performances from Morrison, among others, and Rooney is hopeful he can succeed where so many others have failed in getting the best out of the hugely talented midfielder. Off the pitch, there is still much to resolve and, at the time of writing, a points deduction is still possible. It is set to be a long season, probably the greatest test of Rooney’s career. Jamie Evans WORLD SOCCER 23


SPECIAL REPORT

ADÉU, LEO The fallout from Lionel Messi’s departure from Barcelona to Paris Saint-Germain continues. Colin Millar reports…

A

s Lionel Messi boarded his private jet in Ibiza to return to Barcelona, he believed he would be signing the contract that would allow him to see out his career at the Nou Camp. His first flight to the Catalan capital had been as a13-year-old, in 2000, when he slept on the journey from Buenos Aires ahead of a trial at Barca. So fearful were the club that the talented teenager may have signed elsewhere, director Charly Rexach, with no other paper at hand, offered a written contract on a paper napkin. Fast-forward 21 years and there would be no paper napkin and no contract offer; there could not be. The Argentine was told by club president Joan Laporta that, after a club-record 778 first-team appearances and a clubrecord 672 goals (a figure so absurd, it is higher than the sums of the second, third and fourth highest scorers for the club combined), there would be no more. There could be no more. Barca are in an economic crisis; their club debt stands at an eye-watering €1.35 billion – a figure that has grown by €200 million since January, despite various cost-saving measures. Days after Messi returned home, the club released the news that stunned the sporting world: “Lionel Messi will not continue at Barcelona.” A notably brief and somewhat emotionless statement added that “financial and structural obstacles” from “La Liga regulations” had ensured that renewing Messi’s contract was simply not possible.

24 WORLD SOCCER

The 34-year-old held an emotional farewell press conference three days later, in which he said that his “blood ran cold” after hearing the news, telling reporters: “I offered to reduce my salary by 50 per cent and they didn’t ask me for anything else. “It is not true that they asked me for anything more. I only know that it was not possible because of La Liga, because the club did not want to go into more debt.” The reason for this is that Barca are currently operating above their salary limit – a cap imposed by La Liga, as voted for by its member clubs, that means all clubs must operate within their spending capabilities. These budgetary limits for each club are calculated based on their earnings, revenue streams, profits and losses, overhead costs, investments, and debt repayments. Audits are carried out on the financial health of every club, with the limits designed to ensure their growth and spending are sustainable and for all outgoings to be justified by income. Barca’s spiralling club debts mean that their budget for the 2021-22 campaign is projected to be capped at €160m – the closest comparison to an English Premier League club is Everton, who last season had a wage bill of €158.5m. To put this into further perspective, the Catalan club’s wage bill in the 2019-20 campaign stood at €671m – the highest in world sport, and over four times what it is today. After the closure of the January


World Soccer 25


SPECIAL REPORT

transfer window for new player registrations in La Liga, any new signings or new deals would have to be processed by La Liga this summer and, if any club were operating above their limit, those contracts would not be sanctioned. Messi may have offered to cut his wage by 50 per cent to stay at the Nou Camp, but the league would have rejected any proposal if the club could not streamline their outgoings. Barca – who sold high earners Luis Suarez, Arturo Vidal and Ivan Rakitic the previous summer to slash outgoings – were operating approximately €200m over their budget even without Messi on their books. Had Messi stayed, Barcelona’s annual salary would have accounted for110 per cent of their income and without him it stood at 95 per cent. They had to get that figure down to around 70 per cent to comply with the rules. Critics suggest that La Liga’s 26 WORLD SOCCER

budgetary restrictions are unnecessarily strict and failed to adapt to account for the short-term financial ramifications caused by COVID-19 when club revenue streams – particularly those of Barca and Real Madrid – nosedived. The Blaugrana, in particular, operated a high-risk business model

Messi stay…Barca fans protest outside Leo’s final press conference

Under pressure… Barca president Joan Laporta

with eye-watering costs being maintained temporarily by significant revenue streams. When the pandemic struck, stadiums shut, tours were halted, club museums closed and the income plummeted – leaving sky-high costs and spiralling debts. Timing is everything. As Barcelona confirmed Messi’s exit – leaving the football world reeling and attempting to digest the news – their Clasico rivals Real Madrid released a nearsimultaneous statement of their own, which also attacked the league. Earlier in the week, La Liga announced that they had struck a landmark deal with private equity firm CVC, which would inject €2.7bn into the league in exchange for ten per cent of its audio-visual revenue and a ten per cent stake in most of its business in a long-term agreement, with 90 per cent of the injection going to clubs.


Lionel Messi

Such investment would provide an immediate, and much-needed, cash injection into clubs throughout the top two divisions of Spanish football to help alleviate short-term financial worries. The proposal passed following a club vote – 38 clubs voted in favour, four voted against. Barcelona and Real Madrid both objected to the deal. In theory, the income would have afforded Barca the funds to register a new contract offer for Messi, alongside three new summer signings at the club (Eric Garcia, Memphis Depay and Sergio Aguero), who were only later registered following agreed player-wage cuts elsewhere in the squad. Yet they decided not to accept the proposal and publicly claimed that the league was undervaluing its future rights. Club president Laporta said he would not be prepared to “mortgage the club for half a century” – referencing the CVC investment – to commit Messi to a new agreement.

Real Madrid went further in attacking the league’s plans, claiming that they were undertaking “civil and criminal legal action” against La Liga and its president, Javier Tebas, over the investment proposal. La Liga chief Tebas immediately hit back at Real Madrid president Florentino Perez, accusing him of “threatening methods” over the course of “years” that have been used “in private” against “the clubs and institutions of La Liga”. The gloves were off. This was open warfare. Three days after La Liga’s confirmation of their investment from CVC, Real Madrid supremo Perez met his Barca counterpart Laporta in the Catalan capital. They were joined by Andrea Agnelli, chairman of The gloves were off. Juventus. are This was open warfare theThese three clubs who remained committed to the idea of a so-called European Super League, the de facto proposals of top clubs to break free from what they saw as the shackles of UEFA and other football bodies throughout Europe. The trio continue to release joint-statements backing the plans – they believe the idea is a golden ticket to solving their financial issues and securing their permanent status as elite clubs. La Liga president Tebas was among the most vocal opponents to the plans, driven by the suspicion that the rival clubs – who were initially joined by Atletico Madrid, who later withdrew their support – would lead to the break away from his league, who were attempting to draw up a more equitable distribution of income and implement sustainable models of economic growth. In the simplest terms, the CVC

investment – and their contractual ties to the audiovisual rights of La Liga clubs – would kill off any lingering hopes of a Super League, which Barca and Madrid continue to promote. The league believed that commitment to this investment would tie down its two most Legacy…the trophies profitable and Messi won at Barcelona marketable clubs in a long-term agreement, in which La Liga – and not the clubs – were in the driving seat. This is a battle for power that is being played out in the public eye, not just between clubs and governing bodies but also between hugely influential and self-confident individuals. Spanish football and its clubs are inherently political – club presidents are elected by and accountable to club socios – and power of personality counts. Perez, Laporta and Tebas are three political heavyweights, and none are prepared to cede any ground in this increasingly fractured division. The stand-off has made allies of natural enemies – Real Madrid and Barcelona are now side-by-side in fighting for, what they fundamentally believe, is the natural outcome for European football – as leagues and organisations continue to extinguish the flames, insisting that the proposals are steeped in greed, self-interest and a lack of accountability. By this stage, Messi was jetting off again – this time for Paris, where he would sign a two-year contract with PSG. Gerard Pique, his former La Masia team-mate was revealed to have taken a pay-cut, insisting that the club’s three other captains and academy graduates, Sergio Busquets, Sergi Roberto and Jordi Alba, would join him in doing so to help keep the club afloat. Yet the one player that they were most desperate to keep was ultimately the one whom they could not. Beyond the utterly absurd numbers demonstrating his relentless genius and longevity, it is the memories and history that will leave the most profound impact – this was indisputably an era of true greatness. The future for Barcelona, Real Madrid, La Liga and the power battles for European football remains infinitely less clear. WORLD SOCCER 27


eyewitness Ben Bocsak reports

ZAMBIA

Kafue Celtic: helping put Zambian football on the map

The roughly 200,000 population of Kafue, a Southern town in the province of Lusaka in Zambia, would only fill Leicester City’s King Power and Brighton’s Amex Stadium four times before you would start running out of people. Yet the town’s local club, Kafue Celtic, has produced two of Zambia’s brightest stars. Before this year, only three Zambians had ever played in the Premier League – Emmanuel Mayuka, Collins Mbesuma and Neil Gregory – and between them they only managed 23 appearances. This summer, however, that number increased by two, thanks to Enock Mwepu and Patson Daka, both products of Kafue Celtic. Back when the project began almost two decades ago, Lee Kawanu, the 28 WORLD SOCCER

club’s founder and director, could have never envisaged what it would become. In 2002, Kawanu was a fresh college graduate who had just returned to his hometown in Kafue. Savvy for business, Kawanu embarked on multiple ventures in the computer industry when he was approached by locals looking for sponsors to help fund a new team in the town. “Their thinking was to put all the best players together from the local area and make one strong team that would register with the football association of Zambia,” Kawanu recalls to World Soccer. Kawanu’s father managed local side Nitrogen Stars, a successful team in the1980s and1990s, who were later disbanded. The opportunity to continue his father’s legacy and revive the

ABOVE LEFT: Arrivals… Daka and Mwepu at their new Premier League clubs

football scene in Kafue was one Lee could not refuse. “My dad used to take us to games every weekend. Sometimes we would travel with the players, so it was easy to just fall in love with the game at that kind of intimate level. “Growing up, you dream about owning your own football club. So I told myself: ‘I’m not sure if I can do this, but let me see if it’s worth it.’” Kawanu’s team, then called Kafue FC, would start on the bottom of Zambia’s footballing pyramid. But the town rallied


Kafue Celtic graduates…Daka and Mwepu celebrate with last season’s Austrian double

Before this year, only three Zambians had ever played in the Premier League…this summer that number increased by two, thanks to Enock Mwepu and Patson Daka, both products of Kafue Celtic behind them and under Kawanu’s guidance the club enjoyed admirable early success. “We started in the amateur leagues. I registered a team and that’s how we started. We went the entire season unbeaten and won promotion all the way to the second division as Kafue FC. I named the team after the town just to get Kafue

back on the Zambian football map.” When assembling the team, Kawanu had to think frugally. His astute business background meant he wanted to build a viable and long-lasting future. So, Kawanu sought out Kafue’s brightest young talent. “When I started Kafue FC, most of the players were from schools, they were all youngsters. Initially I could not

Founder and director… Lee Kawanu

afford older players, so over the years I just got used to dealing with younger players,” he explains. Fast-forward to 2009 and things WORLD SOCCER 29


e ewitness were taking shape. A year prior, based on the success of Kafue F, Kawanu was o ered the licence for another local club called usaka eltic after sponsors pulled out. Kawanu used the two licenses to merge usaka eltic and Kafue F into one institution called Kafue eltic. 2009 also marked Kawanu’s first major sale to a uropean club. ussian outfit, Ural, bought hisamba ungu from Kafue eltic, which a irmed Kawanu’s philosophy and vision. “At the time I rebranded, and saw the need to prepare players at a young age for urope. We have always been the team known locally as the ones who supp y youngsters to the bigger clubs. “After selling hisamba, I rea ised I now had to look around the country, not just Kafue and usaka, for p ayers. I would watch school competitions with my coaches and see which players could fit into our team.” Kafue’s reputation grew, as did Kawanu’s. In 2012, he was recognised for his efforts and became an executive board member of the Zambian FA overseeing the country’s youth development. “That opened my eyes up to even more opportunities. I had the chance to interact with people in all the provinces to help us with the national teams. It’s how I discovered players like nock [Mwepu].” ngs alwa o pla ,

[Kawanu] gave me the opportunity to start my dream. Kafue eltic means life to me.” In aka’s case, Kawanu’s role went beyond just a coach or club director. He became Patson’s mentor. “He believed in me even when other people didn’t,” aka remembers. “ee encouraged me and helped me make the right decisions. He supported me and my family, making sure we had everything that we needed. He has been like a father to me.” nock Mwepu, who Kawanu discovered during his scouting trips across Zambia’s opperbe t, is also forever indebted to his former mentor. “It was di icult for me to leave my parents and go to Kafue eltic,” nock says. “What took me there was football… All I wanted was to play football, and I found it at Kafue eltic.” ike with aka, Kawanu became nock’s guide. A shoulder to lean on, especially in the early stages, when Mwepu had to adjust to life away from his family fo the first time as a teenager.

Champions…players wrong character. They would get too celebrating with last easily distracted, start drinking and season’s title medals just lose their way. “So, after that experience, when I was scouting players, I tried to do more of an investigation into the background of the player, what set-up they are in, their families and stu like that.” ne particular player who was groomed by Kawanu was Patson aka. The new eicester ity forward, “It’s hard to find ways to describe how much the whose late father club means to me. They are part of the reason for played in the same Nitrogen who I am today…Kafue Celtic means life to me” Stars team that Leicester City striker Patson Daka was managed by Kawanu’s father is “ . ee aw ng eno .


ZAMBIA

Adviser…former Premier League striker Frederic Kanoute

With Mwepu and Daka, Kawanu’s hard work was justified. The pair of them played major roles in securing victory for Zambia at the Under-20 AFCON in 2017 on home soil. The ultimate piece in the jigsaw was the influence of former African Player of the Year Freddie Kanoute. The ex-West Ham United and Tottenham forward developed an agency called 12Management in 2015, intending to bring more African players to Europe. It was in Kanoute’s quest to find talent that led to him meeting with Kawanu, and the pair bonded. “Things have changed a lot since I started working with him. He is a big part of what Kafue Celtic is today,” Kawanu says. “Fred has taken us to a whole new level. We were big in the nation in terms of player production, but Fred opened us up to the rest of the world.” Kanoute works with Kafue Celtic as a consultant. He provides access to coaching training from the UK, and his agency represents both Mwepu and Daka. And with his links to clubs around the world, Kanoute has helped facilitate more opportunities for Kafue.

Last season, the club earned promotion to the Zambian Premier League with a squad that had an average age of 20 and will become the youngest team in the history of the country’s top flight. Kawanu’s vision of developing youth has made Kafue Celtic one of the most talked about clubs in the Zambia. “That’s the reason I joined Celtic, because it was a team that knew how to give new opportunities and chances to young players like me,” Mwepu says. “He gives a lot of young people a chance,” Daka agrees. “He helps players grow because he has so much patience and ability to build relationships with people.” Kawanu admits securing promotion was a very “special” moment for the club. Especially on a personal level considering he has been trying to get Kafue Celtic to the Super League for almost two decades. But his future vision goes beyond ambitions for his own club. “My big dream is for us to have 20 academies like Kafue Celtic in Zambia. People say if you have competition, it’s impossible to

Return…Daka returned to donate Kafue Celtic’s kit for last season

compete but that’s not true because we have enough talent to go round. If we had 20 Kafue Celtics doing what we are doing, all we would do is open up even more opportunities and open up Zambia to the rest of the world.” Patson Daka and Enock Mwepu have already helped put Kafue on the map. With Kawanu’s perseverance, more may soon follow their suit. And with Barcelona opening an academy in nearby Lusaka, Kawanu’s future vision may not be far away either. WORLD SOCCER 31


eyewitness James Kelly reports

TURKEY

Curses, debts and marquee signings

Adana Demirspor are determined to make their mark on their first Turkish top-flight appearance since 1995 In many ways it all felt so familiar. A figure emerging from the airport terminal, club scarf draped around his neck, sunglasses protecting against a blazing hot summer’s day. Outside a throng of fans were eager to catch a glimpse of their new hero, whose name they deliriously chanted. Scores of phone cameras recorded the moment, as the player slowly trudged through the crowd towards a waiting minivan. As Didier Drogba, Robin van Persie, Ricardo Quaresma and plenty of others can attest, this type of welcome for a marquee signing is the norm in Turkey. What is less frequently seen though, are the colours adorning Mario Balotelli’s scarf. These are not the black and white of Besiktas, Fenerbahce’s blue and yellow, nor the famous red and yellow of Galatasaray; rather they are the sky and navy blue of Adana Demirspor. Based in the south of Anatolia, Turkey’s Asian landmass, Adana is only marginally closer to the capital of Ankara than Lebanon’s Beirut. With a population of some1.8 million people, it is Turkey’s fifth-largest settlement and one of the nation’s most important cities. Home of the famous Adana kebab, natives are renowned for their equally fiery temperament. A perfect home, it would appear then, for the temperamental Italian. “They say that Balotelli is crazy but nobody has to worry: we are from Adana and we will be able

to manage him,” club president Murat Sancak told A Spor upon the announcement of the signing in July. Understandably for Demirspor fans, Balotelli’s signing is exciting. Here is a player who has played for some of the world’s biggest clubs, now pledging his allegiance to their beloved ADS. The symbolism however extends beyond Balotelli’s status. Given how this Super Lig season is Demirspor’s first in the top flight for 26 years, it was a statement: we are back. The past three decades have been full of turmoil for Demirspor supporters. Since the club were relegated in1995, they have had to endure arguably the worst luck of any fan base. Over the past15 seasons Demirspor have lost in promotion play-offs on no fewer than nine occasions. For a club that have one of Anatolia’s largest and most loyal followings, it got to the point where many supporters believed their team was cursed. One of two clubs in Adana – alongside Joachim Low’s former employers Adanaspor – Demirspor hold the distinction of being the first club outside Ankara, Istanbul and Izmir to play in the national league. Formed in1940 by workers of Turkey’s state railway company, whose logo still adorns the club badge, Demirspor have a largely working-class, left-wing support base. Livorno in particular have a good friendship with main supporter



e ewitness group Mavi Simsekler (Blue ightning). They say such phenomenon never strikes twice, but for demirspor fans that woul be incorrect. Their misfortune began uring the late1980s an early 1990s, when they were promote an relegate three times each. The club then ene up in the thir ivision in1999, where they spent much the next ecae an a half. It took five l tt t ivision, an suc a c . , s c ea , . The hen l o la -o se - .

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TURKEY One of his first moves at Demi spor was to sign former Manchester United midfie de Anderson. The Champions League winner ma minimal impact, reti ing at the club last Septembe , but the gaunt et had been aid down. Last season, experienced duo Au elien Chedjou and Gokhan Inler were brought in, and the bar has been raised even higher this summer. A ongside Ba otelli is Moroccan playma e Yo nes Be handa and ex Tottenham Hotspur utility man Benjamin Stambouli. Other notable additions include No way right-back n Z), Lucas Castro Fati ri on Mancheste it l ok i e a ha eno

them alone won’t guarantee success,” says Demirspor supporter Bora Uluturk. “Especially with their fiery histories; they might even hinder the squad more than help it.” It’s been11 years since Balotelli won the Golden Boy award. His past two seasons have consisted of failing to keep Brescia in Serie A, followed by not being able to fire Monza into it. Last term he didn’t even rank among Serie B’s top 40 goalscorers. Such delusions of grandeur were hardly helped when the notoriously outspoken Sancak announced that Balotelli had come to Demirspor to go to next year’s World Cup in Qatar. With the Azzurri winning the European Championship just days after the striker’s signing, you have to say that looks fanciful at best. Perhaps Demirspor’s theory is that by pairing Balotelli with his old team-mate Belhanda, the years might roll back to when the duo fired Nice to third in Ligue1 in 2016-17. The Moroccan playmaker has also arrived on a free, having been sacked by Galatasaray in March for criticising the state of their pitch. His departure was met with indifference by fans, many

Over the past 15 seasons, Demirspor have lost in promotion play-offs on no fewer than nine occasions... many supporters believed their team was cursed of whom felt Belhanda had been performing below par for some time. The impact other signings will have is also something of a mystery. Stambouli is 31 and comes in as damaged goods on the back of Schalke’s relegation. Meanwhile Svensson spent part of last season out with a thigh problem. The biggest quandary though is how Demirspor have managed to afford such deals, especially with the Turkish lira at its lowest-ever rate. Balotelli has penned a three-year deal through to 2024, by which point he’ll be nearly 34. ADS had also been linked with signing David Luiz on a €4 million, two-year deal, following his release by Arsenal. Sancak’s close ties to president Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his ruling AKP party may provide a clue as to how the project is being funded. In June, Mafia boss turned YouTube whistle-blower Sedat Peker claimed that Erdogan’s son-in-law, Berat Albayrak, was staying at the Demirspor president’s house, away from public view after resigning as finance minister. Meanwhile, Sancak’s cousin Ethem also has close ties to Erdogan. Under his ownership, the newspaper Star Gazetesi took a strong pro-AKP line, while he

New boy…Sancak welcomes Lucas Castro to the club

once declared he was in “spiritual love” with Erdogan, and that his entire family would be sacrificed for the president. Both cousins are now involved with BMC, a car manufacturer that has also been treated favourably by the regime. BMC was granted 23.7 million feet of public land by Erdogan for future investment, and awarded a €9 billion contract to manufacture Turkey’s first domestically-assembled tank. “It definitely smells very fishy,” Uluturk tells World Soccer. “In Turkey when something seems too good to be true, there’s usually some shadiness or corruption behind it.” Demirspor fans do not need reminding of such reality. In August 2010, former president and lifelong supporter Bekir Cinar committed suicide after his dream of returning Demirspor to Super Lig plunged him into heavy debt. One way of avoiding another such tragedy could be Demirspor’s new Yeni Adana Stadium. This was built at a cost of140 million TL and is hosting crowds for the first time this season, having opened in February. Like many new builds in Turkey, it is owned by the state. The 33,500-seater stadium, which is shared with bitter rivals Adanaspor, offers Demirspor the opportunity to generate funds. Sancak has announced that an executive box will cost a minimum of 5,000 TL (approximately €490), in line with other top Super Lig clubs. Time will tell if this alone is enough to prop up Sancak’s Demirspor project. However, as a man who narrowly escaped an apparent assassination attempt in 2015, he doesn’t need to be told life is for living. Whilst it is unclear where the money for signings has come from, the mere opportunity to see Demirspor back in Super Lig is something to be celebrated. Whatever happens off the pitch, after a quarter of a century away, fans can enjoy their moment back in the notoriously hot Adana sun.

WORLD SOCCER 35


The road to Russia UEFA CHAMPIONS LEAGUE 2021-22

James Nalton takes a look at the contenders for this season’s Champions League…

A final in Saint Petersburg’s picturesque Krestovsky Stadium will be the reward for two of the 32 teams who make it to UEFA’s showpiece event in 2022. European football is in a state of flux off the pitch, and that’s not solely down to the pandemic. Even the biggest clubs are struggling to find their place in the grand scheme of things after the failure of Super League plans that threatened the prestige of this competition. There are changes on the pitch too. Away goals will not be used for the first time since the1966-67 season after UEFA scrapped the rule across all of its continental competitions. Despite the financial issues, the usual names are still expected to be in the mix for Europe’s top prize. None more so than the English Premier League clubs, whose slightly more robust league structure and big-money television deals have helped them weather the storm, or at least suffer less damage. 36 WORLD SOCCER

Holders…Chelsea celebrate in last season’s final v Manchester City

New boy...can Grealish help Manchester City achieve the Holy Grail?

ENGLAND EXPECTS

Three of the last four finals have featured Premier League sides, with two of those being all-English affairs. Defending champions Chelsea are contenders again as they head into their first full season under Thomas Tuchel. The German has a strong squad at his disposal, including midfield metronome Jorginho who impressed with European champions Italy this summer. With N’Golo Kante alongside him, the London club have one of the best engine rooms in the competition, while the re-signing of former striker Romelu Lukaku from Inter should remedy their goal-shy attack. Manchester City reached their first final last season and though they were unable to clear the last hurdle, Pep Guardiola’s talented squad - now also featuring £100 million signing Jack Grealish – will be one of the big favourites to lift the trophy in 2022.

Liverpool, meanwhile, will be hoping to rediscover the form that saw them reach consecutive finals in 2018 and 2019. Jurgen Klopp has key defenders Virgil van Dijk and Joe Gomez back from long-term injury – and bolstered the back-line further with the £36m signing of France U21 centre-back Ibrahima Konate from RB Leipzig – while forwards Mohamed Salah and Sadio Mane should be refreshed after a rare summer off. One player who had a busier summer was Jadon Sancho. He may not have been a prominent player for England at the Euros, but the rumours of his eventual transfer to Manchester United rumbled on throughout. United have also secured the signing of Raphael Varane from Real Madrid; Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s side, it seems, mean business.


UEFA CHAMPIONS LEAGUE

THE BIG NAMES

Aiming to halt this English mini-revival are some of the behemoths of European football. Germany’s Bayern Munich won the Champions League as part of a treble in 2020 and will be a force to be reckoned with. Julian Nagelsmann has replaced Hansi Flick in the dugout, with highlyrated French defender Dayot Upamecano also arriving from RB Leipzig. Barcelona’s administrative struggles continue, and Ronald Koeman’s biggest challenge will be to stop those issues transmitting onto the pitch. This will be their first Champions League campaign without Lionel Messi since 2002-03 and, if other players do not step in to fill the void left by the Argentine’s departure, they may be facing the prospect of a first group-stage exit for over 20 years. Real Madrid are also going through a transitional period. Although the Galacticos are a thing of the past, the Spanish giants still boast an

array of talented players and, as the competition’s most successful side, the club’s name is enough to intimidate any European opposition. That Galacticos label has now been adopted by 2021 semi-finalists, Paris Saint-Germain. Their prioritising of Champions League glory is no secret and they’ve signed Gianluigi Donnarumma, Achraf Hakimi, Georginio Wijnaldum, Sergio Ramos and, of course, Messi to that end. Indeed, winning the trophy is no longer simply a target: it is an absolute must. With such talent at their disposal, failing to end their wait would be considered an abject failure. Similarly, Juventus have never hidden their European ambition. Their addition of Cristiano Ronaldo back in 2018 in an attempt to secure the trophy has so far failed, but they’ll have one more shot at the continental crown with the Portugal megastar before his contract expires.

UPSET POTENTIAL

Pressure on…PSG ace Kylian Mbappe

Final hosts…the Krestovsky Stadium

REFRESHING CHAMPIONS Serie A, Ligue1 and La Liga all crowned somewhat offbeat champions last season. In Italy, Internazionale prevented Juventus from winning their tenth title in a row; Lille ended PSG’s similar run of titles in France; while in Spain, Atletico Madrid interrupted Barcelona and Real Madrid’s dominance, winning their first title since 2014. Yet despite entering as league winners, all three of those sides are less fancied than their aforementioned compatriots.

Dependent...Lille will rely on Burak Yilmaz’s goals

Inter will be less sure of themselves after the departure of the manager that guided them to Serie A glory, Antonio Conte. He’s been replaced by former Lazio boss Simone Inzaghi who will have to do without last season’s talisman, Romelu Lukaku. His replacement, Edin Dzeko, has enormous shoes to fill after arriving from Roma. Repeating last season’s domestic feat while also challenging in the Champions League will be a tough task for Lille; a task made even tougher by losing goalkeeper Mike Maignan to Milan and midfielder Boubakary Soumare to Leicester City. Atletico, on the other hand, have bolstered their squad with the signing of Rodrigo De Paul from Udinese. The Argentina midfielder stood out at this summer’s Copa America and should be a good fit for Diego Simone’s style – one they hope will take them to a third final in nine years.

The two-legged nature of the Champions League means surprise winners are rare, but upsets can still happen. There are a number of clubs who, on their day, can trouble Europe’s best sides. Porto were arguably the last side to cause a real upset when they won the tournament in 2004. They finished runners-up to Sporting in the Primeira Liga last season though, and the champions will join them in the group stage. From the east of Germany, RB Leipzig are a tight-knit pressing unit that can fluster any opposition. That style is likely to remain under new coach Jesse Marsch and, despite the sale of key players, they are still capable of making their mark. Fellow Bundesliga side Borussia Dortmund may be reeling similarly from the sale of Jadon Sancho but still have plenty of talent at their disposal. Their problem recently has been making the most of these players before they are sold, which is something they will be looking to remedy this season. Sevilla enter the groups having finished fourth in La Liga and will look to progress to the knockouts as they did last season. That said, the six-time Europa League winners will not be too disappointed if they slip into that competition, as the 2022 final is being played at their Ramon Sanchez Pizjuan home. Italian teams will be hoping to ride the wave of optimism after Italy’s European Championship triumph, and there are few more optimistic and entertaining sides than Gian Piero Gasperini’s Atalanta. The remaining Serie A side in the mix, Milan, are the second-most successful team in the competition’s history but have struggled recently. Their second-place finish in Serie A last season was their best since 2012, and some clever signings – including making Fikayo Tomori’s loan deal from Chelsea permanent – means things could be looking up.

SOMETHING TO PROVE La Liga champions… Atletico coach Diego Simeone

Ajax and Dynamo Kiev are the biggest names from the teams not belonging to UEFA’s top six leagues, and will be looking to show their array of homegrown talent can compete at this level. Wolfsburg and Villarreal will be looking to prove they are not there just to make up the numbers – the latter finished seventh in La Liga and only qualified courtesy of their 2021 Europa League win. Club Brugge (Belgium), Zenit (Russia) and Besiktas (Turkey) all won their respective leagues, and will be looking to prove the Champions League is indeed a league for champions. WORLD SOCCER 37


20 breakout stars

CHampions League | Breakout StarS

Nick Bidwell highlights the players who could make a name for themselves in this season’s Champions League

Rodrigo De Paul

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(Atletico Madrid) hese past few weeks, the gods most definitely have been on the side of the outstanding 27-year-old Argentina midfielder who, besides featuring in his country’s triumph at the 2021 Copa America, also celebrated the birth of his second child and competed a dream €35 million move from Udinese to Atletico. After five strong seasons with Udinese, it was surprising that none of the big Italian teams made a concerted effort to bring him on board. Not that Atleti will be complaining; the Argentine should improve the Spanish champions from top to bottom in the engine room. He has the widest of skill-sets: creative, incisive in his passing, superb as a driving ball-carrier and full of energy and commitment. Just the sort of indefatigable all-rounder that Atletico coach iego Simeone likes to go to war with. e Paul will be on something of a revenge mission in the Spanish capital. In a previous spell in La Liga with Valencia (2014-2016), he was for the most part used as a substitute, a square peg in a round hole. Then-Valencia coach Gary Neville did not rate him at all and, early in 2016, sent him on loan to Racing Club, the Argentine side where he started out. It was during his time at Valencia that he had his only taste of the Champions League to date, appearing twice in the competition in 2015-16. This is his moment to step forward and show he belongs in exalted company.

Sebastiaan Bornauw

(Wolfsburg) An off-season acquisition from Cologne, the combative Belgian stopper, 22, has gone from a Bundesliga relegation scrap to the Champions League in the blink of an eye. Ultra-confident and bristling with ambition, facing Europe’s elite forwards will not faze him one bit.

38 WRL SCCER

Arnau Comas

(Barcelona) A solid ever-present with Barcelona B last term, the fair-haired centre-back could well emerge as the heir apparent to Gerard Pique at the heart of the Blaugrana back-line. A calm, composed and very intelligent stopper with faultless positioning.

Boulaye Dia

(Villarreal) The reigning Europa League holders won the race for the signature of the in-form Senegal striker, sealing a €15 million deal with Ligue1 outfit Reims. The archetypal late-developer, he was playing for Jura Sud in the French fourth tier just three years ago.


Breakout stars

Amad Diallo

(Manchester United) Lightning quick, sharp, inventive and totally fearless, the Ivory Coast winger collected admiring glances aplenty in a sprinkling of first-team outings for the Red Devils in 2020-21. The role of impact substitute in Europe would suit him down to the ground.

Harvey Elliott

(Liverpool) An impressive year on loan at Blackburn Rovers in the Championship, with seven goals and11 assists, offered a glimpse of Elliott’s exciting potential. A left-footed right-winger with exciting dribbling ability, the18-year-old is likely to be understudy to Mo Salah.

Miguel Gutierrez

(Real Madrid) Towards the end of last season, the 20-yearold left-back effortlessly made the transition from Real Madrid’s youth ranks to the pro side. Attack-minded, technically gifted and plays with swagger and artistry. Could he be the long-term replacement for Marcelo?

Juanlu

(Sevilla) Very promising18-year-old right-winger, who twice had watching briefs in last season’s Champions League campaign (versus Rennes and Krasnodar). Lightning quick, elusive and determined, he has also displayed his versatility by lining up at right-back on occasion.

Juan Musso

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(Atalanta)

Cyle Larin

(Besiktas) The Canada striker – who shone at the 2021 CONCACAF Gold Cup – was an inspiration for Besiktas last term too, contributing19 goals to their first Turkish League title in four years. Formerly with Orlando City in the US top flight and Belgian side Zulte Waregem.

ot entirely satisfied with the goalkeeping revolving door they operated last term – with Pierluigi Gollini (now with Tottenham) and Marco Sportiello alternating – Atalanta have now opted for a clear hierarchy between the posts, with Musso, a €20 million purchase from Udinese, the undisputed first choice. In matters of recruitment, Atalanta normally prefer to focus on youthful potential, heading off the beaten track to sniff out a bargain. But not in this instance, where the main criteria were experience and track record. Since joining Udinese three years ago from Racing Club in his Argentine homeland, Musso, 27, has established himself as one of Serie A’s top custodians, tall and commanding, a fine shot-stopper, excellent in one-on-one situations and very consistent. Boasting

29 clean sheets in104 appearances for Udinese, he is thought to have definitively caught the eye of Atalanta head-hunters while pulling off a couple of stunning saves in a1-1 league draw with Udinese back in January. Musso, the third-most expensive signing in Atalanta’s history, was a non-playing member of Argentina’s Copa America-winning squad this summer. He only has one full cap to his name – making his national team debut in a friendly against Morocco in March 2019 – and will be hoping that a first piece of the Champions League action with his new club will be the springboard for greater national team activity. For most of his adolescence, basketball was actually his favourite sporting pursuit, only taking up goalkeeping at the relatively advanced age of14. WORLD SOCCER 39


CHampions League | Breakout StarS

Jonathan David

S (Lille)

till on cloud nine after sensationally breaking PSG’s Ligue1 stranglehold last spring, French champions Lille will be banking on the young Canada striker to build on his excellent work in the first six months of 2021. David, snapped up by Lille from Belgian side Gent in the summer of 2020 for a club record €27 million, initially found the going tough in France, out of touch, a few pounds overweight and distinctly short of endproduct. He did not manage one goal in his first dozen games with Les Dogues and inevitably found himself targeted by fans and critics alike. But as soon as his scoring drought ended in December, he suddenly came alive, racking up12 goals and five assists as Lille claimed only their first league title in a decade. The 22-year-old, a Canuck international since September 2018, ended up giving full value for his transfer fee. According to statisticians, he was directly responsible for 20 of Lille’s point-haul last term, and more than once he proved the team’s saviour with late gameAccording to statisticians, changing he was directly responsible goals – the perfect for 20 of Lille’s [Ligue 1] example point-haul last term being the injury-time brace he netted in the 2-0 home win over Marseille in March. Born in the New York borough of Brooklyn to Haitian parents but raised in the Canadian capital Ottawa, he is renowned for his laidback attitude. Indeed some Lille insiders claim he can be too relaxed for his own good. Let’s look on the bright side: the Champions League will not disconcert him.

Nuno Mendes

(Sporting) Teenage left-back or wing-back with the world at his dancing feet. Has a super engine, gets forward at every opportunity and often leaves markers for dead in one-on-one duels. Went to the Euros with Portugal in the summer and already has Premier League scouts on his case.

40 WORLD SOCCER

Pepe

(Porto) The Dragons should not be short of guile and unpredictability now that they have signed the little Brazilian playmaker. A consummate dribbler, and complete contrast to his namesake at the club, he cost Porto €15 million from Gremio of Porto Alegre, his home for the past five years.

Omar Richards

(Bayern Munich) It’s rare for Bayern to go shopping in another country’s second tier for their next talent, but that’s what the Bavarians did this summer, enrolling the 23-year-old Reading left-back. Bayern particularly admire his distribution and ability to play under pressure.


Breakout stars

Martin Satriano

(Internazionale) Not so long ago, the management at Internazionale were finalising plans to send the 20-year-old Uruguayan front-man out on loan this season. Then came pre-season, with the youngster scoring for the Italian champions in industrial quantities. A No.9 with the awareness and touch of a playmaker.

Donyell Malen

T

(Borussia Dortmund) he mouth-watering prospect of a regular diet of Champions League football would have been a key factor when the highly-promising Dutch attacker, 22, opted this summer to swap Eindhoven for what he hopes will be an uplifting five-year tour of duty in the heart of the Ruhr. Malen has little experience in Europe’s elite competition, only appearing fleetingly in one campaign in 2018-19. He scored against BATE in the play-offs to seal PSV’s place in a group featuring Barcelona, Tottenham Hotspur and Internazionale. A move to Dortmund, who have qualified for the Champions League knockout stage in each of the past three years, gives him the opportunity to lift his career to a new, elevated plane. Donyell, who bagged19 Eredivisie goals for PSV last season, will undoubtedly feel that he has a point to prove with the Schwarz-Gelben.

The recent European Championships were something of an anti-climax for him, starting just two of the Netherlands’ four games and missing a gilt-edged chance in the shock round-of-16 defeat to the Czech Republic. Dortmund, whose bill for his services should come to a hefty €34 million including add-ons, have never paid more for a player and they clearly believe he is worth the outlay. They love his extreme pace, comfort in high-tempo situations, flair for spectacular dribbling and the considerable goal threat he poses. The Dutchman, whose formative years were spent in the Ajax and Arsenal academies, will have a vital part to play in the Dortmund reset. Last season’s third-placed team have a hole to fill in their side after the departure of Jadon Sancho, and will hope that Malen can replace the England man’s goals, assists and ability to conjure some magic with the ball at his feet.

Xavi Simons

Matias Soule

(Paris Saint-Germain) Teenage Dutch midfielder who, in a year or two, could be a name on everyone’s lips. Enticed out of the Barcelona nest two years ago, he is an amalgam of natural elegance on the ball, vision, speed off the mark and a willingness to mix it physically.

(Juventus) The18-year-old Argentine is an absolute football natural, sublime in his close control and movement with a left foot to die for. Having joined Juve from Argentine club Velez Sarsfield in early 2020, he could be ready for first-team football after turning on the style in pre-season.

Mohamed Simakan

(RB Leipzig) Exceptional Marseille-born centre-back, who recently moved to Leipzig in a €15 million move from Strasbourg. Suffered a nasty knee injury in January, from which he has now fully recovered. A former French Under-20 international, he chose RB over Milan.

Jurrien Timber

(Ajax) A young Dutch defender of considerable poise and maturity. Despite only one full season in the Ajax first-team, he was included in Netherlands’ Euro 2020 squad, playing three games (one start and two off the bench). His twin brother Quinten also plays in the Eredivisie, at Utrecht. WRLD SCCER 41


Destination Seville EUROPA LEAGUE 2021-22

James Nalton takes a look at the contenders for this season’s revamped Europa League...

It’s the Europa League, but not quite as we know it. UEFA’s secondary competition is now much more streamlined, with fewer sides taking part in qualifying and a group stage reduced from 48 teams to 32. There will also be a brand-new preliminary knockout round featuring the runners-up from each group and the third-placed teams from the Champions League group stage. Once those Champions League teams drop in, the dynamics of the Europa League can change, but for the past three years it has been won by a side who’ve participated in this tournament’s group stage. No recent winners are present as this season’s edition kicks off, but defending champions Villarreal are one of the past winners who could feasibly drop from the Champions League into that preliminary knockout round. 42 WORLD SOCCER

Final host…Seville’s Ramon Sanchez Pizjuan stadium

Loan star...Guendouzi

FRENCH FANCIES

2018 finalists Marseille are present, though, and have already caught the eye with some impressive signings in pre-season. Wingers Konrad de la Fuente and Cengiz Under join from Barcelona and Roma respectively, while French duo William Saliba and Matteo Guendouzi arrive from Arsenal on loan. The main Marseille signing to look out for, though, might be 24-year-old midfielder Gerson, who won the Copa Libertadores with Flamengo in 2019. The Brazilian is looking to make a go of his second stint in Europe having previously spent a couple of seasons in Serie A with Roma and Fiorentina. Their coach Jorge Sampaoli won the Copa Sudamericana – the South American equivalent of the Europa League – with Universidad de Chile in 2011 and, though his Marseille

side are outsiders, this could be a big chance for the Argentine to finally make a similar impression in Europe. After topping the Ligue1 table for a few weeks in the middle of last season, Lyon eventually dropped down to fourth, missing out on the chance to qualify for Champions League football by finishing two points behind third-placed Monaco. The club have, somewhat un-popularly, sold homegrown talents Amine Gouiri and Melvin Bard to fellow Ligue1 side Nice in recent seasons, but have high hopes for other academy products such as Rayan Cherki and Maxence Caqueret. Star player and last season’s top scorer Memphis Depay also departed – to Barcelona – so Les Gones will be looking to Moussa Dembele and Cameroonian striker Karl Toko Ekambi to replace the Dutchman’s attacking prowess.


EARLY FAVOURITES

Serie A side Napoli are favourites going into the tournament, but not overwhelmingly so. The main goal for their new manager, Luciano Spalletti, will be to mount a challenge in Serie A and at least restore the club’s top-four status. Having participated in the Champions League in seven of the previous ten seasons, they are naturally one of the stronger sides in the field. Fellow Italian side Lazio could also go far in the competition, especially after their appointment of Maurizio Sarri who is a previous winner with Chelsea. Sarri replaces Simone Inzaghi who left for Internazionale this summer.

ADDED INTEREST

The 2022 final will be played in Spain at the home of the most successful side in the history of the tournament, Sevilla. With five Spanish sides in the Champions League group stage, there’s a strong possibility one will drop into this competition, but until then La Liga will be represented by Real Sociedad and Real Betis. The interest of Betis will be piqued by the fact that the final will be played in their city at the home of their local rivals, which could give them added impetus. They are managed by the experienced Chilean Manuel Pellegrini, who has guided the club back to the Europa League for the first time since 2018-19, when they lost to Rennes in a thrilling round of 32 clash that ended 6-4 on aggregate. Real Sociedad’s 2020 Copa del Rey win is still fresh in the memory, mainly because the final wasn’t played until April 2021 due to the pandemic. Unique circumstances meant they held that title for just two weeks until Barcelona won the 2021 final. Their popular manager, Imanol Alguacil, who hails from the nearby town of Orio, made headlines after that cup win thanks to his authentic, fan-like celebrations, and his side will

One to watch…Lyon’s Rayan Cherki

EUROPA LEAGUE

Another club who have been handed a favourites tag by the bookmakers early on are Leicester City. In both of the last two seasons they have failed to hold on to a place in the Premier League’s top four, and may well see victory in this competition as their best chance of qualifying for the Champions League. The Europa League is a competition Brendan Rodgers and his players believe they have a genuine chance of winning, and the signings of Patson Daka and Boubakary Soumare from RB Salzburg and Lille respectively brings some useful continental know-how, as well as the depth to challenge on multiple fronts.

BUNDESLIGA CONTENDERS

Former winner…Lazio coach Maurizio Sarri

As one of two German representatives, Bayer Leverkusen will be hoping the sale of Leon Bailey to Aston Villa doesn’t weaken them too much. Players such as Moussa Diaby and Lucas Alario should keep them ticking over in attack, while 21-year-old attacker Paulinho has proved his fitness with Brazil at this summer’s Olympics having spent last season on the sidelines with a knee injury. They are joined by Eintracht Frankfurt, who will be looking to repeat their 2019 heroics when they narrowly lost in the semi-final to eventual winners Chelsea. The signings of Jesper Lindstrom from Brondby and Jens Petter Hauge from Milan should give them a good platform from which to build.

CONFERENCE ROOM

be hoping to take that spirit with them on their travels around Europe. West Ham United’s rise to the Premier League’s European qualification places was an unexpected but welcome surprise. David Moyes’ side were good value for their sixth-place finish and were even in contention for a place in the Champions League at one point. Repeating such an achievement in the league while also competing in Europe will be a difficult ask, but fans will no doubt enjoy the trip. Portuguese side Braga and Lokomotiv Moscow of Russia take their place in the tournament on the back of triumphs in their respective domestic cups. Braga have appeared in the Europa League group stages in five of the past six seasons, reaching the knockout rounds four times. The 2011 runners-up are coached by Braga-born former Sheffield Wednesday and Swansea City manager Carlos Carvalhal, and their squad includes former Chelsea loan ranger Lucas Piazon. Lokomotiv Moscow will be without Vedran Corluka, who retired to take up a post as Croatia assistant coach, but they’ve replaced him with another Croatian defender, 25-year-old Tin Jedvaj from Bayer Leverkusen.

Declan Rice...the England midfielder will be part of West Ham’s first foray in Europe since 2006

We know the Europa League can be shaken up with the introduction of Champions League sides in the knockout stage, but the 2021-22 season brings an added dimension with the introduction of a third European competition for the first time since the last Cup Winners’ Cup in1999. Rather than exiting Europe altogether, teams finishing third in their Europa League groups will drop into a knockout round in the new Conference League. This means more teams will be in continental competition for longer, and there is the potential to see new names etched onto European trophies. The Europa League’s place and

The interest of Betis will be piqued by the fact that the final will be played in their city at the home of their local rivals, which could give them added impetus Second chance...the Conference League

prominence in the new-look festival of European club football could be affected but, given the teams involved and those who could potentially pay a visit, it will still be an entertaining ride.

WORLD SOCCER 43


EUROPA LEAGUE 2021-22

Europa League players to watch Nick Bidwell picks out the stars that could light up this season’s Europa League campaign

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Patson DAKA

LEICESTER CITY

The much-lauded Zambia striker, recently-arrived from Salzburg, was absolutely correct when he once said that he had two distinct personalities: quiet, thoughtful and humble off the pitch, while breathing fire and brimstone in the heat of the battle. Still only 22, he is pacy, energetic, industrious

Lucas PAQUETA

LYON

Afte a difficult18 months with Mi an, the versati e Brazi ian attacking midfielder imp oved week on week with OL ast term, supp ying both the style and the numbers (nine goa s and six assists in Ligue1). Technically as smooth as silk, the fo mer Flamengo sta rounded off an excellent12 months with a prominent ole in Brazil’s silver medal at the 2021 Copa America. New Lyon coach Pete Bosz has the conundrum of whe e to play him: as a deep director of manoeuv es, in boxto-box mode, in the No.10 slot or as an inverted winger.

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and sharp in the red zone, as proven by the 34 goals he rattled home in all comps last season. Cites Luis Suarez, Kylian Mbappe and new team-mate Jamie Vardy as his role models. Benefits from the advice of agent Frederic Kanoute, once a great African goal-getter himself.

Odilon KOSSOUNOU

BAYER LEVERKUSEN

Simon Rolfes, in charge of recruitment at Leverkusen, certainly pulled off a coup this summer in persuading the Ivory Coast centreback to quit Belgian champions Club Brugge for the BayArena in a €23m deal. Kossonou, 20, reportedly had a long list of suitors, including the two Milan giants, Wolves, Arsenal, as well as Pep Guardiola at Manchester City. So hats off to Rolfes for getting to the front of the queue. Athletic, powerful and useful on the ball, the youngster is also able to perform to a good standard at right-back or as a holding midfielder.

Credit: Instagram @odilonkossounou


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Adam MARUSIC LAZIO

Last season, a campaign in which the Biancocelesti were chronically inconsistent, the 28-year-old Montenegrin was one of the few Sky Blues to never let his standards slip. Even more remarkable is that he produced the goods while on a positional tour of the field, operating as both a right and left wing-back, and in central defence. No wonder the Lazio management were quick to offer Marusic a new double-yourmoney deal. This will be his fifth season with Lazio following a €6.5m switch from Belgian outfit Oostende.

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Craig DAWSON

WEST HAM UNITED

In a development which virtually no one saw coming, the 31-year-old Watford loanee turned out to be one of the most effective centre-backs in the Premier League last term: an old-school stopper combining aerial dominance and the willingness to put his body on the line, as well as an impressive passing-range. Totally committed to the Claret-and-Blue cause, he was rightly rewarded with a permanent two-year contract, and now forms the Hammers’ first-choice centre-back pairing alongside Angelo Ogbonna.

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EUROPA LEAGUE

MURILO Cerqueira

LOKOMOTIV MOSCOW As the former Brazil Under-23 international proved with the Railwaymen in the Champions League last season (starting five of their six group-stage games), European competition definitely brings out the best in this watchful and tenacious central defender. The 24-year-old produced a Man-of-the-Match performance in Lokomotiv’s goalless draw at Atletico Madrid in November, often appearing to be the only barrier separating the Muscovites from a veritable drubbing. Previously with top Brazilian side Cruzeiro before moving to the Russian captial in 2019, he could be on the move again soon if he continues his development.

Borja IGLESIAS

REAL BETIS

The Galician centre-forward could not stop scoring for the Verdiblancos in the second half of last season and will be suitably motivated this term, setting himself the double objective of at least 20 goals and a place in the Spain squad. Bought from Espanyol for €28m two years ago, he has spent part of this summer in an individual fitness programme in Madrid.

Ricardo HORTA

BRAGA

Pay no attention to his two indifferent campaigns in La Liga with Malaga (2014-16). For the last five years with Braga, he has been nothing less than a sensation, an impish and highly-skilled winger

– happy on either flank – or second striker. Rejected as a youngster by Benfica, Horta, 26, was Braga’s top scorer last term with15 goals. Much admired by leading Bundesliga clubs. WORLD SOCCER 45


Gianluigi Donnarumma


PLAYER BIOGRAPHY

FE A

s l of a i ready to s goalkeeper ain… Words: Nick Bidwell

n ro ent. e in its now-how, what Italian ly term a fabbrica oalkeeping factory. rn of the century, no ve of its alumni have gone y s lid professional careers: o Mira te, who, apart from ring fo arma, Bologna and o a, was al o a back-up for the nati nal team former Napoli custodian Ge na o Iezz ; Alfonso De Lucia (ex Parma, Monza and Livorno); Do narummas elder brother Antonio, a gr duate of the Milan academy who

as his sibling’s understudy; ut absolutely not least, gi himself, more commonly n as “Gigio”. “It’s amazing that a town of 60,000 inhabitants has produced so many Serie A goalkeepers,” declared Iezzo in an interview on a Neapolitan radio station back in 2015, the year Gigio made his top-flight bow for Milan at the incredibly tender age of16 years and 242 days. “It’s a fairy story that Gianluigi went in the space of two years from the Club Napoli academy to a Serie A spot with Milan. “Of course, Donnarumma had the talent and the physical attributes. But like so many of us, he had the benefit of a great goalkeeping education. In Castellammare, they do a fantastic job with goalies. We all grew up at the school under one individual – Ernesto Ferraro, a real man of sport who dedicated himself to this task.” An institution in grassroots football in the Campania region of southern Italy, Ferraro was not merely an astute WORLD SOCCER 47


Biography

tant-sptt. H was an utstaning instut in th at f gakping t, xpty ving a th thnia bass whi aways making th pss fun f his ptégés. F him, it was a abu f v t pass n his amstnypai knwg t th iks f dnnaumma an mpany. Fa i nt tak ng t ais that h ha a pigy n his hans in th shap f Gianuigi, wh was attning cub Napi sssins vn bf h was  nugh t g t sh. oftn ft pn-muth by Gigi’s pwss, Fa ft mp t t his famiy in n th st. “I mmb da ming hm n night an his ys w bazing with jy,” Fa’s aught t La Repubblica nwspap in th wak f Itay’s eupan champinship tiumph 48 World Soccer

this summ. “da sai t us: ‘I’v gt a by wh is sptaua. Yu wun’t biv what h an  btwn th psts. H’s ny svn, but I t yu nw: h’s ging t pay f Itay an mak histy.’ W thught da was

annas f th Itaian natina tam, winning his fist ap as a substitut in a 3-1 finy fat t Fan in Bai. Apppiaty th pay h pa at haf-tim was Gianuigi Buffn, th pvius -h, an th kp that h k up t “I’ve got a boy who is spectacular. You wouldn’t m than believe what he can do between the posts. He’s any th. Say Fa, only seven, but I tell you now: he’s going to wh pass play for Italy and make history” in 2018, Ernesto Ferraro, Donnarumma’s first coach away wu nt hav th pptunity azy. Hwv, h was pv ight.” t s his sta pupi mak a maj Fa knw what h was taking ntibutin t Itay’s eu 2020 abut. on vning in Sptmb tiumph. But at ast h was ab t 2016 – ag just17 yas an189 witnss dnnaumma’s pius ays – dnnaumma bam th ffts in th ay pat f his a: yungst-v gakp in th his nvss bakthugh n th Bb-fced… Dnnumm n ctn dun s See a debut


Gianluigi Donnarumma the emotional tribute he penned on Instagram: “Dear Mister Ernesto. If today, I’ve fulfilled my dream to play in Serie A and to tread the turf at the San Siro, I owe it above all to you. I learnt so much from you and not only how to act on the pitch. You spent your whole life teaching little players like me the love of this sport.” Donnarumma, who recently sealed a Bosman free transfer to Paris Saint-Germain following six years as a starter with Milan, is a100 per cent football natural. Within the Donnarumma family unit the game was a religion, its influence allpervasive and inescapable. His father Alfonso, a carpenter by trade, was soccer-mad, instilling his love of the Milan club to both his sons. His uncle

Brothers…Gigio and Antonio Donnarumma

Enrico, once a keeper with local club Juve Stabia, also played a key role in the indoctrination process, taking his nephew to Club Napoli at the age of just four and proffering all manner of tricks of the trade.

Serie A stage; the Revelation of the Year award he picked up in 2016; his debut for the Italy Under 21s at the age of just17; the first of his 33 caps for the Azzurri. Understandably Gigio was heartbroken on hearing the sad news of Ferraro’s death. Hence

Arch-rivals…Inter striker Eder clashes with Donnarumma during the keeper’s first Milan derby

Timeline JUL 30, 2015

Just a month after turning professional, Donnarumma plays his first game for Milan, coming off the bench in an International Champions Cup friendly match against Real Madrid in China. The game is decided by penalties, with Donnarumma one of two players to miss.

OCT 25, 2015

Makes his competitive debut in a 2-1 Serie A win v Sassuolo, becoming the second-youngest goalkeeper to start in Italian football history.

JAN 31, 2016

Appears in his first Derby della Madonnina, against Milan’s arch-rivals Internazionale, helping his side to a comfortable 3–0 victory.

MAR 24, 2016

Makes his Italy U21 debut in a 4–1 win over the Republic of Ireland, becoming the youngest player ever to play for the team at17 years and 28 days. WORLD SOCCER 49


BIOGRAPHY His elder brother Antonio, nine years his senior, was a fully paid-up member of the goalkeeping fraternity as well, good enough to be inducted into the Milan youth ranks, where he twice picked up national silverware at junior level. Keen to keep up the family tradition, the adolescent Gigio took mental notes and worked as hard as he could in practice sessions, preparing himself for the day when his turn would come. Even in the earliest stages of his soccer evolution, Gigio had all the basics nailed down. He was athletic, had hair-trigger reactions, was by nature calm and composed, read Icon…Buffon and Donnarumma on international duty

the game well and crucially had the physique to fill the goal up. As a ten-year-old, he already measured a multi-storey 6ft 2in, so obtrusive in his appearance that parents of opposing players were quick to scream age-fraud. To ward off the foul-play jibes, his mother Maria learnt to always be on hand with the necessary date of birth papers. By his early teens, Serie A scouts were beating a path to his door. AUG 21, 2016

Makes the first penalty save of his career, keeping out a stoppage-time effort from Torino’s Andrea Belotti on the first day of the 2016-17 season.

50 WORLD SOCCER

SEP 1, 2016

Replaces Gianluigi Buffon at half-time to make his Italy debut against France, becoming his country’s youngest-ever goalkeeper.

the propagation of all kinds of urban Juventus and Roma were reported myths. According to Club Napoli to be among the interested parties, chairman Ciro Amore, Galliani was though the most insistent of all were effectively persuaded to swoop by a Internazionale, who had cultivated cousin of super agent Mino Raiola, a good relationship with the who has handled Gigio’s affairs for Donnarumma family, invited him the past six years. As for Giocondo to Appiano Gentile (Inter’s training Martorelli, Gianluigi’s former agent, ground) for a five-day trial and he swears that the youngster actually arranged a school for the youngster signed for Internazionale, only to – then aged14 – to attend. The change his mind within 24 hours affair looked in the bag. and pledge himself to Milan. Not so. Shortly after returning from his Inter try-out, Donnarumma “He [Berlusconi] had two choices: he could either would perform fire me and play [Diego] Lopez, or retain me and a stunning volteface, signing for see Donnarumma as the starter. He kept me” Sinisa Mihajlovic, former Milan coach

Milan in the summer of 2013. The cost? A cool €250,000. “Yes, Donnarumma was really close to a move to Inter, probably just a step away,” revealed former Milan vicepresident Adriano Galliani in 2019. “But Mauro Bianchessi (Milan’s chief coach) pushed me to go for him. We went to the Donnarumma home and managed to prise him away from Inter.” This tug-of-war has encouraged DEC 23, 2016

Lifts the first silverware of his career, saving Paulo Dybala’s penalty in a 4-3 shootout victory over Juventus in the Italian Super Cup.

JUL 11, 2017 Signs a new contract with Milan until 2021, following plenty of speculation over his future at the club.


Gianluigi Donnarumma

Player of the Tournament… UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin presents Donnarumma with his award

“I first got in touch with Inter’s director of sport (Piero Ausilio) when Donnarumma was ten, and for the next three-and-a-half years Inter followed him very closely,” declared Martorelli on Italian radio station TMW in 2017. “It was a long story, resulting in the signing of a contract. One afternoon, he, his mum and his dad concluded a written agreement with Inter. The next morning, he signed a deal with Milan. Without warning, without correctness.” To be fair to the youngster, wasn’t he just following his heart? After all, he came from a family of Milan supporters and his brother Antonio had attended the same Milanello academy.

At Club Napoli, young Donnarumma always lined up in the more senior age categories and he continued in exactly the same vein in the Milan youth ranks, invariably competing with youngsters two or three years older than him. Milan knew full well they had a phenomenon in their midst and literally could not wait to blood him at senior level. Three days before his 16th birthday, in February 2015, he was given special dispensation by the Italian federation to sit on the first-team bench for a Serie A fixture against Cesena. Eight months later, he started his first game in the Italian top-flight, a 2-1 victory over Sassuolo. Penalty hero…Bukayo Saka sees his decisive penalty saved by Donnarumma in the Euro 2020 final

JUL 27, 2017

Plays his first European game in a1-0 Europa League third-round qualifier against Romanian side Universitatea Craiova.

NOV 13, 2017 Watches from the bench as Italy fail to qualify for the 2018 World Cup, losing1-0 on aggregate to Sweden in the play-offs.

FEB 28, 2018

Saves two penalties in a 5-4 shootout victory over Lazio to take Milan into the Coppa Italia final, where they go on to lose 4-0 to Juventus.

SEP 7, 2018

Takes over as Italy’s No.1 – following the international retirement of Gianluigi Buffon – by starting all four UEFA Nations League matches.

JUL 21, 2020

Wears the captain’s armband for the first time, during his 200th game for Milan, in a 2-1 away Serie A victory over Sassuolo. WORLD SOCCER 51


Biography Immiaty athing th y with his mpsu, mmaning psn an sht-stpping pwss, h swifty ma himsf unppab. Nt ba at a f smn wh ha bgan th 2015-16 sasn bhin dig lpz an chistian Abbiati in Mian’s pking-. Mian’s ah at th tim, Sinisa Mihajvi, says h was simpy fwing his gut instints, that h ha wath yung dnnaumma in taining an was su h was ma f th ight stuff. “Th wk bf I gav dnnaumma his big han, [Mian wn] Sivi Busni twi am t Mian an put th as t m that dig lpz shu b in ga f us,” Mihajvi t Corriere della Sport a fw yas ag. “I pi that h [Busni] ha tw his: h u ith fi m an pay lpz,  tain m an s dnnaumma as th stat. H kpt m.” Whi Mihajvi wu ny ast a futh six mnths as Mian bss, dnnaumma wu g fm stngth t stngth at th San Si. Th Rossoneri bak-in was infinity m su with him as th ast in f fn an, in his six sasns as th ub’s N.1, h amass th xnt quta f 88 an shts in 251 mptitiv gams. “Smtims it’s bn a us t hav bn th n wh gav dnnaumma his p but,” augh Mihajvi uing an intviw n Sky Sports Italia. “evy tim I’v m up against him sin [as ah f Tin

Mar 19, 2021

Jun 11, 2021

Named the 2019-20 Plays his first Serie A Goalkeeper game at a major tournament, starting of the Year and in Italy’s 3-0 victory included in the over Turkey in Euro Team of the Year 2020’s opening by the Italian game at Rome’s Footballers’ Stadio Olimpico. Association.

52 World Soccer

F…g ws an Bgna] h sms t pu ff mmitt t th ia f bing a Mian it’s e st mia savs. That sai, I’m vy stana-ba. Whn, in th summ S  te E happy f him.” f 2017, h tun wn a ntat 2020 sem-fs Nt that his tim at Mian was aways nwa ff f €5m nt, many Mian a gnty-fwing iv. A stin f th fans spn with fuy, ausing him f g. In, s txi wu th Rossoneri faithfu ftn vi th pinin that Gianuigi’s yaty t issu bm, that uing a eupan th ub was ny Un-21 champinship skin-p, that h A section of the Rossoneri faithful a fw ays was anything but often voiced the opinion that [his] math at, Itaian loyalty to the club was only skin-deep suppts thw buns f fak a bis int his gamuth. H uy i -sign. Hwv, m ntvsy wu fw, with Mian fans istinty unimpss with th ub’s isin t bing bak dnnaumma’s bth Antni f a sn sp at th Rossoneri. cnvin that th mv was a swtn in  t psua Gigi t stay, many suppts bam vn m angy n haing that Antni, “it’s tme t eve”… stnsiby th squa’s N.3 ustian, M fs f  wu b aning a  €1m a ya. be dected t This vpmnt, pus pts te Dmm in th pss that Gianuigi ft btes  2017

Jun 16, 2021

Agrees a five-year deal with PSG, a month after Milan director Paolo Maldini confirms that the goalkeeper would be leaving the club.

Jul 6, 2021

In the Euro 2020 semi-final against Spain, he saves Alvaro Morata’s spot-kick to help Italy to a 4-2 penalty shootout victory.

Jul 11, 2021

In the final against England, he saves two more penalties to win the Euros for Italy. Also becomes the first goalkeeper to be named Player of the Tournament.


33

Gianluigi Donnarumma

“psychologically pressured” to stay put, had the San Siro terraces aflame. So much so that during an Italian Cup match versus Verona in December 2017, Milan supporters unfurled a banner attacking the Donnarumma brothers. The words on the placard bristled with hate: “Psychological violence by giving you €6 million a season and signing your parasite brother? It’s time to leave. Our patience with you is over.” Little wonder Gianluigi was reduced to tears. Such is the life of the sportsman in the public eye: one day a hero, the next a villain. Now, Gianluigi has finally left the Rossoneri, and can anyone truly blame him for wanting a new challenge elsewhere? The European Championship was the first trophy he has lifted since the 2016 Italian Super Cup – another final in which he was the penalty shootout hero. Remarkably, Donnarumma has not even played in the Champions League yet. The switch to PSG gives him the chance to fill that gaping hole in his CV.

ITALY

18

MILAN’S YOUNGEST PLAYERS January 1985

Euro 2020 victory parade…Donnarumma (left) with Italy team-mates Lorenzo Insigne (centre) and Jorginho (right)

2016–17

60 55

2017–18

2018–19

October 1942

30 25

39

16 / 7 / 17

ITALY’S YOUNGEST PLAYERS April 1911

GAMES

May 1910

RODOLFO GAVINELLI

RENZO DE VECCHI

16 / 3 / 8

16 / 3 / 23

September 2016

July 1912

GIANLUIGI DONNARUMMA

LUIGI BARBESINO

17 / 6 / 7

18 / 2 / 0

Years/Months/Days

HONOURS

Team ITALIAN SUPER CUP 2016

EUROPEAN HAMPIONSHI 2020

Individual AIC SERIE A TEAM OF THE YEAR 2019-20

SERIE A BEST GOALKEEPER 2020-21

2019–20

UROS PLAYE OF THE OURNAMEN 2020

EUROS TEAM OF THE OURNAMEN 2020

2020–21 60 55 50 45 40

39

35 30 25

21

15

5

16 / 8 / 0

31

20

10

October 2015

GIANLUIGI DONNARUMMA

48

41

35

16 / 6 / 28

GIUSEPPE SACCHI

45 40

SERGIO BATTISTINI

16 / 6 / 25

53

50

December 1979

PAOLO MALDINI

CLEAN SHEETS

2015–16

the numbers game

11

20

15

12 (Statistics correct as of 01/09/21)

14

15

15 10 5

MILAN WORLD SOCCER 53


30

KEy TRER

Summer Window 2021-22

eye-catching transfers

With the summer transfer window now closed, Jamie Evans examines the standout deals from around Europe…

1

JACK GREALISH

(Aston Villa to Manchester City) To describe Grealish’s huge £100 million transfer – the first British player to move for such a figure – as “eye-catching” would be something of an understatement. It is a transfer that prompts so many questions about the player himself, his new manager, the club he has joined and the one he has left behind, plus how his status in the national team will be affected. The most obvious query is why did Manchester City prioritise the former Aston Villa captain over other areas of the squad that needed strengthening, namely left-back and centre-forward? Is it an indulgence on Pep Guardiola’s part, or does the Catalan coach believe that Grealish is capable of the kind of attacking numbers that Kevin De Bruyne, Raheem Sterling and Sergio Aguero have delivered in recent years? How Pep deploys his new signing alongside Sterling, De Bruyne, Ferran Torres, Phil Foden and Riyad Mahrez is a mouth-watering prospect. The early signs are that he will be happy to trust Grealish in a midfield trio, and if he thrives there it will become increasingly difficult for Gareth Southgate to continue leaving him out of England’s first XI. And what of his former club? On paper, the Villans have invested their £100m smartly, with Leon Bailey, Emiliano Buendia and Danny Ings all arriving. Yet plenty of clubs have tried to replace a talisman with several new faces before and failed. How Dean Smith gets on with his new charges will be fascinating.

54 WORLD SOCCER


Al

2

3

TAMMY ABRAHAM

Debut… Grealish in Community Shield action

New challenge...Tammy Abraham

22-1202 WODNIW REMMUS

DAVID ALABA

(Bayern Munich to Real Madrid) When Alaba agreed to join Real Madrid on a free transfer from Bayern Munich earlier this year, his versatility was cited as a key factor in the decision to sign him, with the Austrian able to play on the left or in the centre of both defence and midfield. However, the summer departures of Sergio Ramos and Raphael Varane have elevated his status to the most experienced Champions League centre-back in the squad. Injuries to Ferland Mendy and Marcelo meant that he started the first La Liga game of the season – a 4-1 victory at Alaves – at left-back, but he is likely to spend much of the campaign in the heart of the defence alongside the less experienced but hugely talented Eder Militao, while the versatile Nacho offers cover. It is potentially a title-winning combination.

(Chelsea to Roma) Chelsea have often been criticised for failing to utilise their academy, but this summer alone they have raised close to £100m with the sales of Abraham, Fikayo Tomori, Marc Guehi and Tino Livramento, effectively funding their signing of Romelu Lukaku. Perhaps as a direct result of their experience with Lukaku – a player they first signed from Anderlecht in 2014 – Chelsea included a buy-back clause in the sale of Abraham: in 2023, they will be able to re-sign their academy graduate for £68m. It is not difficult to imagine the clause being activated either. Abraham is a player that, when given chances, scores goals. Nobody has bagged more for Chelsea since the start of the 2019-20 season; last season he was frozen out to the extent that he wasn’t even included on the12-man bench for the Champions League final, yet still finished joint-top scorer with Timo Werner in 20 fewer games. Jose Mourinho has shown great faith in the 23-year-old by making him his biggest signing at Roma. Can he deliver for the Portuguese manager? WORLD SOCCER 55


TRANSFERS Summer Window 2021-22 Loanee… Zirkzee scored on his Belgian league debut

4

JOSHUA ZIRKZEE

(Bayern Munich to Anderlecht, loan) The relegation of Bayern Munich’s reserve team down to the regional leagues has prompted the German champions to send out a number of their youngsters on loan, including promising forward Fiete Arp, Manuel Neuer’s understudy Alexander Nubel, defender Lars Mai, New Zealand playmaker Sarpreet Singh and holding midfielder Adrian Fein. Yet the brightest spotlight will probably be placed on Zirkzee - a player that Bayern hope will one day replace Robert Lewandowski - who has joined Vincent Kompany’s Anderlecht for a year. The young Dutch striker made an explosive start to his Bundesliga career, coming off the bench to hit a vital late goal at Freiburg in December 2019, before doing exactly the same thing again three days later against Wolfsburg. Last season his progress stalled. A January loan to Parma was halted by injury, but two goals in his first two games in Belgium suggests that this move ma hold more romise.

5

MARKO ARNAUTOVIC

Disciplined… Arnautovic was given a one-match ban for his outburst against North Macedonia

56 WORLD SOCCER

(Shanghai Port to Bologna) Which version of Arnautovic will the Serie A club see? The powerful striker that led the line for West Ham United, scoring seven goals in the first half of the 2018-19 season, or the petulant sulker that demanded a January move to China? The clinical finisher that sealed Austria’s Euro 2020 victory over North Macedonia, or the hothead that celebrated by insulting their Albanian-heritage players? The answer, of course, is all of the above. Gone are the days where the 32-year-old Austrian commanded eight-figure fees, but his summer exploits proved that his two years in China haven’t harmed his ability to compete in Europe. His first appearance for Bologna – scoring in a 5-4 Italian Cup defeat to Ternana – suggests that, whether the move is successful or not, it will be explosive.


STEVEN BERGHUIS (Feyenoord to Ajax) One of the most controversial moves in Eredivisie history, with Berghuis becoming only the fourth player to move directly from Feyenoord to Ajax. MYRON BOADU (AZ to Monaco) Widely touted as one of Europe’s most promising young strikers, having scored 32 Eredivisie goals before his 21st birthday. BRIAN BROBBEY (Ajax to RB Leipzig) Ajax were forced to admit defeat in their attempts to tie the teenage striker down to a new deal in February. Leipzig have a proven eye for recruiting young talent. CLAUDINHO (Red Bull Bragantino to Zenit) After topping the 2020 scoring charts in Brazil, the attacking midfielder was expected to join one of Bragantino’s Red Bull sister clubs in Leipzig or Salzburg, but chose Russians Zenit instead. ANDREAS CORNELIUS (Atalanta to Trabzonspor) Two years after Alexander Sorloth scored 33 goals for them, Trabzonspor have signed another 6ft 5in Scandinavian striker that flopped in the Premier League. Ex-Cardiff City man Cornelius will hope to have a similar impact. KONRAD DE LA FUENTE (Barcelona to Marseille) La Masia graduate De La Fuente may have had a future at the Nou Camp were it not for the financial crisis at the club. The USA winger has joined a thrilling project at Marseille, joining Dimitri Payet and Cengiz Under in attack. MERIH DEMIRAL (Juventus to Atalanta, loan) As a club that asks its centrebacks to defend aggressively,

Exciting… De La Fuente has impressed so far

LUKAS NMECHA (Manchester City to Wolfsburg) Wolfsburg swooped for Nmecha after he scored18 goals on loan at Anderlecht. The ex-England U21 striker will hope to impress Hansi Flick after switching international allegiance to Germany in 2019. AMADOU ONANA (Hamburg to Lille) Lille moved quickly to replace Boubakary Soumare, who played Returning… a vital role in last season’s title win. Lukaku is Onana only turned 20 in August, back at his and impressed in Germany’s favourite club second tier last year. Eligible to represent Senegal or Belgium. Atalanta may prove to be a better JENS PETTER HAUGE fit for Demiral thanJuventus, where (Milan to Eintracht Frankfurt, loan) FRANK ONYEKA the Turk failed to establish himself. Signed by Milan after helping Bodo/ (Midtjylland to Brentford) Glimt to the 2020 Norwegian title, The Nigeria midfielder is the DENZEL DUMFRIES it didn’t quite happen in Serie A latest – and most expensive (PSV to Internazionale) for the 21-year-old. Scoring on his – player to move between Replacing Achraf Hakimi with Bundesliga debut suggests Germany two clubs with the same owner. Dumfries with a healthy €47.5m may be a better fit for the attacker. Onyeka started all of Midtjylland’s profit may prove to be the smartest Champions League games last deal of the summer. The Dutchman MATHEUS HENRIQUE season and impressed on his proved at Euro 2020 that he can (Gremio to Sassuolo, loan) debut against Arsenal. provide just as much attacking Described by Tim Vickery as “a busy thrust from right wing-back. central midfielder in a similar mould TIMOTHEE PEMBELE toJuventus’ Arthur”, Henrique joins (PSG to Bordeaux, loan) EDIN DZEKO Sassuolo on loan after winning gold The teenage defender was one of (Roma to Internazionale) for Brazil in Tokyo. Serie A giants the youngest players at the Tokyo Replacing Romelu Lukaku will be will keep an eye on his progress. Olympics. Showed promise in nine a much greater challenge for Inter. appearances for PSG last season, The 35-year-old Dzeko will have to ERIK LAMELA and scored on his Bordeaux debut roll back the years significantly to (Tottenham Hotspur to Sevilla) against Marseille in August. match the 24 Serie A goals the The Argentine was part of the Belgian scored last season. deal that took Bryan Gil to North DARIO SARMIENTO London. It is a deal that seems (Manchester City to Girona, loan) BRYAN GIL to suit everyone after Lamela The Argentine18-year-old winger (Sevilla to Tottenham Hotspur) scored twice on his La Liga debut. only played18 league games for Starred on loan at Eibar last season, Estudianes, but City saw enough lighting up the league with dazzling ROMELU LUKAKU to sign him before sending him wing performances. Aged 20, he (Internazionale to Chelsea) straight to their sister-club in already has three Spain caps and Lukaku’s return to Stamford Bridge the Spanish second tier. went to the Tokyo Olympics. completes a front-line that looks simply terrifying. The Belgian’s ANDRE SILVA MARC GUEHI physical attributes are well-known, (Eintracht Frankfurt to RB Leipzig) (Chelsea to Crystal Palace) but his link-up play will also help With 28 goals in 32 Bundesliga A star of the England Under-17 side bring the best out of Timo Werner, games last year, Silva is showing that won the 2017 World Cup, Guehi Kai Havertz, Hakim Ziyech, Mason why Milan paid Porto €38m for has developed into a commanding Mount and Christian Pulisic – him in 2017 after he scored five defender. Could form a combative depending on who starts alongside Champions League goals aged 21. pairing alongsideJoachim Andersen. him. A boyhood Chelsea fan, he is desperate to make his second spell KAMALDEEN SULEMANA at Stamford Bridge a success. (Nordsjaelland to Rennes) The latest graduate from the JOAO MARIO Right To Dream Academy, which (Internazionale to Benfica) produced Denmark’s Mikkel Another controversial summer Damsgaard and Mohammed move and, potentially, the most Kudus. Marked his €15m move controversial in Portuguese football by scoring on his Ligue1 debut. history. Won the title on loan with Sporting last season, but opted to CHRISTOS TZOLIS join their massive arch-rivals after (PAOK to Norwich City) leaving the Italian champions. The Canaries have been far more ambitious in this window GONZALO MONTIEL than they were on their previous (River Plate to Sevilla) Premier League campaign. Greek An overdue move to Europe for the teenager Tzolis edges out Kosovo 24-year-old right-back, who played forward Milot Rashica, United a vital role in River’s 2019 Copa States strikerJosh Sargent and Libertadores victory and started for Scotland midfielder Billy Gilmour Argentina in the Copa America final. as their most exciting recruit.

22-1202 WODNIW REMMUS

THE REST

WORLD SOCCER 57


SPECIAL FEATURE

Der Bomber of Germany and Bayern Munich’s goalscoring legend, Gerd Muller

G

erd Muller was a one-off. He was Germany’s greatest goalscorer and one of the legends that effectively created the modern Bayern Munich. Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, one-time team-mate then later friend and CEO, described him as: “a specialist goalscorer whose role does not even exist in today’s football.” Muller’s death at 75 had been reluctantly and sorrowfully awaited ever since October 2015 when Bayern confirmed he was suffering from Alzheimer’s disease. In fact Muller had been diagnosed initially in 2011 and was living out his last memorynumbed years in a nursing home. The rate at which Muller scored goals was truly mind-boggling, and some of his records will stand for years. Between1964 and1979, Muller scored 566 goals in 607 matches for Bayern, including 365 in 427 Bundesliga appearances. Together club and star striker celebrated13 national and international club trophies, and Muller also shared in West Germany’s triumphant European Championship and World Cup double in1972 and1974. His record of 40 goals in a Bundesliga season – scored in

58 WORLD SOCCER

1971-72 – stood for 49 years before it was broken by Robert Lewandowski in May. He held the record for the most goals in a calendar year, with 85 in1972, until Lionel Messi surpassed him in 2012. Nobody has scored more goals in the Bundesliga (365) or German Cup (78). No German has more in UEFA club competitions (62), while only eight others have scored more; all of them having played at least 40 more games than Muller. His average of 0.87 goals per game is better than both Lionel Messi (0.8) and Cristiano Ronaldo (0.74) at the top of the pile. Until 2014, Muller was also the national team’s record marksman with 68 goals in an incredible 62 caps. It is a record that is even more impressive with friendly matches taken out, with 39 goals in 31 competitive games. Miroslav Klose, who overtook Muller, needed almost three times as many games (171) to reach 71. Klose was the first to acknowledge his admiration for Muller and the chasm between their goal-grabbing ratios. Muller’s last formal public appearance was a gala in his honour in Hamburg in 2013. The address was delivered by Franz Beckenbauer, his room-mate during their time together


Gerd Muller

WORLD SOCCER 59


SPECIAL FEATURE

at Bayn as yung, w-nquing ftbas in th1970s. Bn n Nvmb 3,1945, Mu bgan with a ub TSV Ningn an sign f Bayn in1964 aft sing 47 gas in 28 gams. Gna manag Wat Fmbk fught ff mptitin fm TSV1860 Munih t sign him, ahing Mu’s famiy hm just haf an hu bf his ppsit numb. cah Zatk “Tshik” cajkvski was ss impss upn mting his nw, yung, tubby nt-fwa at p-sasn taining, mpaining t psint Wihm Nuk: “I’m nt putting that itt phant in amng my sting f thughbs.” Spp Mai ag: “H was w f,” th fm gakp n sai. “His thighs w th with f th pp’s waist. Th way h k, I thught h wun’t ast ng with us.” But a psintia  was an , an cajkvski uy st th nw signing. Bayn nv k bak. Th ub that Mu jin u nt hav bn m iffnt t th a-nquing Bayn si f tay. Thy ha just n agu hampinship 60 World Soccer

t thi nam, wn v 30 yas ai, an w yt t pay in th nwy-fm Bunsiga. Yt within th yas, Mu’s gas ha sht thm ut f th gina agu (suth) an n t cup Winns’ cup gy. H was an antithsis f th ahtypa big, stng nt-fwa; quit th vs. Mu was sht, stky an musua, but a w nt f gavity gav him th g in baan an aaity v ppsing fns wh tw ha an shus v him at ns an f-kiks. Thy w sti tumbing bak wn t ath whn Mu was aay stabbing th ba int th nt. “Withut G, w wu nv hav ha that suss,” sai Bknbau ai this ya. “H s th gas an ha th mntaity that tk us fwa. H wasn’t th bst pay but h was th mst imptant. G was th MVP.” Mu’s hau f 68 intnatina gas inu fu in a math n fu asins, spit paying at th hight f ftba’s mst fnsiv a. His 566 gas f Bayn bught sivwa jinging. Thy wn th

World Cup winner… Muller scores West Germany’s second goal v Netherlands

eupan cup Winns’ cup in1967 thn th eupan cup in1974 – whn h stuk twi in th pay fina against Atti Mai – as w as in1975 an1976. In1976 Bayn fw up with th w ub wn, fating Suth Amian hampins cuzi 2-0 at hm an awing 0-0 in Bazi. Mu pn th sing in Munih. F a that his gasing  was phnmna, Mu was iminay unat as a ftba. ray i h hav a han t ispay a fu ang f his abiitis. oppnnts nsistnty misjug his a-un gifts. Amng ths aught ut w ls Unit in th1975 eupan cup fina in Pais. Mu ha t p bak int th mifi baus f an injuy-nf shuff ay in th math. This tim, h  Bayn by bth shming an sing, puing th stings in mifi bf nvting a ss t sa a 2-0 vity in th 81st minut. Fans with ng mmis aim it was ny Mu’s injuy absn in th sping f1977 that pvnt Bayn making it fu eupan cups in a w. Mu was Wst Gmany’s Pay f


Gerd Muller the Year in1967 and1969 and then European Footballer of the Year in1970. It was no contest. He had top-scored at the World Cup in Mexico with ten goals, including the closerange, extra-time volley that beat England so dramatically in the quarter-finals. “He is my scorer of ‘little’ goals,” said Helmut Schon, manager of the West German side who achieved the coveted European and world double. Der Bomber scored twice in the 3-0 defeat of the Soviet Union in the1972 European Championship final, then the winner against the Netherlands in the 1974 World Cup decider on Muller’s home turf in Munich. Schon understood well that Muller’s specific talent lay in finishing off moves from close range in and around the six-yard box. He was all about rapid anticipation and split-second explosion. His winner against the Dutch was the finest and most important example of a “little” goal. The teams were locked at1-1 with two minutes remaining in the first half when Rainer Bonhof escaped down the German right wing. Muller, apparently off balance at the near post, had to swivel on Bonhof’s short cross and shoot all in one movement. His acute sense of goal was all it took to jab the ball beyond keeper Jan Jongbloed for what proved the winner. In fact, Muller should have been credited with a second goal after the interval. He accelerated clear of the Dutch defence to beat Jongbloed again, only to be flagged offside. Referee Jack Taylor and his linesman, deceived by Muller’s quickness of thought and action, duly disallowed the “goal”. Even Muller’s team-mates accepted the decision, raising not one whisper of protest. Yet slow-motion reruns prove that Muller was safely onside when the pass was hit. “I was content I’d made the right decision,” said Taylor years later. “Muller was yards clear of the last defender. But when I saw the slow-motion rerun I saw I’d been wrong. Muller had been too quick for his own good!” Muller retired from the national team after the World Cup triumph but played on with Bayern until early1979. Then, disaffected with the game in general and upset at being substituted by coach Pal Csernai in a defeat at Eintracht Frankfurt, he decided to quit altogether. Muller’s last goal for Bayern was in a 2-1 defeat by Kaiserslautern on November18,1978; his last game was a 4-0 win over Borussia Dortmund on February10,1979.

Enduring rancour over his abrupt exit meant it was not until September 20, 1983, that he was honoured with a “farewell match” between Bayern and the West German national team in the Munich Olympic Stadium. The late1970s were the high days of the razzmatazz that was the doomed North American Soccer League. Beckenbauer had left for New York Cosmos in1977. Muller always insisted he would never go and anyway, he spoke no English. But the money was too good to turn down. Muller scored 40 goals in three seasons for Fort Lauderdale Strikers and poured his earnings into a steakhouse.

respectively. They were shocked by the Muller they found in Florida, brought him back to Munich, supported him through a brutal treatment regime then put him to work, coaching the youngsters. Later he would admit: “Overcoming my addiction to alcohol was my greatest victory, even more important than winning the World Cup.” Tributes on Muller’s death were appropriately generous. Bayern president Herbert Hainer, the former adidas boss, hailed “the greatest striker there has ever been – and a fine person, a personality in world football. Without Gerd Muller, FC Bayern would not be the club we all love today. His name and the memory of him “Without Gerd, we would never have had that will live on forever.” success…he wasn’t the best player but he was Oliver Kahn, who recently the most important. Gerd was the MVP” Franz Beckenbauer, Muller’s team-mate and room-mate succeeded Rummenigge as CEO, said: The investment turned sour. Fading “He has been one of the greatest glory and boredom sent Muller spiralling legends in the history of FC Bayern. into depression and alcoholism. He His achievements are unrivalled. As a spent too much time drinking with player and a person, Gerd Muller stands holidaying fans and not enough time for FC Bayern and its development into on the business. Later he said: “I did one of the biggest clubs in the world not realise what was happening, I just like no other. Gerd will forever be did not know. Then, they came along in our hearts.” and saved me from it.” Muller, who was awarded FIFA’s German champions… “They” were Muller’s old team-mates, Order of Merit for services to the Muller holds aloft Beckenbauer and Uli Hoeness, by now game in1998, is survived by wife Bayern’s second Bundesliga trophy Bayern president and general manager Uschi and daughter Nicole.

Room-mates…Beckenbauer and Muller at New York Cosmos and Fort Lauderdale Strikers in1980 WORLD SOCCER 61


SEAMUS CLEMAN

“I want to win a trophy at the club and I will keep trying to do that until I’ve kicked my last ball” The Everton skipper discusses life at Goodison Park under new manager Rafael Benitez Words & Interview by Kevin Palmer

Many Everton supporters may never accept Rafael Benitez as manager of their club, but Toffees captain Seamus Coleman believes the former Liverpool boss can win the popular vote among the Goodison Park faithful if he ends their long wait for a trophy. Few managerial coronations have divided a fan base like the appointment of Benitez at Everton in June, with the former Liverpool manager – who infamously dismissed his latest employer as a “small club” back in 2007 – facing an uphill battle to win over his critics. Yet Coleman believes all with a blue pulse need to unite behind the latest incumbent of the Everton hot seat. “The appointment of a former Liverpool manager was never going to go down so well with some Everton fans, but we all have to take a step back now and get behind him, which I’m sure our supporters will do,” said the Republic of Ireland international. “At the end of the day, we all want success and Rafael Benitez has had success in his career. He has won the biggest trophies in the game, won in different countries and I know the fans will get behind us this season because we all want the same thing – success. “He had a great time at Valencia, he won 62 WRLD SCCER

stuff at Chelsea, we know he won stuff at Liverpool. He did well with Newcastle and won a cup with Napoli. So he’s a successful manager and I think as a club we’ve got to get behind this. We all want the same thing. “Like anything in football, it’s all about results and I’m sure the manager will get some good results for us and we can all move forward from the talk of the summer and what his previous ties were as well. “We’ve all got to get fully behind the new manager and try first and foremost to impress him and get into his plans and try to be successful for Everton Football Club, because that’s what we all want. That’s what the board want, that’s what the players want, that’s what the manager will want and it’s what the fans will want.” Benitez is the seventh manager Coleman has worked under during his time as an Everton first-team performer and he admits that is too many for a club with their eyes on trophy success. “What’s disappointing for me is we’ve had so many managers during my time at the club,” continued Coleman. “Ultimately, that’s a reflection on the players – I don’t think that’s just a reflection on the manager. Personally, I’ve been a part

of the first team for12 years, so it’s also a reflection on me. “We are crying out for that success and we’ve not got that recipe right yet for whatever reason. I do believe that the club will win a trophy very soon. I don’t know how soon but that’s what we are all looking for. “We’re going into a new stadium very soon, we’ve got the financial backing now we didn’t have many years ago and we have a manager in place who has a track record of success, so let’s be positive. “It’s not like everything needs to be ripped up now and go again. But I do know every manager is different and he’ll want to put his own stamp on things as quickly as possible and bring his own style and philosophy.” Coleman’s commitment to the Everton cause was highlighted by the new contract he signed ahead of the start of the season, keeping the 32-year-old at the club until 2023. Providing he avoids injuries, he should go on to overtake Tim Howard’s Premier League appearance record for the Toffees, having made his debut in 2009 in a side managed by David Moyes and featuring Marouane Fellaini and Tim Cahill. Yet he still lacks the one piece of gold he craves. “To be honest, if I get to the end of my career and I haven’t won a trophy with


Everton, I will feel like I’ve not achieved what I wanted to,” he conceded. “When I went to Everton, the first aim was to break into the first team and I had little goals along the way, but then you really fall for the club and understand what the club means, you want to be part of that history of winning. “You see the videos and the images of Everton players lifting trophies in the1980s and you understand how big the football club is. “When some players sign for Everton, they don’t realise how big the football club is and how successful it was. Yes, those trophy wins were a long time ago, but this is a big club. “So if I get to the end of my career with this football club and I haven’t won anything, I will look back on it with regret. “I don’t want to be remembered as an Everton player who has played 300 or 400 games for the club and everyone says it’s a great achievement, well done. “I want to win a trophy at the club and I will keep trying to do that until I’ve kicked my last ball at the club.” At the age of 32, life after football will soon be a subject on Coleman’s agenda and, while management and coaching could be part of his future, a step back into a quiet life back home in Ireland with his three children and wife Rachel may appeal. “I see a lot of players saying life after football can be a scary thought, but it doesn’t frighten me at all,” he added. “My life has always been focused on family and football and when the second one of those goes, I won’t need the daily acknowledgment from people or the applause of the fans. I don’t need that in my life. I’m not going to miss the feeling of being a footballer. It won’t leave a void in my life. “Will I go into management? I don’t know. I’ve worked under a lot of great managers, all very different in the way they do things and you learn something from each one of them. If I went into coaching and management, I’d take what I have seen from them with me into that job, soak up all the information each one brings and try to blend it all together for when you become a coach or a manager. “I’m doing my coaching badges at the moment and I have enjoyed working on them, but I could easily disappear back to Donegal with the family and not have too much to do with football. “I will miss this job, don’t get me wrong, I love it. That love for football has never faded for me through the years. I go in every day and I love it, I’m grateful that I am able to work in this profession and I love working hard in training every day, but there is more to life than football and when my time is up, I’ll accept it and do whatever is next in my life.” Seamus Coleman was speaking to World Soccer as he launched SPAR’s Better Choices summer 2021 campaign


Women’s Football Glenn Moore

Canada take gold Sweden secure silver after penalty shootout defeat, while a bronze medal for the USA prompts an inquest for the world champions They had risen from their beds in their millions, bleary-eyed but hopeful. When the gold medal match at the Tokyo Olympics kicked off, it was 5am in Vancouver, 6am in Edmonton and 8am in Toronto. Nearly three hours later – with a lot of strong coffee consumed, probably a few early beers, too – there were 4.4 million Canadians watching as Julia Grosso stood, trying to calm her nerves, just inside the penalty area. The 20-year-old was about to take the12th shot of a penalty shootout. With only four previously converted, the score was Sweden 2, Canada 2. Grosso shot left-footed to the right of Hedvig Lindahl. The veteran goalkeeper got a strong hand to the ball but could not keep it out. After successive bronze medals, Canada had finally won Olympic gold. Their maiden major honour tasted all the sweeter for having despatched the United States in the semi-final. The first victory over their neighbours in 20 years did not just slay a nemesis, it avenged the bitterly controversial semi-final defeat at Old Trafford at the same stage of the 2012 Games. The question now is whether Canada can build on this triumph and establish a domestic professional foothold; at present Canadian women have to leave to forge a career. Of the 22-woman Olympic squad, nine play south of the border in the NWSL, five in England’s WSL (Deanne Rose joined Reading from Florida Gators during the tournament), four in France, one in Sweden, and three

in the US college system – including Grosso who plays for the Texas Longhorns. The Canadian men, far less successful internationally, have a fledgling eight-team domestic league and three franchises in the US-based Major League Soccer. “It’s now or never,” said Christine Sinclair after capping an illustrious career with gold. The 38-year-old, the leading scorer in international football of either gender, added: “I’ve been on the podium twice before and nothing changed. If a gold medal doesn’t change some things in our country, nothing’s going to. My plea is for Canada to fully support this team. It’s time we get a professional league or some professional teams.” The former seems unlikely. Lisa Baird, NWSL commissioner, admitted in August that the nine-year-old league is still loss-making, in spite of a third of the players being paid the league minimum $22,000 [£16,000]. Given how successful the US team has been for decades it is hard to envisage the much smaller Canadian market being ready to support a league system off the back of one gold medal. More probable is entering a team or two into NWSL. Baird added: “I’ve heard from fans in Vancouver, Toronto and other places say that they’d love to have a team, and it’s certainly something we will seriously consider as we finalise our expansion plans.” NWSL will expand to12 teams next year and is aiming for14 in the near future. Nick Bontis, president of Canada

Winners…Canada players celebrate after Julia Grosso’s winning penalty

Dejected…Megan Rapinoe after the United States’ semi-final defeat

64 WORLD SOCCER

Soccer, said last year: “I’ll work my butt off to get an NWSL team in Canada,” and he reiterated his commitment in the wake of Tokyo. “It just takes some wealthy individuals in Canada willing to invest in women’s sports and women’s soccer,” added Sinclair. Easy to ask for, less easy to commit to, but those 4.4m viewers should have made a few investors ponder the possibilities. Back below the border, the fall-out was more of an inquest than a celebration of the bronze medal that the US team ultimately won. The reigning world champions, unbeaten since January 2019, were heavily fancied. But they were a shadow of their usual dominant selves and fortunate to make the semi-finals. Questions were asked of Vlatko Andonovski, in his first test as coach, but Megan Rapinoe put the onus closer to home: “I just think the players have a lot to look at ourselves about,” she said. “We need to perform better, period. We can deep-dive into analysing…but it’s just getting it done from players, from all of us.” The US were well beaten in their opening match by a Swedish side that were the tournament’s outstanding team, winning all five matches en route to the final. There, however, they met the best-organised team. Even with the kick-off moved to 9pm (it was originally scheduled, due to US TV demands, for the steaming heat and humidity of the middle of the day) they could only


Heartbreak…beaten finalists Sweden were the tournament’s outstanding team

goals, notably for the Netherlands who defeated Zambia10-3 and China 8-2, and drew 3-3 with Brazil and 2-2 with the US. Vivianne Miedema scored ten, but was one of two Dutch players to miss as they lost the quarter-final penalty shootout to the US. However, the key moment was Alyssa Naeher saving Lieke Martens’ spot-kick at 2-2 with nine minutes left of the regular 90. Zambia’s Barbra Banda had a remarkable tournament with hat-tricks against the Netherlands and China, where she plays in Shanghai. Wang Shuang scored four in the latter tie but the 4-4 draw effectively eliminated a disappointing Chinese team. Of the South Americans, Brazil looked potent in the group stage but were another team suffocated by Canada, losing the quarter-final on penalties, while Chile made a creditable debut with a trio of narrow defeats. Hosts Japan were underwhelming. The absence of fans (only Rifu of the six venues allowed spectators, and that at a few thousand) affected Canada captain Christine Sinclair capped them and they only won one of their Australia went on to a narrow defeat four matches. It was, however, an against Sweden in the semi-finals but achievement to put on the football left full of hope for the 2023 Women’s tournament given the constraints of the World Cup which they co-host with New pandemic. With a wider geographical Zealand – whose team did respectably spread than any other Olympic event given their minimal preparation. the risk of COVID-19 was significant, but Except for the matches involving the fortunately the only infectious outbreak eventual winners, it was a tournament of was football fever in Canada. fielding an understrength team, an English-dominated Team GB may feel the Olympics were also a missed opportunity. Despite limited preparation Team GB had looked good, defeating Chile and Japan to qualify ahead of the Canada match. They then led Australia 2-1 with two minutes remaining in the quarter-final. But despite Hege Riise’s side defending in growing numbers they somehow left Sam Kerr with space and time in the box, and suffered the inevitable consequence. Kerr struck again as Australia won 4-3. Team GB were left with the memory of outstanding performances from the evergreen Scot Kim Little, tyro winger Lauren Hemp, and the clinical Ellen White, who scored six goals in four games including a hat-trick against Australia.

break Canada down once. But Stina Blackstenius’ fifth goal of the Games was cancelled out by Jessie Fleming’s penalty. In the shootout, faced with the jack-in-a-box antics of goalkeeper Stephanie Labbe, their nerve failed. Cruelly, the captain Caroline Seger, a giant of the game in Sweden, had

“If a gold medal doesn’t change some things in our country, nothing’s going to…it’s time we get a professional league or some professional teams”

the chance to win gold with their fifth spot-kick, but shot over. Canada only won two matches without recourse to a shootout, and only scored six goals, but conceded just four with their defence outstanding. Their performance was a triumph for new coach Bev Priestman, who took over in October 2020 after two years as assistant to England’s Phil Neville. A former coach of the Canadian U17 and U20 teams, Priestman knew her youthful squad well. However, the Englishwoman would not have taken the job had the Football Association opted to promote her when Neville quit. The FA instead poached the Dutch Euro 2017 winner Sarina Wiegman. It seemed a coup at the time, but there will now be added pressure on Wiegman at next summer’s home-hosted Euros to prove the FA were right. Having drawn with Canada, despite

Canada legend… Christine Sinclair

Top scorer… Netherlands’ Vivianne Miedema hit ten goals

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Exclusive reports from our worldwide network of correspondents 82 MARTIN DEL PALACIO LANGER Gold Cup

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STEVE MENARY Belarus

JOHN DUERDEN Asia

KEIR RADNEDGE Europe

MARK GLEESON Africa 76

PLUS

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TIM VICKERY South America

LASANA LIBURD CONCACAF

Gold Cup… review of the United States’ triumph

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82 PREVIEWS/UPDATES 68 Euro e 2022 World Cu ualifiers 70 South America 2022 World Cu ualifiers 72 Asia 2022 World Cu ualifiers 74 Africa 2022 World Cu ualifiers 76 CONCACAF 2022 World Cup qualifiers NEWS/REVIEWS 79 Belarus 80 2020 Ol m ics 82 2021 CONCACAF Gold Cu DIARY 78 The month in numbers 84 Global diar SQUADS 86 2021 CONCACAF Gold Cu 88 2020 O m ics men 90 2020 Olympics women RESULTS, TABLES, FIXTURES 92 Internationals 94 Club football

SAMINDRA KUNTI Olympics 68

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2020 Olympics…the men’s and women’s squad lists WORLD SOCCER 67


UEFA World Cup Qualifier

World Cup holders…France were held to a1-1 draw by Ukraine in March

U p d eta

KEIR RADNEDGE

Rivalries renewed on road to Qatar

While some nations will also be embarking on new eras following the appointment of new head coaches The interruption of the rescheduled Euro 2020 tournament has cast an intriguing air of mystery over Europe’s resumed Qatar 2022 qualifiers.

Under pressure…Germany were beaten 2-1 by North Macedonia at home in March and are currently outside the qualifying places

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Usually the World Cup preliminaries politely await the post-Euro autumn, when shattered summertime dreams can be renewed. This time around the horizon has been clouded by the Euro fall-out. Notable among those with a hazy view will be Germany, Russia and Switzerland, who have all changed their national coach. Germany always knew that Joachim Low would abandon ship after sailing them into the World Cup qualifiers and the Euros. Hansi Flick thus had a watching brief at Euro 2020. Not so well-prepared for a change of command were Switzerland and Russia after contrasting European Championship campaigns.

Stanislav Cherchesov’s word-spinning proved insufficient to keep him in post after Russia’s group-stage exit; the haste of his departure was evidenced by the need for successor Valeri Karpin to double up, initially, with his club job at Rostov before leaving the club in early August. By contrast Switzerland’s impressive progress to the Euro 2020 quarter-finals, including the dramatic shootout victory over France, raised significantly the profile of coach Vladimir Petkovic – so significant that they lost him to Bordeaux in France. His replacement is former Swiss defender Murat Yakin, whose coaching CV includes such clubs as Basel and Spartak Moscow. Four of the ten groups were headed on restart by teams who had won all three early games: newly-crowned European champions Italy, Euro 2020 runners-up England, Euro 2020 semi-finalists Denmark and, suprisingly, Armenia. Roberto Mancini’s Azzurri are in one of the least threatening groups and should soon be booking flights to Doha. Their only serious resistance may be the imminent away trip to a Switzerland team under new management and then the reverse tie in November, although the 3-0 victory over the “Nati” at the Euros suggests that it would take quite


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T sce…Sebia stike Aleksada Mitic

Portugal’s following qualifiers against Azerbaijan, Luxembourg or Serbia, for whom Aleksandar Mitrovic tops the scoring charts with five goals. Spain must envy such a striker to complement their build-up skills: that weakness cost them badly in Euro 2020. Still, once they have withstood an immediate test in Sweden the rest should be comparatively plain sailing. Didier Deschamps survived France’s misfiring Euro 2020 campaign and a four-point cushion should permit a comfortable resumption of their World Cup defence. No reigning title-holders have ever failed to qualify (Uruguay did not enter in1934 after winning in1930) but Les Bleus must sort out attacking balance among Antoine Griezmann, Karim Benzema and Kylian Mbappe to avoid such a fate. At least Deschamps need not reshuffle his entire team, unlike Flick with Germany. Joshua Kimmich, Serge Gnabry and Co. may come to rue their shock home defeat by North Macedonia in March. Every new tournament provides a platform for surprise and Armenia can fulfil this role after winning their first three Group J ties. Goals from Tigran Barseghyan inspired home victories over Iceland and Romania, an indication of the challenge awaiting in Yerevan after those long flights into European Asia. Note that North Macedonia, thrilled by their outsiders’ Euro debut, also began well in pursuit of what will probably be the “other” qualifying slot with Germany. Few other mid and low-range nations threaten to disturb the status quo. Scotland, encouraged by their Euro campaign, can reach the World Cup finals for the first time since1998 through Group F. Wales’ October 8 trip to Czech Republic can be crucial in Group E while, the next day, the fate of Teemu Pukki’s Finland may rest on their home tie against Ukraine in Group D.

the turnaround from new coach Yakin in the dugout to slow down Italy’s progress. Denmark were swept to the Euro semifinals on a powerful wave of emotion arising out of the Christian Eriksen drama. Whether they can rekindle such spirit is open to question but they boast a secure cushion thanks to a 4-0 away win over Austria, who proved no one’s pushovers in the summer. England’s return to action will be accompanied by the usual Premier League managers’ bleats about fixture pressure and injury fears. Poland and Hungary present awkward stumbling blocks, whether Gareth Southgate looks to make changes to his team or stick with the formula that took them Four of the ten groups were to the Euro 2020 final. headed on restart by teams who Either way, for all the had won all three early games talent, England must prove more consistently creative to justify World Cup optimism. Winners of the ten groups all Italy missing out on Russia 2018 will qualify direct for the finals in Qatar. offer a warning to the other big-hitters. The other three slots will be decided Even Portugal, Spain, France and by play-offs featuring the ten group Germany must conquer their own runners-up and the two best nonnerves as well as rivals poised to qualifying Nations League group winners (based on Nations League punish post-Euro jitters. If Cristiano Ronaldo doesn’t surpass overall ranking). The single-leg Ali Daei’s all-time international scoring semi-finals will be played next record against Republic of Ireland, he March 24-25 and the singlewill be confident of doing it in one of match finals on March 28-29.

ThE STAnDInGS

Group A p 1 Portu al 3 2 Serbia 3 3 Luxembour 2 4 Re . of Ireland 2 5 Azerbai an 2 Group B p 1 S ain 3 2 Sweden 2 3 Greece 2 4 Geor ia 3 5 Kosovo 2 Group C p 1 Ital 3 2 Switzerland 2 3 Northern Ireland 2 4 Bul aria 3 5 Lithuania 2 Group D p 1 France 3 2 Ukraine 3 3 Finland 2 4 Bosnia-Herze ovina 2 5 Kazakhstan 2 Group E p 1 Bel ium 3 2 Czech Re ublic 3 3 Wales 2 4 Belarus 2 5 Estonia 2 Group F p 1 Denmark 3 2 Scotland 3 3 Israel 3 4 Austria 3 5 Faroe Islands 3 6 Moldova 3 Group G p 1 Turke 3 2 Netherlands 3 3 Montene ro 3 4 Norwa 3 5 Latvia 3 6 Gibraltar 3 Group h p 1 Croatia 3 2 Russia 3 3 Slovakia 3 4 C rus 3 5 Slovenia 3 6 Malta 3 Group I p 1 En land 3 2 Hun ar 3 3 Albania 3 4 Poland 3 5 Andorra 3 6 San Marino 3 Group J p 1 Armenia 3 2 North Macedonia 3 3 German 3 4 Romania 3 5 Iceland 3 6 Liechtenstein 3

W 2 2 1 0 0

D 1 1 0 0 0

L pts 0 7 0 7 1 3 2 0 2 0

W 2 2 0 0 0

D 1 0 2 1 0

L pts 0 7 0 6 0 2 2 1 2 0

W 3 2 0 0 0

D 0 0 1 1 0

L pts 0 9 0 6 1 1 2 1 2 0

W 2 0 0 0 0

D 1 3 2 1 1

L pts 0 7 0 3 0 2 1 1 1 1

W 2 1 1 1 0

D 1 1 0 0 0

L pts 0 7 1 4 1 3 1 3 2 0

W 3 1 1 1 0 0

D 0 2 1 1 1 1

L pts 0 9 0 5 1 4 1 4 2 1 2 1

W 2 2 2 2 0 0

D 1 0 0 0 1 0

L pts 0 7 1 6 1 6 1 6 2 1 3 0

W 2 2 1 1 1 0

D 0 0 2 1 0 1

L pts 1 6 1 6 0 5 1 4 2 3 2 1

W 3 2 2 1 0 0

D 0 1 0 1 0 0

L pts 0 9 0 7 1 6 1 4 3 0 3 0

W 3 2 2 1 1 0

D 0 0 0 0 0 0

L pts 0 9 1 6 1 6 2 3 2 3 3 0 WORLD SOCCER 69


CONMEBOL World Cup Qualifier TIM VICKERY

So many games, so little time

Chaotic schedule could produce interesting results in tightly-packed table The original reluctance of the players to take part in the recent Copa America was based on two areas of discontent. One, of course, was the pandemic. The other was the idea that preference should have been given to getting up to scratch with World Cup qualification. This question now needs to be addressed. There are12 rounds of qualifiers to complete by the end of March and, even with an extra FIFA date created at the end of January, this is still going to be a very tight squeeze, almost certainly involving triple headers in ten days in a vast continent. The games, then, will be coming thick and fast. And the scenario has divided the teams into what effectively looks like two different competitions. Brazil and Argentina can concentrate on preparing a team for Qatar. That does not mean that the pressure is off – it never is for a Brazil coach, especially one who has just lost

Brazil and Argentina can concentrate on preparing a team for Qatar…everyone else is scrambling around with hopes and fears

Leaders…Brazil have a100% winning record in qualifying so far

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a Copa America at home, the first time this has ever happened to Brazil. So although his side are100 per cent in the campaign, and qualification is close to a formality, Tite needs a good run of results coupled with impressive performances. In a sense he is a victim of his own success. Five years ago when he took over Brazil were struggling to make it to Russia. That task then became so easy that victories over South American rivals have been taken for granted – until, of course, the final of the Copa. But to compete with the western Europeans at the end of next year – the true challenge – he will surely have to solve his problem at centre-forward. Rivals Argentina are unbeaten and relatively comfortable in second place.

They emerge from the Copa with morale sky high. There are potential dangers here – the sense, after ending the long wait for a title, of mission accomplished, for example, which undid Colombia after they had won the 2001 Copa. And the defensive positions are still not nailed down. But the rest of the campaign should serve as an audition for Qatar. Everyone else is scrambling around with hopes and fears, and just five points separate third-placed Ecuador from bottom-of-the-table Peru. These teams had contrasting fortunes in the Copa. Peru will hope that, as happened after the 2016 Copa, the recent tournament will serve as a springboard to more solid performances in qualification. Ecuador were without a win in all seven games they played in June and July. But coach


U p tead

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Troubled times…James Rodriguez is misfiring for his country

Marcelo Martins…the Bolivian is the top scorer in qualifying with six goals

Copa champs… Argentina resume qualifying as champions of South America

Gustavo Alfaro consistently played down the importance of the Copa, his side did well against the tougher opponents and, as Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni commented after a hard-fought quarter-final, they have a highly-promising crop of youngsters – something that must make Chile very jealous. Uruguay have made it to the last three World Cups and Colombia to the last two, and both must feel confident of making it to Qatar. But there are problems to resolve. As both Russia 2018 and Brazil 2021 made clear, Colombia are badly dependent on James Rodriguez for attacking inspiration. In the Copa they finished third after winning just two games from seven – a record that can work much better in a tournament than in a qualification league.

THE STANDINGS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Team Brazil Argentina Ecuador Uruguay Colombia Paraguay Chile Bolivia Venezuela Peru

P 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6

W 6 3 3 2 2 1 1 1 1 1

Rodriguez has clearly fallen out with some members of the squad, and these relations need to be patched up quickly. Uruguay are very short of goals, which, given the attacking resources at their disposal, is a huge disappointment. Has 4-4-2 become a straitjacket?

D 0 3 0 2 2 4 3 2 1 1

L Pts 0 18 0 12 3 9 2 8 2 8 1 7 2 6 3 5 4 4 4 4

Should they continue with both Luis Suarez and Edinson Cavani up front? These are big decisions for coach Oscar Tabarez to take. Elsewhere, Paraguay have been dropping too many points at home, proof that coach Eduardo Berizzo has as yet been unable to implant the ultra-attacking game of his mentor, Marcelo Bielsa. Bolivia have started to pick up away points – two draws either side of a home win, giving coach Cesar Farias hope that they can shrug off a dreadful start, take advantage of the extreme altitude of La Paz and make it to their first World Cup since1994 in the United States. And, for the moment, at least, Venezuela can still dream of making their World Cup debut. The COVID epidemic they suffered during the Copa prevented coach Jose Peseiro doing anything else than defending in depth and hoping, and the two draws they obtained were the motive of considerable pride. Now they should have their attacking weapons back – striker Salomon Rondon flanked by quick wingers. And so they, like everyone else in the most competitive qualification campaign on the planet, are still entitled to have their sights on Qatar. WORLD SOCCER 71


AFC World Cup Qualifiers

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JOHN DUERDEN

Vietnam add intrigue to familiar line-up

Southeast Asian nation in final group stage for the first time, while continent’s leading powers prepare to face off again Familiarity may not breed contempt in the final round of qualification for the 2022 World Cup in Asia, but it has left fans and journalists around the continent desperately searching for something new. The12 teams that progressed through to this stage were, on July1, divided into two groups of six, with the top two from each going to Qatar and the two third-placed teams entering the play-offs. 72 WORLD SOCCER

Of the four top seeds, Iran and South Korea were placed together for the fourth consecutive campaign, which meant, over in Group B, Japan and Australia are also together, as they have been ever since qualification for 2010. There’s not much new to be said about these big rivals meeting once – well, twice – more as they know each other so well. Of this quartet, who all appeared at the last two World Cups, the Socceroos may be the most

vulnerable, though, of course, the pandemic is likely to have a huge part to play and could level the playing field. Group B looks to be the most interesting on paper, not least due to the presence of Vietnam in this stage for the first time. The Golden Stars have been the most improved team in Asian football in the past few years. Under the “Korean Hiddink” Park Hang-seo (a member of the Dutchman’s coaching staff at the 2002 World Cup), Vietnam


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country arguments in Riyadh, just as there won’t in Hanoi or Beijing. Group A looks a little less diverse, as five of the six are all West Asian nations. While Iran and South Korea are expected to make it, it is not a given. Iran struggled through the second round of qualification but improved after replacing coach Marc Wilmots with Dragan Skokic in February 2020. In Seoul, there is a feeling that coach Paulo Bento has not yet managed to get the best out of the Taeguk Warriors since arriving in 2018. The Portuguese boss may not survive if the team starts slowly against Iraq and Lebanon. Of the other teams looking to take advantage of any slip-ups, United Arab Emirates should be well placed. The UAE FA re-appointed Bert van Marwijk last year and there have been noticeable improvements in performance. Abdullah Ramadan has emerged as a midfielder of vision and creativity and has helped Ali Mabkhout move into joint-second in the active international goalscorer rankings – going into this international window, he has 76, level with Lionel Messi, and only behind Cristiano Ronaldo. Syria and Iraq are unpredictable, partly because they never play at home. There is talent in both countries, especially the latter, but there is a lack of consistency. Brazilians who have been naturalised Lebanon, the lowest-ranked team in the after successful stints in the league. group, is a tough place to go but have Elkeson, Alan Carvalho and Fernandinho other priorities. Given the collapse of (or, to give them their Chinese names: Ai the country’s economy and currency, Kesen, A Lan and Fei Nanduo) were all the $2.5 million earned for reaching in the squad. The league will be paused the third round will go to help prop up well before any qualifier to give Li and his the domestic game and pay wages of players as much chance to add to the clubs around the country. country’s sole World Cup appearance While the draw does look very back in 2002. It’s hard to see Team familiar, it does not mean that there Dragon taking one of the top two spots won’t be any surprises; especially in a but third is a definite possibility. world of COVID-19, which is more than Saudi Arabia pipped Australia to capable of throwing spanners in the second place on the road to Russia works of even the best-laid plans. and will be dangerous again. The Green Falcons have been steadily improving THE DRAW under Herve Renard – the man who led Morocco to Russia – since the GROUP A Frenchman was appointed in 2019 and this is another national team that has a Iran completely domestic-based squad with Iraq a league that will, once again, do all it Lebanon can to help; there won’t be any club v South Korea Syria United Arab Emirates GROUP B Australia China Japan Oman Saudi Arabia Vietnam One to watch… UAE’s Abdullah Ramadan (right) in action v Iraq

Upstarts…Vietnam midfielder Nguyen Cong Phuong (right)

We meet again…Iran and South Korea will face each other for the fourth consecutive qualifying campaign

Group B looks to be the most interesting on paper, not least due to the presence of Vietnam in this stage for the first time have added steel, determination and hunger to what was always a talented team, including midfielders such as Nguyen Cong Phuong and Nguyen Quang Hai. A third-place finish is a long shot but not out of the question. The same can be said about China, another team full of domestic-based players who are able to have lengthy pre-qualifier training camps and don’t have to worry about players in Europe struggling to report for national team duty due to travel restrictions. Not just that but former Everton midfielder Li Tie succeeded Marcello Lippi in 2019 and, quite frankly, has done a better job than the Italian. Despite a dodgy start in the second round, China won the last four games to move into the final round. The team looks settled and more confident and has been boosted by the additions of

Herve Renard…the coach took charge of Saudi Arabia in July 2019

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CAF World Cup Qualifiers

Favourites set to prosper MARK GLEESON

Few surprises on the cards in the group stage of Africa’s World Cup qualifying Algeria will go into Africa’s twice delayed kick-off of the group phase of World Cup qualifiers as arguably the best prepared team to ever enter the African preliminaries. Qualifying was supposed to begin in June, but was postponed when several countries had their stadiums deemed unfit for use for international matches. Instead of taking a holiday, the Algerians used the international window to set a new record for an unbeaten run by an African side. Friendly wins over Mauritania (4-1 in Blida), Mali (1-0 in Blida) and 2-0 away against Tunisia took their streak to 27, going past the old record held by the Ivory Coast. Even Riyad Mahrez held off on his post-season holidays after Manchester City’s run to the Champions League final, scoring in two of the three games as he helped his country fine-tune their preparations. They now go into qualifying as the form side and could well sweep through Group A where Burkina Faso look the only side capable of offering any potential resistance. Algeria are in a purple patch, fuelled by their Africa Cup of Nations success in Egypt in 2019, which ended almost 30 years without any continental success and has re-awoken a sleeping giant. The last defeat suffered by Algeria was an away game in a Cup of Nations qualifier against Benin in October 2018, and they start their World Cup qualifying bid at home against minnows Djibouti in a perfect dress rehearsal for their trip to

Unbeaten…Algeria go into the second round of Africa’s World Cup qualifiers full of confidence

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Ouagadougou straight after, for what is likely to be the only troubling clash they will have in their group. Coach Djamel Belmadi looks a no-nonsense operator, his pool of players is expanding all the time, particularly among the expatriate Algerians in France, and there is a self-belief that had previously been missing, as well as a record to now protect when they start the qualifiers. There are ten qualifying groups in the African prelims, with only the winners Rematch…Group G arch-rivals Ghana and South Africa have already played each other this year

advancing to home-and-away play-offs next March, which will determine the continent’s five sides for Qatar 2022. That only comes after the completion of the group phase in November, so there are no patterns to discern or potential match-ups to predict. But it is easy to see the likes of Mali, Egypt, Morocco, Nigeria, Senegal and Tunisia going through from the group stage, as they look overwhelming favourites in their respective groups. Group D is set to supply fireworks


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THE DRAW

w e iv e r P

ABOVE: Under as Cameroon and the Ivory Coast go Cameroon in Abidjan in the second pressure…2022 head-to-head in what is a tough draw game of the group. AFCON hosts for both countries. Ghana will have the psychological Cameroon edge over South Africa in Group G, after Cameroon can ill afford to miss out ABOVE RIGHT: edging them in recent Cup of Nations just months before they host the Cup DR Congo coach… qualifiers, but there is also the up-andof Nations finals, but they have not Hector Cuper coming Zimbabwe to contend with. If been convincing over the last year. they look after their The Ivorians will be despite able to forge an The last defeat suffered by Algeria players early advantage their limited when they host resources, they was an away game in a Cup of prove a real Nations qualifier against Benin in could surprise package October 2018 given the quality of their squad. Group J is wide open as Benin, DR Congo, Madagascar and Tanzania compete. They all have in common the fact that none were able to qualify for January’s Cup of Nations finals. Employing the veteran coach Hector Cuper is a statement of intent from the Congolese and they will be marginal favourites because they also have the best squad, even if they are often let down by administrative inefficiency and bungling officialdom. Benin are sticking with veteran French coach Michel Dussuyer despite their failure to get the point they needed in a belated June qualifier to reach the Nations Cup finals and will also fancy their chances. There very few outsiders worthy of consideration, however the Cape Verde Islands always push way above their weight and Zambia are also capable but in something of a slump. They fired Serbian coach Milutin Sredojevich in July after a poor COSAFA Cup campaign, and Under-20 coach Beston Chambeshi is caretaker for the start of the qualifiers where they are away in Mauritania and then hosting Tunisia. Their two key players, Patson Daka and Enock Mwepu, have just moved to the Premier League. Africa opened World Cup qualification way back in September 2019 with a first round of knockout matches involving the bottom 28 countries in the FIFA rankings. The extraordinary two-year gap between the first and second stage is indicative of the turmoil caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

GROUP A Algeria Burkina Faso Djibouti Niger GROUP B Equatorial Guinea Mauritania Tunisia Zambia GROUP C Cape Verde Central African Republic Liberia Nigeria GROUP D Cameroon Ivory Coast Malawi Mozambique GROUP E Kenya Mali Rwanda Uganda GROUP F Angola Egypt Gabon Libya GROUP G Ethiopia Ghana South Africa Zimbabwe GROUP H Congo Namibia Senegal Togo GROUP I Guinea Guinea-Bissau Morocco Sudan GROUP J Benin DR Congo Madagascar Tanzania WORLD SOCCER 75


CONCACAF World Cup Qualifiers

Final eight on the road to Qatar LASANA LIBURD

Who will join USA and Mexico at the World Cup?

In the 2018 World Cup qualifying series, the fireworks came on the final matchday, as bottom-of-the-table Trinidad and Tobago eliminated USA with a shock 2-1 win in Couva, a result that saw Panama advance to their first-ever senior FIFA tournament. Is there a surprise brewing for the Qatar 2022 World Cup qualifying series? First, let’s look at the three nations that have essentially hogged CONCACAF’s qualifying berths since the turn of the millennium (USA’s 2018 banana skin notwithstanding): Mexico, Costa Rica and the United States. An inaugural CONCACAF Nations League crown plus a seventh Gold Cup victory with a virtual C team was an awesome and timely show of strength by USA coach Gregg Berhalter, and the Stars and Stripes will surely be anxious to get going in CONCACAF’s new Octagonal. Chelsea attacker Christian Pulisic is USA’s marquee player and leads a gifted fresh-faced cast that includes 23-yearold Juventus midfield fixer Weston McKennie, teenage Borussia Dortmund schemer Gio Reyna and 21-year-old 76 WORLD SOCCER

P r e iv e w

Canada talisman… Alphonso Davies

frontman Josh Sargent, a recent acquisition for Norwich City from forward Rogelio Funes Mori emerging Werder Bremen. as one of the Gold Cup’s standouts, USA have tallied ten straight while star Wolves centre-forward Raul competitive wins since a surprise 2-0 Nations League defeat to Canada Jimenez is on the mend after a lengthy injury-enforced layoff. in Toronto in October 2019 and are Behind them, 36-year-old Club the confederation’s form team. It is America goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa difficult not to imagine them going shows little sign of slowing down, while the full distance in this World Cup Ajax defensive midfielder Edson Alvarez qualifying edition. and flanker Jesus Corona offer guile and Mexico football fans would not have enjoyed this summer too much, as USA have tallied ten straight competitive they lost successive wins…it is difficult not to imagine them finals to their bitter going the full distance in this World Cup North American qualifying edition neighbours in the Nations League and panache to the cause. Gold Cup tournaments, before being And, of course, there is Mexico’s edged out on penalties by Brazil in the intimidating Azteca Stadium in Mexico semi-finals at the Tokyo Olympics. City where they have not lost in11 Coach Gerardo “Tata” Martinez also lost star Napoli attacker Hirving Lozano outings – nine wins and two draws to a serious injury within ten minutes of – since a 2-1 defeat to Honduras in September 2013. their Gold Cup opener – a goalless Should Mexico’s home form hold, draw against Trinidad and Tobago. Mexico still have a player pool to envy El Tricolor will also be amongst the though, with Argentina-born Monterrey 32 nations at the Qatar World Cup.


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an inconvenience that Mexico, USA, Costa Rica, Jamaica and Honduras were not asked to endure. Pacy and versatile 20-year-old Bayern Munich flanker Alphonso Davies is Canada’s most recognisable face but hardly their only match-winner, as prolific Besiktas forward Cyle Larin, veteran playmaker Junior Hoilett and New England Revolution attacker Tajon Buchanan demonstrated in their 2021 Gold Cup semi-final run. At present, Canada’s COVID-19 restrictions force their footballers to play all their games on the road. If that holds, coach John Herdman’s task is more difficult – although not insurmountable for arguably the most talented crop of players in their history. Honduras, El Salvador and Panama complete the line-up and will not be out of their depth, although they are not obvious contenders for a World Cup qualifying spot. Honduras are generally tight at the back with some bite at the other end through athletic Boavista attacker Alberth Elis, while their Tokyo Olympic qualification suggests that a talented crop is emerging – led by 23-year-old Reggina flanker Rigoberto Rivas. But can coach Fabian Coito fashion his players into an irrepressible unit in time? Panama have been lukewarm themselves and, having only just bested Curacao in the second qualifying round, it is hard to see their adventure lasting much longer. If they are to taste success, 32-year-old UNAM Pumas forward Gabriel Torres would be heavily involved as he looks to add to an international tally of 22 goals from 96 outings. El Salvador, coached by former USA playmaker Hugo Perez, strengthened recently with the addition of Americanborn midfielder Alex Roldan (Seattle Sounders) while CD Aguila forward David Rugamos will hope to continue over match fees has dissipated. Head coach Theodore Whitmore settled for a his purple patch of eight qualifying quarter-final finish at the Gold Cup but goals from his first six qualifiers. El Salvador have not qualified for he can point to a weakened squad and a World Cup since1982. But then an untimely injury to new Aston Villa they have not made it even this far signing and talented attacker Leon Bailey. in12 years. One step at a time. At the last three Gold Cups, the Reggae Boyz, led by wily Philadelphia Union goalkeeper Andre Blake, were THE FINAL EIGHT twice runners-up and fourth-placed finishers respectively and must fancy Canada their chances of advancing to their Costa Rica second World Cup finals. Their odds of doing so should shorten El Salvador considerably if English-born West Ham Honduras United forward Michail Antonio joins Jamaica the cause, as has been rumoured. Mexico Canada will be there or thereabouts Panama as well. The Canucks took the long way into the Octagonal, as they navigated USA two qualifying rounds to get here – Top two…USA have beaten Mexico twice this summer

An alarming loss of form by Costa Rica, coupled with the resurgence of Jamaica and Canada, means that CONCACAF’s automatic third place is far from a shoe-in. Gifted Paris Saint-Germain goalkeeper Keylor Navas, Alajuelense playmaker Bryan Ruiz and experienced midfielder Celso Borges are suing ex-Costa Rica FA executives for defamation over a claim that they threatened to lose matches on purpose to get rid of former national coach Jorge Luis Pinto. It was an unwelcome distraction during a period in which Costa Rica tallied just one win in14 matches under coach Ronald Gonzalez. Luis Suarez replaced him for the Gold Cup and steered Los Ticos to wins over Guadeloupe, Jamaica and Suriname before they fell 2-0 to Canada in the quarter-finals. It was, at best, an anaemic showing from a near full-strength Costa Rica squad. And Suarez will hope that Navas inspires when he returns from the shoulder injury that kept him out of the Gold Cup. Jamaica have had their own internal issues, although talk of a player strike

Jamaica playmaker… Leon Bailey

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The month in numbers The facts and stats that have caught our eye in the world of football this month...

6

£6bn Reported relief fund planned by

195

UEFA to help clubs across Europe. Leicester City’s 1-0 victory over Manchester City means that the FA Cup winners have beaten the league champions in six of the last seven Community Shield clashes. FIFA-recognised international caps won by legendary Malaysia defender Soh Chin Ann, now officially acknowledged as the Amount that Internazionale most-capped male player of all president Steven Zhang is being time – 27 years after he retired. pursued for in a Hong Kong court.

$250m Olympics ace… Netherlands’ Vivianne Miedema

£10m Annual value of Arsenal’s sleeve

sponsor from the Rwandan tourist board – despite president Paul Kagame criticising the club’s performances on Twitter.

£100,000 Transfer offer made for professional

10

esports FIFA player Tom Leese – the first-ever offer of its kind.

2022 Return date for Leicester City’s

Wesley Fofana after a horror Goals scored by Vivianne Miedema tackle from Fer Nino in the Foxes’ at the Tokyo Olympics – a record pre-season friendly with Villarreal. haul for a single tournament.

24 Robert Lewandowski’s match-

winning brace against Borussia Dortmund in the German Super Cup took him to 24 goals against his former club – level with Wolfsburg as the team he has scored against the most times.

3

Chelsea’s victory against Villarreal in the UEFA Super Cup ended a three-match losing streak in the competition, having lost the 2012, 2013 and 2019 finals.

13

36

Goals scored by Celtic new boy Kyogo Furuhashi in an11-game spell for the Scottish side and his previous club Vissel Kobe.

£288.8m Cumulative transfer fees spent

Ferreira, Tottenham became the first English club to lose a game in UEFA’s Conference League, Champions League, Europa League, Cup Winners’ Cup and Intertoto Cup.

4Red cards shown to Roma players

The total fall in European football’s revenues due to the pandemic, according to Deloitte.

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In-form… Hulk

7

Copa Libertadores goals scored by Hulk since returning to Brazil, to fire Atletico Mineiro to their first semifinal since winning the 2013 edition.

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and their coach Jose Mourinho during a pre-season friendly defeat to Real Betis.

£3.4bn

Spanish winger Pedro recently became the first player in 36 years to move directly from Roma to Lazio, and only the fourth player in history to do so after Astutillo Malgioglio (1986), Franco Cordova (1979) and Attilio Ferraris (1936).

on Romelu Lukaku following his club-record £97.5m transfer from Internazionale to Chelsea, making him the most expensive footballer of all time.

1After their defeat to Pacos de

Purple patch… Celtic’s new goal king Furuhashi

Aged 38 years and 93 days, Dani Alves became the oldest medallist in men’s football Olympics history.

5

UEFA Super Cup… Chelsea triumphant

Consecutive years in which Mohamed Salah has scored on the opening day of the new season – a Premier League record.


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Belarus

Krumkachy…the Minsk-based side are flying high in the second tier

STEVE MENARY

Anti-establishment club under attack L

Second-tier Belarusian side Krumkachy are fighting for both promotion and democracy ike many Eastern European countries, leading clubs in Belarus survive in part or completely on some sort of state subsidy – apart from one. Krumkachy FC was founded a decade ago by a group of fans, and named after the ravens that dominate the skies of their home city, Minsk. Krumkachy were outsiders from the outset and their independence made the club popular with young Belarusians who did not understand why they could order pizza on their smartphone but not vote out their autocratic president, Alexander Lukashenko. Football in Belarus briefly achieved global recognition last year as the COVID-19 pandemic shut down many leagues apart from their Premier League. Belarus then stayed in the headlines due to protests over contested elections to remove Lukashenko, who claimed vodka and saunas could cure the global pandemic. With all Belarus’

clubs eliminated from UEFA competition by the end of July, football in the country has diminished. Krumkachy’s place as a hotbed for protest has flourished and the club is coming under increasing attack from the authorities.

Krumkachy’s place as a hotbed for protest has flourished and the club is coming under increasing attack from the authorities Number 25… Krumkachy fans show their support for the detained Aleksandr Ivulin

Krumkachy had won promotion to the Premier League in 2015 but were relegated after three seasons and denied a licence to return in 2018. That in itself is not unheard of. Every year, a handful of clubs in the top two leagues struggle to qualify for a licence due to problems

ranging from stadia, finances or lack of a youth academy. But Krumkachy fear their role in the protests is the real reason for the increasing assault. On August 30 last year, two Krumkachy players, Pavel Rassolko and Sergei Kozeka, were returning from training when they were caught up in a protest march and detained by Belarusian security forces, who have locked up more than 600 people. Kozeka was severely beaten and suffered a fracture of the third vertebra and damaged kidneys. The pair were released but there were protests before Krumkachy’s next match, a cup game with Dinamo Minsk. Krumkachy’s players refused to leave the dressing room unless they were allowed to wear T-shirts supporting their injured team-mates. Protest leader Maria Kolesnikova was also at the game, which Krumkachy surprisingly won 2-0 against Belarus’ establishment side Dinamo Minsk. Six days later, Kolesnikova was abducted and also jailed. Krumkachy’s profile grew further when Aleksandr “Sasha” Ivulin, a popular blogger, joined the club to make a series of videos on how to become a professional player, and given the squad number 25. Ivulin was an amateur striker and the partnership proved popular, only for the blogger to also be detained by the police, prompting more protests from fans. On the pitch, Krumkachy are in the running to return to the top flight under experienced coach Oleg Kubarev, but that could be scuppered if a rumoured plan for clubs to show a significant sum in their bank account before being allowed access to the Premier League – rumoured to be $1m – is ratified. The plans are to prevent clubs folding mid-season due to financial problems. Sputnik folded during the 2021 Premier League season and Torpedo Minsk, who were ironically promoted ahead of Krumkachy in 2018, folded their senior side a year later. Krumkachy only have a budget of $400,000, paid in stages by private sponsors, and have no chance of being able to comply with a rule that may have a good aim on the surface but would suit the authorities in keeping Belarus’ football outsiders out of the elite. Protesting…police disperse protesters on the streets of Minsk last year

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Japan

Brazil retain gold medal SAMINDRA KUNTI

But the country’s second consecutive Olympics victory fails to erase doubts about football’s long-term future at the Games

E

R e v i e w

ven Dani Alves, the 38-year-old warrior and right-back with countless trophies to his name, kneeled in celebration. After an enthralling contest, Brazil retained their Olympic crown with a 2-1 final win against a valiant but exhausted Spain, featuring in their third extra-time of the tournament. Brazil coach Andre Jardine hailed the victory against “a very difficult school”, pointing out that his team demonstrated enough “determination and pride” to ultimately

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prevail. Jardine feted the victory with beer and music from Oasis. And so the gold medal remained in South America, eluding Europe once again. The continent that has come to dominate the World Cup has not produced an Olympic winner since 1992, when Spain defeated Poland 3-2 in Barcelona. That squad included Pep Guardiola, Luis Enrique and Kiko in the tournament’s first iteration as an Under-23 competition. The 2008 Court of Arbitration for Sport ruling that clubs were not obliged to release players for the Beijing Olympic Games

further corroded the competition’s quality, leading to an existential vacuum: what does Olympic football really represent? What does it mean? Who is it for? The identity crisis was on full show in Tokyo, where Under-24 players were eligible because of the event’s year-long postponement. Once again, football was an afterthought and a nuisance in the Olympic cosmos, with the spotlight fixed on the likes of Eliud Kipchoge, Tom Daley, Katie Ledecky and Daiki Hashimoto. They conquered hearts and gold, while football – a

Golden goal… Malcom scores the winner in extra-time


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spt us t hgging a th attntin – was ft t its wn vis. Th fat that th tunamnt bgan tw ays bf th pning mny ny a t th sns that it s nt ay bng. oympi ftba mains qustinab, an ighty s. Th mptitin is a sw-bun, smwh btwn a vpmnt stag an a mpt sishw. In fat, th g f anmnss an iffnt vs f gavitas appi by th patiipating natins pint at smthing ntiy s – shu ftba simpy b sapp fm th oympi Gams? With th xptin f Spain, th eupan tams w nt invst in th mptitin. Gmany’s squa in’t ntain a sing pay fm thi eu 2020 paty, whi thi tw mst xpin pays, Max Kus an Maximiian An, havn’t wn a sni ap sin 2015 an 2014 sptivy. Th sut was a p shwing in Japan: utass in thi utain-ais by Bazi, with An snt ff in a 4-2 fat, thn iminat by Ivy cast in a1-1 aw fwing a naw 3-2 vity against Saui Aabia. At ast th 2016 finaists w nt as amntab as thi nighbus Fan: withut hsin an mphnsiv ahing, thy xit Gup A fwing havy fats against bth th hsts an Mxi, vating Fnh has t an at fm. With11 gas n – m than any th tam in th mptitin – thi pfman xabat a misab summ f Fnh ftba aft thi shk un f16 iminatin at th eupan champinship.

nugh quaity t tp Gup c aha f egypt an gin thi way past bth Ivy cast an Japan in th knkut stags. But th fina, Spain’s fist sin th 2000 Syny oympi Gams siv ma against camn, was a stp t fa. Pfigay in fnt f ga, a tait that as st th sni tam at eu 2020, stuk again. In fist-haf stppag-tim thy f bhin as Mathus cunha siz his han t gab th pn. In Bazi, th oympi utfit is a hafway hus t th sni tam an th Htha Bin stik, a quik, twft bak-t-ga nt-fwa, might w sv ha ah Tit’s attaking nunum. ra Sia’s Mik oyazaba quais in th sn haf, taking th gam t xta-tim, but Jain’s si ish th spa n th untattak that was aff thm by Spain. oth ppnnts, inuing Mxi in th smi-finas, ha sat bak t absb In th aftmath, vtan stik equas…Mk oyazaba ss f th pssu, but th Spanish w An-Pi Gigna pu n punhs. s masts Span “It was mpiat fm A t Z. Yu pn an, in th108th minut, substitut Mam a in bhin t hav t say ik it is,” sai th Tigs nt th Baziian winn fm an aut stik. “W ti, w gav vything, ang. By thn, Spain w a n but th ppnnts w ay, thi ft. Mifi Pi was paying tivy an physiay. Whn in his 73 math f th sasn. yu n11 gas, it’s nt asy, Tunamnt tp gas an w hav sn that taking th rihaisn was n iffnt. H Gams siusy is imptant.” fatu in 40 maths f evtn mbaking n an yssy t What does Olympic football really bf patiipat in th W cup quaifis, cpa Amia an Tky oympi represent? What does it mean? Gams. In just v tw mnths, Who is it for? h pay in 20 itis an fu mptitins n th ntinnts. His Nn f Matt Gunuzi, Kyian xpanatin? “I’m tainy azy f Mbapp, eua camavinga, dayt ftba an f th Selecao shit.” Upaman  Hussm Aua, a His attitu an ih wa pv igib, w psnt in Tky. A tam’s that Bazi’s bsssin with oympi hans pn n th avaiabiity f g has nt iminish aft ri 2016, thi bst pays. Buny’s chis W a nsqun f th tunamnt’s fatu in Nw Zaan’s nt un imptan in Suth Amia’s ftba vtan…aptan utu. Sm th ntinnts as at dan As bats t th quat-finas an Spain’s squa th vnt highy, but what Tky 2020 wnnng th g ma inu six pays fm eu 2020, mnstat abv a is that oympi ftba quis a maj think if it wants t main vant at a.

exhaust…P snks t hs kns fwng hs 73 gam f th sasn World Soccer 81


CONCACAF Gold Cu

R e v i e w

MARTIN DEL PALACIO LANGER

USA triumph in Gold Cup T The Stars and Stripes take the title with third-choice squad

he United States National Men’s Team started the summer with a specific set of goals: to end their run of eight years without a competitive win against arch-rivals Mexico; to give their new and talented generation minutes with the national team jersey; and to win a title along the way. Three months later, the mission was accomplished, and then some. After breaking the famous streak in the Nations League, defeating Mexico 3-2 in the final, coach Gregg Berhalter decided to rest his best players and face the continental tournament, the Gold Cup, with an alternative team,

82 WORLD SOCCER

Elation…Nicholas Gioacchini (right) and Miles Robinson (left) celebrate USA’s late winner


WORLD SERVICE

Forlorn...Qatar’s players are distraught after conceding a late goal against the USA in the semi-finals

in the win over Canada, again1-0. Shaq Moore opened the scoring in the first minute of the match but, from then on, the Canadians were the best team and just couldn’t find their way to the goal of the always-excellent Matt Turner. The win secured a place in the knockout round, but the road didn’t get any easier from there. Schalke’s young forward Matthew Hoppe, just one of four European-based players in the squad, unlocked a tough match against a physical Jamaica in the quarter-finals. The United States did not perform badly, but it was not enough to allay doubts. And if the Stars and Stripes were Victory…USA superior to their rivals in the quarterplayers celebrate with the trophy finals, the same could not be said for the semis. The opponents It was, so to speak, Qatar, Mexico’s A Team against were invited to the USA’s C Team competition, who arrived made up of mostly MLS players. with a full-strength squad and who had Nobody, not even the most loyal fans, surprised with an entertaining, offensive thought that this team was in a position style throughout the tournament. to win the competition, especially since During long stretches of the match, Mexico chose the opposite path. Fired the Qataris were much better, but they up by the previous defeat, coach Gerardo Player of the encountered an extraordinary Turner “Tata” Martino decided to bet everything Tournament… in the American goal, and even had on the tournament and bring his best Mexico midfielder a penalty in the second half, but their available squad. Barring the absence Hector Herrera of injured attacker Hirving Lozano, and goalkeeper and captain Guillermo Ochoa, it was, so to speak, Mexico’s A Team against USA’s C Team. Throughout the competition, despite making it through the rounds, the doubts generated by Berhalter’s team did not cease. The United States opened the tournament with a drawn out1-0 win over Haiti, where an early goal by Sam Vines somewhat masked criticism for not being able to fully counter the physical game of the Caribbeans. After a 6-1 victory over the weak Martinique, the questions returned

captain Hassan Al Haydos sent his effort over the bar. When the match seemed destined for extra-time, Gyasi Zardes – who, at 29, was the team’s oldest outfield player – finished off a great pass from Nicholas Gioacchini to seal the United States’ ticket to the final. There awaited a Mexico team that were considered big favourites due to the experience and quality of their players, in spite of the fact that they hadn’t played particularly well in the tournament. But the Stars and Stripes were up to the task. Despite being territorially dominated, appealing to order and discipline, Gregg Berhalter’s boys managed to limit El Tri’s offensive power and even generated the two clearest chances of the match against the run of play. Twice striker Paul Arriola came close to scoring, but he was prevented: first by Mexico goalkeeper Alfredo Talavera, then later by the post. The game ended 0-0 in regulation time, and when, after a tense overtime period a penalty shootout seemed almost inevitable, the winning goal arrived. Every time the United States had a chance on set pieces there was a sense of danger, and finally the USMNT finished the job in that way. A fine, curled cross by Kellyn Acosta found Miles Robinson, who beat Talavera to spring the upset. This was the USA’s seventh title in the Gold Cup – second to Mexico’s 11 – and, coupled with the triumph in the Nations League, has swung the pendulum again towards the American side after a decade of Aztec rule. With Qatar 2022 just around the corner, the future looks bright for Berhalter and his young team. While in the always-unstable Mexico, the waters are beginning to become muddy in what, before the summer, was a honeymoon period for Gerardo Martino and the impatient Mexican supporters. WORLD SOCCER 83


Global diar SEPTEMBER 3-29, 2021

Games and dates to pencil in for the month ahead

(All kick-off times are BST)

Friday September 3

EUROPE: With a pause in the week’s World Cup qualifiers, the U21s take over. England travel to Romania for a friendly, while a host of others play qualifiers for the next European Championship. SOUTH AMERICA: Chile host Brazil in the most eye-catching CONMEBOL World Cup qualifier. CONCACAF: The final round of World Cup qualifying begins, with Mexico playing host to Jamaica.

the first time since 2012, when the tie was postponed due to torrential rain. Elsewhere, Northern Ireland meet Switzerland, while Spain and Germany travel to Kosovo and Iceland respectively.

Friday September 10

ENGLAND: Birmingham City face Derby County in the first weekend after the international break. SOUTH AMERICA: Brazil face Peru in the early hours of Friday morning in a repeat of their Copa America semi-final clash. Saturday September 4 AFRICA: The first preliminary EUROPE: France and Ukraine meet round of qualifying for the CAF for the third time in12 months, with Champions League begins. the previous results a1-1 draw and Saturday September 11 a 7-1 win for Les Bleus. Elsewhere, Scotland host Moldova and Republic GERMANY: The Bundesliga’s top of Ireland face Azerbaijan. two from last season, RB Leipzig and Bayern Munich, face off. Sunday September 5 Sunday September 12 EUROPE: Switzerland meet Italy in a repeat of the Euros group FRANCE: Monaco and Marseille, stage. England, Spain, Belgium two teams hoping to challenge for and Germany are also in action. the Ligue1 title, go head-to-head. SOUTH AMERICA: In a repeat SPAIN: Barcelona face their first of the Copa America final, Brazil big La Liga test of the season with take on Argentina at the Maracana. a trip to Andalusia to face Sevilla. AFRICA: Two of the Premier League’s most clinical attackers go Monday September 13 head-to-head as Pierre-Emerick ASIA: In the AFC Champions Aubameyang’s Gabon take on Mo League, five round of16 games Salah’s Egypt in a WC qualifier. take place from both the east and west sides of the draw. Monday September 6 CONCACAF: USA face Canada as the World Cup qualifiers continue. AFRICA: Ivory Coast v Cameroon is the headline fixture in another round of World Cup qualifying.

Wednesday September 15

AFRICA: The 2021 COSAFA Women’s Cup gets underway, with record seven-time winners South Africa beginning the defence of their crown against Malawi. EUROPE: Qualifying for the Women’s World Cup begins, starting with Turkey v Portugal.

Thursday September 16

Wednesday September 8

EUROPE: Poland host England for 84 WORLD SOCCER

Tuesday September 21

EUROPE: Scotland v Faroe Islands and Estonia v Wales complete the first week of Women’s WC qualifiers. SOUTH AMERICA: It’s the last four of the Copa Sudamericana, with Red Bull Bragantino and Penarol facing tough away trips.

Wednesday September 22

SOUTH AMERICA: The semi-finals of the Copa Libertadores kick off, with Brazilian sides Palmeiras and Flamengo among the sides involved.

Thursday September 23

SCOTLAND: In the Scottish League Cup quarter-finals, Championship side Raith Rovers will be hoping to spring a surprise at Celtic.

CONCACAF: Philadelphia Union face Mexican giants America in the Friday September 24 CONCACAF Champions League. GERMANY: Newly-promoted Greuther Furth host Bayern Munich Friday September 17 for the first time since 2012-13. ENGLAND: Marcelo Bielsa and Saturday September 25 Leeds United head to St. James’ Park to face Newcastle United. ENGLAND: Last season’s AFRICA: The Champions League Champions League finalists, qualifying second legs take place. Chelsea and Manchester City, for the first time since Porto. Saturday September 18 meet ITALY: In Serie A it’s the Rome FRANCE: PSG face fellow Ligue1 derby, with Jose Mourinho facing hopefuls Lyon, while rivals Nice and Lazio for the first time since Monaco face off in southern France. joining Roma in the summer. ITALY: Last year’s runners-up Milan Sunday September 26 travel to Turin to face Juventus. ENGLAND: The North London Sunday September 19 derby between rivals Arsenal and Tottenham kicks off at the Emirates. ENGLAND: Nuno Espirito Santo faces Chelsea for the first time MEXICO: The first Superclasico of as Tottenham manager, with the the season between Club America Blues heading to North London. and Guadalajara takes place. BRAZIL: Corinthians host Palmeiras NETHERLANDS: PSV and Feyenoord clash in Eindhoven. in Sao Paulo’s Paulista derby.

Monday September 27

ENGLAND: Crystal Palace meet their rivals Brighton at Selhurst Park in the Premier League.

Tuesday September 28

Tuesday September 7

EUROPE: France host Finland while Scotland travel to Austria in the next round of UEFA qualifiers. ASIA: Vietnam’s bid to reach their first World Cup continues with a home game against Australia.

Monday September 20

EUROPE: Qualifying for the Women’s World Cup continues, with England v Luxembourg.

SOUTH AMERICA: The Copa Sudamericana semi-final second legs reach their conclusion to decide November’s finalists.

Wednesday September 29

Top-of-the-table clash…RB Leipzig v Bayern Munich

SOUTH AMERICA: The Copa Libertadores finalists will also be decided as both semi-final second legs are concluded in Brazil.


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S D AUQS

2021 CONCACAF GOLD CUP CANADA

COSTA RICA

GOALKEEPERS

1 DayneST.CLAIR (24)09.05.97 MinnesotaUnited(USA) 16 MaximeCREPEAU (27)11.05.94 VancouverWhitecaps 18 JaysonLEUTWILER (32)2504.89 Huddersfield Town( ng)

DEFENDERS

2 Alistai JOHNSTON 4 KamalMIL ER 5 StevenVITORIA 13 Fran STURING 15 Doneil HENRY 22 Richie LARYEA 23 CristianGUTIERREZ

(22)0810.98 Nashvil e SC(USA) (24)1605.97 CF ontreal (34) .01.87 Morerense( o ) (24)29.05.97 Unattached (28)2004.93 SuwonSamsun Bluewings(Kor) (26)07.01.95 TorontoFC (24)18.02.97 VancouverWhitecaps

6 SamuelPIETTE 7 StephenEUSTAQUIO 8 iamFRASER 14 MarkAnthonyKAYE 19 HarryPATON 21 JonathanOSORIO

(26)12.11.94 (24)2 12.96 (23) 302.98 (26)021294 (23)230598 (29)1206.92

3 TylerPASHER 9 L casCAVALLINI 10 JunorHOILETT 11 TheoCORBEANU 12 TajonBUCHANAN 17 CyeLARIN 20 AyoAKINOLA (until 20July) 24 TeshoAKINDELE (from23July)

(27)27.04.94 Houston ynamo(USA) (28)2812.92 VancouverWhitecapsFC (31)0506.90 Unattached (19) 705.02 Wolves(Eng) (22)0802.99 New ngandRevoluton(USA) (26)17.04.95 Besiktas (Tu ) (21)20.01.00 TorontoFC

JohnHERDMAN(Eng)

(45)1907.75

MIDFIELDERS

FORWARDS

(29)31.03.92

COACH

CF ontreal PacosFerreira( o ) ColumbusCrew(USA) LosAngeles C(USA) RossCounty(Sco) TorontoFC

OrlandoCity

1 Frederic TEJOU (33)130787 16 Kevin AJAX (33)31.08.87 23 YohannTHURAM-UL EN (32)31.10.88 DEFENDERS

2 Kevin MOESON 3 Kelly IREP 4 RonanHAUTERVILLE 5 SteveSO VET 12 MickaelALPHONSE 17 AnthonyBARON 18 ThomasPINEAU 21 ColmanMAKOUKE

LaGauloise CSMoulien Amiens(Fra)

6 Quentin ANNETTE (23)13.01.98 7 MavrickANNEROSE (25)291195 8 Kevin MALPON (25)01.03.96 13 Morga SAINT-MAXIMIN (23)02.08.97 15 Dimit iCAVARE (26)05.02.95 20 Steve sonCASIMIR (29)03.06.92

ClubFrancscan(Mtq) USRSaintRose Gosie Solidarte-Scolai e Sion(Sui) LaGauloise

9 RaphaelMIRVAL 10 MatthasPHAETON 11 SkeveenROMAGE 14 VikashTILLE 19 Luthe ARCHIMEDE 22 imit iRAMOTHE COACH

JocelynANG OMA

(25)04.05.96 Solidarte-Scolaire (21)080100 Guingamp(Fra) (23)22.12.97 USBM (23)26.11.97 CSMoulien (21)17.09.99 NewYorkRedBulls I (USA) (30)080990 ACMG (54)07.08.65

86 WORLD SOCCER

He ediano RealUnion(Spa)

(22)21.10.91

Cartagines

(31)02.0490

Alajuelense

2 YaelLOPEZ 3 Giancarlo GONZALEZ 4 KeysherFULLER 6 OscarDUARTE 15 FranciscoCALVO 19 Kendall WASTON 22 Ronald MATARRITA

(22)17.12.98 (33)08.0288 (26)12.0794 (32)03.06.89 (29)08.07.92 (33)01.01.88 (27)09.07.94

He ediano LAGalaxy(USA) He ediano Levante(Spa) ChicagoFire(USA) Sap issa FCCincinnati(USA)

5 CelsoBORGES 7 JohanVENE AS 8 Luis DIAZ 10 BryanRUIZ 11 A iel ASSITER 13 AllanCRUZ 14 JmmyMARIN 16 AlonsoMARTINEZ 17 JeffersonBRENES 20 avid GUZMAN

(33)27.05.88 DeportivoLaCo una(Spa) (32)271188 Alajuelense (22)06.1298 Columbus rew(USA) (35)18.0885 Alajuelense (26)27.09.94 HoustonDynamo(USA) (25)24.02.96 FCCincinnati(USA) (23)08.1097 Sap issa (22)15.10.98 Alajuelense (24)130497 erediano (31)18.02.90 Saprissa

DEFENDERS

MIDFIELDERS

FORWARDS

9 A ielRODRIGUEZ (31)27.0989 12 JoelCAMPBELL (29)26.0692 21 JoseGuil ermoORTIZ (29)20.06.92

Saprissa eon(Mex) DeportesTolima(Col)

(61)23. 259

GUATEMALA

Solidarite-Scolaire Enonis (Cyp) PharePetit-Canal Sete(Fra) Amiens(Fra) StadeNyonnais (Sui) Solida ite-Scolaire PharePetit-Canal

FORWARDS

(32)28.0489 (22)01.0399

COACH

(23)30.09.97 (25)01.0995 (31)21.11.89 (25)290396 (31)12.07.89 (28)291292 (30)31.01.91 (31)07.06.90

MIDFIELDERS

EL SALVADOR

1 EstebanALVARADO 18 PatrickSEQUEIRA (until 21July) 18 Kevin BRICENO (from21July) 23 LeonelMOREIRA

Luis SUAREZ(Col)

GUADELOUPE GOALKEEPERS

GOALKEEPERS

GOALKEEPERS

1 NicholasHAGEN (24)020896 12 KendersonNAVARRO (19)25.02.02 21 Kevin MOSCOSO (28)13.06.93

DEFENDERS

2 MoisesHERNANDEZ 3 Kervin GARCIA 4 JoseCa losPINTO 13 SthevenROB ES 20 GerardoGORDILLO 22 JoseMORALES

MIDFIELDERS

5 RudyBARRIENTOS 6 OscarCASTELLANOS 7 Marvin CEBAL OS 8 Luis deLEON 9 Yeltsin ALVAREZ 10 AlejandroGALINDO 16 MarcoDOMINGUEZ 17 Luis MARTINEZ 18 OscarSANTIS 23 JorgeAPARICIO

FORWARDS

11 JaroARR O A 14 Da win OM 15 ManuelLOPEZ 19 Robin BETANCOURTH

COACH

RafaelLOREDO( ex)

GRENADA

1 Mario GONZALEZ (24)2005.97 18 Osca PLEITEZ (28)06.02.93 22 Kevin CARABANTES (26)20.03.95

Alianza IsidroMetapan FAS

2 Julio SIBRIAN 3 RobertoDOMINGUEZ 4 E iq ZAVALETA 5 Ronald GOMEZ 13 AlexanderLARIN 16 Miguel EMUS (from21July) 19 Alexis RENDEROS 21 BryanTAMACAS

(24)17.07.96 (24)09.05.97 (28)02.08.92 (22)22.09.98 (29)2706.92 (27)26.10.93

OnceDeportivo Chalatenango TorontoFC(Can) Aguila Xelaju MC(Gua) Chalatenango

(23)01.06.98 (26)2102.95

Alianza Alianza

6 NarcisoORELLANA 7 Darwin CEREN 10 AmandoMORENO 12 Marvin MONTERROZA 15 AlexROLDAN 17 Jai oHENRIQU Z 20 IsaacPORTIL O

(26)2801.95 Alianza (31)311289 HoustonDynamo(USA) (25)100995 NewMexicoUnted(USA) (30)0303.91 Alianza (24)2807.96 Seattle Sounders(USA) (27)31.08.93 Chalatenango (26)08.11.94 Alianza

8 JoshuaPEREZ 9 WamerMARTINEZ 11 JuanCa losPORTILLO 14 Joa in RIVAS 16 David RUGAMAS (until 20July) 23 Marvi MARQUEZ

(23)21.01.98 (22)1708.98 (29)26.12.91 (29)26.04.92 (31)1702.90

Ibiza(Spa) HartfordAthletic (USA) Alianza FCTulsa(USA) OnceDeportivo

(23)12.03.98

IsidroMetapan

HugoPEREZ(USA)

(57)08.11.63

DEFENDERS

MIDFIELDERS

FORWARDS

COACH

Sabail (Aze) Municipal Comunicaciones Antigua CobanImperial Comunicaciones Comunicaciones UTC(Per) Municipal

(22)01.03.99 (21)18.01.00 (29)22.04.92 (25)141195 (26)02.11.94 (29)05.03.92 (25)25.02.96 (29)14.12.91 (22)25.03.99 (28)21.11.92

Municipal Antigua UdeG(Mex) Municipal Municipal CobanImperial A tigua Guastatoya Comunicaciones Comunicaciones

(35)20.09.85 A tigua (23)140797 Caifornia UntedStrke s(USA) (31)26.04.90 Municipal (29)251191 CobanImperial

GOALKEEPERS

1 BrianSYLVESTRE 2 JosueDUVERGER 23 IsaacROUAUD

DEFENDERS

2 Ca lensARCUS 3 Francois DU YSSE 4 Rica doADE 5 StephaneLAMBESE 6 JemsGEFFRARD 13 Kevin LAFRANCE 17 Martin EXPERIENCE 22 AlexJuniorCHRISTIAN

DEFENDERS

3 KwesiPAUL 4 AaronPIERRE 5 OmarBECKL S 16 ArthurPATE SON 17 TyroneSTERLING 18 raig NOEL-MCLEOD MIDFIELDERS

6 Olive NORBURN 7 RomarFRANK 8 AlexanderMCQUEEN 11 ShavonJOHN-BROWN 19 wazim THEODORE 21 JoshGABRIEL

(26)07.11.94 Peacht eeCity(USA) (28)17.02.93 ShrewsburyTown(Eng) (29)25.10.91 LeytonOrient(Eng) (25)310196 CharlestonBattery(USA) (33)08.10.87 ConcordRangers(Eng) (21)111299 Unattached (28)26.10.92 ShrewsburyTown(Eng) (24)280996 Camerhogne (26)24.03.95 Barnet(Eng) (26)130495 NewAmsterdam(USA) (25)12.01.96 St.David’s FC (21)30.11.99 Unattached

FORWARDS

2 Benjamin TTIENNE (18)13.03.03 QueensParkRangersSC 9 KairoMITCHELL (23)21.10.97 Chesterfied(Eng) 10 SaydrelLEWIS (23)27.11.97 Paradise 13 ReganCHAR ES-COOK (24)140297 RossCounty(Sco) 14 Dejo NOEL-WI LIAMS (22)22.09.98 Guadalajara(S a) 15 RickyGERMAN (22)130199 CrawleyTown(Eng) Dartford(Eng) 20 JacobBERKELEY-AGYEPONG (24)27.03.97 23 JamalCHARLES (25)24.11.95 Paradise COACH

(57)06.11.63

HONDURAS (28)191292 (21)27.04.00 (23)12.02.98

MiamiFC(USA) Vitoria Setubal(Por) J3SAmil y (Fra)

(25)28.06.96 Auxerre(Fra) (22)13.04.99 NewEngandRevoutionII (USA) (31)21.05.90 MushucRuna(Ecu) (26)100595 Orleans(Fra) (26)26.08.94 HFXWanderers(Can) (31)13.01.90 AEKLarnaca(Cyp) (22)09.03.99 Avranches(Fra) (28)12.05.93 Atyrau(Kaz)

8 ZacharyHERIVAUX (25)01.02.96 Birmingham egion(USA) 0 DerrickETI NN (24)251196 ColumbusCrew(USA) 4 LevertonPIERRE (23)09.03.98 USLDunke que(Fra) 15 DuthersonCLERVEAUX (22)20.01.99 Cavaly 19 SteevenSABA (28)24.02.93 Violette 21 BryanALCEUS (25)01.02.96 GazMetanMedias(Rou)

FORWARDS

7 Ca nejy ANTOIN (29)27.07.91 Orleans(Fra) 9 DuckensNAZON (27)170494 Sint-Tuiden(Blg) 1 Ro ertoLO IMA (24)04.03.97 Vio ette 16 Louic us onDEEDSON (20)11.02.01 Hob o(Den) 18 RonaldoDAMUS (21)12.09.99 O angeCountySC(USA) 20 FrantzdyPIERROT (26)290395 Guingamp(Fra) Jean-JacquesPIERRE

1 JasonBELFON (31)030790 Paradise 12 ReiceCHARLES-COOK (27)08.04.94 WellingUnited(Eng) 22 TrishawnTHOMAS (18)250103 QueensParkRangersSC

GOALKEEPERS

MIDFIELDERS

COACH

GOALKEEPERS

Michae FINDLAY(Can)

HAITI

(29)05.03.92 (30)07.12.90 (28)16.06.93 (25)121195 (26)17.08.94 (24)031296

(63)25.08.57

GOALKEEPERS

(40)23.01.81

1 Ed ickMENJIVAR 18 MarlonLICONA 22 Luis OPEZ

(28)01.03.93 (30)09.02.91 (27)13.09.93

2 Felix CRISANTO 3 MaynorFIGUEROA 4 Marcelo PEREIRA 5 RaulSANTOS 16 Johnny VERON 17 Franklin FLORES 21 Kevin ALVAREZ 23 DiegoRODRIGUEZ

(30)09.09.90 Unattached (38)02.05.83 HoustonDynamo(USA) (26)27.05.95 Motagua (28)02.08.92 Motagua (31)07.02.90 Olimpia (25)18.04.96 RealEspana (24)03.08.96 Norrkoping(Swe) (25)06.11.95 Motagua

6 B yanACOSTA 8 WalterMARTINEZ 10 AlexanderLOPEZ 13 JhowBENAVIDEZ 14 BoniekGARCIA 15 Jua DELGADO 20 DeybiF ORES 25 Kevin LOPEZ (from19July)

(27)24.11.93 FCDallas(USA) (30)26.03.91 Motagua (29)05.06.92 Alajuelense(Crc) (25)26.12.95 RealEspana (36)04.09.84 HoustonDynamo(USA) (28)21.07.92 Motagua (25)16.0696 Olimpia (25)03.02.96 otagua

DEFENDERS

MIDFIELDERS

FORWARDS

7 AlberthE IS (until 19July) 9 CarlosFERNANDEZ (until 21July) 11 JerryBENGTSON 12 Romell QUIOTO 19 Edwin SOLANO 24 RogerROJAS (from21July) COACH

FabianCOITO Uru)

Olimpia Motagua RealEspana

(25)12.02.96

Boavista(Por)

(29)17.0292

Fenix (Uru)

(34)08.04.87 (29)09.08.91 (25)25.01.96 (31)09.0690

Olimpia CFMontreal(Ca ) Marathon Cartagines

(54)03.03.67


SQUADS JAMAICA GOALKEEPERS

1 And eBLAKE 13 Dil onBARNES 23 Dennis TAYLOR DEFENDERS

3 MichaelHECTOR 4 Ama i’iBELL 5 AlvasPOWELL 6 LiamMOORE 8 OnielFISHER 17 DamionLOWE 19 AdranMARIAPPA 20 Kemar AWRENCE MIDFIELDERS

2 LamarWALKER 15 Bai TURGOTT 16 Da ielJOHNSON 18 RavelMORRISON 2 TyreekMAGEE 22 Devo W LL AMS

MARTINIQUE (30)21.11.90 Philadelp ia Union(USA) (25)08.04.96 QueensParkRangers(Eng) (30)21.01.91 Humble Lions (28)19.07.92 Fulham(Eng) (27)0505.94 LutonTown(Eng) (26)18.07.94 Philadelp ia Union(USA) (28)31.0 .93 Readi g(Eng) (29)221 .91 LAGalaxy(USA) (28)05.05.93 AlIttihad(Egy) (34)03.10.86 B istolCity( ng) (28)17.09.92 To ontoFC(Ca ) (21)05.12.99 Miam FC(USA) (27)22.05.94 Östersund(Swe) (28)08.10.92 PrestonNo t E d(Eng) (28)02.02.93 Unattac ed (21)27.08.99 Eupen(Blg) (29)08.04.92 MiamiFC(USA)

GOALKEEPERS

1 Loic CHAUVET (33)30.04.88 16 ArnaudHuyghuesDESETAGES (35)30 285 23 Gil esMESLIEN (32)17.06.89

DEFENDERS

2 FlorianGOMA 4 Gerald DONDON 6 Jean Sylvain BABIN 8 YannTHIMON 15 YordanTHIMON 18 SamuelCAMILLE 2 SebastienCRETINOIR

MIDFIELDERS

3 AmbroiseFELICITET 5 Ka lVITUL 14 No manGRELET 19 Da ielHERELLE 20 StephaneABAUL 22 Romario BARTHELERY

FORWARDS

7 LeonBAILEY (23)09.08.97 Baye Leve usen(Ger) 9 CoryBURKE (29)28.12.91 Philadelp ia Union(USA) 10 BobbyDECORDOVA-REID (28)0202.93 Fulham(Eng) 11 Shama NICHOLSON (24)16.02.97 Charleroi(Blg) 12 Junio FLEMMINGS (25)16.0 .96 Bi mi ghamLegion(USA) 14 And eGRAY (30)26.06.91 Watfo d(Eng)

7 GregoryPASTEL 9 EnrickREUPERNE 10 Kevin FORTUNE 1 Emmanue RIVIERE 12 JohnnyMARAJO 13 ChristopheJOUGON 17 PatrickBURNER

COACH

COACH

FORWARDS

TheodoreWH TMORE

Mario BOCALY

(48)05.08.72

QATAR 1 SaadALSHEEB (31)19.02.90 21 YousefHASSAN (25)24.05.96 22 MeshaalBARSHAM (23)14.02.98 DEFENDERS

MIDFIELDERS

6 Abdulaziz HATEM 11 AkramAFIF 12 Karim BOUDIAF 20 AbdullahALAHRAK 23 Assim MADIBO FORWARDS

COACH

Felix SANCHEZ(Spa)

(20)21.0 .01 Sa a itaine (34)04 0.86 ClubF a ciscain (34)14.10.86 SportingGijon(Spa) (31)01.0 .90 GoldenLion (24)1009.96 ClubF anciscain (35)02.02.86 OlympiqueValence(Fra) (35)12.02.86 Sama itaine

AlSadd AlGharafa AlSadd

(30)06.08.90 (27)28.08.93 (23)05.12.97 (22)08.02.99 (27)26.09.93 (21)25.08.99 (23)16.12.97 (30)07.09.90

AlSadd AlSadd AlSadd AlSadd AlSadd AlGharafa AlDuhail AlSadd

(30)28.10.90 (24)18.11.96 (30)16.09.90 (24)10.05.97 (24)22.10.96

AlRayyan AlSadd AlDuhail AlDuhail AlDuhail

(21)18.09.99 (28)31.01.93 (27)20.12.93 (30)11.12.90 (31)05.04.90 (21)06.08.99 (24)19.08.96

AlSadd AlGharafa AlDuhail AlSadd AlDuhail AlSadd AlDuhail

(45)13.12.75

GOALKEEPERS

1 WarnerHAHN 13 ClaidelKOHINOR 23 IshanKORT

DEFENDERS

2 Damil DANKERLUI 3 SeanKLAIBER 4 DionMALONE 5 RidgecianoHAPS 12 AlbertNIBTE 14 SersinhoEDUARD 15 RyanDONK 19 Anduelo AMOEFERIE

MIDFIELDERS

6 RyanKOOLWIJK 8 RolandALBERG 16 Mitchell DONALD 18 Kelvin LEERDAM 21 DiegoBISESWAR

FORWARDS

7 FlorianJOZEFZOON 9 NigelHASSELBAINK 10 AlvaroVERWEY 11 SheraldoBECKER 17 Dimitrie APAI 20 Gleofilo VLIJTER 22 IvenzoCOMVALIUS

COACH

DeanGORRE

PANAMA

1 Alf edoTALAVERA 12 RodolfoCOTA 20 Jonat anOROZCO

(38)18.09.82 (34)03.07.87 (35)12.05.86

UNAMPumas Leon Tjuana

2 Nesto ARAUJO 3 CarlosSALCEDO 4 EdsonALVAREZ 5 OsvaldoRODRIGUEZ 8 Kevin ALVAREZ 15 Hecto MORENO 19 GilbertoSEPULVEDA 21 Luis RODRIGUEZ 23 JesusGALLARDO

(29)29.08.91 (27)29.09.93 (23)24.10.97 (24)10.09.96 (22)15.0 .99 (33)17.01.88 (22)04.02.99 (30)21.01.91 (26)15.08.94

CeltaVigo(Spa) TigresUANL Ajax(Ned) Leon Pac uca Monte rey Guadalajara TgresUANL Monte rey

6 Jonat anDOSSANTOS (31)26.04.90 7 ErickSANCHEZ (21)27.09.99 10 Orbelin PINEDA (25)24.04.96 13 AlanCERVANTES (23)17.01.98 14 ErickGUTIERREZ (26)15.06.95 16 Hecto HERRERA (31)19.04.90

LAGalaxy(USA) Pac uca CruzAzul SantosLaguna PSV(Ned) AtleticoMadrd(Spa)

DEFENDERS

(28)29.05.93 (30)15.01.91 (27)14.07.93 (32)17.10.88 (29)23.11.91 (27)24.06.94

Aiglon Sama itaine GoldenLion Sama itaine ClubF anciscain GoldenLion

MIDFIELDERS

(30)18.09.90 (22)03.08.98 (31)06.08.89 (3 )03.03.90 (27)21.10.93 (26)10.07.95 (25)11.04.96

RCRiviere-Plote Aiglon Auxer e(Fra) C otone(Ita) ClubF anciscain ClubF anciscain Nimes(Fra)

9 AlanPULIDO 11 Rogelio FunesMORI 17 JesusCORONA 18 Efrain ALVAREZ 22 HirvingLOZANO (until 21July) 24 RodolfoPIZARRO (from21July)

FORWARDS

(30)08.03.91 Spo tingKansasCity(USA) (30)05.03.91 Monte rey (28)06.01.93 Porto(Por) (19)19.06.02 LAGalaxy(Ita) (25)30.07.95 Napol (Ita) (27)15.02.94

Inte Miami(USA)

Ge a doMARTINO(Arg) (58)20.11.62

(29)15.06.92 (29)07.02.92 (21)01.06.00

Unattached Robinhood AlmereU21(Ned)

(24)24.08.96 (26)31.07.94 (32)13.02.89 (28)12.06.93 (28)20.05.93 (26)04.09.94 (35)30.03.86 (29)24.09.91

Groningen(Ned) Ajax(Ned) NACBreda(Ned) Feyenoord(Ned) LeoVictor InterMoengotapoe Galatasaray(Tur) InterMoengotapoe

(35)08.08.85 (30)06.08.90 (32)10.12.88 (31)24.06.90 (33)08.03.88

AlmereCity(Ned) Hyderabad(Ind) Erzurumspor(Tur) InterMiami(USA) ApollonLimassol(Cyp)

(30)09.02.91 RotherhamUnited(Eng) (30)21.11.90 BneiSakhnin (Isr) (22)12.01.99 Transvaal (26)09.02.95 UnionBerlin (Ger) (26)19.07.94 WConnection(Tri) (21)17.09.99 BeitarJerusalem(Isr) (24)24.06.97 Dugopolje (Cro) (50)10.09.70

1 Marvin PHILLIP (36)01.08.84 21 NicklasFRENDERUP (28)14.12.92 22 AdrianFONCETTE (32)10.10.88

DEFENDERS

2 AubreyDAVID 4 JelaniPETERS 5 Curtis GONZALES 6 RadanfahABUBAKR 11 NoahPOWDER 15 NevealHACKSHAW 16 Alvin JONES 17 Justin GARCIA 18 TristanHODGE 19 RossRUSSELL 23 JesseWILLIAMS

MIDFIELDERS

3 Hashim ARCIA 8 Mekeil WILLIAMS 10 Kevin MOLINO 13 ReonMOORE 14 AndreFORTUNEII 20 DuaneMUCKETTE

FORWARDS

7 RyanTELFER 9 MarcusJOSEPH 12 IsaiahLEE

COACH

AngusEVE

Unattached Ranheim (Nor) Police

(32)08.10.88 DefenceForce (30)24.07.90 PittsburghRiverhounds(USA) (31)17.06.90 ColumbusCrew(USA) (24)22.09.96 DefenceForce (25)03.07.96 Memphis 901(USA) (26)01.07.95 Unattached

(49)23.02.72

(30)10.12.90 (29)0103.92 (27)13.06.94 (27)20.09.93 (36)14.02.85 (30)31.03.91 (29)03.04.92

SanFrancisco AlwaysReady(Bol) Independiente Tauro SanCa los(C c) DAC(Svk) CarosStei (Per)

MIDFIELDERS

6 VictorGRIFFITH (20)12.12.00 ArabeUnido 7 JoseLuis RODRIGUEZ (23)19.06.98 Lugo(Spa) 8 Adalbe toCARRASQUILLA (22)281 98 Cartage a(Spa) 10 EdgarBARCENAS (27)23.10.93 Gi o a(Spa) 11 ArmandoCOOPER (33)26.11.87 MaccabiPetahTkva(Is ) 19 Albe toQUINTERO (33)181287 Universitario (Pe ) 20 AbdielAYARZA (28)12.09.92 Cencano(Per) 21 CesarYANIS (25)28.01.96 DeportvodelEste 23 MiguelCAMARGO (27)05.09.93 IndependienteMedellin (Col) FORWARDS

9 GabrielTORRES 14 RolandoBLACKBURN 17 JoseFAJARDO 18 Jorma AGUILAR

(32)31.10.88 (30)09.01.90 (27)18.08.93 (26)11.09.94

UNAMP mas(Mex) TheStrongest(Bol) 9deOctubre(Ecu) SanCa os(Crc)

UNITED STATES

(30)11.10.90 Saprissa(Crc) (27)17.12.93 PittsburghRiverhounds(USA) (32)26.01.89 DefenceForce (34)12.02.87 Unattached (22)27.10.98 RealSalt Lake(USA) (25)21.11.95 IndyEleven(USA) (27)09.07.94 Unattached (25)26.10.95 DefenceForce (26)09.10.94 ColoradoSpringsSwitchbacks(USA) (28)09.09.92 LaHorquettaRangers (20)18.05.01 Unattached

(27)04.03.94 (30)29.04.91 (21)21.09.99

DEFENDERS

2 FrancscoPALACIOS 3 Harold CUMMINGS 4 Oma CORDOBA 5 RchardPERA TA 13 AdolfoMACHADO 15 Eric DAVIS 16 RoderckMIL ER

Fenix (Uru) CobanImpe ial(Gua) Boluspor(Tu )

ThomasCHRISTIANSEN(Spa) (58)20.11.62

TRINIDAD & TOBAGO GOALKEEPERS

Luis MEJIA (30)16.03.91 12 JoseCALDERON (35)14.08.85 22 OrlandoMOSQUERA (26)25.12.94

COACH

COACH

(42)28.07.78

GOALKEEPERS

AtleticoOttawa(Can) MohammedanSC(Ind) LaHorquettaRangers

GOALKEEPERS

1 MattTURNER 18 SeanJOHNSON 22 BradGUZAN

(27)24.06.94 NewEnglandRevolution (32)31.05.89 NewYorkCityFC (36)09.09.84 AtlantaUnited

2 Reggie CANNON 3 SamVINES 4 DonovanPINES 5 WalkerZIMMERMAN (until 20July) 12 MilesROBINSON 16 JamesSANDS 20 ShaqMOORE 21 GeorgeBELLO 24 HenryKESSLER (from24JULY)

(23)11.06.98 (22)31.05.99 (23)07.03.98 (28)19.05.93

6 GianlucaBUSIO 10 CristianROLDAN 14 JacksonYUEILL 17 SebastianLLETGET 19 ErykWILLIAMSON 23 KellynACOSTA

(19)29.05.02 (26)03.06.95 (24)19.03.97 (28)03.09.92 (24)11.06.97 (25)24.07.95

SportingKansasCity Seattle Sounders SanJoseEarthquakes LAGalaxy PortlandTimbers ColoradoRapids

7 PaulARRIOLA 8 NicholasGIOACCHINI 9 GyasiZARDES 11 DarylDIKE 13 MatthewHOPPE 15 JonathanLEWIS

(26)05.02.95 (20)25.07.00 (29)02.09.91 (21)03.06.00 (20)13.03.01 (24)04.06.97

D.C.United Caen(Fra) ColumbusCrew OrlandoCitySC Schalke(Ger) ColoradoRapids

GreggBERHALTER

(47)01.08.73

DEFENDERS

MIDFIELDERS

FORWARDS

COACH

Boavista(Por) ColoradoRapids D.C.United Nashvil e SC

(24)14.03.97 AtlantaUnited (21)06.07.00 NewYorkCityFC (24)02.11.96 Tenerife(Spa) (19)22.01.02 AtlantaUnited (23)25.06.98 NewEnglandRevolution

WORLD SOCCER 87

)12.70.01 fo sa sbulc dna sega(

4 MohammedWAAD 7 AhmedALAAELDIN 9 MohammedMUNTARI 10 HassanALHAYDOS 17 IsmaeelMOHAMMAD 18 YusufABDURISAG 19 AlmoezALI

GoldenLion Aiglon GoldenLion

SURINAME

GOALKEEPERS

2 RO-RO 3 Abdelkarim HASSAN 5 TarekSALMAN 8 AhmedSUHAIL 13 MusabKHEDER 14 HomamAHMED 15 BassamALRAWI 16 BoualemKHOUKHI

MEXICO GOALKEEPERS


S D AUQS

TOKYO 2020 OLYMPICS MEN ARGENTINA

AUSTRALIA

GOALKEEPERS

1 Je emiasLEDESMA* (28)13.0293 12 LautaroMORA ES (21)16. 299 22 Joaquin BLAZQUEZ (20)28.0101

DEFENDERS

2 NehuenPEREZ 3 Claudio BRAVO 4 HernanDELAFUENTE 6 Leone MOSEVICH 13 Marcelo HERRERA 14 FacundoMEDINA 19 FranciscoORTEGA

(21)240600 (24)13.0397 (24)07.0197 (24)04.02.97 (22)03.1198 (22)280599 (22)19.0399

MIDFIELDERS

5 FaustoVERA (21 26.0300 7 Agustin URZI (21)04.05.00 8 SantiagoCOLOMBATTO (24)17.0197 10 Alexis MACALLISTER (22)24.12.98 11 EzequielBARCO (22)29.0399 16 Martin PAYERO (22)11.0998 17 TomasBELMONTE (23)27.0598 20 ThiagoALMADA (20)26.0401 21 CarosVALENZUE A (24)22.04.97

FORWARDS

9 AdofoGAICH 15 Pe roDELAVEGA 18 EzequelPONCE

(22)26.0299 (20)07.0201 (24)29.03.97

COACH

Fe nandoBAT STA

Cadiz (Spa) anus Talleres Granada(Spa) o tlandTimbers(USA) VelezSarsfield Vizela (Por) San orenzo Lens(Fra) VelezSarsfield ArgentinosJuniors Ban eld Leon(Mex) Brighton(Eng) AtlantaUnited(USA) Banfield Lanus VelezSarsfield Famalcao(Por) Benevento(ta) Lanus Sparta Moscow( us)

6 LucasTOUSART 8 EnzoL FEE 11 Tej SAVANIER* 12 Alexis BEKABEKA FORWARDS

7 ArnaudNORDIN 9 NathanaelMBUKU 10 Andre- ierreGIGNAC* 14 FlorianTHAUVIN* 18 RandalKOLOM ANI 20 Isaa LI ADJI COACH

Sylvain RIPOLI

MelbourneCity Cha ltonAthletc(Eng) EbbsfleetUnited(Eng)

(22)130699 MebourneCity (23)24.06.98 CentralCoastMariners (21)22.10.99 Crysta Palace(Eng) (22)22.10.98 StokeCity(Eng) (21)20.02.00 WesternUnited (24)20.03.97 UrawaRedDiamonds(Jpn) (20)30.10.00 Sydney

(21)050600 (20)06.11.00 (18)09.09.02 (20)01.11.00 (24)11.05.97 (22)14.04.99 (24)01.07.97 (17)24.07. 3 (24)290497 (21)030200 (29)22.12.91 (20)29.03.01 (23)17.06.98 (19)16.03.02 (35)05.12.85 (28)26.01.93 (22)05.12.98 (19)04.04.02 (49)15.08.71

88 WORLD SOCCER

Angers Saint-Etienne Montpellier Mlan(Ita) Lyon Paris Saint Germain Everton(Eng) Lens RealSociedad(Spa) Strasb urg Valenciennes He thaBerlin (Ger) Lorient Montpellier Caen Saint-Etienne Reims TigresUANL(Mex) TigresUANL(Mex) Nantes Lil e

BRAZIL

EGYPT

GOALKEEPERS

GOALKEEPERS

1 SANTOS* 12 BRENNO 22 LUCAO

DEFENDERS

3 DiegoCARLOS* 4 RicardoGRACA 6 GuilhermeARANA 13 DaniALVES* 14 BrunoFUCHS 15 NINO 16 ABNER

MIDFIELDERS

MIDFIELDERS

FORWARDS

FORWARDS

6 KeanuBACCUS (23)07.06.98 WesternSydneyWanderers 8 RileyMCGREE (22)0 .11.98 BirminghamCity(Eng) 10 Denis GENREAU (22)21.05.99 Macarthur 15 CalebWATTS (19)16.01.02 Southampto (Eng) 17 ConnorMETCALFE (21)05.11.99 Melbour eCity 21 CameronDEVLIN (23)07.06.98 WellingtonPhoenix (Nzl) 7 RenoPISCOPO 9 NicholasD’AGOSTINO 11 DanielARZANI 12 Mitchell DUKE* 19 Ma c TI IO 20 LachanWA ES

(23)27.05.98 WellingtonPhoenix ( l) (23)25.02.98 PerthGlory (22)04.01.99 AGF(Den) (30)18.01.91 Weste nSydneyWanderers (19)23.08.01 MelbourneCity (23)19.10.97 WesternUnited

AndreJARDINE

DEFENDERS

2 Benjamin HENRICHS (24)23.02.97 3 David RAUM (23)220498 4 Felix UDUOKHAI (23)09.09.97 5 AmosPIEPER (23)17.01.98 15 JordanTORUNARIGHA (23)07.08.97 16 KevenSCHLOTTERBECK (24)28.04.97

FORWARDS

7 MarcoRICHT R 9 Cedric TEUCHERT 10 MaxKRUSE*

COACH

StefanKUNTZ

(31)17.03.90 (22)01.04.99 (20)26.02.01

Athletico a anaense Gremio VascodaGama

1 Mohamed ELSHENAWY* (32)18.12.88 16 MahmoudGAD (22)01.10.98 22 MohamedSOBHY (22)15.07.99

(28)150393 (24)16.02.97 (24)14.04.97 (38)06.05.83 (22)01.04.99 (24)10.04.97 (21)27.05.00

Sevil a (Spa) VascodaGama AtleticoMineiro SaoPaulo CSKAMoscow(Rus) Fluminense Athletico aranaense

4 OsamaGALAL (23)170997 5 Mo amedABDELSALAM (23)01.10.97 6 AhmedHEGAZI* 30)25.01.91 17 AhmedRAMADAN (24)23.03.97 18 MahmoudHAMDY* (26)01.06.95

(20)29.09.00 Palmei as (23)09.05.98 AstonVil a ( ng) (23)16.11.97 Lyon(Fra) (23)19.12.97 Gremio (19)19.01.02 Borussia Do tmund(Ge ) (24)28.01.97 RedBull B agantino

Stuttgart YokohamaFC(Jpn) WerderBremen RB eipzig GreutherFurth Augsburg Arminia Bielefeld HerthaBerlin Freibu g

(22)28.07.98 (27)27.05.94 (24)27.10.96 (22)08.01.99 (21)17.08.99 (22)15.11.98 (24)28.01.97

EintrachtFrankfurt Wolfsburg BayerLeverkusen Arminia Bielefeld Monaco(Fra) GreutherFurth Augsbu g

(23)24.11.97 (24)140197 (33)1903.88

Augsbu g UnionBe lin UnonBerin

(58)30.11.62

1 AlexGUITY 12 MichaelPERELLO 22 BryanRAMOS

DEFENDERS

2 Denil MA DONADO 3 Wesly DECAS 4 CarlosMELENDEZ 5 C istopherMELENDEZ 16 JoseGARCIA 21 Elvin OLIVA

MIDFIELDERS

6 JonathanNUNEZ 7 JoseAlejandroR YES 8 Edwin RODRIGUEZ 11 SamuelELVIR 15 CarosPINEDA 20 Jo geALVAREZ

FORWARDS

9 JorgeBENGUCHE* 10 RigobertoRIVAS 13 BrayanMOYA* 14 JosePINTO 17 Luis PALMA 18 JuanOBREGONJR 19 DouglasMARTINEZ

COACH

Miguel ALERA(Uru)

DEFENDERS

MIDFIELDERS

2 AmarHAMDY (21)26.11.99 3 Karim FOUAD (20)01.1099 8 NasserMAHER (24)08.02.97 12 AkramTAWFIK (23)081197 13 Karim ELERAKI (22)29.11.97 15 EmamASHOUR (23)20.02.98 20 AhmedAbouELFOTOUH (22)22.03.98 FORWARDS

(21)15.07.00 Bayer everkusen(Ge ) (22)27.05.99 HerthaBerlin (Ger) (24)10.05.97 Eve ton(Eng) (21)24.02.00 Ajax(Ned) (24)26.02.97 Zenit (Rus) (20)18.06.01 A senal(Eng)

7 SaahMOHSEN 9 TaherMOHAMED 10 RamadanSOBHI 11 Ibrahim ADE 14 AhmedYasserRAYYAN 19 AbdelRahmanMAGDY 21 NasserMANSI

(4 )08.09.79

ShawkyGHARIEB

COACH

HONDURAS

1 FlorianMULLER (23)13.11.97 2 SvendBRODERSEN (24)22.03.97 22 LucaPLOGMANN (21)1003.00

6 Ragna ACHE 8 MaximilianARNOLD* 11 Na iemAMIRI* 13 ArneMAIER 14 Ismail JAKOBS 17 AntonSTACH 18 Eduard OWEN

7 PAULINHO 9 MatheusCUNHA 10 R CHAR ISON 11 ANTONY 17 MALCOM 21 GabrielMARTINELLI

GOALKEEPERS

GOALKEEPERS

MIDFIELDERS

2 GabrielMENINO 5 DouglasLUIZ 8 BrunoGUIMARAES 18 MatheusHENRIQUE 19 REINIER 20 CLAUDINHO

COACH

(57)03.08.63

GERMANY

1 PaulBERNARDONI (24)18.04.97 16 StefanBAJIC (19)23.12.01 22 DimitryBERTAUD (23)06.06.98

MIDFIELDERS

DEFENDERS

2 NathanielATKINSON 3 KyeROWLES 4 JayRICH-BAGHUE OU 5 HarrySOUTTAR 13 DylanPIERIAS 14 ThomasDENG 16 JoelKING

COACH

FRANCE

DEFENDERS

1 TomGLOVER (23)24.12.97 18 AsheyMAYNARD-BREWER (22)25.06.99 22 JordanHOLMES (24)08.05.97

GrahamARNO D

(50)20.0870

GOALKEEPERS

2 PierreKALULU 3 Melvin BARD 4 TimotheePEMBELE 5 Nels NKOUNKOU 13 ClementMICHELIN 15 ModiboSAGNAN 17 AnthonyCACI 19 IsmaelDOUKOURE

GOALKEEPERS

(22)01.09.98 (24)07.03.97 (24)23.01.97 (20)23.04.01 (23)24.0198 (23)12.09.97 (23)16.11.97

AlAhly ENPPI AlIttihad Pyramids Zamalek AlIttihad(Ksa) AlAhly Zamale AlIttihad ENPPI AlAhly AlAhly AlMasry Zamale Zamalek AlAhly AlAhly Pyramids Pyramids CeramicaCleopatra Ismaily Tala’eaElGaish

(62)26.02.59

IVORY COAST GOALKEEPERS

(23)20.09.97 (23)11.07.98 (19)080801

Olimpia RealEspana RealEspana

1 MaximeNAGOLI 16 IraEliezerTAPE 22 NicolasTIE

(23)26.05.98 (21)11.08.99 (23)08.12.97 (23)25.11.97 (22)21.09.98 (23)24. 097

Everton(Chi) Motagua Vida Motagua Olimpia Olimpia

(19)26.11.01 (23)05. .97 (21)25.0999 (20)25.04.01 (23)23.0997 (23)28.01.98

Motagua RealEspana Olimpia UPNFM Olimpia Olimpia

2 SilasGNAKA 3 E ic BAILLY* 4 Kouadio YvesDABILA 5 IsmaelDIALLO 6 Wilf iedSINGO 17 Zie OUATTARA 19 KoffiKOUAO

DEFENDERS

MIDFIELDERS

7 IdrissaDOUMBIA 8 Franc KESSIE* 12 EboueKOUASSI 18 Cheic T MITE FORWARDS

(25)21.05.96 Boavista(Po ) (22)31.0798 Reggina(Ita) (28)19.10.92 Angola 1ºdeAgosto(An ) (23)27.09.97 Olimpia (21)17.01.00 Vida (23)291097 HartfordAthletic (USA) (24)05.0697 RealSalt Lake(USA)

9 YoussoufDAO 10 Amad IA LO 11 ChristianKOUAME 13 Kade KEITA 14 Parfait GU AGON 15 MaxGRADEL* 20 AboubacarDOUMBIA

(64)17.05.57

SoualhoHAIDARA

COACH

(20)20.12.00 (23)31.08.97 (20)1302.01

Sol SanPedro Vitoria Guimaraes(Por)

(22)181298 Eupen(Blg) (27)12.04.94 ManchesterUnited(Eng) (24)0101.97 Mouscron(Blg) (24)29.01.97 Ajaccio (F a) (20)25.12.00 Torino(Ita) (21)09.01.00 Vitoria Guimaraes(Por) (23)20.05.98 Vizela (Por) (23)14.04.98 (24)191296 (23)131297 (23)20.11.97

Huesca(Spa) Milan(Ita) Genk(Blg) Amiens(F a)

(23)0503.98 SpartaPrague(Cze) (19)1107.02 ManchesterUnited(Eng) (23)0612.97 Fiorentina(Ita) (20)0611.00 Weste lo Blg) (20)22.02.01 BeitarTelAviv (Isr) (33)30.11.87 Sivasspo (Tur) (21)12.11.99 MaccabiNetanya(Isr) (46)3012.74


SQUADS JAPAN

MEXICO

GOALKEEPERS

GOALKEEPERS

1 KeisukeOSAKO 12 KoseiTANI 22 ZionSUZUKI DEFENDERS

2 HirokiSAKAI* 3 YutaNAKAYAMA 4 Ko TAKURA 5 MayaYOSHIDA* 13 ReoHATATE 14 TakehiroTOMIYASU 15 DaikiHASHIOKA 20 KokiMACHIDA 21 AyumuSEKO MIDFIELDERS

6 WataruENDO* 7 TakefusaKUBO 8 Koji MIYOSHI 10 RitsuDOAN 11 KaoruMITOMA 16 Y k SOMA 17 AoTANAKA FORWARDS

9 DazenMAEDA 18 AyaseUEDA 19 DaichiHAYASHI COACH

HajimeMORIYASU

(21)28.07.99 (20)22.11.00 (18)21.08.02

SanfrecceHiroshima ShonanBelmare UrawaRedDamonds

(31)12.04.90 (24)1602.97 (24)2701.97 (32)24.08.88 (23)21.11.97 (22)05.11.98 (22)17.05.99 (23)250897 (21)0706.00

UrawaRedDamonds P CZwole (Ned) Groni gen(Ned) Sampdoria (Ita) KawasakiFrontae Bologna(Fra) Sint-Truiden (Blg) Kas imaAntlers CerezoOsaka

(28)0902.93 (20)04.06.01 (24)26.03.97 (23)16.06.98 (24)20.05.97 (24)2502.97 (22)1009.98

Stuttgart(Ge ) Getafe(Spa) Antwerp(Blg) PSV(Ned) KawasakiFrontae NagoyaGra pus KawasakiFrontae

(23)2010.97 (22)28.08.98 (24)23.05.97

YokohamaF Marinos KashimaAntlers SaganTosu

1 Amin BUKHARI (24)02.05.97 12 MohammedALRUBAIE (23)14.08.97 22 Zaid ALBAWARDI (24)26.01.97 DEFENDERS

2 SaudABDULHAMID 3 HamadALYAMI 4 Abdulbasit HINDI 5 AbdulelahALAMRI 13 YasserALSHAHRANI* 16 KhalifahALDAWSARI 21 AbdullahHASSOUN

AlAin AlAhli AlShabab

6 SamiALNAJEI (24)07.02.97 7 SalmanALFARAJ* (31)01.08.89 8 NasserALOMRAN (24)13.07.97 10 SalemALDAWSARI* (29)19.08.91 11 Khalid ALGHANNAM (20)07.11.00 14 Ali ALHASSAN (24)04.03.97 15 AymanYAHYA (20)14.05.01 17 AymanALKHULAIF (24)22.05.97 18 AbdulrahmanGHAREEB (24)31.03.97 20 MukhtarALI (23)30.10.97

AlNassr AlHilal AlShabab AlHilal AlNassr AlNassr AlNassr AlWehda AlAhli AlNassr

FORWARDS

COACH

SaadALSHEHRI

(41)09.01.80

(23)10.12.97 (24)24.0297 (23)30.0 .98 (21)22.10.98 (22)16.11.98 (23)15.08.97 (24)23.02.97

ClubAme ica Monterrey Atas UNAMPumas Tijuana Juarez Pachuca

7 LusROMO* (26)05.06.95 8 CarlosRODRIGUEZ (24)030197 16 JoseJoaquin ESQUIVEL (23)07.01.98 17 SebastianCORDOVA (24)12.06.97 20 FernandoBELTRAN (23)08.05.98

CruzAzul Monterrey Juarez CubAmerica Guadalajara

MIDFIELDERS

FORWARDS

9 HenryMARTIN* 10 DiegoLAINEZ 11 Alexis VEGA 15 UrielANTUNA 18 EduardoAGUIRRE 19 RicardoANGULO 21 RobertoALVARADO

(28)18.11.92 (21)09.06.00 (23)25.11.97 (23)21.08.97 (22)03.08.98 (24)20.02.97 (22)07.09.98

CubAmerica Rea Betis (Spa) Guadalajara Guadalajara SantosLaguna Guadalajara C uzAzul

AlHilal AlNassr

MIDFIELDERS

4 TebohoMOKOENA 6 Kamohelo MAHLATSI 7 Nkosingiphile NGCOBO 8 ThaboCELE 12 GoodmanMOSELE 13 ReeveFROSLER

FORWARDS

9 EvidenceMAKGOPA 10 LutherSINGH 11 MacBethMAHLANGU 18 Kobamelo KODISANG

COACH

David NOTOANE

2 WinstonREID* 3 LberatoCACACE 4 NandoPIJNAKER 5 MichaelBOXALL* 14 GeorgeSTANGER 15 DaneINGHAM 17 CalanELL OT

MIDFIELDERS

6 ClaytonLEWIS 8 JoeBELL 10 MarkoSTAMENIC 16 GianniSTENSNESS 20 SamSUTTON 21 BenOLD

FORWARDS

7 EljahJUST 9 Chris WOOD* 11 JoeCHAMPNESS 12 CalumMCCOWATT 18 BenWAINE 19 MatthewGARBETT DannyHAY

(21)30.04.00 (23)10.03.98 (21)03.03.00 (22)14.04.99 (24)18.02.97 (23)30.01.98

OrlandoPirates UniversityofPretoria SuperSportUnited AmaZulu Mynai(Ukr) CapeTownSpurs

(24)24.01.97 (22)23.08.98 (21)16.11.99 (24)15.01.97 (21)18.11.99 (23)11.01.98

SuperSportUnited MorokaSwallows KaizerChiefs PortugalCovaPiedade Baroka KaizerChiefs

(21)05.06.00 (23)05.08.97 (19)11.10.01 (21)28.08.99

Baroka PacosdeFerreira(Por) TSGalaxy Braga(Por)

(52)07.02.69

(22)16.0199 (20)25.1100 (19)04.0702

AlmereCity(Ned) SwanseaCity(Wal) LowerHuttCity

1 SONGBum-keun 18 AHNJoon-soo 22 ANChan-gi

DEFENDERS

2 LEEYou-hyeon 3 KIMJae-woo 4 PARKJi-soo* 5 JEONGTae-wook 12 SEOLYoung-woo 13 KIMJin-ya 19 KANGYoon-sung 20 LEESang-min

MIDFIELDERS

6 JEONGSeung-won 7 KWONChang-hoon* 8 LEEKang-in 10 LEEDong-gyeong 14 KIMDong-hyun 15 WONDu-jae 21 KIMJin-kyu

FORWARDS

9 SONGMin-kyu 11 LEEDong-jun 16 HWANGUi-jo* 17 UMWon-sang

COACH

KIMHak-Bum

1 MihaiPOPA (20)1210.00 12 MihaiAIOANI (21)07.11.99 22 StefanTARNOVANU (21)0905.00 DEFENDERS

(33)03.0788 Brentford(Eng) (20)270900 Sint-Truden(Blg) (22)25.0299 RoAve(Por) (32)18.08.88 MnnesotaUnited(USA) (20)15.08.00 HamiltonAcademical(Sco) (22)08.06.99 PerthGlory(Aus) (22)07.0799 Xanthi(Gre)

2 RaduBOBOC 3 Florin STEFAN* 4 AexPASCANU 6 Virgi GHITA 14 AndreiRATIU 15 AndreiCHINDRIS 17 RicardoGRIGORE

(24)12.0297 WellingtonPhoenix (22)270499 Viking(Nor) (19)19.0202 Cope hagen(Den) (22)07.02.99 CentralCoastMarners(Aus) (19)10.1201 WellingtonPhoenix (18)13.0802 LowerHuttCity

5 TudorBALUTA 7 IonGHEORGHE 8 MarusMARIN 10 AndreiCIOBANU 13 EduardFLORESCU 16 RonaldoDEACONU 18 MarcoDULCA 20 AexDOBRE 21 AntonoSEFER

(21)01.0500 (29)07.1291 (24)27.0497 (22)30.0499 (20)11.06.01 (19)13.04.02

Hels ngor(Den) Burney(Eng) BrisbaneRoar(Aus) Hels ngor(Den) WelingtonPhoenix Fakenbergs(Swe)

Faru Constanta Unattached Ponferradina(Spa) FarulConstanta Vil arreal(Spa) Botosani DinamoBucha est

(22)2703.99 (21)081099 (22)300898 (23)18.0198 (24)27.0697 (23)20.0697 (22)110599 (22)300898 (21)22.0400

Brighton(Eng) Voluntari Pisa(ta) Faru Constanta Botosani GazMetan Chindia Targoviste Dijon(F a) Rapid Bucha est

9 GeorgeGANEA (22)260599 11 ValentnGHEORGHE (24)14.0297 19 AndreiSINTEAN (22)16.06.99

Faru Constanta AstraGurgiu Hermannstadt

MIDFIELDERS

FORWARDS

MirelRADOI

(40)22.03.81

SPAIN GOALKEEPERS

(23)15.10.97 JeonbukHyundaiMotors (23)28.01.98 BusanIPark (23)06.04.98 SuwonSamsungBluewings

1 UnaiSIMON (24)11.06.97 13 AlvaroFERNANDEZ (23)13.04.98 22 IvanVILLAR (24)09.07.97

(24)08.02.97 JeonbukHyundaiMotors (23)06.02.98 Daegu (27)13.06.94 GimcheonSangmu (24)16.05.97 Daegu (22)05.12.98 UlsanHyundai (23)30.06.98 Seoul (24)01.07.97 Jeju United (23)01.01.98 SeoulE-Land

2 OscarMINGUEZA 3 MarcCUCURELLA 4 PauTORRES 5 JesusVALLEJO 12 Eric GARCIA 18 OscarGIL 20 JuanMIRANDA

(24)27.02.97 UlsanHyundai (27)30.06.94 SuwonSamsungBluewings (20)19.02.01 Valencia (Spa) (23)20.09.97 UlsanHyundai (24)11.06.97 Gangwon (23)18.11.97 UlsanHyundai (24)24.02.97 BusanIPark (21)12.09.99 (24)01.02.97 (28)28.08.92 (22)06.01.99 (61)01.03.60

AstraGurgiu Faru Constanta FCSB

(22)2404.99 (25)090596 (22)280998 (23)04.0698 (23)20.0698 (22)12.0199 (22)070499

COACH

(46)15.0575

SOUTH KOREA GOALKEEPERS

1 RonwenWILLIAMS* (29)21.01.92 SuperSportUnited 16 Mondli MPOTO (22)24.07.98 Bloemfontein Celtic 22 SifisoMLUNGWANA (24)27.04.97 Lamontvil e GoldenArrows 2 JamesMONYANE 3 KatlegoMOHAMME 5 LukeFLEURS 14 SibusisoMABILISO 15 TerciousMALEPE 17 ThendoMUKUMELA

DEFENDERS

COACH

(42)29.09.78

GOALKEEPERS

DEFENDERS

1 Mic aelWOUD 13 JameSEARLE 22 AlexPAULSEN

ROMANIA GOALKEEPERS

PohangSteelers UlsanHyundai Bordeaux(Fra) Gwangju

DEFENDERS

MIDFIELDERS

6 Martin ZUBIMENDI 8 MikelMERINO* 10 DaniCEBALLOS* 14 CarlosSOLER 15 JonMONCAYOLA 16 PEDRI 17 JaviPUADO FORWARDS

7 MarcoASENSIO* 9 RafaMIR 11 MikelOYARZABAL 19 DaniOLMO 21 BryanGIL COACH

Luis DELAFUENTE

Athletic Bilbao Huesca CeltaVigo

(22)13.05.99 (23)22.07.98 (24)16.01.97 (24)05.01.97 (20)09.01.01 (23)26.04.98 (21)19.01.00

Barcelona Getafe Vil arreal Granada Barcelona Espanyol RealBetis

(22)02.02.99 (25)22.06.96 (24)07.08.96 (24)02.01.97 (23)13.05.98 (18)25.11.02 (23)25.05.98

RealSociedad RealSociedad RealMadrid Valencia Osasuna Barcelona Espanyol

(25)21.01.96 (24)18.06.97 (24)21.04.97 (23)07.05.98 (20)11.02.01

RealMadrid Huesca RealSociedad RBLeipzig (Ger) Eibar

(60)21.06.61

WORLD SOCCER 89

)12.70.22 fo sa sbulc dna sega( sreyalp egarevo setoned*

AlIttihad AlQadsiah AlAhli AlNassr AlHilal AlQadsiah AlAhli

9 AbdullahALHAMDAN (21)13.09.99 19 FirasALBURAIKAN (21)14.05.00

2 JorgeSANCHEZ 3 CesarMONTES 4 JesusAbertoANGULO 5 JohanVASQUEZ 6 Vladimir LORONA 12 AdrianMORA 14 ErickAGUIRRE

Necaxa CubAmé ica CruzAzul

SOUTH AFRICA

(22)18.07.99 (22)17.05.99 (24)02.02.97 (24)15.01.97 (29)25.05.92 (22)02.01.99 (24)19.03.97

MIDFIELDERS

DEFENDERS

Jaime OZANO

SAUDI ARABIA GOALKEEPERS

1 LusMALAGON (24)02.03.97 13 Guil ermoOCHOA* (36)13.07.85 22 SebastianJURADO (23)28.09.97

COACH

(52)23.08.68

NEW ZEALAND GOALKEEPERS


S D AUQS

TOKYO 2020 OLYMPICS WOMEN AUSTRALIA

BRAZIL

GOALKEEPERS

1 Lydia WILLIAMS 18 TeaganMICAH 22 Mackenzie ARNOLD

(33)13.05.88 Arsenal(Eng) (23)20.10.97 Sandviken(Nor) (27)25.02.94 WestHamUnited(Eng)

DEFENDERS

4 ClarePOLKINGHORNE 7 StephCAT EY 12 Ellie CARPENTER 14 AlannaKENNEDY 19 CourtneyNEVIN 20 CharlotteGRANT 21 LauraBROCK

(32)01.02.89 Vittsjo (Swe) (27)260194 Arsenal(Eng) (21)28.04.00 Lyon(F a) (26)21.01.95 TottenhamHotspur(Eng) (19)12.02.02 WesternSydneyWanderers (19)20.09.01 Rosengard(Swe) (31)281189 Guingamp(F a)

MIDFIELDERS

3 KyraCOONEY-CROSS 5 AiviLUIK 6 ChloeLOGARZO 8 EliseKELLOND-KNIGHT 10 Emily VANEGMOND 13 TamekaYALLOP

(19)15.02.02 MelbourneVictory (36)18.03.85 Sevila (Spa) (26)22.12.94 KansasCity(USA) (30)10.08.90 Hammarby(Swe) (28)12.07.93 WestHamUnited(Eng) (30)16.06.91 BrisbaneRoa

FORWARDS

2 SamKERR 9 Cait in FOORD 11 MaryFOWLER 15 Emily GIE NIK 16 HayleyRASO 17 KyahSIMON

(27)10.09.93 (26)11.11.94 (18)14.02.03 (29)13.05.92 (26)05.09.94 (30)25.06.91

Chelsea(Eng) Arsenal(Eng) Montpellier(F a) Vittsjo (Swe) Everton(Eng) PSV(Ned)

COACH

TonyGUSTAVSSON Swe) (47)14.08.73

CHINA 1 ZhuYU 12 PengSHIMENG 22 DingXUAN

DEFENDERS

2 LiMENGWEN 3 Lin YUPING 5 WuHAIYAN 16 WangXIAOXUE 17 LuoGUIPING

MIDFIELDERS

4 LiQINGTONG 6 ZhangXIN 7 WangSHUANG 8 WangYAN 9 MiaoSIWEN 10 WangYANWEN 13 YangLINA 14 Liu JING 19 WangYING 21 ChenQIAOZHU

DEFENDERS

2 POLIANA 3 ERIKA 4 RAFAELLE 6 TAMIRES 13 BRUNA 14 JUCINARA 19 Leticia SANTOS

MIDFIELDERS

5 JULIA 7 DUDA 8 FORMIGA 11 ANGELINA 15 GEYSE 17 ANDR SSINHA

FORWARDS

9 DEBINHA 10 MARTA 12 LUDMILA 16 BEATRIZ 20 GIOVANA 21 ANDR SSA

COACH

Pia SUNDHAGE(Swe)

GOALKEEPERS

(23)23.07.97 WuhanJanghanU versty (23)12.05.98 Jiangsu (32 11.02.89 ShanghaiShengli

1 Ellie ROEBUCK 13 Carly TE FORD 22 SandyMACIVER

(26)28.03.95 Jiangsu (29)28.02.92 MeizhouHakka (28)26.02.93 WuhanJiangha U iversity (26)20.10.94 Jiangsu (28)20.04.93 MeizhouHakka

2 LucyBRONZE 3 DemiSTOKES 5 StephHOUGHTON 12 RachelDALY 14 Mil eBRIGHT 16 LeahWI LIAMSON 21 LotteWUBBEN-MOY

(22)14.04.99 MeizhouHakka (29)23.05.92 ShanghaiShengli (26)23.01.95 WuhanJangha U versty (29)22.08.91 Bejing hoenix (26)24.01.95 ShanghaiShengli (22)27.03.99 BejingPhoenix (27)13.04.94 ShanghaiShengli (23)28.04.98 ChangchunDaz ongZhuoyue (23)18.11.97 WuhanJianghanU iversity (21)08.09.99 MeizhouHakka

DEFENDERS

MIDFIELDERS

4 KeiraWALSH 6 Sop ie INGLE 8 Kim LITTLE 11 CarolineWEIR 17 Georgia STANWAY 18 Jil SCOTT FORWARDS

(31)270190 Tianjin Shengde (25)02.11.95 ShandongSports ottery (24)26.08.96 ChangchunDaz ongZhuoyue (25)10.01.96 ShanghaiShengli

7 NikitaPARRIS 9 EllenWHITE 10 FranKIRBY 15 Lau enHEMP 19 NiamhCHARLES 20 Ella TOONE

(57)09.11.63

HegeRIISE(No )

FORWARDS

11 WangSHANSHAN 15 Ya gMAN 18 WURIGUMULA 20 XiaoYUYI Jia XIUQUAN

1 BARBARA 18 Leticia IZIDORO 22 ALI E

CANADA (33)04.07.88 (26)13.08.94 (32)15.0489

Kinde mann Benfica(Por) Granadil a (Spa)

(30)06.02.91 Corinthians (33)040288 Corinthians (30)18.0691 Palmeiras (33)10.1087 Corinthians (35)16.1085 nternacional (27)03.0893 Levante(Spa) (26)02.12.94 EintrachtFrankfurt(Ger) (23)07.1097 (26)18.0795 (43)03.03.78 (21)26.0100 (23)27.03.98 (26)01.0595

Palmeiras SaoPaulo SaoPaulo O Reign(USA) Madrid CFF(Spa) Corinthians

GOALKEEPERS

1 Stephanie LABBE 18 KailenSHERIDAN 22 Erin McLEOD DEFENDERS

2 AllyshaCHAPMAN 3 KadeishaBUCHANAN 4 ShelinaZA ORSKY 8 JaydeRIVIERE 10 Ashley AWRENCE 14 VanessaGIL ES 21 Gabriel e CARLE MIDFIELDERS

5 QUINN 7 Juia GROSSO 11 DesireeSCOTT 17 Jessie FLEMING 20 Sophie SCHMIDT FORWARDS

(29)20. 091 No th Ca olnaCo rage(USA) (35)19.02.86 OrlandoP de(USA) (26)01.1294 AtleticoMa rid (Spa) (27)17.1293 Palmeiras (18)21.06.03 Barcelona(Spa) (28)10.11.92 Roma(Spa)

6 DeanneROSE 9 AdrianaLEON 12 ChristineS NCLAIR 13 EvelyneVIENS 15 Nichelle PRINCE 16 Ja ineBECKIE 19 Jo dynHUITEMA

(61)13.0260

BevPRIESTMAN E g)

COACH

CHILE (34)10.10.86 (26)16.07.95 (38)26.0283

GOALKEEPERS

Rosengard(Swe) NJ/NYGotham(USA) Orlando ride(USA)

1 ChristianeENDLER 12 Natalia CAMPOS 22 Antonia CANALES

(32)25.01.89 HoustonDash(USA) (25)051 95 Lyon(Fra) (28)24.1092 TottenhamHotspur(Eng) (20)22.01.01 MichiganWolverines(USA) (26)11.06.95 Paris Saint-Germain (Fra) (25)11.03.96 Bor eaux(Fra) (22)121098 FordaState Semi oes(USA)

3 Carla GUERRERO 5 ernandaRAMIREZ 3 ernandaPINIL A 17 JavieraTORO 18 Camila SAEZ 21 VaentinaDIAZ

(25)11.08.95 OLReign(USA) (20)29.08.00 TexasLonghorns(USA) (33)31.07.87 KansasCity(USA) (23)11.0398 Chelsea(Eng) (33)28.0688 HoustonDas (USA) (22)030399 (28)02.1092 (38)12.0683 (24)06.02.97 (26)19.02.95 (26)20.08.94 (20)08.05.01 (35)29.04.86

ForidaGators(USA) WestHamUnited(Eng) PortlandThorns(USA) NJ/NYGotham(USA) HoustonDash(USA) ManchesterCity(Eng) Paris Saint Germain (Fra)

DEFENDERS

MIDFIELDERS

2 Yastin JIMENEZ 4 ancisca ARA 6 NayadetLOPEZ 8 KarenARAYA 1 Yessenia LOPEZ 4 Daniela PARDO 20 ranciscaMARDONES FORWARDS

7 YennyACUNA 9 Maria J seURRUTIA 10 YanaraAEDO 15 Daniela ZAMORA 16 Rosario BALMACEDA 19 JavieraGREZ COACH

JoseLETELIER

(29)23.07.91 Paris Saint-Germain (Fra) (29)12.01.92 UniversidaddeChile (18)16.10.02 UniversidadCatolica (33)23.12.87 (28)300892 (27)06.11.93 (23)22.04.98 (26)17.10.94 (20)30.03.01

UniversidaddeChile UniversidaddeChile UniversidaddeChile Sevil a (Spa) RayoVallecano(Spa) Coo-Colo

(20)17.10.00 (30)29.07.90 (26)05.08.94 (30)16.10.90 (30)20.10.90 (33)09.05.88 (32)24.03.89

Colo-Colo eHavre(Fra) SantaTeresa(Spa) SantiagoMorning Universidad eChile SantagoMorning SantiagoMorning

(24)18.05.97 (27)17.12.93 (27)05.08.93 (30)13.11.90 (22)23.03.99 (21)11.07.00

SantagoMorning Colo-Colo RayoVallecano(Spa) Djurgardens(Swe) SantagoMorning Colo Colo

(55)23.05.66

GREAT BRITAIN

GOALKEEPERS

COACH

GOALKEEPERS

90 WORLD SOCCER

COACH

(21)23.0999 (34)07.0787 (23)18.06.98

ManchesterCity Chelsea Everton

(29)28.1091 (29)12.1291 (33)23.0488 (29)06.12.91 (27)21.08.93 (24)29.0397 (22)11.0199

ManchesterCity ManchesterCity ManchesterCity HoustonDash(USA) Chelsea Arsenal Arsenal

(24)08.0497 (29)02.0991 (31)29.06.90 (26)20.0695 (22)03.01.99 (34)02.02.87

ManchesterCity Chelsea Arsenal ManchesterCity ManchesterCity Everton

(27)10.03.94 (32)09.05.89 (28)290693 (20)07.0800 (22)21.0699 (21)02.09.99

Arsenal ManchesterCity Chelsea ManchesterCity Chelsea Mancheste Unted

(52)18.0769

Hat-trick hero...Ellen White crashed out with Team GB despite her treble v Australia


SQUADS JAPAN GOALKEEPERS

1 SakikoIKEDA 18 Aya aYAMASHITA 22 ChikaHIRAO

DEFENDERS

2 RsaSHIMIZU 3 SaoriTAKARADA 4 SakiKUMAGAI 5 MoekaMINAMI 16 AsatoM YAGAWA 17 anamiK TAMURA 19 Shior MIYAKE

MIDFIELDERS

6 HinaSUGITA 7 EmiNAKAJIMA 8 a umiMIURA 12 JunENDO 13 YuzuhoSH OKOSHI 14 YuiHASEGAWA 20 HonokaHAYASHI 21 MomokaKINOSHITA

FORWARDS

9 YuikaSUGASAWA 10 ManaIWABUCHI 11 MinaTANAKA 15 YukaMOMIKI

COACH

AsakoTAKAKURA

NETHERLANDS (28)0809.92 UrawaReds (25)290995 Nppo TokyoVerdyBeleza (24)311296 AbirexNiigata

1 SariVANVEENENDAAL (31)0304.90 6 LizeKOP (23)170398 22 LoesGEURTS (35)120186

NpponTokyoVerdyBeleza WashingtonSpirit (USA) Lyon(Fra) UrawaReds Nppo TokyoVerdyBeleza Nppo TokyoVerdyBeleza NACKobeLeonessa

2 LynnWILMS (20)031000 3 Stefanie VANDERGRAGT(28)1608.92 4 AniekNOUWEN (22)0903.99 5 MerelVANDONGEN (28)1102.93 12 SiscaFOLKERTSMA (24)210597 5 KikaVANES (29)111091 17 DomniqueJANSSEN (26)170195 21 AnoukDEKKER (34)15.11.86

(25)150696 (21)27.12.99 (30)17.10.90 (22)071298 (23)240298 (21)251199 (25)13.1095

(24)310197 NACKobeLeonessa (30)27.0990 INACKobeLeonessa (24)03.07.97 NpponTokyoVerdyBeleza (21)240500 NpponTokyoVerdyBeleza (23)011197 UrawaReds (24)290197 Mia (Ita) (23)19.0598 AIK (Swe) (18)02.03.03 NipponTokyoVerdyBeleza (30)05.1090 (28)18.0393 (27)280494 (25)090496

UrawaReds Arsenal(Eng) INACKobeLeonessa OLReign(USA)

1 Erin NAYLER 18 AnnaLEAT 22 Victoria ESSON

DEFENDERS

3 AnnaGREEN 4 C.J.BOTT 5 Meikayla MOORE 6 Claudia BUNGE 7 Ali RILEY 8 AbbyERCEG 19 ElizabethANTON 20 MarisaVANDERMEER

MIDFIELDERS

2 Ria PERCIVAL 10 Annalie LONGO 12 BetsyHASSETT 14 Katie BOWEN 15 DaisyCLEVERLEY 16 EmmaROLSTON

FORWARDS

COACH

TomSERMANNI(Sco)

FCTwente Ajax PSV AtleticoMadrid (Spa) FCTwente FCTwente Wolfsburg(Ger) Montpellier(Fra)

(24)2204.97 Arsenal(Eng) (29)0508.91 Arsenal(Eng) (22)0306.99 Ajax (26)171294 ManchesterUnited(Eng) (25)170496 Brighton(Eng)

FORWARDS

7 ShaniceVANDESANDEN(28)021092 8 Joelle SMITS (21)070200 9 Viv anneMIEDEMA (25)1507.96 11 LiekeMARTENS (28)1612.92 18 LinethBEERENSTEYN (24)1110.96 19 RenateJANSEN (30)071290 SarinaWIEGMAN

Wolfsburg(Ge ) PSV Arsenal(Eng) Barcelona(Spa) BayernMunich(Ger) FCTwente

(51)26.10.69

Top scorer...Vivianne Miedema scored a record ten goals for the Netherlands

SWEDEN Reading(Eng) FFDP Avaldsnes(Nor)

(30)20.08.90 LowerHuttCity (26)22.04.95 Valerenga(Nor) (25)04.06.96 Liverpool(Eng) (21)21.09.99 MelbourneVictory(Aus) (33)30.10.87 OrlandoPride(USA) (31)20.11.89 North CarolinaCourage(USA) (22)12.12.98 FFDP (19)27.03.02 FFDP (31)07.12.89 TottenhamHotspur(Eng) (30)01.07.91 MelbourneVictory(Aus) (30)04.08.90 Stjarnan(Ice) (27)15.04.94 KansasCity(USA) (24)30.04.97 GeorgetownHoyas(USA) (24)10.11.96 NorthernLights (20)07.07.01 IndianaHoosiers(USA) (27)05.10.93 BrisbaneRoar(Aus) (23)13.04.98 CanberraUnited(Aus) (29)28.05.92 Duisburg(Ger) (24)28.08.96 LowerHuttCity (67)01.07.54

MIDFIELDERS

6 Jil ROORD 10 Daniel e VANDEDONK 13 Victoria PELOVA 14 Jackie GROENEN 20 InessaKAAGMAN

PSV Ajax Hacken(Swe)

GOALKEEPERS

1 Hedvig LINDAHL 12 JenniferFALK 22 ZeciraMUSOVIC

DEFENDERS

2 JonnaANDERSSON 3 EmmaKULLBERG 4 HannaGLAS 6 MagdalenaERIKSSON 13 AmandaILESTEDT 14 Nathalie BJORN

MIDFIELDERS

5 HannaBENNISON 8 LinaHURTIG 9 KosovareASLLANI 16 FilippaANGELDAL 17 CarolineSEGER 20 Julia RODDAR

FORWARDS

7 MadelenJANOGY 10 SofiaJAKOBSSON 11 StinaBLACKSTENIUS 15 Olivia SCHOUGH 18 FridolinaROLFO 19 AnnaANVEGARD 21 RebeckaBLOMQVIST

COACH

PeterGERHARDSSON

UNITED STATES GOALKEEPERS

(38)29.04.83 (28)26.04.93 (25)26.05.96

AtleticoMadrid (Spa) Hacken Chelsea(Eng)

1 AlyssaNAEHER 18 AdriannaFRANCH 22 JaneCAMPBELL

(28)02.01.93 (29)25.09.91 (28)16.04.93 (27)08.09.93 (28)17.01.93 (24)04.05.97

Chelsea(Eng) Hacken BayernMunich(Ger) Chelsea(Eng) BayernMunich(Ger) Rosengard

2 CrystalDUNN 4 BeckySAUERBRUNN 5 KelleyO’HARA 12 TiernaDAVIDSON 14 Emily SONNETT 17 AbbyDAHLKEMPER 20 CaseyKRUEGER

(18)16.10.02 Rosengard (25)05.09.95 Juventus(Ita) (31)29.07.89 RealMadrid (Spa) (24)14.07.97 Hacken (36)19.03.85 Rosengard (29)16.02.92 WashingtonSpirit (USA) (25)12.11.95 (31)23.04.90 (25)05.02.96 (30)11.03.91 (27)24.11.93 (24)10.05.97 (23)24.07.97 (61)22.08.59

Hammarby RealMadrid (Spa) Hacken Rosengard Wolfsburg(Ger) Rosengard Wolfsburg(Ger)

DEFENDERS

MIDFIELDERS

3 SamMEWIS 6 Kristie MEWIS 8 Julie ERTZ 9 LindseyHORAN 16 RoseLAVELLE 19 CatarinaMACARIO FORWARDS

7 Tobin HEATH 10 Carli LLOYD 11 ChristenPRESS 13 AlexMORGAN 15 MeganRAPINOE 21 LynnWILLIAMS COACH

(33)20.04.88 (30)12.11.90 (26)17.02.95

ZAMBIA ChicagoRedStars PortlandThorns HoustonDash

(29)03.07.92 PortlandThorns (36)06.06.85 PortlandThorns (32)04.08.88 WashingtonSpirit (22)19.09.98 ChicagoRedStars (27)25.11.93 WashingtonSpirit (28)13.05.93 ManchesterCity(Eng) (30)23.08.90 ChicagoRedStars (28)09.10.92 NorthCarolinaCourage (30)25.02.91 HoustonDash (29)06.04.92 ChicagoRedStars (27)26.05.94 PortlandThorns (26)14.05.95 OLReign (21)04.10.99 Lyon(Fra) (33)29.05.88 Unattached (39)16.07.82 GothamFC (32)29.12.88 Unattached (32)02.07.89 OrlandoPride (36)05.07.85 OLReign (28)21.05.93 NorthCarolinaCourage

VlatkoANDONOVSKI(Mkd) (44)14.09.76

GOALKEEPERS

1 CatherineMUSONDA (23)20.02.98 IndeniRoses 16 HazelNALI (23)04.04.98 HapoelBe’erSheva(Isr) 22 NgamboMUSOLE (23)26.06.98 ZESCOUnited DEFENDERS

2 Fikile KHOSA 3 LushomoMWEEMBA 4 EstherSIAMFUKO 5 AnitaMULENGA 8 MargaretBELEMU 13 MarthaTEMBO 18 VastPHIRI 20 EstherMUKWASA MIDFIELDERS

6 MaryWILOMBE 10 GraceCHANDA 14 IreenLUNGU 15 AgnessMUSASE 17 RachealKUNDANANJI 19 EvarineKATONGO 21 HellenCHANDA FORWARDS

7 Lubandji OCHUMBA 9 HellenMUBANGA 11 BarbraBANDA 12 Avell CHITUNDU

(24)24.07.96 (20)10.04.01 (16)08.08.04 (26)03.05.95 (24)24.02.97 (23)08.03.98 (25)03.02.96 (24)24.10.96

RedArrows GreenBuffaloes QueensAcademy GreenBuffaloes RedArrows GreenBuffaloes ZESCOUnited IndeniRoses

(23)22.09.97 (24)11.06.97 (23)06.10.97 (24)11.07.97 (21)03.06.00 (18)29.12.02 (23)19.06.98

RedArrows RedArrows GreenBuffaloes GreenBuffaloes BIIK Kazygurt(Kaz) ZISDQueens RedArrows

(20)01.07.01 RedArrows (26)23.05.95 ZaragozaCFF(Spa) (21)20.03.00 ShanghaiShengli (Chn) (23)30.07.97 ZESCOUnited

COACH

BruceMWAPE

WORLD SOCCER 91

)12.70.12 fo sa sbulc dna sega(

9 GabiRENNIE 11 Olivia CHANCE 13 PaigeSATCHELL 17 HannahWILKINSON 21 Michaela ROBERTSON

(29)17.04.92 (20)26.06.01 (30)06.03.91

DEFENDERS

COACH

(53)19.04.68

NEW ZEALAND GOALKEEPERS

GOALKEEPERS


serutxif ,selbat ,stluser

Internationals 2020 OlYMPiCs

Mn’ tonmn

Gop a Jul 22 – Tokyo Mco 4 (Vega 47, Cordova 55, Antuna 80, Aguirre 90+1) fnc1 (Gignac 69 pen) Ht: 0-0. r: Beath (Aus) Jul 22 – Tokyo Jpn1 (Kubo 71) soh ac 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Valenzuela (Ven) Jul 25 – Saitama fnc 4 (Gignac 57, 78, 86 pen, Savanier 90+3) soh ac 3 (Kodisang 53, Makgopa 73, Mokoena 82) Ht: 0-0. r: Ortega (Per) Jul 25 – Saitama Jpn 2 (Kubo 6, Doan11 pen) Mco1 (Alvarado 85) Ht: 2-0. r: Dias (Por) Jul 28 – Yokohama fnc 0 Jpn 4 (Kubo 27, Sakai 34, Miyoshi 70, Maeda 90+1) Ht: 0-2. r: Barton (Slv) Jul 28 – Yokohama soh ac 0 Mco 3 (Vega18, Romo 45+1, Martin 60) Ht: 0-2. r: Conger (Nzl) Jpn (Q) Mco (Q) fnc soh ac

P 3 3 3 3

W 3 2 1 0

D 0 0 0 0

l 0 1 2 3

f 7 8 5 3

a 1 3 11 8

P 9 6 3 0

Gop b Jul 22 – Kashima Nw Znd1 (Wood 70) soh Ko 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Gomes (RSA) Jul 22 – Kashima Hond 0 romn1 (Oliva 45+1 og) Ht: 0-0. r: Gonzalez (Uru) Jul 25 – Kashima Nw Znd1 (Cacace10, Wood 49) Hond 3 (Palma 45+1, ObregonJr 59, Rivas 87) Ht:1-1. r: Grinfeld (Isr) Jul 25 – Kashima romn 0 soh Ko 4 (Marin 27 og, Um Won-sang 59, Lee Kang-in 84 pen, 90) Ht: 0-1. r: Valenzuela (Ven) Jul 28 – Sapporo romn 0 Nw Znd 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Ortega (Per) Jul 28 – Yokohama soh Ko 6 (Hwang Ui-jo12 pen, 45+5, 52 pen, Won Da-jae19 pen, KimJin-ya 64, Lee Kang-in 82) Hond 0 Ht: 3-0. r: Kabakov (Bul) P soh Ko (Q) 3 Nw Znd (Q) 3 romn 3 3 Hond

W 2 1 1 1

D 0 1 1 0

l 1 1 1 2

Gop C Jul 22 – Sapporo egyp 0 spn 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Makhadmeh (Jor)

92 World Soccer

f 10 3 1 3

a P 1 6 3 4 4 4 9 3

Jul 22 – Sapporo agnn 0 a 2 (Wales14, Tilio 80) Ht: 0-1. r:Jovanovic (Ser) Jul 25 – Sapporo egyp 0 agnn1 (Medina 52) Ht: 0-0. r: Kabakov (Bul) Jul 25 – Sapporo a 0 spn1 (Oyarzabal 81) Ht: 0-0. r: Weyesa (Eth)

Jul 28 – Rifu a 0 egyp 2 (Rayyan 44, A. Hamdy 85) Ht: 0-1. r: Dias (Por) Jul 28 – Saitama spn1 (Merino 66) agnn1 (Belmonte 87) Ht: 0-0. r: Elfath (USA) spn (Q) egyp (Q) agnn a

P 3 3 3 3

W 1 1 1 1

D 2 1 1 0

l 0 1 1 2

f 2 2 2 2

a P 1 5 1 4 3 4 3 3

Gop D Jul 22 – Yokohama ivoy Co 2 (Al-Amri 39 og, Kessie 66) sd a1 (Al-Dawsari 44) Ht:1-1. r: Conger (Nzl) Jul 22 – Yokohama bz 4 (Richarlison 7, 22, 30, Paulinho 90+5) Gmny 2 (Amiri 57, Ache 84) Ht: 3-0. r: Barton (Slv) Jul 25 – Yokohama bz 0 ivoy Co 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Elfath (USA) Jul 25 – Yokohama sd a 2 (Al-Najei 30, 50) Gmny 3 (Amiri11, Ache 43, Uduokhai 75) Ht:1-2. r: Gomes (RSA) Jul 28 – Saitama sd a1 (Al-Amri 27) bz 3 (Cunha14, Richarlison 76, 90+1) Ht:1-1. r: Weyesa (Eth) Jul 28 – Rifu Gmny1 (Lowen 73) ivoy Co1 (Henrichs 69 og) Ht: 0-0. r: Gonzalez (Uru) P 3 bz (Q) ivoy Co (Q) 3 3 Gmny sd a 3

W 2 1 1 0

D 1 2 1 0

l 0 0 1 3

f 7 3 6 4

a P 3 7 2 5 7 4 8 0

Q-fn Jul 31 – Rifu spn 5 (Olmo 30, Mir 90+3,117,120+1, Oyarzabal 98 pen) ivoy Co 2 (Bailly10, Gradel 90+1) Ht:1-1. r: Valenzuela (Ven) After Extra-Time Jul 31 – Kashima Jpn 0 Nw Znd 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Elfath (USA) After Extra-Time. Japan win 4-2 on penalties Jul 31 – Saitama bz1 (Cunha 37) egyp 0 Ht:1-0. r: Beath (Aus)

July 31 – Yokohama soh Ko 3 (Lee Dong-gyeong 20, 51, Hwang Ui-jo 90+1) Mco 6 (Martin12, 54, Romo 30, Cordova 39 pen, 63, Aguirre 84) Ht:1-2. r: Grinfeld (Isr) sm-fn Aug 3 – Kashima Mco 0 bz 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Kabakov (Bul) After Extra-Time. Brazil win 4-1 on penalties Aug 3 – Saitama Jpn 0 spn1 (Asensio115) Ht: 0-0. r: Ortega (Per) After Extra-Time bonz Md Mch Aug 6 – Saitama Mco 3 (Cordova13 pen, Vasquez 22, Vega 58) Jpn1 (Mitoma 78) Ht: 2-0. r: Weyesa (Eth) God Md Mch Aug 7 – Yokohama bz1 (Cunha 45+2, Malcom108) spn1 (Oyarzabal 61) Ht:1-0. r: Beath (Aus) After Extra-Time

2020 OlYMPiCs

Womn’ tonmn

Gop e Jul 21 – Sapporo G bn 2 (White18, 73) Ch 0 Ht:1-0. r: Mukansanga (Rwa) Jul 21 – Tokyo Jpn1 (Iwabuchi 84) Cnd1 (Sinclair 6) Ht: 0-1. r: Batista (Bra) Jul 24 – Saitama Ch1 (Araya 57 pen) Cnd 2 (Beckie 39, 47) Ht: 0-1. r: Staubli (Swi) Jul 24 – Saitama Jpn 0 G bn1 (White 74) Ht: 0-0. r: Pustovoitova (Rus) Jul 27 – Yokohama Ch 0 Jpn1 (Tanaka 77) Ht: 0-0. r: Borjas (Hon) Jul 27 – Yokohama Cnd1 (Leon 55) G bn1 (Prince 85 og) Ht: 0-0. r: Monzul (Ukr) P G bn (Q) 3 Cnd (Q) 3 3 Jpn (Q) Ch 3

W 2 1 1 0

D 1 2 1 0

l 0 0 1 3

Jul 24 – Rifu Nhnd 3 (Miedema 3, 59,Janssen 79) bz 3 (Debinha16, Marta 65 pen, Ludmila 68) Ht:1-1. r:Jacewicz (Aus) Jul 27 – Yokohama Nhnd 8 (Van de Sanden12, Beerensteyn 37, 45+2, Martens 47, 70, Miedema 65, 76, Pelova 71) Chn 2 (Wang Shuang 28, Wang Yanwen 69) Ht: 3-1. r: Mukansanga (Rwa) Jul 27 – Saitama bz1 (Andressa19) Zm 0 Ht:1-0. r: Yamashita (Jap) P Nhnd (Q) 3 3 bz (Q) 3 Zm 3 Chn

a P 1 7 3 5 2 4 5 0

Gop f Jul 21 – Rifu Chn 0 bz 5 (Marta 9, 74, Debinha 22, Andressa 82 pen, Beatriz 89) Ht: 0-2. r: Monzul (Ukr) Jul 21 – Rifu Zm 3 (Banda19, 82, 83) Nhnd10 (Miedema 9,15, 29, 59, Martens14, 38, Van de Sanden 44, Roord 64, Beerensteyn 75, Pelova 80) Ht:1-6. r: Fortunato (Arg) Jul 24 – Rifu Chn 4 (Wang Shuang 6, 22, 23, 84 pen) Zm 4 (Kundananji15, Banda 43 pen, 46, 69) Ht: 3-2. r: Borjas (Hon)

D 1 1 1 1

l 0 0 2 2

f 21 9 7 6

a 8 3 15 17

P 7 7 1 1

Gop G Jul 21 – Tokyo swdn 3 (Blackstenius 25, 54, Hurtig 72) und s 0 Ht:1-0. r: Yamashita (Jap) Jul 21 – Tokyo a 2 (Yallop 20, Kerr 33) Nw Znd1 (Rennie 90+1) Ht: 2-0. r: Venegas (Mex) Jul 24 – Saitama swdn 4 (Rolfo 20, 63, Hurtig 52, Blackstenius 82) a 2 (Kerr 36, 48) Ht:1-1. r: Batista (Bra) Jul 24 – Saitama Nw Znd1 (Hassett 72) und s 6 (Lavelle 9, Horan 45, Erceg 63 og, Press 80, Morgan 88, Bott 90+3 og) Ht: 0-2. r: Frappert (Fra) Jul 27 – Rifu Nw Znd 0 swdn 2 (Anvegard17,Janogy 29) Ht: 0-2. r: Fortunato (Arg) Jul 27 – Kashima und s 0 a 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Pustovoitova (Rus) P swdn (Q) 3 und s (Q) 3 a (Q) 3 Nw Znd 3

f 4 4 2 1

W 2 2 0 0

W 3 1 1 0

D 0 1 1 0

l 0 1 1 3

f 9 6 4 2

a 2 4 5 10

P 9 4 4 0

Q-fn Jul 30 – Rifu Cnd 0 bz 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Frappart (Fra) After Extra-Time. Canada win 4-3 on penalties Jul 30 – Kashima G bn 3 (White 57, 66,115) a 4 (Kennedy 35, Kerr 89,106, Fowler103) Ht: 0-1. r: Mukansanga (Rwa) After Extra-Time Jul 30 – Saitama swdn 3 (Eriksson 7, Blackstenius 53, Asllani 68 pen) Jpn1 (Tanaka 23) Ht:1-1. r: Venegas (Mex) July 30 – Yokohama Nhnd 2 (Miedema18, 54) und s 2 (S. Mewis 28, Williams 31) Ht:1-2. r:Jacewicz (Aus) After Extra-Time. USA win 4-2 on penalties sm-fn Aug 2 – Kashima und s 0 Cnd1 (Fleming 75) Ht: 0-0. r: Monzul (Ukr)


results, tables, fixtures Aug 2 – Yokohama a 0 swdn1 (Rolfo 46) Ht: 0-0. r: Borjas (Hon)

Jul 7 – Port Elizabeth sng1 (Diene17) Nm 2 (Papama13, Kambindu 50) Ht:1-1. r: Dungula (Ang)

Jul 11 – Frisco e svdo 2 (Roldan 81, Rivas 90+6) Gm 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Marrufo (USA)

bonz Md Mch

Jul 9 – Port Elizabeth Mw 2 (Muyaba 27, Kuwali 50) Zmw 2 (Sarupinda 62, Musaka 79) Ht:1-0. r: Dintwa (Bot)

Jul 14 – Frisco tndd & togo 0 e svdo 2 (Henriquez 30, Martinez 90+1) Ht: 0-1. r: Brown (Hon)

Jul 9 – Port Elizabeth sng1 (Djitte 63) Mozmq 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Koto (Les)

Jul 14 – Dallas Gm 0 Mco 3 (Funes Mori 29, 55, Pineda 79) Ht: 0-1. r: Parchment (Jam)

Jul 11 – Port Elizabeth Nm 2 (Amini 70 og, Kambindu 86) Zmw 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Nkolo (Zam)

Jul 18 – Dallas Mco1 (L. Rodriguez 26) e svdo 0 Ht:1-0. r: Martinez (Hon)

Jul 11 – Port Elizabeth Mozmq 2 (Vitinho 55 pen, Simbine 68) Mw 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Chimene (Zim)

Jul 18 – Frisco Gm1 (Gordillo 78) tndd & togo1 (Moore12) Ht: 0-1. r: Nation (Jam)

Aug 5 – Kashima a 3 (Kerr17, Foord 54, Gielnik 90) und s 4 (Rapinoe 8, 21, Lloyd 45+1, 51) Ht:1-3. r: Fortunato (Arg) God Md Mch Aug 6 – Yokohama swdn1 (Blackstenius 34) Cnd1 (Fleming 68 pen) Ht:1-0. r: Pustovoitova (Rus) After Extra-Time. Canada win 3-2 on penalties

AFRICA

2021 COsafa CuP

Gop a Jul 6 – Port Elizabeth ewn 3 (Badenhorst 42, Khethkulhe 57, Mamba 78) loho1 (Khutlang 45+4) Ht:1-1. r: Tom (RSA) Jul 6 – Port Elizabeth soh ac1 (Malinga 6) bown 0 Ht:1-0. r: Chimene (Zim)

Jul 10 – Port Elizabeth loho 0 bown 4 (Orebonye 28, 45+4 pen, 69, Kgamanyane 73) Ht: 0-2. r: Sibandze (Esw)

Jul 13 – Port Elizabeth bown1 (Kgamanyane 62) Zm 2 (Shonga 21, 83 pen) Ht: 0-1. r: Sibandze (Esw)

l 1 1 1 2 2

f 6 3 5 4 3

a P 4 9 1 7 3 7 7 2 6 2

sm-fn

thd-Pc Py-O Jul 18 – Port Elizabeth ewn1 (Mkhontfo 89) Mozmq1 (Thauzene 39) Ht: 0-1. r: Tom (RSA) Eswatini win 4-2 on penalties

Jul 14 – Port Elizabeth soh ac 0 Zm 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Chimene (Zim) Jul 14 – Port Elizabeth ewn1 (Ndzinisa19) bown1 (Kgamanyane 65) Ht:1-0. r: Nkole (Zam)

Jul 7 – Port Elizabeth Mozmq 0 Zmw 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Adelaide (Sey)

D 0 1 1 2 2

Jul 16 – Port Elizabeth soh ac 3 (Ngcobo 24, Maart 59, Letsoalo 73 pen) Mozmq 0 Ht:1-0. r: Chimene (Zim)

Jul 13 – Port Elizabeth soh ac 4 (Letsoalo 5, 44, 57, Mkhulise 20) loho 0 Ht: 2-0. r: Nkole (Zam)

Gop b

W 3 2 2 0 0

l 0 1 2 2 3

f 6 5 3 6 3

a 0 3 4 4 12

P 10 7 4 4 3

fn Jul 18 – Port Elizabeth sng 0 soh ac 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Nkole (Zam) After Extra-Time. South Africa win 5-4 on penalties

CONCACAF 2021 GOlD CuP

Gop a Jul 10 – Arlington Mco 0 tndd & togo 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Monero (Crc)

D 1 0 2 1

l 0 1 1 2

f 4 4 1 1

a P 0 7 1 6 3 2 6 1

Jul 11 – Kansas City und s1 (Vines 8) H 0 Ht:1-0. r: Martinez (Hon)

Jul 16 – Port Elizabeth sng 2 (Djitte 58, Kane 80) ewn 2 (Matse15, Ndzinisa 20) Ht: 0-2. r: Koto (Les) Senegal win 3-0 on penalties

Jul 10 – Port Elizabeth Zm 0 ewn1 (Gomedze 53) Ht: 0-0. r: Tom (RSA)

D 1 1 1 1 0

P sng (Q) 4 Mozmq (Q) 4 Nm 4 4 Mw Zmw 4

W 2 2 0 0

Co rc (Q) Jmc (Q) snm Gdop

Gop b Jul 11 – Kansas City Cnd 4 (Larin16, Osorio 20, Eustaquio 26, Corbeanu 89) Mnq1 (Riviere10) Ht: 3-1. r: Barton (Slv)

Jul 14 – Port Elizabeth sng 2 (Diop11, 90+1) Mw1 (Muyaba 35) Ht:1-1. r: Dintwa (Bot)

Jul 8 – Port Elizabeth soh ac1 (Sibanyoni 59) ewn 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Muianga (Moz)

W 3 2 1 1 1

Jul 13 – Port Elizabeth Mw1 (Mhone 73) Nm1 (Kambindu 53) Ht: 0-0. r: Makalima (RSA) Jul 14 – Port Elizabeth Mozmq1 (Melito 80) Nm 0 Ht:1-0. r: Koto (Les)

Jul 8 – Port Elizabeth Zm1 (Shonga 2) loho 2 (Motebang 70, 88) Ht:1-0. r: Makalima (RSA)

P soh ac (Q) 4 ewn (Q) 4 4 Zm bown 4 4 loho

P Mco (Q) 3 e svdo (Q) 3 tndd & togo 3 Gm 3

Jul 13 – Port Elizabeth sng 2 (Ndoye 44, Ba 88) Zmw1 (Amini 3 pen) Ht:1-1. r: Tom (RSA)

Jul 15 – Kansas City H1 (Lambese 56) Cnd 4 (Eustaquio 5, Larin 51, 74 pen, Hoilett 79 pen) Ht: 0-1. r: Calderon (Crc) Jul 15 – Kansas City Mnq1 (Riviere 64 pen) und s 6 (Dike14, 59, Camille 23 og, Robinson 50, Zardes 70, Gioacchini 90) Ht: 0-2. r: Escobar (Gua) Jul 18 – Frisco Mnq1 (Fortune 53) H 2 (Antoine 3, Ade 61) Ht: 0-1. r: Cornejo (Slv) Jul 18 – Kansas City und s1 (Moore1) Cnd 0 Ht:1-0. r: Escobedo (Mex) P und s (Q) 3 Cnd (Q) 3 H 3 Mnq 3

W 3 2 1 0

D 0 0 0 0

l 0 1 2 3

f 8 8 3 3

a 1 3 6 12

Jul 20 – Orlando Co rc1 (Ruiz 53) Jmc 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Escobar (Gua) Jul 20 – Houston snm 2 (Vlijter14, Hasselbaink 79) Gdop1 (Phaeton 20) Ht:1-1. r: Guerrero (Mex)

P 9 6 3 0

Gop C Jul 12 – Orlando Jmc 2 (Nicholson 6, Decordova-Reid 26) snm 0 Ht: 2-0. r: Gassama (Gam) Jul 12 – Orlando Co rc 3 (Campbell 6, Lassiter 21, Borges 70) Gdop1 (Mirval 45+5) Ht: 2-1. r: Elfath (USA) Jul 16 – Orlando Gdop1 (Ramothe 4) Jmc 2 (Burke14, Flemmings 87) Ht:1-1. r: Lopez (Gua) Jul 16 – Orlando snm1 (Vlijter 52) Co rc 2 (Campbell 58, Borges 59) Ht: 0-0. r: Hernandez (Mex)

P 3 3 3 3

W 3 2 1 0

D 0 0 0 0

l 0 1 2 3

f 6 4 3 3

a P 2 9 2 6 5 3 7 0

Gop D Jul 13 – Houston Q 3 (Afif 48, Ali 53, Al-Haydos 63 pen) Pnm 3 (Blackburn 51, 58, Davis 79 pen) Ht: 0-0. r: Ramos (Mex) Jul 13 – Houston Hond 4 (Bengtson 28, Solano 52, Leveron 86, Quioto 88) Gnd 0 Ht:1-0. r: Guerrero (Mex) Jul 17 – Houston Gnd 0 Q 4 (Hatem11, Afif 22, Muntari 36, Ali 46) Ht: 0-3. r: Villarreal (USA) Jul 17 – Houston Pnm 2 (Davis 32 pen, Yanis 45+1) Hond 3 (Quioto 22, 65, A. Lopez 61) Ht: 2-1. r: Gassama (Gam) Jul 20 – Houston Hond 0 Q 2 (Ahmed 25, Hatem 90+5) Ht: 0-1. r: Marrufo (USA) Jul 20 – Orlando Pnm 3 (Quintero 7, Rodriguez 27, 64) Gnd1 (Frank 76) Ht: 2-0. r: Ramos (Mex) Q (Q) Hond (Q) Pnm Gnd

P 3 3 3 3

W 2 2 1 0

D 1 0 1 0

l 0 1 1 3

f 9 7 8 1

a 3 4 7 11

P 7 6 4 0

Q-fn Jul 24 – Glendale Q 3 (Ali 2, 55 pen, Hatem 8) e svdo 2 (Rivas 63, 66) Ht: 2-0. r: Hernandez (Mex) Jul 24 – Glendale Mco 3 (Funes Mori 26,J. Dos Santos 31, Pineda 38) Hond 0 Ht: 3-0. r: Escobar (Gua) Jul 25 – Arlington Co rc 0 Cnd 2 (Hoilett18, Eustaquio 69) Ht: 0-1. r: Marrufo (USA) Jul 25 – Arlington und s1 (Hoppe 83) Jmc 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Ramos (Mex) sm-fn Jul 29 – Austin Q 0 und s1 (Zardes 86) Ht: 0-0. r: Calderon (Crc) Jul 29 – Houston Mco 2 (Pineda 45+2 pen, Herrera 90+9) Cnd1 (Buchanan 57) Ht:1-0. r: Parchment (Jam) fn Aug 1 – Paradise und s1 (Robinson117) Mco 0 Ht: 0-0. r: Martinez (Hon) After Extra-Time World Soccer 93


serutxif ,selbat ,stluser

Club Football AFRICA fiNal tables 2020-21 aNGOla

P sgdepnc(C) 30 Po d lnd 30 1º d agoo 30 bvo do Mq 30 rcvo d C 30 inc 30 30 W acdmc do loo 30 Pogo 30 rcvo do loo 30 Dpovo H 30 Cndo Cngo 30 spong d Cnd 30 bdKng(r) 30 sn r (r) 30 fovo doHmo*(r) 30

W 21 21 19 15 11 11 10 10 9 8 9 6 10 8 7 0

D 7 4 7 10 13 11 11 8 7 10 7 15 3 8 8 1

l 2 5 4 5 6 8 9 12 14 12 14 9 17 14 15 29

f 42 47 54 43 30 35 38 30 29 21 25 31 25 28 18 5

a 10 17 23 23 19 22 33 31 37 32 30 31 40 43 29 81

P 70 67 64 55 46 44 41 38 34 34 34 33 33 32 29 1

Chmponhp rond P W 18 12 loo (C) bfl 18 10 18 8 Dgon 18 8 aym bk bmk 18 7 Dm 18 6 rqn 18 6 en 18 6 18 3 Coono Dynmo Pko 18 4 Hodo 18 4 18 1 asOs

D 3 3 7 7 5 6 5 3 10 6 4 7

l 3 5 3 3 6 6 7 9 5 8 10 10

f 34 24 21 15 21 21 19 15 15 16 19 12

a 15 13 14 9 18 19 21 19 22 21 27 34

P 39 33 31 31 26 24 23 21 19 18 16 10

W 17 17 17 15 10 11 11 11 10 11 11 9 8 9 9 7 9 6

D 16 10 9 12 19 14 10 10 12 8 8 13 15 12 10 14 8 12

l 1 6 8 7 5 9 13 13 12 15 15 12 11 13 15 13 17 16

f 49 56 48 35 36 32 27 36 32 27 23 31 30 31 27 26 22 27

a 24 33 33 23 21 33 27 37 38 29 38 40 31 37 35 38 40 45

P 67 64 60 57 49 47 43 43 42 41 41 40 39 39 37 35 35 30

W 15 16 16 15 14 14 13 12 11 12 11 10 10 9 6 2

D 10 7 6 8 8 8 5 6 9 5 6 7 6 4 7 6

l 5 7 8 7 8 8 12 12 10 13 13 13 14 17 17 22

f 42 50 43 49 48 41 34 35 36 24 33 35 38 31 30 15

a 26 35 26 33 30 35 33 30 32 27 39 42 45 42 58 51

P 55 55 54 53 50 50 44 42 42 41 39 37 36 31 25 12

*Ferroviario do Huambo forfeited all points (up until the 27th round) for fielding an ineligible player. Subsequently, their respective opponents were each awarded a 3-0 win

beNiN

burKiNa fasO

P sONabel (C) 34 34 Don 34 s usfa Ogdogo 34 rC boo-Doo 34 asfa Ynnng 34 eo fn 34 roy 34 Mjc 34 aseC Kodogo 34 r C d Kdogo 34 asf boo-Doo 34 Poc 34 V 34 rhmo (r) 34 us Ogdogo (r) 34 lopd (r) 34 KOZaf (r) 34

buruNDi

P lMgNgoz(C) 30 Kynz und 30 fm d Cn 30 ag No 30 Mong 30 30 rknzo 30 V’O Oympc s 30 roy d Mmvy 30 Dynmk 30 bmm 30 ahco Oympc 30 Pjm Cy 30 in s (r) 30 l ephn (r) 30 Mzng (r) 30

CONGO

DJibOuti

P a / so 7(C) 18 Poc Non 18 18 Gr / siaf 18 Po Gndm 18 asas 18 18 Hyy 18 Dkh bwqo / CCO (r)18 Q5/No tn (r) 18

Dr CONGO

P W D l f a P Ooho d’Oyo (C) 26 21 3 2 48 9 66

94 World Soccer

D No 26 Js tng 26 lopd d Do 26 Cara bzzv 26 eo d Congo 26 Kondzo 26 Pongsn-ann 26 inCdbzzv 26 Nhy 26 Nco-Ncoy 26 VCdMoknd 26 Chmno (r) 26 rC d bzzv (r) 26

P tP Mzm (C) 30 Mnm unon 30 V C 30 sn-eo lpopo 30 sng bnd 30 Mom Pm 30 bng Kowz 30 Don boco 30 rnnc dCongo 30 30 rng Js Knh 30 Dphn No 30 sm 30 Gop bzno (r) 30 rC Knh (r) 30 lmhspo (r) 30

etHiOPia

P f Knm (C) 24 ehop bnn 24 Kd Gog 24 Hdy Hon 24 s Knm 24 aw Knm 24 bhd 24 Wy Dch 24 sdm bnn 24 D Dw Knm 24 Wok Km 24 Jmm aJ 24 adm Knm 24

GaMbia

P fon (C) 26 e und 26 r d bnj 26 Wdn 26 W bnj 26 26 GPa amd foc 26 bkm und 26 26 Mmoo GaMtel 26 26 bnj 26 Hwk 26 Mn (r) tndng und (r) 26

GHaNa

P H o Ok (C) 34 an Kooko 34 Wafa 34 adn s 34 Mdm 34

15 11 10 10 9 8 8 6 7 6 6 6 6

6 7 9 8 10 11 9 10 6 8 7 6 6

5 8 7 8 7 7 9 10 13 12 13 14 14

42 28 37 26 23 25 17 23 22 23 15 25 28

21 26 32 20 22 26 23 23 42 28 30 31 49

51 40 39 38 37 35 33 28 27 26 25 24 24

W 15 11 9 9 8 7 5 5 2 1

D 1 2 6 6 4 4 7 4 0 2

l 2 5 3 3 6 7 6 9 16 15

f 67 38 43 36 34 29 21 33 11 16

a 20 21 21 19 23 22 24 35 58 85

P 46 35 33 33 28 25 22 19 6 5

W 20 20 19 14 15 13 10 10 8 10 7 9 8 6 5 5

D 9 6 8 10 5 7 9 6 10 4 11 5 7 11 9 5

l 1 4 3 6 10 10 11 14 12 16 12 16 15 13 16 20

f 55 43 43 31 30 31 25 31 30 25 25 29 29 22 25 18

a 14 17 21 19 24 24 27 31 40 44 29 36 45 28 45 48

P 69 66 65 52 50 46 39 36 34 34 32 32 31 29 24 20

W 16 11 11 10 9 9 8 9 9 7 5 2 3

D 6 8 7 8 10 8 9 6 4 7 7 9 5

l 2 5 6 6 5 7 7 9 11 10 12 13 16

f 38 44 37 26 28 31 27 31 27 24 21 19 18

a 17 29 26 19 26 27 23 29 31 31 29 42 42

P 54 41 40 38 37 35 33 33 31 28 22 15 14

W 12 10 11 10 9 8 9 8 8 8 5 5 6 3

D 11 12 9 11 11 12 7 9 7 7 13 11 8 12

l 3 4 6 5 6 6 10 9 11 11 8 10 12 11

f 25 33 25 36 14 33 36 30 25 23 16 25 21 16

a 13 23 19 27 11 24 40 31 28 29 23 29 32 29

P 47 42 42 41 38 36 34 33 31 31 28 26 26 21

W 17 15 16 16 15

D 10 12 8 7 9

l 7 7 10 11 10

f 45 37 46 44 38

a 23 22 38 42 34

P 61 57 56 55 54

G Oympc 34 34 Dm K und 34 ahn God 34 bkm Ch 34 evn Wond 34 bchm und 34 lgon C 34 Kng f 34 emn shk 34 e Dw* (r) 34 lyPoon (r) 34 in a (r) 34

15 13 12 11 12 11 11 11 10 10 12 10 7

7 10 10 12 7 9 9 9 11 11 8 10 5

12 11 12 11 15 14 14 14 13 13 14 14 22

37 45 42 50 38 33 38 34 32 34 40 33 28

33 35 41 36 46 38 47 35 45 45 44 45 45

*Ebusua Dwarfs deducted three points and relegated based on their head-to-head record against Elmina Sharks and King Faisal

GuiNea

P Hooy (C) 26 26 Km 26 Wky ahn Gb 26 26 Hfi acdm sOar 26 Kom 26 fo s 26 26 s fmm Oympq 26 26 loh ephn Coh 26 sno (r) 26 asfaG (r) 26

W 18 12 13 12 11 11 11 10 8 7 4 5 5 6

D 4 10 6 7 9 6 5 3 7 10 11 8 8 4

l 4 4 7 7 6 9 10 13 11 9 11 13 13 16

f 48 33 47 24 33 31 34 28 25 24 21 25 26 27

a 13 17 31 24 21 31 28 34 33 35 28 36 45 50

52 49 46 45 43 42 42 42 41 41 41 40 26

P 58 46 45 43 42 39 38 33 31 31 23 23 23 22

GuiNea-bissau s a

P spongdGn-b(C) 12 spong d b 12 ObndMno 12 Poo d b 12 12 Cnm 12 sonco DpovodG(r) 12 s b

P bnficd b (Q) 12 Cnchngo 12 uDib 12 12 Pndo aco d bo 12 fmngo d Pfin 12 Nnotodb (r) 12

fn s

W 11 6 6 5 4 2 0

D 0 2 2 2 2 5 3

l 1 4 4 5 6 5 9

f 29 18 14 11 6 3 5

a 4 17 12 13 11 7 22

P 33 20 20 17 14 11 3

W 8 4 3 3 2 2 2

D 4 4 5 4 7 7 5

l 0 4 4 5 3 3 5

f 22 11 10 11 6 9 4

a 7 13 12 13 10 8 10

P 28 16 14 13 13 13 11

fn J10: Sporting da Guinea-Bissau1 Benfica de Bissau 0

iVOrY COast Gop1

P 12 afaD (Q) sn-Pdo (Q) 12 12 bfing spong Ggno 12 12 bm indn angoo 12 ac spo (r) 12

W 8 5 3 3 2 2 2

D 2 5 5 4 6 6 6

l 2 2 4 5 4 4 4

f 14 17 8 12 12 8 10

a 7 13 11 13 14 10 13

P 26 20 14 13 12 12 11

W 7 6 4 3 3 4 3

D 3 4 6 5 4 1 1

l 2 2 2 4 5 7 8

f 16 16 13 8 10 11 8

a 7 9 12 8 11 20 15

P 24 22 18 14 13 13 10

Chmponhp rond P W aseC Mmo (C) 6 2 sn-Pdo 6 2 6 2 sOa afaD 6 1

D 4 2 1 3

l 0 2 3 2

f 7 6 2 3

a P 3 10 3 8 6 7 6 6

Gop 2

P sOa (Q) 12 aseC Mmo (Q) 12 rcng d’adjn 12 bok 12 12 sOl 12 s 12 tnd (r)

liberia

P W D l f a P lPrC O (C) 22 13 7 2 54 20 46

22 lisCr Nm Kwdo 22 Wng 22 bea Monn 22 Mghy bo 22 22 fpo MC bw 22 Nm und 22 NPa ancho (r) 22 Nm (r) 22 sm town (r) 22

13 12 11 10 8 8 8 5 6 1 2

6 7 5 6 7 6 5 10 5 5 1

3 3 6 6 7 8 9 7 11 16 19

44 25 41 28 26 31 23 21 26 15 18

20 14 29 19 25 27 27 23 38 49 61

45 43 38 36 31 30 29 25 23 8 7

Chmponhp rond P W adm (C) 6 4 6 3 COsfa 6 2 aj 6 1 fv

D 0 2 2 0

l 2 1 2 5

f 9 10 6 6

a 4 8 7 12

P 12 11 8 3

Chmponhp rond P W Nodho (C) 14 11 tvgh-Zn 14 7 14 5 K Nokcho Kng’ 14 5 tdjkj 14 5 Concod 14 4 14 3 Kd sh 14 3

D 2 1 5 3 3 4 5 3

l 1 6 4 6 6 6 6 8

f 24 20 18 15 14 11 10 6

a 3 13 20 15 19 15 17 16

P 35 22 20 18 18 16 14 12

rgon rond P 14 sNiM 14 tz Poc 14 14 am Gd Non (r) 14 Kd (r) 14 14 JaHe (r) in Nokcho (r) 14

W 6 6 6 4 5 4 3 1

D 6 5 3 8 5 7 3 5

l 2 3 5 2 4 3 8 8

f 16 17 23 18 12 15 17 10

a 7 13 14 15 11 11 32 25

P 24 23 21 20 20 19 12 8

W 20 17 14 13 12 9 7 10 7 8 9 8 7 7 6 7

D 7 8 9 6 6 10 15 6 14 11 8 11 12 12 14 9

l 3 5 7 11 12 11 8 14 9 11 13 11 11 11 10 14

f 58 48 39 37 38 23 30 29 26 32 32 30 28 23 36 31

a 26 26 29 36 35 24 34 36 25 36 40 41 36 33 43 40

P 67 59 51 45 42 37 36 36 35 35 35 35 33 33 32 30

W 19 18 19 20 19 18 18 17 14 13 15 14 13 12 12 11 11 11 9 5

D 14 12 8 5 7 9 8 7 9 12 5 7 9 11 9 12 10 8 12 10

l 5 8 11 13 12 11 12 14 15 13 18 17 16 15 17 15 17 19 17 23

f 53 41 48 55 38 48 43 43 45 34 37 35 43 48 40 28 29 30 33 20

a 24 33 28 38 29 36 31 39 35 35 47 42 50 42 47 39 46 45 50 55

P 71 65 64 63 63 62 59 55 51 50 49 48 45 44 43 42 42 41 36 25

Chmponhp rond P W 7 6 aPr (C) 7 6 as Kg 7 3 epo

D 1 1 1

l 0 0 3

f 21 14 9

a 1 2 11

P 19 19 10

MaDaGasCar

MauritaNia

MOrOCCO

P Wydd (C) 30 rj 30 30 far rs bkn 30 Mood Ojd 30 Hn agd 30 Mgh d f 30 ir tng 30 Ch Mohmmd 30 fus r 30 D e Jdd 30 Oympc sfi 30 rpd Od Zm 30 Yoofi bchd 30 Mogh ton (r) 30 Nhd Zmm(r) 30

NiGeria

P akw und (C) 38 enym 38 Kw und 38 Nw und 38 Kno P 38 rv und 38 eng rng 38 lo s 38 P und 38 MfM 38 38 Dkkd Kn und38 Hnd 38 a Wo 38 Wkk to 38 snhn s38 JgwGodns(r) 38 W Wov (r) 38 iny uh (r) 38 admw und (r) 38

rWaNDa


results, tables, fixtures Poc Mn ro ryon spo bg

7 7 7 7 7

2 2 1 1 1

2 1 3 2 1

3 4 3 4 5

7 5 5 7 5

11 12 12 12 12

8 7 6 5 4

rgon rond P Kyov spo 7 Gog und 7 7 enc Mnz 7 7 Mk Go 7 sn (r) 7 Mhng (r) 7

W 4 3 4 4 3 3 2 0

D 1 3 0 0 2 1 3 0

l 2 1 3 3 2 3 2 7

f 8 13 13 11 8 10 13 3

a 3 7 8 14 7 9 8 23

P 13 12 12 12 11 10 9 0

W 15 12 12 13 11 7 9 7 7 7 6 7 6 6

D 7 10 10 5 8 15 4 9 8 8 10 6 8 6

l 4 4 4 8 7 4 13 10 11 11 10 13 12 14

f 36 37 29 24 31 26 21 29 22 18 19 21 16 25

a 11 18 12 22 27 17 30 36 32 31 29 31 26 32

P 52 46 46 44 41 36 31 30 29 29 28 27 26 2

W 11 11 9 9 6 7 5 5 5 1

D 5 5 6 6 5 2 5 4 2 2

l 2 2 3 3 7 9 8 9 11 15

f 37 27 35 19 26 18 19 31 21 8

a 11 12 17 10 17 21 28 31 25 69

P 38 38 33 33 23 23 20 19 17 5

seNeGal

P tngh (C) 26 Dm 26 Gnon foo 26 J 26 26 Pkn C spo 26 Mo P Co 26 Don 26 CNePs ecnc 26 aseC Ndmo 26 26 DsC Go 26 sd d Mo (r) 26 Ny ty (r) 26

sOMalia

P Hod* (C) 18 Mogdh Cy 18 Hgn 18 rdn 18 Dkdh 18 Mdnmo 18 18 Jnyo Gddk 18 emn (r) 18 Gk ak (r) 18

*Horseed crowned champions after Mogadishu City failed to attend their Championship decider

sOutH afriCa

P Mmodsndown(C) 30 30 amZ Ondo P 30 Godn aow 30 spspo und 30 swow 30 Cp town Cy 30 Kz Ch 30 ts Gy 30 bok 30 bomonn Cc 30 Mmo Gn 30 Mzg und 30 snoch 30 Chpp und 30 bck lopd (r) 30

taNZaNia

P sm (C) 34 Yong acn 34 azm 34 bh und 34 34 KMC Po tnzn 34 tnzn Pon 34 Dodom Jj 34 Nmngo 34 My Cy 34 rv shoong 34 Kg sg 34 Co unon 34 Mw sg 34 JKt tnzn (r) 34 Gwmn (r) 34 ih (r) 34 Mwd (r) 34

tOGO Noh

W 19 15 13 11 11 8 10 8 9 7 6 7 7 5 5 5 W 26 21 19 13 13 10 10 11 10 10 11 10 10 10 11 8 9 5

D 10 9 11 14 12 20 11 12 9 13 14 10 9 14 12 8 D 5 11 11 11 9 15 14 11 13 12 8 10 10 9 6 11 8 4

l 1 6 6 5 7 2 9 10 12 10 10 13 14 11 13 17 l 3 2 4 10 12 9 10 12 11 12 15 14 14 15 17 15 17 25

f 49 38 33 40 37 31 42 34 26 28 30 19 27 26 24 23 f 78 52 50 28 39 29 25 28 24 30 34 34 29 21 34 29 22 24

a 14 23 22 28 31 23 40 37 31 36 35 35 36 32 37 47 a 14 21 22 32 27 27 25 31 31 33 38 38 46 31 47 37 41 69

P 67 54 50 47 45 44 41 36 36 34 32 31 30 29 27 23 P 83 74 68 50 48 45 44 44 43 42 41 40 40 39 39 35 35 19

P K (Q) 14 asKO d K (Q) 14 unpo 14 bnh 14 iodj 14 14 sm s spo 14 Kook (r) 14 soh

P togo Po* (Q) 14 Otr* (Q) 14 Dynmc togo 14 enn ii 14 Gomdo 14 Goho- d lc 14 ang No 14 Mnh fokpo (r) 14

W 10 8 5 4 5 4 4 3

D 3 5 4 6 1 3 2 2

l 1 1 5 4 8 7 8 9

f 42 24 20 9 17 18 16 14

a 12 11 21 16 26 22 23 29

P 33 29 19 18 16 15 14 11

W 8 6 6 6 5 4 2 2

D 4 5 4 4 5 4 5 3

l 2 3 4 4 4 6 7 9

f 16 15 19 12 15 13 10 9

a 9 10 14 7 13 12 21 23

P 28 23 22 22 20 16 11 9

*Togo Port and OTR lost in the Finals Series semifinals against ASKO de Kara and Kara respectively

fn s

fn J 27: Kara1 ASKO de Kara1 ASKO de Kara win 4-3 on penalties

tuNisia

P epnc (C) 26 eo d sh 26 bn Gdn 26 somn 26 sn 26 26 rjch C acn 26 ton 26 26 Mo 26 Mon 26 bzn Oympq bj 26 sd tnn (r) 26 Js Kon (r) 26

uGaNDa

P ep* (C) 26 26 ua 26 Vp KCCa 27 bgh s 27 Poc 27 M Cy 27 uPDf 27 Wko Gn 26 V 27 bul 27 Ondpk 26 bog und26 Kym (r) 27 MYDa (r) 27 K (r) 27

W 19 15 10 11 10 9 7 8 8 8 8 7 6 0

D 3 5 11 7 10 9 12 9 8 7 7 10 11 3

l 4 6 5 8 6 8 7 9 10 11 11 9 9 23

f 37 46 25 35 29 27 26 24 17 28 21 25 22 14

a 16 26 16 34 16 23 30 30 21 29 27 26 22 60

P 60 50 41 40 40 36 33 33 32 31 31 31 29 3

W 17 17 17 14 11 11 10 11 8 9 9 8 6 5 3 3

D 7 6 5 6 9 7 8 4 12 9 6 4 8 8 5 4

l 2 3 4 7 7 9 9 12 6 9 12 14 12 14 19 20

f 44 41 56 56 40 50 30 34 42 29 39 25 21 28 32 35

a 13 18 21 22 27 31 34 39 33 30 41 45 44 47 77 80

P 58 57 56 48 42 40 38 37 36 36 33 28 26 23 14 13

*Express crowned champions despite league being suspended early due to the COVID-19 pandemic

ZaMbia

P ZesCO und (C) 34 Znco 34 rd aow 34 Kw Wo 34 Gn eg 34 Pon lopd 34 lk Dynmo 34 Nkwz 34 Gn bo 34 Pow Dynmo 34 34 bdcon fo rng 34 34 Nkn indn 34 Yong Gn eg 34 NaPsa s (r) 34 lmwnrdn(r) 34 Kw und (r) 34

ASIA

W 22 15 14 14 12 13 12 12 11 12 13 11 13 9 9 9 7 3

D 5 10 9 9 14 9 12 12 14 11 7 12 6 14 13 10 12 11

l 7 9 11 11 8 12 10 10 9 11 14 11 15 11 12 15 15 20

fiNal tables 2020-21

f 54 50 35 37 39 40 35 30 41 29 42 36 42 39 23 34 23 15

a 26 36 28 34 30 33 31 28 32 26 44 35 46 43 38 47 42 45

P 71 55 51 51 50 48 48 48 47 47 46 45 45 41 40 37 33 20

baHraiN

P a r (C) 18 e r 18 Mnm 18 Mhq 18 a Hdd 18 a ah 18 bdy 18 18 a Njm Mky (r) 18 bn (r) 18

W 14 11 9 7 8 5 3 3 2 1

D 3 2 4 6 3 6 8 6 7 9

l 1 5 5 5 7 7 7 9 9 8

f 31 32 26 24 26 17 11 17 11 17

a 13 20 18 15 23 25 19 31 26 22

P 45 35 31 27 27 21 17 15 13 12

W 10 9 8 6 3 4 2 1

D 4 4 1 3 3 0 5 6

l 0 1 5 5 8 10 7 7

f 29 33 20 26 24 11 14 14

a 9 12 17 19 30 35 23 26

P 34 31 25 21 12 12 11 9

Chmponhp rond P W Kch (C) 17 11 17 10 en l Mn 17 9 Pg 17 9

D 4 4 3 1

l 2 3 5 7

f 32 38 34 23

a 12 16 21 27

P 37 34 30 28

rgon rond P sohn Dc 17 17 rng roc Cp 17 Hppy Vy (r) 17

W 4 3 5 2

D 4 7 0 7

l 9 7 12 8

f 29 25 15 25

a 35 28 49 33

P 16 16 15 13

W 19 19 16 12 13 10 9 10 10 9 8 9 7 5 5 2

D 10 8 8 9 6 14 13 9 8 10 13 6 10 11 11 8

l 1 3 6 9 11 6 8 11 12 11 9 15 13 14 14 20

f 47 53 36 35 33 27 32 23 27 24 25 27 21 28 19 19

a 14 24 19 29 32 18 30 29 31 29 33 34 29 39 34 52

P 67 65 56 45 45 44 40 39 38 37 37 33 31 26 26 14

W 25 20 21 20 16 12 13 12 10 11 10 10 9 8 9 7 8 7 4 5

D 8 15 11 12 15 17 11 13 16 12 14 14 16 17 14 20 15 16 19 11

l 5 3 6 6 7 9 14 13 12 15 14 14 13 13 15 11 15 15 15 22

f 68 46 46 60 46 36 30 45 35 35 35 39 38 36 39 22 36 27 32 22

a 29 19 26 27 31 34 32 44 40 40 45 41 48 39 50 36 47 39 48 58

P 83 75 74 72 63 53 50 49 46 45 44 44 43 41 41 41 39 37 31 26

Chmponhp rond P W a a (C) 18 13 a Qd 18 10 Kw sC 18 9 Kzm 18 6 18 6 a N a smyh 18 6 a sh 18 4 a fhh 18 3

D 5 6 7 7 4 2 7 7

l 0 2 2 5 8 10 7 8

f 39 32 37 30 20 25 16 22

a 16 16 20 22 23 32 23 36

P 44 36 34 25 22 20 19 16

HONG KONG

rg son P 14 Kch en 14 Pg 14 14 l Mn sohn Dc 14 roc Cp 14 rng 14 Hppy Vy 14

iraN

P Ppo (C) 30 sphn 30 30 egh tco 30 Go Goh 30 food 30 30 Pykn M rnjn 30 Pddh 30 sn N 30 amnm ak 30 Nj Mzndn 30 NMjdsoymn 30 Zo ahn 30 30 sp (r) Mchn sz (r) 30

iraQ

P aQwaJwy(C) 38 a Zw 38 38 a Nj a sho 38 N a W 38 a N 38 amn bghdd 38 38 a Mn Zkho 38 38 a Kkh N a b 38 e 38 N Myn 38 a Kh 38 38 a Qm a Dwny 38 a t 38 asnaKhy(r) 38 a Hdood (r) 38 a smw (r) 38

KuWait

Khn (r) 18 3 5 10 21 39 14 a sh (r) 18 3 4 11 21 36 13

lebaNON

Chmponhp rond P W a an (C) 16 13 a Njmh 16 10 sh a sh 16 8 a ahd 16 6 16 7 s a akh ah ay 16 5

D 1 5 3 6 3 5

l 2 1 5 4 6 6

f 37 31 15 20 25 8

a 8 10 11 16 25 12

P 40 35 27 24 24 20

rgon rond P 16 boj sh boj 16 tpo 16 tdmon so 16 Ch Ghzh (r) 16 sm Zgh (r) 16

W 5 6 5 3 3 0

D 8 5 4 7 2 1

l 3 5 7 6 11 15

f 18 22 11 7 12 6

a 13 14 15 12 26 50

P 23 23 19 16 11 1

W 17 14 11 10 5 4 5 3 2 2

D 0 0 2 0 3 5 2 4 6 2

l 0 3 4 7 9 8 10 10 9 13

f 112 90 29 39 23 17 30 17 14 12

a 4 15 27 39 55 30 45 67 45 56

P 51 42 35 30 18 17 17 13 12 8

W 10 7 5 4 4 3 3 3

D 4 4 4 5 4 6 4 3

l 0 3 5 5 6 5 7 8

f 34 21 13 15 17 9 11 20

a 6 9 16 21 25 18 19 26

P 34 25 19 17 16 15 13 12

W 16 13 9 10 10 9 7 6 6 4 4 1

D 4 4 8 5 4 5 9 8 6 10 9 2

l 2 5 5 7 8 8 6 8 10 8 9 19

f 49 36 26 34 43 36 32 22 27 28 17 16

a 18 20 16 29 36 30 25 35 31 38 24 64

P 52 43 35 35 34 32 30 26 24 22 21 5

W 19 15 10 10 10 9 8 7 7 5 3 4

D 3 2 5 3 3 5 5 5 5 6 8 0

l 0 5 7 9 9 8 9 10 10 11 11 18

f 77 53 31 41 28 30 28 19 22 13 17 17

a 14 25 22 34 38 24 32 29 36 31 42 49

P 60 47 35 33 33 32 29 26 26 21 17 12

W 18 17 15 13 14 13 12 11 9 10

D 7 6 11 8 5 7 6 6 9 6

l 5 7 4 9 11 10 12 13 12 14

f 60 68 45 42 50 53 55 44 42 44

a 27 43 29 30 48 40 55 56 47 47

P 61 57 56 47 47 46 42 39 36 36

MaCau

P 17 CPK* (C) bnfic 17 tk Chn K i 17 Chng fng 17 ln lok 17 Poc 17 spong Mc 17 C d Pog 17 Mon Co (r) 17 Hng s (r) 17

*Chao Pak Kei (CPK) crowned champions despite matchday 18 being postponed

MalDiVes

P Mzy (C) 14 14 Vnc Gn s 14 14 eg D Gnd 14 sp und spo 14 tC spo C14 und Vcoy 14

PalestiNe

P sh aKh(C) 22 Mkz b 22 H a Qd 22 J a Mk 22 sh a am’ 22 a bh inon 22 sh a Dhhy 22 t 22 thqfi tkm 22 sh am 22 ah a Kh (r) 22 tjWdaN(r) 22

Qatar

P a sdd (C) 22 a Dh 22 a ryyn 22 a Gh 22 22 a ah Q sC 22 22 a a a Wkh 22 22 a sy umm s 22 a Kho 22 a Khyh (r) 22

sauDi arabia a H (C) a sh a ihd a twon a eq a N a fh a ah a fy a rd

P 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30

World Soccer 95


serutxif ,selbat ,stluser

30 Dmc 30 a bn 30 ah a Qdh (r) 30 a Whd (r) 30 a an (r) 30

9 9 10 8 9 5

9 9 6 11 5 5

12 12 14 11 16 20

43 43 42 41 40 34

48 55 50 47 60 64

36 36 36 35 32 20

P 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26 26

W 18 17 14 12 13 8 6 7 6 5 5 5 3 3

D 5 6 10 11 6 12 11 8 9 11 9 8 8 6

l 3 3 2 3 7 6 9 11 11 10 12 13 15 17

f 42 45 28 37 33 31 36 22 24 18 20 21 19 16

a 16 19 14 18 18 25 41 28 36 25 29 34 46 43

P 59 57 52 47 45 36 29 29 27 26 24 23 17 15

P bGPhmund (C) 30 bm und 30 Po 30 Chng und 30 bngkok und 30 sm Pkn Cy 30 Mng thong und 30 rch 30 Nkhon rchm 30 Pchp 30 Poc to 30 30 Chon sphn 30 skhoh (r) 30 30 t (r) ryong (r) 30

W 24 20 17 16 15 14 14 13 11 10 10 9 9 8 4 4

D 5 3 5 6 6 5 5 7 9 7 6 5 3 4 5 3

l 1 7 8 8 9 11 11 10 10 13 14 16 18 18 21 23

f 54 63 58 48 57 58 52 48 40 35 32 30 33 40 31 24

a 13 26 36 32 39 51 43 41 41 47 50 47 47 57 64 69

P 77 63 56 54 51 47 47 46 42 37 36 32 30 28 17 15

f 65 50 52 48 47 39 48 29 49 35 31 24 31 19

a 29 22 30 29 33 33 33 39 47 50 58 57 57 50

P 57 54 50 48 46 41 40 39 37 25 21 18 15 12

sYria thn (C) a Jh a Kmh a Whd Hn a ty Jh a ihd a sho a Wh a fow a Hogh a sh (r) a Hy (r)

tHailaND

uNiteD arab eMirates

P a Jz (C) 26 26 bny sh a ah26 26 shjh a N 26 26 a an a Whd 26 26 K 26 a W Kho fkkn 26 a Dh 26 26 ajmn fjh (r) 26 26 H (r)

W 17 16 13 14 14 11 10 11 10 7 5 4 4 3

D 6 6 11 6 4 8 10 6 7 4 6 6 3 3

l 3 4 2 6 8 7 6 9 9 15 15 16 19 20

CONCACAF

sm-fn –1 lg Aug 11 - Monterrey Mony1 (Meza 9) Cz az 0 Ht:1-0. r: Santander (Mex) Aug 12 – Mexico City C amc 2 (R. Sanchez17, Aguilera 80 pen) Phdph unon 0 Ht:1-0. r: Castellanos (Gua)

rCa (Q) Dko (Q) l fm (Q) Ncon (Q) bnn e Cv b

P 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7

fn s

W 5 3 3 3 2 2 1 0

D 2 3 3 2 2 2 1 3

l 0 1 1 2 3 3 5 4

f 15 15 11 12 12 12 8 7

a 3 10 8 6 11 19 17 18

P 17 12 12 11 8 8 4 3

sm-fn J 21: RCA1 La Fama 2; Dakota 0 Nacional1

96 World Soccer

CaYMaN islaNDs

P schoinnon(C) 18 boddn town 18 f 18 18 acdmy 18 lno 18 e e end und 18 Gog town 18 sn 18 rom und (r) 18

COsta riCa

P ajn (Q) 22 snodGp(Q) 22 Hdno (Q) 22 Dpovosp(Q) 22 sn Co 22 22 Jc Pz Zdon 22 Cgn 22 Mncp Gc 22 spong snJo 22 Gdp 22 lmon (r) 22

fn s

W 14 10 9 9 9 8 6 5 3 2 W 14 10 7 6 7 6 6 6 4 6 4 5

D 3 5 5 3 2 5 3 3 1 0 D 8 6 9 11 8 10 10 8 11 5 10 6

l 1 3 4 6 7 5 9 10 14 16 l 0 6 6 5 7 6 6 8 7 11 8 11

f 51 25 32 33 26 22 23 14 18 17 f 49 36 35 31 21 21 22 23 22 18 33 25

a 7 17 26 23 24 23 32 25 37 47 a 12 29 29 29 24 24 29 27 29 31 31 42

P 45 35 32 30 29 29 21 18 10 6 P 50 36 30 29 29 28 28 26 23 23 22 21

sm-fn My17: Deportivo Saprissa 4 Alajuelense 3 My 20: Alajuelense 2 Deportivo Saprissa 2 Deportivo Saprissa win 6-5 on aggregate My18: Herediano 2 Santos de Guapiles1 My 20: Santos de Guapiles 0 Herediano 0 Herediano win 3-1 on aggregate fn My 24: Deportivo Saprissa 3 Herediano 2 My 27: Herediano 0 Deportivo Saprissa1 Deportivo Saprissa win 4-2 on aggregate

DOMiNiCaN rePubliC

rg son P Co* (Q) 18 aco Pnoj* (Q) 18 Moc* (Q) 18 unvdd O&M*(Q) 18 Jco* (Q) 18 Vg r* (Q) 18 Dfin D e 18 sn Co 18 18 anco aco d sf (r) 18

W 13 10 9 9 6 7 5 4 3 3

D 5 4 5 5 8 3 2 4 5 1

l 0 4 4 4 4 8 11 10 10 14

f 32 34 26 26 20 26 20 15 22 15

a 8 17 13 17 21 26 40 27 26 41

P 44 34 32 32 26 24 17 16 14 10

W 5 5 4 3 2 1

D 3 1 4 4 4 4

l 2 4 2 3 4 5

f 13 19 17 14 12 5

a 10 13 15 10 19 13

P 18 16 16 13 10 7

W 6 5 3 3 3 1

D 1 3 6 4 3 1

l 3 2 1 3 4 8

f 19 12 10 14 12 9

a 10 7 6 14 16 23

P 19 18 15 13 12 4

*Top six teams qualify for the Championship Round

el salVaDOr

CHaMPiONs leaGue 2021

fiNal tables 2020-21 aruba

fn J 25: La Fama 0 Nacional 2

Gop a P Onc Dpovo (Q) 10 anz (Q) 10 fas (Q) 10 fpo (Q) 10 aco M 10 10 Jocoo Gop b P ido Mpn (Q) 10 Mncp lmno (Q) 10 ag (Q) 10 sn tc (Q)10 Chnngo 10 sonon 10

fn s

Q-fn My 5: Firpo1 Isidro Metapan 0 My 9: Isidro Metapan1 Firpo 3 Firpo win 4-1 on aggregate My 5: Aguila 0 Alianza1 My 9: Alianza 2 Aguila1 Alianza win 3-1 on aggregate My 5: FAS 2 Municipal Limeno1 My 9: Municipal Limeno 2 FAS1 3-3 on aggregate. FAS win 4-2 on penalties

My 6: Santa Tecla 2 Once Deportivo1 My 9: Once Deportivo1 Santa Tecla 2 Santa Tecla win 4-2 on aggregate sm-fn My16: Santa Tecla 0 FAS1 My 23: FAS 0 Santa Tecla1 1-1 on aggregate. FAS win 4-2 on penalties My16: Firpo1 Alianza 2 My 23: Alianza 0 Firpo1 2-2 on aggregate. Alianza win 5-4 on penalties fn My 30: Alianza1 FAS1 FAS win 3-4 on penalties

GuateMala

Gop a P Comnccon (Q) 16 sn lc (Q)16 izp (Q) 16 16 xj Mcco 16 ang GfC 16 Gop b

P Goy (Q)16 Mncp (Q) 16 Con imp (Q) 16 Dpovosn(Q) 16 scchp (Q) 16 16 achp

fn s

W 10 6 5 3 3 2

D 4 6 7 8 7 7

l 2 4 4 5 6 7

f 28 13 29 14 8 15

a 12 13 25 15 14 26

P 34 24 22 17 16 13

W 7 8 5 4 5 4

D 7 3 8 6 3 2

l 2 5 3 6 8 10

f 23 24 20 16 15 16

a 10 11 17 25 26 27

P 28 27 23 18 18 14

Q-fn My 5: Deportivo Sanarate 2 Guastatoya 0 My 8: Guastatoya 4 Deportivo Sanarate1 Guastatoya win 4-3 on aggregate My 6: Iztapa 3 Municipal1 My 9: Municipal 0 Iztapa 0 Iztapa win 3-1 on aggregate My 6: Sacachispas 0 Comunicaciones1 My 9: Comunicaciones1 Sacachispas 0 Comunicaciones win 2-0 on aggregate My 6: Coban Imperial1 Santa Lucia1 My 9: Santa Lucia 3 Coban Imperial 0 Santa Lucia win 4-1 on aggregate sm-fn My12: Iztapa 2 Comunicaciones 2 My12: Comunicaciones 2 Iztapa1 Comunicaciones win 4-3 on aggregate My14: Santa Lucia1 Guastatoya 0 My16: Guastatoya1 Santa Lucia 2 Santa Lucia win 3-1 on aggregate fn My 20: Santa Lucia 4 Comunicaciones 0 My 24: Comunicaciones 5 Santa Lucia 2 Santa Lucia win 6-5 on aggregate

HONDuras

Gop a P r epn (Q) 14 HondPogo(Q) 14 14 Vd (Q) Mhon 14 Pn 14 Gop b

P Omp (Q) 14 Mog (Q) 14 uPNfM (Q) 14 r socdd 14 r d Mn 14

fn s

W 4 3 2 3 2

D 7 6 8 5 6

l 3 5 4 6 6

f 17 20 19 17 20

a 13 25 23 22 33

P 19 15 14 14 12

W 11 9 5 3 0

D 2 4 4 8 6

l 1 1 5 3 8

f 36 29 20 21 11

a 9 14 19 21 31

P 35 31 19 17 6

emnon fn My 2: UPNFM 3 Honduras Progreso 2 My 6: Honduras Progreso 4 UPNFM 0 Honduras Progreso win 5-3 on aggregate My 2: Vida1 Motagua1 My 6: Motagua 3 Vida 0 Motagua win 4-1 on aggregate

sm-fn My 9: Honduras Progreso 0 Olimpia 0 My13: Olimpia 7 Honduras Progreso 0 Olimpia win 7-0 on aggregate My 9: Motagua1 Real Espana 0 My13: Real Espana1 Motagua 0 1-1 on aggregate. Motagua win 6-7 on penalties fn My17: Motagua 2 Olimpia1 My 20: Olimpia1 Motagua 0 1-1 on aggregate. Olimpia win 4-3 on penalties

NiCaraGua

P Dngn (Q) 18 r e (Q) 18 Mng (Q) 18 W f (Q) 18 Dpovo Oco (Q) 18 r Mdz (Q) 18 MncpJp 18 18 Jno Jvn Mng 18 Chnndg 18

fn s

W 13 12 10 10 7 6 4 4 4 3

D 1 2 3 3 5 3 5 4 3 5

l 4 4 5 5 6 9 9 10 11 10

f 36 34 41 29 22 18 21 16 17 17

a 16 13 23 17 21 26 32 33 33 37

P 40 38 33 33 26 21 17 16 15 14

emnon fn My10: Walter Ferretti 3 Deportivo Ocotal 0; Managua1 Real Madriz 0 sm-fn My13: Walter Ferretti1 Diriangen 0 My16: Diriangen 3 Walter Ferretti 0 Diriangen win 3-1 on aggregate My14: Managua 3 Real Esteli1 My17: Real Esteli 4 Managua 2 5-5 on aggregate. Managua win on away goals fn My 23: Managua 0 Diriangen 2 My 30: Diriangen1 Managua1 Diriangen win 2-1 on aggregate

PaNaMa

e P Pz amdo (Q) 16 Co d e (Q) 16 spongsnMgo(Q) 16 to 16 a undo 16 16 anz W P unvo (Q) 16 indpndn (Q) 16 Vg (Q) 16 16 H aco Chq 16 sn fncco 16

fn s

W 7 5 5 4 3 2

D 6 6 6 6 7 8

l 3 5 5 6 6 6

f 22 15 16 12 15 13

a 14 14 19 16 18 17

P 27 21 21 18 16 14

W 8 8 6 7 5 2

D 6 3 8 4 3 5

l 2 5 2 5 8 9

f 25 19 20 20 21 14

a 15 15 19 16 26 23

P 30 27 26 25 18 11

emnon fn My12: Costa del Este1 Veraguas1 Veraguas win on penalties My13: Independiente 0 Sporting San Miguelito 0 Sporting San Miguelito win on penalties sm-fn May15: Veraguas 0 Universitario 0 May 23: Universitario 2 Veraguas 0 Universitario win 2-0 on aggregate My16: Sporting San Miguelito 0 Plaza Amador1 My 24: Plaza Amador1 Sporting San Miguelito1 Plaza Amador win 2-1 on aggregate fn My 29: Universitario1 Plaza Amador 2

SOUTH AMERICA 2021 COPa libertaDOres

rond o16 – 2nd lg Jul 20 - Belo Horizonte aco Mno 0 (0) boc Jno 0 (0) Ht: 0-0. r: Ostojich (Uru) Atletico Mineiro won 3-1 on penalties


RESULTS, TABLES, FIXTURES Jul 20 – Avellaneda Racing1 (2) (Correa 63) Sao Paulo 3 (4) (Rigoni 44, 57, Marquinhos 48) HT: 0-1. Ref: Tejera (Uru)

Jul 22 – Rosario Rosario Central1 (3) (Vecchio 42) Deportivo Tachira 0 (2) HT:1-0. Ref: Fedorczuk (Uru)

Jul 21 - Brasilia Flamengo 4 (5) (Rodrigo Caio 9, De Arrascaeta 66, Vitinho 83, 90+4) Defensa y Justicia1 (1) (Loaiza 41) HT:1-1. Ref: Tobar (Chi)

Jul 22 - Montevideo Penarol 0 (2) Nacional1 (2) (Corujo 90+11) HT: 0-0. Ref: Daronco (Bra) Penarol win on away goals

Jul 21 – Sao Paulo Palmeiras1 (2) (Rocha 36) Universidad Catolica 0 (0) HT:1-0. Ref: Herrera (Ven)

Jul 22 - Avellaneda Independiente1 (1) (Gonzalez 68) Santos1 (2) (KaioJorge 38) HT: 0-1. Ref: Haro (Per)

Jul 21 – Guayaquil Barcelona 3 (3) (Preciado 24, Cortez 69 pen, Perlaza 80) Velez Sarsfield1 (2) (Lucero 48) HT:1-0. Ref: Maza (Chi)

Quarter-Finals –1st Leg Aug 10 – Rosario Rosario Central 3 (Ruben 23, 55, Caraglio 62) Red Bull Bragantino 4 (Bruno Praxedes16, Artur 20 pen, 43, 73) HT:1-3. Ref: Haro (Per)

Jul 21 – Buenos Aires Argentinos Juniors 0 (1) River Plate 2 (3) (Romero 35, 54) HT: 0-1. Ref: Arleu (Bra) Jul 22 – Porto Alegre Internacional 0 (0) Olimpia 0 (0) HT: 0-0. Ref: Ferreyra (Uru) Olimpia win 5-4 on penalties Aug 3 – Rio deJaneiro Fluminense1 (3) (Fred 24 pen) Cerro Porteno 0 (0) HT:1-0. Ref: Roldan (Col) Quarter-Finals –1st Leg Aug 10 – Sao Paulo Sao Paulo1 (Luan 54) Palmeiras1 (Patrick 74) HT: 0-0. Ref: Pitana (Arg) Aug 11 – Asuncion Olimpia1 (Torres 45+14) Flamengo 4 (De Arrascaeta16, Gabriel Barbosa 45+12, 52, Vitnho 90+1) HT:1-2. Ref: Rapallini (Arg) Aug 11 – Buenos Aires River Plate 0 Atletico Mineiro1 (Fernandez 58) HT: 0-0. Ref: Valenzuela (Ven) Aug 12 – Rio deJaneiro Fluminense 2 (Teixeira 26, Fred 90+5 pen) Barcelona 2 (Preciado 69, Cortez 88 pen) HT:1-0. Ref: Herrera (Ven)

2021 COPA SUDAMERICANA Round of16 – 2nd Leg Jul 20 – Curitiba Athletico Paranaense 4 (5) (Vitinho 26, 71, Nikao 79 pen, Canesin 90+7) America de Cali1 (1) (Ramos 70 pen) HT:1-0. Ref: Herrera (Arg) Jul 20 – Porto Alegre Gremio1 (2) (Diego Souza 23) LDU Quito 2 (2) (Alcivar 44, 56 pen) HT:1-1. Ref: Argote (Ven) LDU Quito win on away goals Jul 21 – Asuncion Libertad 0 (4) Junior1 (4) (Gonzalez 87) HT: 0-0. Ref: Matonte (Uru) Libertad win on away goals Jul 21 – Asuncion Arsenal1 (2) (Albertengo 52) Sporting Cristal1 (3) (Gonzales 85) HT: 0-0. Ref: Claus (Bra) Jul 22 – Braganca Paulista Red Bull Bragantino1 (3) (Cuello 52) Independiente del Valle1 (1) (Guerrero 4) HT: 0-1. Ref: Tobar (Chi)

URUGUAY

Aug 11 – Lima Sporting Cristal1 (Merlo 90) Penarol 3 (Alvrez Martinez 8, Torres19, Gargano 90+5) HT: 0-1. Ref: Sampaio (Bra)

P Atletico Nacional (Q) 18 IndependenteSanta e(Q) 18 Millonarios (Q) 18 Depo tivo Cali (Q) 18 Deportes To ima (Q) 18 La Equidad (Q) 18 Junior (Q) 18 America de Cali (Q) 18 IndependienteMedellin 18 18 Jaguares AtleticoBuca amanga 18 Deportivo Pasto 18 Boyaca Chico 18 Depo tivo Pereira 18 Once Caldas 18 18 Envigado Patriotas Boyaca 18 Aguilas Doradas 18 Alianza Petrolera 18

Finals Series

W 10 9 10 8 8 8 8 7 6 7 6 4 5 4 3 3 5 2 0

D 4 6 3 7 6 6 5 8 8 4 6 11 4 6 8 8 2 8 6

L 4 3 5 3 4 4 5 3 4 7 6 3 9 8 7 7 11 8 12

F 37 25 25 19 22 21 21 19 17 21 20 19 17 16 20 15 17 13 10

A 15 14 18 14 14 18 13 12 15 21 16 20 20 24 23 23 31 24 39

W 10 8 7 7 7 7 5 5 4 3 4 5 4 3 2 2

D 4 5 5 5 4 1 7 4 6 6 4 3 3 5 8 4

L 1 2 3 3 4 7 3 6 5 6 7 7 8 7 5 9

F 34 20 30 19 28 23 25 19 21 22 15 17 17 16 15 12

A 13 12 14 16 16 26 24 23 27 31 17 22 23 21 21 27

Pts 34 29 26 26 25 22 21 21 18 18 16 15 15 14 14 10

*River Plate awarded two points and Fenix deducted one point after Fenix fielded an ineligible player during a match between the two teams **Montevideo Wanderers awarded three points and Progreso deducted three points after Progreso fielded an ineligible player during a match between the two teams

Championship Play-Offs

Aug 12 – Santos Santos 2 (Sanchez 43 pen, Barboza 90+3 og) Libertad1 (Bocanegra 59) HT:1-0. Ref: Gonzalez (Uru) Aug 12 – Quito LDU Quito1 (Reasco 87) Athletico Paranaense 0 HT: 0-0. Ref: Matonte (Uru)

COLOMBIA

P Liverpoo (C) 15 15 Penarol MontevideoCtyTorque 15 15 Nacional Plaza Colonia 15 Boston River 15 Fenix* 15 River Plate* 15 DeportivoMaldonado 15 MontevdeoWandere s** 15 Cerro Largo 15 Progreso** 15 15 Danubio Cerro 15 Defensor Sporting 15 15 Rentistas

Pts 34 33 33 31 30 30 29 29 26 25 24 23 19 18 17 17 17 14 6

Quarter-Finals Apr 24: America de Cali1 Millonarios 2 May 2: Millonarios 0 America de Cali 0 Millonarios win 2-1 on aggregate Apr 25:Junior 3 Independiente Santa Fe1 May 2: Independiente Santa Fe 0 Junior 0 Junior win 3-1 on aggregate Apr 25: Deportes Tolima 3 Deportivo Cali 0 May 4: Deportivo Cali 2 Deportes Tolima 0 Deportes Tolima win 3-2 on aggregate Apr 26: La Equidad1 Atletico Nacional 0 May 2: Atletico Nacional 2 La Equidad 2 La Equidad win 3-2 on aggregate Semi-Finals Jun10: Junior 3 Millonarios 2 June13: Millonarios 2Junior 0 Millonarios win 4-3 on aggregate Jun11: Deportes Tolima1 La Equidad1 June15: La Equidad1 Deportes Tolima 2 Deportes Tolima win 3-2 on aggregate Final Jun18: Deportes Tolima1 Millonarios1 June 20: Millonarios1 Deportes Tolima 2 Deportes Tolima win 3-2 on aggregate

Liverpool qualify as Clausura winners Rentistas qualify as Apertura winners Nacional qualify after topping aggregate table Semi-Final Apr1: Rentistas1 Liverpool1 Rentistas won 3-2 on penalties Final Apr 5: Nacional 3 Rentistas 0 Apr 7: Rentistas 0 Nacional1 Nacional win 4-0 on aggregate

OCEANIA NEW ZEALAND P Auckland City (P)*14 Team We ington (C)**14 Ha i ton Wa derers 14 Eastern Suburbs 14 Waitake e United 14 Canterbury United 14 Hawke’s Bay United 14 Wellington Phoenix II 14

W 8 7 5 5 4 5 4 2

D 4 5 5 4 6 3 1 4

L 2 2 4 5 4 6 9 8

F 27 35 23 25 28 21 17 18

A 13 21 21 23 26 24 29 37

Pts 28 26 20 19 18 18 13 10

*Auckland City crowned Premiers **Team Wellington crowned Champions after beating Auckland City 4-2 in Finals Series Grand Final

TAHITI

Regular Season P 12 Pi ae 12 Venus Dragon 12 Pueu 12 Central 12 Tiare Tahiti 12 Tefana 12 Jeunes Tahitiens 12 Manu Ura 12 Olympic Mahina 12 12 Mataiea 12 Arue 12 Excelsior

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D 1 1 2 2 2 3 3 1 0 2 0 1 0

L 1 1 1 2 4 4 4 6 7 8 10 10 11

F 68 58 55 42 20 36 27 21 22 18 20 10 17

A 14 14 15 20 23 24 21 32 39 49 61 42 60

Pts 43 43 41 38 32 30 29 28 27 20 18 16 15

Championship Round P W 6 4 Pirae* (C) 6 5 Venus Dragon 6 3 Tefana 6 3 Pueu 6 2 Tiare Tahiti 6 0 Central 6 0

D 2 1 0 0 2 2 1

L 0 0 3 3 2 4 5

F 24 14 19 20 17 10 7

A 9 1 16 12 25 28 20

Pts 22 22 15 15 14 8 7

Note: 4 points for a win, 2 points for a draw and 1 point for a defeat in Tahiti league

*Pirae awarded two bonus points for topping the Regular Season table on goal difference Relegation Round P Olympic Mahina 10 10 Mataiea 10 Excelsior Manu Ura (R) 10 Arue (R) 10 Jeunes Tah tiens (R) 10

October 2021 Vol. 62 No.1 GROUP EDITOR Stephen Fishlock ASSISTANT EDITORS Jamie Evans &Jared Tinslay DESIGN Sean Phillips, atg-media.com PICTURES Pictures copyright: Getty Images EDITORIAL Kelsey Media, The Granary, Downs Court, Yalding Hill, Yalding, Maidstone, Kent, ME18 6AL ADVERTISING AND SPONSORSHIP Talk Media Sales: David Lerpiniere Tel: 01732 445325 Email: david.lerpiniere@talkmediasales.co.uk CHIEF EXECUTIVE Steve Wright CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER Phil Weeden MANAGING DIRECTOR Kevin McCormick PUBLISHER Steve Brown SUBS MARKETING DIRECTOR Gill Lambert SENIOR SUBS MARKETING MANAGERS Nicholas McIntosh & Rochelle Gyer-Smith SUBS MARKETING MANAGERS Andy Cotton & Alex Havell PRINT PRODUCTION MANAGER Georgina Harris PRINT PRODUCTION CONTROLLERS Kelly Orriss & Hayley Brown DISTRIBUTION Great Britain: Marketforce Tel: 0330 390 6555 Northern Ireland and the Republic Of Ireland Newspread Tel: +353 23 886 3850 PRINTING William Gibbons & Sons Ltd

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WORLD SOCCER 97


MY BIGGEST

GAME

Mark Lawrenso Liverpool1 Roma1 (Liverpool won 4-2 on penalties)

1984 European Cup Final, Rome Liverpool were a team of serial European up winners when Mark Lawrenson arrived in 1981. Three years later, he had a medal of his own, after the Reds beca e the first team to win the final by penalty shootout, in night that has gone down in Anfield folklore… I didn’t really think about winni g the European Cup when I was growing up. It felt like a dream too fa You set out with a dream of playin for your local club, maybe get to Wembley at some point, but the European Cup is a match you see on TV, not something you believe you will be a part of one day. Yet that was me in1984, winning the biggest competition of them all against Roma in front of their own fans in Rome. When I look back on our run in that season, the semi-final against Dinamo Bucharest was perfect preparation for what was to come in the final: the atmosphere out in Romania was hostile with a capital H. It was scary. We won the first leg at Anfield1-0 and, for them, the second leg was the biggest game of their lives. They tried every trick in the book to intimidate us and I remember they went after Graeme Souness in a big way – fair enough, after he had broken their best player’s [Lica Movila] jaw in the first leg. He would never have got away with it now, but Graeme delivered a punch that flattened the guy at Anfield and no one saw it. Not the referee, none of the players and the TV cameras didn’t spot it either. The perfect crime! From the moment we arrived at the airport, you got the impression that something bad might happen, so we were just happy to get out of there with a 2-1 win and a place in the final. After coming through that, Roma in Rome didn’t seem so bad. The fact that I was in a dressing room full of champions that had already won the European Cup a couple of times made my first experience of a final seem a lot easier. I remember being in the tunnel

European champs… Lawrenson (right) holds the trophy with Graeme Souness (left)

We were the better side against Roma, but we couldn’t get the winning goal we deserved and it came down to penalties. Bruce Grobbelaar did his famous spaghetti legs and that seemed to do the trick. Penalties shou d have been a concern for us because the day before we f ew down to Rome, e had a shootout practice against e youth team and it was a mes . ruce didn’t get near any of th and we ended up osing a st the kids, but we when it mattered most. That Liverpool team was special. Three European Cups? I was only part of one of them so I can’t take too much credit for that record, but they were a special team. We had players that were good enough to play in any era: Graeme Souness, Alan Hansen, Kenny Dalglish and Ian Rush were world-class

z

l r

before we went out into this lion’s den and we were all just so calm, ready to go. This was a team of winners and nothing affected us. One of the lads started singing the Chris Rea song, I Don’t Know What It Is But I Love It, and I can only imagine what the Roma players thought. That song had become a kind of anthem for us that season and it probably gave them a hint that we weren’t worried about what was to come.

He would never have got away with it now, but Graeme delivered a punch that flattened the guy at Anfield and no one saw it Spaghetti legs… Roma’s Francesco Graziani skies his penalty over Bruce Grobbelaar’s crossbar

performers and they would have been stars now, no doubt about it. Imagine how much they would be worth in the current transfer market? You couldn’t put a price on them. Mark Lawrenson was speaking to Kevin Palmer for World Soccer at a BT Sport event

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