GUIA DO BRASILEIRÃO: Multicampeão, Palmeiras vai buscar título inédito na era Abel Ferreira

MatériaMais Notícias

O torcedor do Palmeiras tem muitos motivos para comemorar. Atual bicampeão da Libertadores, campeão da Recopa e campeão paulista, o time talvez seja o melhor do país neste momento. E é assim que o Verdão entra para a disputa do Brasileirão, título que ainda não foi conquistado nesta era Abel Ferreira. Em 2022, os palmeirenses devem entrar para valer na disputa.

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> Veja a análise dos adversários, onde assistir e tudo sobre o Palmeiras

Time-base: Weverton; Marcos Rocha, Gustavo Gómez, Luan e Piquerez; Danilo, Zé Rafael, Raphael Veiga e Gustavo Scarpa; Dudu e Rony. Técnico: Abel Ferreira.

Vaivém do Verdão
Quem chega: –
Quem sai: Patrick de Paula (Botafogo) e Renan (Red Bull Bragantino)
Quem pode chegar:Carlos Vinícius (PSV-HOL)
Quem pode sair: Danilo (interesse europeu) e Deyverson (fim de contrato)
Necessidade de reforços: centroavante
Retornos de empréstimo: –

Os primeiros jogos:
9/4 (sábado) – Palmeiras x Ceará – Allianz Parque
​16/4 (sábado) – Goiás x Palmeiras – Estádio da Serrinha
​20/4 (quarta-feira) – Flamengo x Palmeiras – Maracanã
23/4 (sábado) – Palmeiras x Corinthians – Allianz Parque
​8/5 (domingo) – Palmeiras x Fluminense – Allianz Parque
​14/5, 15/5 ou 16/5 – Palmeiras x Red Bull Bragantino – Allianz Parque
​21/5, 22/5 ou 23/5 – Juventude x Palmeiras – Alfredo Jaconi
28/5, 29/5 ou 30/5 – Santos x Palmeiras – Vila Belmiro
​4/6, 5/6 ou 6/6 – Palmeiras x Atlético-MG – Allianz Parque
8/6 ou 9/6 – Palmeiras x Botafogo – Allianz Parque

Opinião do setorista – Alexandre Guariglia

O Palmeiras entra neste Brasileirão-2022 como um dos principais favoritos. Falando assim, parece até óbvio para um time que tem sido constantemente colocado na primeira prateleira de todos os torneios que disputa. No entanto, a edição atual deve ter um caráter diferente para a equipe de Abel Ferreira, que nesta era vitoriosa ainda não conquistou o título do campeonato nacional.

Com taças Libertadores, da Recopa, da Copa do Brasil e do Paulistão na bagagem ainda resta um Brasileiro para colocar nesse currículo fantástico do clube sob o comando do técnico português e uma série de fatores indica que o Verdão entrará para valer para buscar essa conquista inédita nesse período, já que nas duas edições anteriores, por conta do calendário, isso não foi possível.

A maratona de jogos é parecida com as temporadas anteriores, mas a administração do elenco para suportar esses jogos deve ser diferente. Com um grupo “tranquilo” na Libertadores, apesar das longas viagens, pode ser que a comissão técnica opte por poupar algumas peças na competição continental, dando prioridade aos duelos pelo Brasileirão, principalmente neste início, já que o importante é acumular pontos para tentar deslanchar na classificação.

Se depender da qualidade do time, do elenco e do trabalho de Abel Ferreira, dificilmente alguém vai dizer que o Palmeiras não é um dos principais favoritos ao título do Brasileirão. Claro que em um campeonato de pontos corridos, que é muito longo, várias coisas podem mudar, jogadores podem sair, ou podem chegar, lesões podem acontecer e o desgaste pode pesar naquele “sprint” final. No entanto, em condições normais, o Verdão briga forte por mais uma taça.

Opinião do setorista – Julia Mazarin

O Palmeiras chega forte para mais uma competição que disputa na temporada. Sob o comando de Abel Ferreira, o Brasileirão é o único título que falta em uma prateleira repleta de grandes conquistas. Acredito que a exigência do calendário do futebol nacional e as longas viagens possam prejudicar um pouco o planejamento da comissão técnica. Contudo, o Verdão tem um elenco que pode suprir as necessidades no momento em que for necessário e isso acaba se tornando o menor dos problemas alviverdes.

O fato é que, caso os jogadores continuem colocando em prática as ideias impostas pelo treinador português, o Palmeiras briga para se manter no topo do continente e do país, além de ser a equipe a ser batida.

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Conway, Thornton, Manenti bolster South Australia's bowling stocks

Redbacks refresh their list after losing Worrell, Mennie and Kane Richardson, while four WNCL sides also announce contract lists

ESPNcricinfo staff10-May-2022

Harry Conway leaves NSW for South Australia•Getty Images

South Australia have poached seam-bowling duo Harry Conway and Henry Thornton from interstate as well as offspinner Ben Manenti to bolster their bowling depth ahead of the 2022-23 Australian domestic season.Conway and Thornton were both part of the Adelaide Strikers in the BBL and have joined South Australia for more opportunities in the Sheffield Shield and Marsh Cup.Conway, 29, has played 38 first-class matches – and reached Australia A level – but struggled for continuity in New South Wales playing just five matches last season while Thornton, 25, had left NSW last winter to search for opportunities in Victoria. He played four Marsh Cup games last season and was named Victoria’s Marsh Cup player of the season despite only taking five wickets. But he made his name as a replacement player in the BBL for Strikers taking 14 wickets in nine games in 2021-22 including 4 for 26 against Melbourne Stars.Both men join a South Australia squad that is starting to build fast-bowling depth after the recruitment of Nathan McAndrew and Brendan Doggett last season, which offsets the loss of Daniel Worrall and Joe Mennie, who have both moved to the UK, and Kane Richardson who has moved to Queensland.”It’s so exciting that lads come and spend time at the Strikers and feel South Australia is a great place to be,” South Australia coach Jason Gillespie said. “It’s wonderful to be able to get these guys over. Henry got drafted into the second half of the BBL and I thought he did remarkably well. He fit in so well to the group. He clearly enjoyed himself. The players enjoyed playing with him and it is fantastic to have him here.”Henry brings airspeed. He pitches the ball up and moves it away from the right-handers at pace. Harry is a tall fast bowler with plenty of skills. He can move the ball off the straight but also the height and bounce he can generate is fantastic. He’s also a big personality who aspires to be a leader around the group. He wants to be a leader and that is fantastic.”Ben Manenti celebrates•Getty Images

Manenti, 25, adds to South Australia’s thin spin stocks after making his first-class debut for Tasmania late last season. Manenti, originally from NSW, has been a regular in the Sydney Sixers squad over the last four seasons in the BBL but finally made his List A and first-class for Tasmania.”We’ve had our eye on Ben for a little while now, and what we are really excited about is his competitive nature and how he goes about his work,” Gillespie said. “He is a really competitive guy who plays to win, and we know that energy will add significantly to the squad.”South Australia played their last two Shield games last season without a specialist spinner, with legspinner Lloyd Pope still taking time to develop but he remains on SA’s list. Thomas Kelly and Jordan Buckingham have been upgraded to the main list after making their Shield debuts last season.The Redbacks have recruited some young batters with Australia Under-19 right-hander Aidan Cahill moving from NSW on a rookie deal.In the Scorpions squad, the South Australia women’s team, youngsters Ella Wilson and Paris Hall have been added alongside Strikers batter Madeline Penna who has moved from ACT. Former captain Tegan McPharlin retired from state cricket after 15 season at the end of last summer.Belinda Vakarewa has lost her WNCL deal•Getty Images

Elsewhere, former Australia quick Holly Ferling has moved from Queensland to the ACT for the coming WNCL season. Ferling, 26, adds plenty of international experience to the Meteors after the retirement of veteran Erin Osborne.”Whilst she is an extremely accomplished cricketer, having made 34 appearances for Australia across all formats, she is also a wonderful leader and will be a great mentor for some of our younger players,” ACT coach Jono Dean said.Former New Zealand wicketkeeper-batter Rachel Priest and one-time Australia ODI seamer Belinda Vakarewa have not been offered new contracts with WNCL title-holders Tasmania while Corinne Hall has retired. Rachel Trenamen has moved from NSW to Tasmania while Saskia Horley has taken her place on the NSW Breakers’ contract list.South Australia men’s contract list Wes Agar, Jordan Buckingham, Kyle Brazell, Aidan Cahill, Alex Carey (CA), Bailey Capel, Jake Carder, Harry Conway, Brendan Doggett, Daniel Drew, David Grant, Travis Head (CA), Isaac Higgins, Henry Hunt, Spencer Johnson, Thomas Kelly, Ryan King, Jake Lehmann, Nathan McAndrew, Nathan McSweeney, Ben Manenti, Harry Mathias, Harry Nielsen, Lloyd Pope, Liam Scott, Henry Thornton, Jake Weatherald, Nick Winter.In Harry Conway (NSW), Spencer Johnson, Thomas Kelly, Ben Manenti, Henry Thornton | Out Ryan Gibson, Corey Kelly, Sam Kerber, Joe Mennie, Kane Richardson (Queensland), Daniel Worrall (Surrey).South Australia women’s contract list Jemma Barsby, Sam Betts, Darcie Brown (CA), Emma de Broughe, Josie Dooley, Ellie Falconer, Paris Hall, Brooke Harris, Tahlia McGrath (CA), Annie O’Neil, Bridget Patterson, Madeline Penna, Kate Peterson, Megan Schutt (CA), Courtney Webb, Amanda-Jade Wellington, Ella WilsonIn Madeline Penna, Ella Wilson, Paris Hall | Out Tegan McPharlin (retired), Alex Price, Eliza DoddridgeACT women’s contract list: Angela Reakes, Katie Mack, Kayla Burton, Gabrielle Sutcliffe, Chloe Rafferty, Carly Leeson, Matilda Lugg, Olivia Porter, Rebecca Carter, Amy Yates, Zoe Cooke, Holly Ferling, Alisha Bates, Angelina Genford, Annie WikmanIn Holly Ferling (Queensland), Alisha Bates, Annie Wikman, Angelina Genford | Out Erin Osborne (retired), Madeline Penna (South Australia), Nicola Hancock, Erica KershawTasmania women’s contract list: Nicola Carey (CA), Julia Cavanough, Maisy Gibson, Heather Graham, Emma Manix-Geeves, Sasha Moloney, Clare Scott, Hayley Silver-Holmes, Amy Smith, Naomi Stalenberg, Molly Strano, Emma Thompson, Rachel Trenaman, Elyse Villani, Callie Wilson.In Rachel Trenaman (New South Wales), Clare Scott, Callie Wilson, Julia Cavanough | Out Corinne Hall (retired), Chloe Abel, Rachel Priest, Emily Smith, Belinda Vakarewa.NSW Women’s contract list: Jade Allen, Maitlan Brown, Erin Burns, Stella Campbell, Lauren Cheatle, Hannah Darlington, Ashleigh Gardner (CA), Rachael Haynes (CA), Alyssa Healy (CA), Saskia Horley, Emma Hughes, Sammy Jo-Johnson, Anika Learoyd, Phoebe Litchfield, Claire Moore, Lauren Smith, Tahlia Wilson.In Saskia Horley | Out Rachel Trenaman (Tasmania)

'You can't win with your shirt' – USMNT's Golden Generation dealt another harsh reminder that 2026 World Cup dreams rest on their shoulders, not Mauricio Pochettino's

The USMNT's supposed "Golden Generation" keeps wasting golden chances, and the players must hold themselves accountable

LOS ANGELES – "We need to play with personality, we need to play relaxed, we need to play with intensity. When we do these things, we're a really good team. But when we don't, we're an average team."

A spot-on analysis of the USMNT's CONCACAF Nations League performance, right?

But here’s the thing: that quote isn’t from Thursday night. It’s not even from Mauricio Pochettino. Indeed, former U.S. boss Gregg Berhalter said those words in September 2022 after the USMNT’s loss to Japan, just weeks before the World Cup. On that day, with so much at stake, the U.S. failed to rise to the occasion. Nearly three years later, that same theme feels more relevant than ever.

This is a talented group of players, for sure, but those words are a cautionary tale of what can happen when attitude and intensity are missing. Pochettino, the U.S. manager brought in to reignite a meandering program, repeatedly bemoaned his side's lack of both after Thursday night's 1-0 loss to Panama in the Nations League semifinals.

Berhalter is long gone, Pochettino hired as his high-profile replacement. The Argentine's arrival was supposed to be the wake-up call this team needed. He was brought in to be the leader, the one that can finally coax a much-needed mentality shift out of this talented group of American stars. It's what makes moments like Thursday's so frustrating: this team is too good to lose these games, yet they seem to find ways time and time again.

At some point, that isn't all down to coaching. That's not down to the rah-rah speeches in the locker room or the training sessions or the tactics. At some point, it comes down to one question: does this team have it or not? And until they discover it, their hopes of even putting in a really good showing at next summer's World Cup look slimmer and slimmer.

The USMNT's supposed "Golden Generation" keeps wasting golden chances and, at some point, the players that make up that generation need to look in the mirror and figure out why. Pochettino is a fantastic coach, one who can help take a team to a new level. He can't save them from themselves, though, and this group's future will be defined by their ability to look in the mirror and reflect that desire on the field.

Getty ImagesAnother letdown

Every player in a USMNT shirt must be weary of seeing Panama. For whatever reason, this team just has the USMNT's number. Even when outplayed, Panama finds a way to win it, and the USMNT finds a way to lose.

On Thursday, the winner came from Cecelio Waterman, whose perfectly placed shot caught Matt Turner flat-footed. Waterman's subsequent celebration with Thierry Henry made the moment legendary, but the goal itself was already historic. For the first time, in this fourth edition of the CONCACAF Nations League, the USMNT won't lift the trophy in the end. They won't even make the final.

"Just lacking a bit of aggressiveness and creativity in the final third," Christian Pulisic said after the match. "We're still building our identity. This is a tough loss. We've won this tournament a couple of times now and it didn't go our way this year, but we just have to keep going from here."

It's not just this loss, though. It's the one in the Copa America in 2024 when Tim Weah was sent off to, ultimately, send the U.S. to their doom. They had a chance to avoid it days later against Uruguay, but couldn't muster much of anything as they were bounced from the tournament in the group stage.

It's the one at the Gold Cup in 2023. That U.S. group was without nearly all of their stars due to the nature of that tournament (with the top teams going with their B squads) but the feeling was largely the same. Penalty kicks were their undoing that time around. Who knows what could have happened if it got there on Thursday night?

To their credit, the U.S. has stepped up to the occasion multiple times. They've lifted this trophy three times for a reason, beating good Mexico and Canada teams to do so. They played hard as hell at the 2022 World Cup, too, showing well, in particular, against England.

That performance against was defined by their intensity and tenacity, but those haven't always been apparent in the years since. They should be non-negotiable but in the wake of Thursday's loss, Pochettino hit on those themes again when explaining away this latest setback.

AdvertisementAFPThe lack of intensity

Berhalter's quote from 2022 fit the theme of Thursday night. And Pochettino essentially echoed the same sentiments after the match.

"I don't think we approached the game or started the game in the right way," he said. "That's why I feel so disappointed and we all feel disappointed. In the first half, we played too slow, too comfortable on the pitch. We didn't show aggression with the ball and there are consequences to not showing aggression with the ball. We also didn't show agression in a defensive way. Even if we didn't concede too much, only two or three shots and one on target going into that last action, but we knew we had to be aggressive with the ball and have a mature approach to the game. I think we didn't show that."

It's about competitive spirit, about desire, about fight. And the USMNT was lacking in all of those areas.

"It's the responsibility of everyone and we need to find a way to compete better," Pochettino said. "I don't like to say that. We are the USA, but you can't win with your shirt. You cannot win because you play here or there. You need to show and you need to come here and be better and suffer and win duels and work hard. If not, it's not going to be enough. We are going to play, but competing demands that level. At the international level, it's not going to be enough."

The stats support Pochettino's words. Panama won 44 duels to the USMNT's 34, which is the most telling stat. Virtually every other data point was in the USMNT's favor except for that one – and that's the one defined solely by effort and attitude. Talent doesn't win 50-50s, commitment does. Panama simply had more of it.

"The difference was the way that they fought for the game," Pochettino said. "They were hungry. Every single ball was the last one for every single player of Panama. That's something you can feel from the touchline. You feel that that was the difference."

It is reminiscent of Berhalter's point. The USMNT has struggled to find the line between intense and comfortable, composed and aggressive. It's something the best teams can do. The best teams find moments to switch on and attack. They bury teams before they get a chance to be buried themselves. It's a skill. The question is if it's one that this group of players can learn.

In fact, after Pochettino's hire was announced last fall, Pulisic specifically addressed what he wanted the Argentine manager to bring to this squad.

"Hopefully a culture that is willing to fight, that is willing to take risks, you know, win," Pulisic said. "There’s a lot of things that need to change, just the mentality and the culture of the group. I think we have the quality, but hopefully, that’s the first thing he’s going to want to change."

Pochettino has to be the one to teach them and guide them, but they also have to be willing to absorb, learn and execute. It's clear that's not yet happened. Yes, of course, the USMNT were unlucky with saves, posts, and VAR calls against Panama, but a better team wouldn't have let it get to that point.

Pochettino, though, wasn't without blame on Thursday. He, too, could have been better.

AFPPochettino's part in it all

USMNT star Tyler Adams made it abundantly clear: when a team loses in the way the USMNT did, the blame doesn't fall on the coach.

"I've never blamed the coach in my entire career," Adams said. "A loss depends on the players, and that's the bottom line, unless a coach goes out and tries something completely random and it wasn't what the coach was following or if there was a lack of communication. There was no lack of communication in what was happening today. We knew exactly what we had to do. We knew what we needed to be competitive. I don't think we were as competitive as we needed to be."

Pochettino was brought in for a reason. He's paid more than any USMNT coach in history for a reason. Every time the USMNT takes the field, Pochettino is expected to make a difference and, on Thursday, he couldn't find a way to do it.

His counterpart, Thomas Christiansen, sure did. It wasn't rocket science, of course, but the Panama coach drilled his players on shrinking the field and limiting the U.S. attack. He kept them hungry and gave them a game plan that worked. There was no big secret to it and, in some ways, that makes it all the more impressive.

Pochettino, meanwhile, never really turned the tide. Yes, the injury absences of top players such as Antonee Robinson and leading strikers Folarin Balogun and Ricardo Pepi also played a part. So, too, did the width of the field – literally more narrow than the pitch will be at SoFi for the World Cup next year. You could question at the roster selection, too.

Still, Pochettino had options at his disposal and he didn't deploy all of them. Patrick Agyemang and Jack McGlynn were thrown into the game in the second half, but Gio Reyna and Diego Luna were not. The game was crying out for them, and Pochettino admitted he was preparing to turn to them in extra time. They never got there, so he never got that chance.

"The last three times that we faced Panama in an official competition we were not capable of beating them," he said. "Why? I think that is a question mark, but it's a question mark that we, all together, need to find a solution."

It's a question that Pochettino arguably could have answered in real-time. Now, he and the players will be left wondering as they prepare for what's next.

ImagnLooking ahead

Chalk this up as yet another learning moment in a long line. Panama and Uruguay in the summer, Canada and Mexico in the fall and, now, Panama again in the spring – the USMNT seemingly has had ample education in what not to do.

"You always learn more from the setbacks than you do from other games," said veteran Tim Ream. "You can say we would have won, but you're just papering over the issues that I think everybody saw in terms of getting behind and aggression and all of that. There are always teaching moments, always learning moments in every game, every training, every day you step on the field.

"We have to look at that and make sure that we take on board exactly what he wants and exactly what he needs. That starts with duels and aggression and intensity."

The good news is that the USMNT will have a chance at some level of redemption on Sunday. Canada awaits in the Nations League third-place match – with Mexico facing Panama in the finale – offering the U.S. another crack at a good team. There will be no trophy lift, of course, but a win could lift morale. There will be no excuses in that one. If the U.S. fails to show up on Sunday, the knives will, rightfully, come out.

In the hours until then, the U.S. will have to dissect this latest loss, just as they have previously.

"We're not going to have the chance to win a trophy right now," Matt Turner said, "but I think you can go one of two ways from a result like this: you either come back on Sunday, put together a good result, and you have a good feeling going into the summer or you can implode, really. I don't foresee that coming… We can't let performances like this slide."

Maybe, on Sunday, those lessons will take hold. Maybe this time around the U.S. will discover that, as Pochettino says, it takes more than just a shirt to win a game. And if these players learn that lesson, they'll learn another one: Pochettino can't save this team on the road to the 2026 World Cup – only they can.

Hazlewood claims No. 1 spot among T20I bowlers; Ishan Kishan becomes highest-rated India batter

Before Hazlewood, the last Australia bowler to top the T20I bowling charts was Nathan Bracken in 2008

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Jun-2022

Josh Hazlewood was the leading wicket-taker in Australia’s recent 2-1 series win over Sri Lanka•ICC via Getty

Josh Hazlewood continued his rise in T20 cricket by claiming the No. 1 spot among bowlers in the ICC rankings. Before him, the last Australia bowler to top the T20I bowling charts was Nathan Bracken back in 2008.With six wickets, Hazlewood was the leading wicket-taker in Australia’s recent 2-1 series win over Sri Lanka, as he rose two places to go above Tabraiz Shamsi and Adil Rashid to the No. 1 spot. Before that, Hazlewood had grabbed 11 wickets in Australia’s victorious campaign in the T20 World Cup last year.Full rankings tables

Click here for the full team rankings

Click here for the full player rankings

Hazlewood, remarkably, hadn’t played a T20I between March 2016 and September 2020.Meanwhile, India opener Ishan Kishan entered the top ten in the T20I batting rankings for the first time. Scores of 76, 34 and 54 in the first three T20Is in the ongoing series against South Africa propelled him 68 spots from his No. 75 ranking at the start of the series. Kishan is now the top-ranked India batter in T20Is, above KL Rahul who sits at 14th.Kishan remains the top-scorer in the series with 164 runs, as India hit back in the third game in Visakhapatnam on Tuesday to keep the five-match series alive.Pakistan captain Babar Azam continues to lead the batting charts, with his opening partner Mohammad Rizwan rising a spot up to No. 2, from where Aiden Markram slipped to third after missing the series against India after testing positive for Covid-19.In other notable movements among bowlers, Hazlewood’s team-mate Ashton Agar gained three places to move up to ninth, while Sri Lanka’s Maheesh Theekshana jumped 16 spots to eighth. Bhuvneshwar Kumar’s six wickets in three games against South Africa helped him rise three places to No. 11 with a career-best ratings points total of 635.

ماجد سامي: "مين مدرب عالمي عنده كرامة يقبل يدرب الأهلي"

واصلت ردود الفعل على أزمة رحيل السويسري مارسيل كولر عن تدريب النادي الأهلي، تصاعدها، حيث دخل ماجد سامي، مالك نادي وادي دجلة، على خط التعليقات بتصريح مُثير للجدل.

وكان النادي الأهلي قد أعلن مؤخرًا عن توجيه الشكر للمدير الفني مارسيل كولر وجهازه المعاون بالكامل، بعد الخروج من نصف نهائي دوري أبطال إفريقيا أمام فريق صن داونز، وهي النتيجة التي أثارت حالة من الغضب داخل القلعة الحمراء وأدت إلى تغييرات شاملة بالجهاز الفني والإداري.

طالع أيضًا | شوبير: قد تحدث مفاجآت مُدوية في الأهلي بسبب كولر والشرط الجزائي

وكتب ماجد سامي عبر صفحته الشخصية بموقع التواصل الاجتماعي “فيس بوك”: “مين مدرب عالمي عنده شخصية وكرامة اللي هيقبل يدرب النادي الأهلي بعد مشهد الوداع الذي نقلته الصحف الأوروبية؟”.

ويواجه مجلس إدارة النادي الأهلي تحديًا كبيرًا خلال الفترة المقبلة في ظل بحثه عن مدرب أجنبي جديد يقود الفريق، وسط حالة من الترقب داخل الأوساط الرياضية لمعرفة اسم المدير الفني القادم.

وقرر النادي الأهلي تعيين الكابتن عماد النحاس مدربًا عامًا للفريق، لقيادته في المباريات المتبقية من الموسم الحالي، حتى يتم التعاقد مع مدير فني أجنبي، ويستكمل النحاس مهمته معه.

VIDEO: Mixed day for Jesse Lingard! Ex-Man Utd star scores AND misses penalty in thrilling FC Seoul victory

Former Manchester United and England star Jesse Lingard endured a mixed day with FC Seoul as he scored a penalty and missed one.

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  • Seoul won 3-2 against Daegu
  • Lingard scored penalty before half-time
  • Missed one in the second half
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Lingard played for Seoul on Saturday as they faced Daegu in the K-League. Lingard opened the scoring from the penalty spot before half-time, but missed a second spot-kick after the break. Seoul were still able to win all three points, however, as they scored twice in injury time.

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  • THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Seoul were 2-1 down in the 80th minute as Daegu mounted a comeback, but injury time goals from Jeong Seung-won and Moon Seon-min spared Lingard's blushes. The ex-England man has played in all six K-League games this season, scoring twice.

  • Getty Images

    WHAT NEXT?

    Seoul play Ulsan next weekend. Lingard and his team-mates are currently third, two points behind early pace-setters Daejeon Hana.

Ericson destaca oportunidades no Botafogo-SP, líder do Brasileiro Série C

MatériaMais Notícias

Após duas rodadas no Campeonato Brasileiro Série C, há apenas quatro times com 100% de aproveitamento na competição: Botafogo-SP, Campinense, Mirassol e Floresta. O zagueiro Ericson faz parte do Botafogo-SP, atual líder da competição.

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TABELA
Veja a tabela do Brasileirão Série C

Recém-contratado pelo Pantera, o defensor deixou o Grêmio após sete anos de clube e assinou com o Botafogo-SP até o fim do Campeonato Paulista 2023. Entrando no decorrer dos dois jogos do clube no Campeonato Brasileiro Série C, Ericson falou sobre a importância das oportunidades cedidas pelo treinador Moacir Júnior.

– Mesmo com o título no Brasileirão de Aspirantes, eu precisava provar pra mim que tinha capacidade de atuar no profissional. Fiz duas partidas no Gauchão e consegui acreditar ainda mais que eu conseguiria. Quando cheguei ao Botafogo, treinei bem e recebi oportunidades nos dois jogos, isso é muito bom pra mim. Passo a passo, buscando meu espaço, treinando firme, para quando as oportunidades aparecerem, eu chegar cada vez mais pronto para retribuir a confiança do treinador – afirmou o jovem de 22 anos.

Buscando manter os 100% na competição nacional, o Botafogo-SP encara o Brasil de Pelotas, no próximo sábado (23), às 11h. O Brasil de Pelotas ainda não venceu no campeonato. Ericson vê o confronto como uma partida difícil e que requer muita atenção tática do Botafogo para triunfar fora de casa e manter a invencibilidade no torneio.

– O Brasil de Pelotas tem uma equipe qualificada, mostraram isso no Campeonato Gaúcho, avançando de fase e etc. Temos que entrar ligados desde o primeiro minuto e respeitar a equipe adversária. Uma vitória lá dentro pode nos dar ainda mais confiança, e isso é muito importante para todos nós, quanto mais confiança, mais as coisas fluem e temos capacidade e um bom time para avançar bem, jogo a jogo, etapa a etapa – finalizou Ericson.

Stuart Broad reprimanded for throwing ball at Daryl Mitchell

Fast bowler handed demerit point after admitting to Level One offence

ESPNcricinfo staff28-Jun-2022Stuart Broad has received an official reprimand from the ICC and had a demerit point added to his record for a code of conduct breach during the Headingley Test, which England won by seven wickets.Broad was charged with a breach of Article 2.9, with relates to throwing a ball “at or near a player in an inappropriate and/or dangerous manner”. The incident occurred during the 89th over of New Zealand’s second innings, when Broad fielded the ball in his follow through and threw it towards Daryl Mitchell, with the New Zealand batter having not left his crease.The breach was similar to that for “reckless fielding” which saw Carlos Brathwaite and Birmingham Bears penalised to the tune of 5 runs during a recent Vitality Blast game (the playing conditions for international cricket are different to the Blast).Broad admitted the Level One offence and accepted the sanction proposed by David Boon, the ICC match referee at Headingley.Related

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This counts as Broad’s second offence within a 24-month period, having previously received a demerit point for directing an “inappropriate word” at Yasir Shah during the 2020 Old Trafford Test against Pakistan. Collecting four or more demerit points within 24 months can result in a ban for one Test or two limited-overs matches.Broad went wicketless in New Zealand’s second innings in Leeds, finishing the series with 12 at 35.25, with England subsequently chasing down a target of 296 on the fifth day.

Man Utd & Chelsea want him: Arsenal set for Gnabry 2.0 with "fantastic" ace

In recent years Arsenal have got a lot better at tying down their key players and ensuring they don’t leave the Emirates Stadium behind.

It wasn’t long ago that the likes of Bukayo Saka, William Saliba and Martin Odegaard all penned new terms to keep them in north London.

It hasn’t always been like that, however. There were the horrible days of Manchester City pillaging players from Arsenal with the likes of Emmanuel Adebayor, Gael Clichy and Samir Nasri all trading the capital for the north west.

Robin van Persie did the same, although headed to Old Trafford, and another club captain in Cesc Fabregas also wanted to seek pastures new, eventually moving to boyhood club Barcelona after a barren run without a trophy.

There’s also the classic example of Serge Gnbary, perhaps the biggest what-if story in the club’s recent history.

Why Serge Gnabry left Arsenal behind

Having made waves in the Arsenal academy, a certain Gnabry made his debut for the Gunners in 2012.

The occasion wasn’t a big one as far as the club were concerned but it was a landmark moment for the player nonetheless, starting a League Cup tie against Coventry City.

Remarkably, despite his eye-catching skillset, he only made a further 17 outings at a first-team level under the legendary Arsene Wenger.

Why, we hear you asking? Well, he had a pretty impressive crop of players to usurp with the likes of Alexis Sanchez, Mesut Ozil, Aaron Ramsey and Theo Walcott ahead of him on the wings and in central attacking areas. Despite that, he did his best to make an impact and did so against Swansea City when he bagged his first top-flight goal for the Gunners.

Wenger still didn’t take much of a fancy to him and following that infamous loan spell under Tony Pulis at West Brom, he decided that leaving English football behind was for the best.

Since that moment, the German talent has made Mr Wenger and Mr Pulis look rather foolish

He initially joined Werder Bremen for just £4m and then, of course, was snapped up by Bundesliga giants Bayern Munich where he has been nothing short of a sensation. Gnabry has won the league title five times, lifted the Champions League aloft and contributed 86 goals and 56 assists in 255 outings. Not bad, is it?

Arsenal

18

1

1

West Brom

3

0

0

Hoffenheim

26

10

7

Werder Bremen

27

11

2

Bayern Munich

255

88

56

So, to repeat that error would be a mistake, surely? Well, it could well happen.

Arsenal heading for a Gnabry repeat

Over the last few years, the Gunners have had great success selling on Hale End stars for future profit. You only need to look at the deals surrounding the likes of Emile Smith Rowe, Folarin Balogun and Co.

It’s not just been prominent names who have decided to flee the Emirates Stadium either. Thankfully, they have been able to entice Ethan Nwaneri into committing his future to Arsenal but the same sadly could not be said for Chido Obi Martin, their former teenage goal machine.

He departed for Manchester United over the summer after rejecting fresh terms at Colney and a repeat scenario now looks as though it’s emerging.

According to journalist Graeme Bailey this week, teenage sensation Ayden Heaven is attracting interest from a host of domestic and European outfits.

Ayden Heaven for Arsenal.

Heaven – aged just 18 – was a regular feature during the club’s pre-season preparations and then made his competitive senior bow in this term’s Carabao Cup. However, according to the report the teen has so far rejected all proposals of a professional deal.

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Capable of playing in midfield or central defence, Heaven is versatile and offers a “highly unique” skillset in the words of data analyst Ben Mattinson. He’s also labelled the teen starlet as “fantastic”, hailing his ability in possession of the ball.

Alas, it’s suggested that Premier League big boys such as Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City and Manchester United all have an interest.

There are also foreign suitors in the form of Borussia Dortmund, Bayer Leverkusen, Napoli and, coincidentally, Gnabry’s Bayern Munich.

Of course, Heaven has not made a similar impact on the first team yet as Gnabry did during the Wenger years, but a move to Germany at a young age would be eerily similar.

It must be admitted that losing such a young player would not be a blow to Arsenal’s immediate ambitions but losing Gnabry when they did wasn’t either.

The future ramifications, however, particularly considering the Gunners went on to spend £72m on Nicolas Pepe were colossal.

They cannot afford to be looking back on this situation in a few years time wondering what if again. Tying down Heaven, introducing him more to first-team life and selling for a decent fee in the future would be the wisest idea here.

Balogun, Smith Rowe and Eddie Nketiah serve as fine examples of that particular notion.

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Wolves could hire "excellent" Pereira alternative who’d fix their defence

It did feel written into the script that Gary O’Neil was going to be axed as Wolverhampton Wanderers manager eventually, even with the Wolves board giving him a vote of confidence after a barrage of losses.

A last-gasp loss to relegation rivals Ipswich Town proved to be the final straw, as Jack Taylor’s dramatic header caused a chorus of boos to fill Molineux at the final whistle, with brawls involving Wolves players souring the mood even more at the close of the tense clash.

Now, it’s up to a fresh face to pick up the Premier League strugglers and breathe life back into proceedings away from O’Neil, with one name looking more likely by the day to be his immediate successor.

The next Wolves manager

That face is Vitor Pereira, with Sky Sports News reporting now that the current Al-Shabab boss is nearing a deal to become the next Old Gold manager.

This would make sense as the struggling club’s next appointment, as Wolves are known to favour Portuguese imports, as seen in previous managers such as Nuno Espirito Santo and the make-up of much of the squad.

But, nothing is set in stone until an official announcement is out in the open, with the managerless Old Gold also reportedly looking at this EFL experienced boss as their next man for the dug-out.

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Wolves' "excellent" Pereira alternative

As per football journalist Ben Jacobs, John Eustace is “in the frame” to be Wolves’ next manager after the disastrous end to O’Neil’s time in the West Midlands, with the 45-year-old currently succeeding at the helm of Blackburn Rovers.

Already well known to football fans in the Midlands region for his time at Birmingham City, the Old Gold hierarchy could well swoop in last minute to hand him the reins over the inexperienced Pereira if that move doesn’t go to plan.

Birmingham City's former manager John Eustace.

Eustace was a steady presence at St. Andrew’s during some turbulent recent times in Birmingham’s history, so he could well be the desired figure Wolves need for some momentary calm, having overseen 21 wins in charge of the Blues before his dismissal then signalled relegation for the club.

He has since bounced back from that controversial sacking, as the popular 45-year-old has steered the Riversiders into a surprise playoff spot this season to date, with a remarkable defensive record on display that would lend itself well to the leaky Wolves back four.

Blackburn’s last five results in the Championship

Opponent

Score

1. Luton Town

2-0 win

2. Sheffield Wednesday

1-0 win

3. Hull City

1-0 win

4. Leeds United

1-0 win

5. Middlesbrough

1-0 win

Sourced by Transfermarkt

Amazingly, Blackburn have picked up six wins on the trot in the unforgiving division of the Championship, with zero goals shipped across their last five victories against some tough opponents in the form of Daniel Farke’s Leeds United and Rob Edwards’ Luton Town.

With Wolves conceding goals for fun as of late near the foot of the Premier League, having now shipped an abysmal 40 strikes, Eustace could well be an unflashy appointment that works for Wolves in their short-term dismal situation, away from tempting Pereira to leave Saudi Arabia for a relegation battle.

Rightfully praised for his heroics in Lancashire so far this season, with equally glowing words coming his way from football journalist Alan Biggs during his stint at Birmingham who labelled the 45-year-old as “excellent”, the time could be right for him to win himself a Premier League calibre job post.

It does seem likely that the Wolves hierarchy will go in a different direction by appointing Pereira, but for some stability in what is a basket-case time at Molineux, the Old Gold would do far worse than to hand Eustace the role instead.

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Gary O’Neil has been sacked, and Wolves should replace him with this Premier League legend.

By
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Dec 16, 2024

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