5/25/23 EPL Season Ends Sun, US U20s advance in WC play Tues 1:30 pm FS2, US GK helps team promote to EPL

Notes

The Sports Emmy Awards were kind to Soccer as Fox’s World Cup I Believe Campaign and Andre Cantor’s Argentina Goal Call were winners.  This call by Cantor, an Argentina native and lifelong fan, still brings tears to my face.  Imagine calling your team’s World Cup winning goal.  Wow!!  Cool celebration news as Indiana University Men’s Soccer celebrated their 50 year Anniversary – cool story in the Indy Star. Check this young GK dominate their box. (full GK saves below).

American GK Horvath Leads Luton Town to Promotion Playoff Final Sat at 11:45 am on ESPN+. 

Luton Town, with American Goalkeeper Ethan Horvath, advanced to the EFL Playoff Final where they beat Coventry City at Wembley 2-1 in Penalty Shootout – Sat, May 27th at 11:45 am on ESPN+. Horvath who helped get Nottingham’s Forest promoted last season spoke with Morning Footy this week – he helped take a 2nd team to the EPL in back to back seasons. Lets hope we can stay with them as the move into the EPL next season. This the first time since 1995 – just 9 years ago they were in the National League where Whrexham were last season. Of course who can forget Horvath’s PK save vs Mexico in 2021.   (Cool story below) Luton Town is Carmel FC Director of Coaching Goalkeeper Juergen Sommer’s first employer in 1990 when he became the first American to play in the first flight of English football.  He later was named GK of the year the same year he lead them to the FA Cup Semi-Finals in Wembley. 

U-20 Men’s World Cup Fri 2 pm on FS2

The U20 USMNT has gotten off to a great start with 2 wins (1-0 over Ecuador) and (3-0 over Fiji) and 6 pts in 2 games – they can win the group with a win vs Slovakia Friday at 2 pm on FS2. Jonathan Gomez discusses his 96th minute winning goal vs Ecuador with Morning Footy (see stories and TV schedule below).  US plays New Zealand Tues at 1:30 pm on FS2 looking for their 4th straight Final 8 appearance.

League Races Overseas Wrap Up

Germany has the biggest race at the top as Saturday will decide who wins the Bundelsiga Title – Dortmund of Bayern Munich – both teams play on ESPN+ at 9:30 am.  Here are all the leagues and how this weekend’s season ending games effect standings.   

Indy 11 home Sat 7 pm vs Louisville City – $3 Sodas/$1 popcorn/$7 tix

The Boys in Blue remain at home Saturday for a USL Championship match-up vs heated rival Louisville City FC. The Eleven sits at 3-4-3 on the season after a 1-0 win vs Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC last Saturday. Bryan Rebellon’s early tally would be enough to give Indy Eleven their first home win of the season in USL Championship play. Despite losing the possession battle 59%-41% and being outshot by Colorado 12-9, Indy was able to hold on for the win. Dambrot led the Eleven with three shots, while Yannik Oettl had seven saves in the net. The victory snapped a four-game home winless streak. This week $3 Ciders or Sodas, $1 popcorn and $7 tickets will be featured as part of 317 Night at the Mike. Buy Tix now via indyeleven.com/tickets  or by calling 317-685-1100   Full Schedule   Promotions 

Proud of our 2010 Boys Blue Team who finished 6-2 and 2nd in the division. First year of travel ball for them. Here with a little help from 3 2011s. Coach Shane Best on the left, Head Coach Mark Stumpf on the right.

We took some of our 2010 Carmel FC Boys to the Indy 11 game Sat night – good times had by all and we won!!

Want to Tryout for Carmel FC?  Click here for info   https://www.facebook.com/carmelfchq      https://twitter.com/CarmelFCHQ

Congrats to the following Carmel FC teams for advancing to Cup Championship weekend!

– 2012 Boys Gold – 2012 Boys Blue – 2007 Boys Gold – 2006 Boys Gold – 2007 Girls Gold

GAMES ON TV

Thur, May 25    

2 pm FS2                              Uraguay vs England U20 WC

3 pm USA                            Man United vs Chelsea

4 pm ESPN+                        Real Madrid vs Rayo Vallencano 

9:30 pm Uni                        Tigres vs Guadalajara

Fri, May 26    

2 pm FS2/Tele                   USA U20s vs Slovakia U20 WC

6 pm FS2                              USA Women U20s vs Jamaica

8 pm Para+                         KC Current (Franch) vs Houston Dash NWSL

10 pm Para+, Sirius          San Diego (Morgan, Girma) vs Portland (Rapino)

10:30 pm ESPN+               Phoenix Rising vs Las Vegas Lights USL

Sat, May 27

9:30 am ESPN+                  Dortmund (Reyna) vs Mainz  

9:30 am ESPN+                  Union Berlin (Pfok) vs Werder Breman

9:30 am ESPN+                  Bayern Munich vs Koln

11:45 am ESPN+         Luton Town (Ethan Horvath) vs Coventry City  EFL Playoff

2:45 pm  Para+                  Inter Milan vs Atlalanta

3:30 pm Para+                   OL Reign vs Angel City (Ertz) NWSL

7 pm TV 8                   Indy 11 vs Louisville City

8 pm CBSSN                Racing Louisville vs NC Courage NWSL

Sun, May 28                      

11:30 am CNBC          Leeds United (McKinney, Aaronson) vs Tottenham

11:30 am USA             Everton vs Bournemouth  

11;30 am Syfy                    Leicister City vs West Ham United  

11:30 am Peacock            Man United vs Fulham (Robinson)

2 pm FS2                     Iraq vs England U20 World Cup

2:45 pm Para+            Juventus vs AC Milan

3 pm FOX                    Sporting KC vs Portland Timbers

5 pm  Para+                Washington vs NY Gotham FC (Williams) NWSL

8:30 pm FS1                Nashville vs Columbus

Mon, May 29

10 am ESPN+                      Barnsley vs Sheffield Wednesday – League 1 promotion playoff

Tues, May 30     

1:30  pm FS2/Tele            USA vs New Zealand WC U20s

5 pm Fox Soc                      Uzbekistan vs Isreal U20s WC

6 pm FS2                              USA vs Canada Women’s U20s

Wed May 31     

1:30  pm FS2/Tele            Brazil vs Tunisia WC Sweet 16

1:30 pm Fox Soccer         Colombia cs Slovakia WC Sweet 16

3 pm CBSSN               Sevilla vs Roma  Europa League

5 pm FS2                              England vs Italy U20’s WC Sweet 16

5 pm Fox Soccer/Tele     Argentina vs Nigeria U20WC

7 pm FS1                              Atlanta vs New England 

10 pm FS 1                  Leon vs LAFC  CONCACAF UCL Final

10 pm Para+                       San Diego (Morgan, Girma) vs OL Reign (Rapino) NWSL

10:30 pm Para+                 Portland vs Angel City (Ertz) 

Thur, June 1      

1:30  pm FS2/Tele            Gambia vs Uruguay U20s WC

5 pm FS2                              Ecuador vs Korea  U20’s WC

Thur, June 2      

7:30 pm ESPN+           Charlestown vs Indy 11

Sat, June 3     

10 am ESPN+              Man City vs Man United  FA Cup Final

1:30  pm FS2/Tele            U20s WC Quarters USA??

2 pm ESPNU               RB Leipzig vs Frankfurt  German Cup

4:30 pm Fox                        Seattle Sounders vs Portland Timbers

5 pm FS2/Tele                   U20’s WC Quarters

7:30 pm Apple                   MLS game? 

8 pm CBSSN                        OL Reign vs Portland Thorns NWSL

8 pm Para +                        Washington Spirit (Williams) vs Racing Louisville

9 pm ESPN+                        San Antonio (Jordan Farr) vs San Diego USL
Sun, June 4      

12:30 pm ESPN+               Gent (US player) vs Antwerp Belgium

12:30 pm ESPN+               Real Madrid vs Athletic Club

1:30 pm FS2/Tele             U20’s World cup Quarters

3 pm CBSSN?                     AC Milan vs Hellas Verona

3 pm Para+                         Jueventus vs Udinese

1:30 pm FS2/Tele             U20’s World Cup Quarters

6 pm Para+                         NY Gotham vs San Diego (Morgan, Girma) NWSL

9 pm FS1                              LAFC vs Leon      UCL Final

Wed, June 7                      

3 pm Para+                 West Ham vs Fiorentina  Europa Conf Final  

8 pm Para?                          Birmingham Legion vs Inter Miami US Open Cup

9:30 pm Para+                   Real Salt Lake vs LA Galaxy US Open Cup

10:30 pm Apple                 LAFC vs Atlanta United

Sat, June 10                       

2 pm CBS                    Champions League Final Man City vs Inter Milan

Thurs, June 15

10 pm                                    USMNT vs Mexico  Nations League Semi’s

Sat, June 24

9:30 pm                                USMNT vs Jamaica (Soldier Field) Gold Cup

Fri, July 21                           USWNT vs Vietnam Women’s World Cup

Indy 11 Schedule

NWSL Schedule

Soccer Saturday’s are every Sat 9-10 am on 93.5 and 107.5 FM with Greg Rakestraw

Enjoy $3 ciders/sodas and $1 popcorn specials throughout the match while the Boys in Blue take on their rivals Louisville City.

2023 Alumni Summer Soccer

Location: Shelbourne Fields – CCCSC – 3451 W. 126th St., Carmel  (Ages: 18 – 35)  $105  Sign Up

Grab your friends and make your own team or sign up and we’ll place you on a team, you don’t have to live in Carmel.
Games will take place on Wednesday and Sunday evenings. Dates: June 18, 21, 25, 28 & July 9, 12, 16, 19, 23, 26 Sign Up

https://www.facebook.com/carmelfchq

US Men


U.S. Soccer not close to naming USMNT coach
  ESPN Jeff Carlisle

What will Arsenal striker Balogun bring to USMNT? ESPNFC

US American’s in England last weekend – Yanks Abroad

US U20’s beat Ecuador 1-0

US U20s beat Figi 3-0

EFL Championship Sat 11:45 am ESPN+, Cup Finals


Coventry City vs Luton Town: How to watch Championship Playoff Final

Fred confident Manchester United can beat Manchester City in the FA Cup final but admits City have ‘the world’s best forward’

Champions League final 2023: When is it, what TV channel is it on and what is the venue?

US OPEN CUP


Columbus Crew knocked out of U.S. Open Cup in 1-0 loss to Pittsburgh Riverhounds

FC Cincinnati defeats RBNY in penalties to advance in US Open Cup | Replay

U.S. Open Cup: Galaxy look to build momentum after eliminating rival LAFC

Chicago no stranger to Wolff as Austin FC prepares for Round of 16 U.S. Open Cup contest

Miami snaps Nashville SC’s unbeaten streak in U.S. Open Cup game

Galaxy defeat rival LAFC to advance to U.S. Open Cup quarterfinals

WORLD


Bundesliga’s Dortmund-Bayern title fight unmatched in Europe
  Derek Rae
Vinicius Junior has red card rescinded as Valencia hit by partial stadium closure

Spanish football federation orders partial stadium ban and fine for racism suffered by Vinícius Jr. at Valencia match, rescinds red card

Real Madrid players and fans honor Vinícius Júnior after Brazilian was racially abused

Police detain three in connection with racist abuse of Vinícius Jr, Brazilian soccer star

Barcelona veteran Alba leaving club after 11 years

Real Sociedad beat Almeria to tighten grip on fourth

Juve docked 10 points after appeal

Liga MX finals: Will Chivas claim coveted crown or will Tigres cap off chaotic season? hCesar Hernandez

 

US Ladies & Women’s Soccer


USWNT star Rose Lavelle suffers injury ‘setback,’ World Cup availability in question

Key US midfielder Macario latest to miss Women’s World Cup

Macario says she’ll miss the Women’s World Cup because of ACL injury

Catarina Macario, a USWNT star felled by ACL injury, will miss 2023 World Cup

Gotham FC sets single game ticket sales record for upcoming match against San Diego Wave

Indy 11

Preview – #LIPAFC

W League Recap KHR 0:1 IND

Indy Eleven Announces Top-Tier Professional Academies

Indy Eleven Acquires Top-Tier Women’s Professional Franchise as Part of USL Super League

Recap – SAC 3:1 IND

Season tickets

Full Schedule   Promotions 

new stadium

MLS

CCL Champions League Final LAFC vs Leon

Power Rankings

Youthful Diverse Player Pool  

GoalKeeping

Fantastic Saves Champions League 2nd Legs

Great Saves EPL Week 37

USL Indy 11 GK Oettl 5/13 Saves of Week

Naeher Save of the Week Again

Save of the Week Phallon Tullis-Joyce NWSL

Saves of the Week NSWL

Reffing

Angel City Ower fined for Ref comments

Dana Hackney 15 YO – Youngest Indiana Ref to officiate a Semi-Pro Game

Become a Referee Must be 13

Man in the Middle – Champions League Reffing Documentary on Paramount +   

Man that’s a good looking set of refs at the State Cup at Grand Park last weekend

Carmel Dad’s Indy 11 Soccer Camp 6/12-6/15 Registration

Luton’s Ethan Horvath: Solskjaer’s influence, Haaland’s shirt and play-off lessons learned at Forest

Dan Sheldon

May 11, 2023 Ethan Horvath can tell you all you need to know about famous goalkeepers, having grown up in the United States watching former Premier League shot-stoppers such as Petr Cech and Edwin van der Sar.His knowledge of strikers, however, was almost non-existent when he joined Norwegian club Molde as a teenager, where the manager at the time was Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, a name that meant nothing to Horvath.

“Not for a while,” says the Luton Town goalkeeper — on loan from Nottingham Forest — when asked how long it took for him to realise he was being managed by a Manchester United legend.“If you had asked me who Ole Gunnar Solskjaer was at the time, I wouldn’t have had a clue. And when it was explained to me, I remember thinking, ‘Oh, shit, he is a big-time guy’.“At the time, Josh Gatt was the striker at Molde and he didn’t know who he was either. In my defence, I was a goalkeeper so I wouldn’t have been paying attention to Ole. I could have told you everything about Peter Schmeichel.”

Ethan Horvath playing for Luton earlier this year (Photo: Paul Harding via Getty Images)

Horvath and his family soon got to know Solskjaer, with the goalkeeper’s parents taking jobs that had them cleaning the manager’s office. “He was a top, top guy,” Horvath says. “I will always remember how he treated my parents with so much respect. He would always speak to them when he saw them and would always be asking if they needed anything. He is a genuine, down-to-earth person who looks out for everyone.”Horvath says Solskjaer has excellent man-management skills and expects the Norwegian will return to the dugout before too long. The pair have stayed in touch and when asked for a standout memory of their time together, Horvath gives one without any hesitancy.“I was about to turn 18 and Molde were playing in the Europa League,” he says. “I didn’t travel to all the games, but one of the final group games was Stuttgart away and I’m in the elevator on my own and it stopped on one of the floors.“Ole got in and it was just me and him in there together. I will always remember he looked at me and said: ‘Get used to this because you will be playing at stadiums this big one day’.“He just casually dropped that into conversation and that will always stay with me.”

Horvath playing for Molde in the Europa League in 2015 (Photo: Dean Mouhtaropoulos via Getty Images)


Horvath’s journey has so far taken him from Colorado to the Championship — via Norway, Belgium and the Champions League — and now he has a chance to be part of consecutive Championship play-off-winning sides after Nottingham Forest’s success in 2021-22.The US international joined Luton Town on a season-long loan last summer and played a pivotal role in their third-placed finish, which has set up a two-legged tie with Sunderland for a spot at the Wembley final later this month.Horvath’s ties to football — or ‘soccer’ — run deep. His father, Peter, played as a forward for the Denver Avalanche in the Major Indoor Soccer League and was a high school PE teacher. Horvath’s mother, Deana, also has a background in football and both his parents have flown to the United Kingdom to watch Luton Town’s push for promotion.“Soccer, basketball and baseball were my sports growing up,” says Horvath. “(But) I don’t think there was ever a doubt that it wouldn’t be football. I was seven years old when I decided I wanted to be a goalkeeper.“I would always be hanging around the goalkeeper group. My dad was a striker, my mum a defender and my uncle was a defender. My two cousins also played, but I was the only one who wanted to be a goalkeeper.”

Horvath at home being interviewed by The Athletic (Photo: Dan Sheldon)

For a reason unknown to Horvath, the United States has developed several goalkeepers who have made an impact in England. “It made me think that if they can do it, then there is no reason why I couldn’t do the same,” Horvath explains. “When I was around 13 years old and trying to learn and develop in the position, I would be watching Kasey Keller, (Tim) Howard, (Brad) Guzan, (Brad) Friedel.”Horvath’s first break came when he was playing for Real Colorado, his local team, at a showcase event: “There was this one gentleman who would just scout the academy games and he knew an agent who was over in Austria, and they were putting together a team of people he thought might be ready for a chance in Europe.”“I went on this two-week tour, which was based in Austria, and all these scouts and clubs would come and watch. We were playing teams from Austria, Germany, Switzerland and Italy. Clubs would watch training and the games and that is when one of the Molde scouts saw me.”DeAndre Yedlin, the former Newcastle and current Inter Miami player, was on the same tour. One of the benefits of being there for Horvath was receiving a DVD of his highlights, which his grandfather, being close friends with someone in Bristol, England, sent to Bristol City. An invite to spend a week training with the club duly followed.

“At the time, David James was still there,” he says. “That was my first time in England and it was really cool. I loved every bit of it. I remember playing small-sided games with the first team and David being in the other goal.”After that, Horvath told his parents that he didn’t want to go to college. “That trip still sticks out in my head as the time I decided this is what I want to do with my life,” he says. Aged 16, he was invited to train with Molde.“After the first training session, I came back, had lunch and was called into the office where they said they wanted to sign me,” Horvath recalls. “But because I was so young, nobody was sure how to do it.“We went back to the hotel. There was a seven-hour time difference and I had to wake my parents up by calling them on Skype to explain what was happening. I stayed for the week and flew back to Colorado. The next day was my first day of junior high school. It was all a bit surreal.”To gain more experience, in January 2012, Horvath visited England to train with Manchester City and Stoke. His mother joined the then-teenager on the trip to homeschool him.“These weren’t trials,” he says. “I was just training to get used to the level. I spent three months at Stoke and I enjoyed that time 100 per cent more than I did at Manchester City.“I was playing games for Stoke’s under-18s and the day I showed up we played Liverpool. I trained with the first team a couple of times. We were always at the first-team building, and this is when Peter Crouch was there.”

On international duty with Matt Turner at the World Cup in Qatar in 2022 (Photo: Tim Nwachukwu via Getty Images)

With his time in the UK over, he flew to California for a training camp with a “question mark” over his future. He was unsure whether another opportunity would arise in Europe or if he would head back to Colorado.Molde, however, were still looking at ways to enable Horvath to join the club. On his passport, he could spend three months in Norway, so that was his next move. His parents, for now, stayed in Colorado.“I would train with the first team in the morning, gym with them right after and then train with the second team in the afternoon,” he says. “That was my existence.”Molde figured out that for his parents to qualify for residency, they would have to move to Norway, meaning the goalkeeper could apply for a family visa. The club offered them jobs at the cleaning company that had the contract for the stadium and training ground and sorted out an apartment for them to live in.“My mum and dad sold everything, including their house and car,” Horvath says. “They were pretty much janitors, cleaning at the stadium. They would have to wake up at around 4am each morning to go and clean.“They used to clean Ole’s office and the changing rooms. It was not the most glamorous job.”Horvath left Molde for Club Bruges in Belgium in 2017, just when Erling Haaland, who had been playing for Molde 2, was about to step up to the first team. Their paths didn’t cross, but they had a friendly exchange years later.“When I was at Brugge, we played Salzburg in the knockout stage of the Champions League and that is when Erling was there before his career really took off,” says Horvath. “The next year we drew Dortmund in the Champions League and we spoke after the home and away games. There was that Molde connection and I don’t remember what we spoke about, but we exchanged shirts.”

Horvath saving a penalty while playing for Bruges against Salzburg in 2019 (Photo: Kurgfoto/APA via Getty Images)

The shirt now resides with his parents in the United States, home to his collection, which includes jerseys from Manchester United’s David de Gea and Real Madrid’s Thibaut Courtois.


Horvath’s time at Club Bruges saw him play in the Champions League, where he kept clean sheets against Atletico Madrid and away to both AS Monaco and Borussia Dortmund in the 2018-19 group stage. He recalls his “goosebumps” when he heard the iconic anthem for the first time.However, ahead of the 2019-20 season, the Belgian side signed Simon Mignolet, the former Liverpool goalkeeper, and Horvath’s playing time became limited. When his four-and-a-half-year contract ended in 2021, he joined Nottingham Forest. Again his minutes were restricted because Brice Samba was the club’s first choice ’keeper.“In the beginning, we got one point from seven games,” Horvath says. “But when Steve Cooper came in, everything just clicked. We took off and we had momentum. We felt unstoppable and unbeatable.”Horvath says Cooper, like Solskjaer, is very personable.“He is not one of those managers who comes in, does his job and then goes home. He’ll come into the physio room, see what’s going on and have a joke with you.”Before Nottingham Forest’s play-off final win over Huddersfield at the end of the 2021-22 season, Horvath had made 10 appearances and wasn’t expecting to make an 11th. But when Samba had to be substituted in the 89th minute with the game poised at 1-0, his afternoon dramatically changed.“I remember being told to kick the ball 80 yards and all I was thinking was I could end up pulling my groin because I hadn’t warmed up. You never know what is going to happen in a few minutes of football, but it was a nice experience to have been on the pitch when the final whistle went.“To have that little bit of feeling goes a long way because, at Luton, I know what we are going through now. Even if I didn’t come on, I had still been involved in a play-off final and I know what to expect from the day.”After the highs of Wembley and Forest sealing promotion to the Premier League, Horvath wanted to play regularly, which led to his loan move to Luton. Before a ball has been kicked in the play-offs, he has racked up 48 appearances and kept 19 clean sheets.“On a personal level, I think it has been a successful season for myself,” he says. “By the end of this season, with the play-off games, I’d have played 50-plus games this year.“I have been really happy with how I have done and I hope I’ve shown England who I am and what I am capable of. I would love to play in the Premier League, whether that is with Luton, Nottingham, or another team that has seen what I’ve done this season.”Horvath’s season for Luton led to a spot in Gregg Berhalter’s United States squad for the Qatar World Cup in December. “It is hard to put that experience into words because it is something you dream of as a kid,” he saysBefore the World Cup, in November, a billboard in Denver, Colorado, was painted with a quote from Ted Lasso, the fictional coach, which read: “One thing I know rock solid, nobody’s gonna cross Mt. Horvath.”Although he didn’t feature for the USMNT in Qatar, just being there felt like vindication for the sacrifices his parents made all those years ago by selling everything they had in Colorado to move to Norway.“He used to be my goalkeeper coach back in the US,” Horvath says of his father. “It was me and him learning on the fly, which was really nice. We both didn’t know what we were doing. To sing your national anthem at a World Cup and see my mum and dad was such a special feeling.”His long-term ambition is to earn a spot in the team for the 2026 World Cup, which will be hosted across the United States, Canada and Mexico, with the goalkeeper predicting it to be “the biggest ever” edition of the tournament.“It was special enough to go to Qatar and be part of a World Cup squad,” he said. “So, to host it is something in itself — and it is a big goal down the road.”(Top photo: designed by Eamonn Dalton; photo by Tony Marshall via Getty Images)

LAFC’s Timmy Tillman eligible to represent USMNT, completing switch from Germany By The Athletic Staff ay 23, 2023


LAFC midfielder Timmy Tillman has been approved by FIFA for a one-time “change of association” and is eligible to represent the U.S. in international competition, U.S. Soccer announced Tuesday. Here’s what you need to know:

  • The 24-year-old is a dual citizen of Germany and the U.S. and previously represented Germany in international play at the youth level.
  • He is the older brother of current USMNT midfielder Malik Tillman.
  • If the elder Tillman makes his international debut with the U.S. this summer, the Tillmans would become the ninth set of brothers to appear for the USMNT, joining the Aaronsons as the latest set of brothers to join following Paxten’s debut in January.

What they’re saying

“To represent the United States is obviously making me proud,” Tillman said in a statement. “I’m really honored to do so and I’m looking forward to the future with the United States. Telling my family about it was really exciting. As a kid, my brother and I dreamt of playing for a national team together and now we’re one step closer.”

Backstory

Tillman played for Germany’s youth national teams from the U-15 to U-19 levels. In February, he signed with LAFC through 2025. He’s scored two goals in 10 appearances this season.

Weekend stakes for Premier League, LaLiga, top European soccer leagues

  • Dale Johnson, General Editor, ESPN FCMay 25, 2023, 03:54 AM ET
  • With a handful of games remaining, the 2022-23 season is drawing to a close across European club football. One or two rounds remain in most of the continent’s top tiers, and many clubs in England, Spain, Germany, Italy and France have concerns beyond mere final league placings with titles, European qualification and relegation still on the line.

Here’s a quick roundup of exactly what is left to play for in the English Premier LeagueSpanish LaLigaGerman BundesligaItalian Serie A and French Ligue 1 at this late stage.

Premier League

TitleManchester City (89 points) were crowned champions last weekend when Arsenal (81) lost at Nottingham Forest.

Premier League Table

GPGDPTS
1 – Man City37+6289
2 – Arsenal37+4081
3 – Newcastle37+3570
4 – Man United36+1169
5 – Liverpool37+2866
6 – Brighton37+2062
7 – Aston Villa37+458
8 – Tottenham37+457
9 – Brentford37+1156

Champions League: Arsenal had already booked their return to the UEFA Champions League (UCL) for the first time in 2016-17, and on Monday they were joined by Newcastle United (70). A draw at home to Leicester sent the Magpies to Europe’s premier club competition for the first time in 21 years. One place remains, and Manchester United (69, +11) only need a single point from their two remaining home matches (Chelsea on Thursday, and Fulham on Sunday.) If Man United lose both matches, then Liverpool (66, +28) can overtake them on goal difference with a win at Southampton. Man City winning the Champions League cannot affect England’s number of places.

Europa League: Barring a major collapse from Man United, Liverpool will finish fifth and take one of the two UEFA Europa League (UEL) qualification berths on offer. Brighton & Hove Albion (62, +20) secured the second UEL place with a draw at home to Man City on Thursday. West Ham United will also qualify for the Europa League if they beat Fiorentina in the final of the UEFA Europa Conference League (UECL).

Europa Conference League: Aston Villa are in pole position and are guaranteed to qualify if they win at home to Brighton. If Villa draw, Tottenham Hotspur (57, +4) overtake them with a win at Leeds. If Villa lose, Spurs will be above them with a win/draw. But Brentford (56, +11) could sneak into seventh; the Bees must win at home to Man City, and hope neither Villa or Spurs win.

Relegation: Bottom club Southampton (24) have already had their fate sealed, and two of Leeds United (31, -27), Leicester City (31, -18) and Everton (33, -24) will be joining them. Everton know that a win at home to Bournemouth secures their safety. If Everton draw or lose, Leicester can overtake them with a win at home to West Ham. Leeds must beat Spurs, with Everton losing and Leicester failing to win. (If Everton draw, Leeds would need to beat Spurs by three goals to have a chance.)

Bundesliga

TitleBorussia Dortmund (70, +39) and Bayern Munich (68, +53) are entrenched in a dramatic two-horse Bundesliga title race, which has gone all the way to the wire with the final matches to be played on Saturday. BVB are in the driver’s seat: after Bayern lost to RB Leipzig on Saturday, Dortmund moved two points clear at the top by winning 3-0 at FC Augburg on Sunday. Dortmund will be champions if they win at home to Mainz on Saturday, or if they draw/lose and Bayern fail to win. Bayern must take three points at FC Cologne, and hope Dortmund draw/lose.

STREAM LIVE: Bundesliga final day, 9.30 a.m. ET (U.S. only)

Champions League: Along with Dortmund and Bayern, RB Leipzig (63, +21) are also assured of qualification. That leaves one slot open for either Union Berlin (59, + 12) or SC Freiburg (59, +8). Union, who are at home to Werder Bremen, must only match or better the result of Freiburg, who travel to Eintracht Frankfurt.

Europa League: Union or Freiburg will take the Europa League spot allocated to the league, with the second place associated with the German Cup. If RB Leipzig win the final, sixth in the Bundesliga will get the UEL place; if Eintracht Frankfurt lift the trophy, they will go into the UEL.

Europa Conference League: As it stands, sixth will go into the UECL. Bayer Leverkusen (50, +11), VfL Wolfsburg (49, +10) and Eintracht Frankfurt (47, +5) are mathematically in contention, though goal difference means the best Frankfurt can hope for is seventh. Leverkusen will finish sixth if they win at VfL Bochum, while Wolfsburg are at home to Hertha Berlin. Wolfsburg will be sixth if they win and Leverkusen draw/lose; or if Wolfsburg draw and Leverkusen lose by 2+ goals. If Wolfsburg draw and Leverkusen lose by 1 goal, goal difference will be level; if goals scored is identical, Wolfsburg are sixth on head-to-head away goals.

Seventh will qualify for the UECL if Leipzig win the German Cup. The only realistic way Frankfurt could finish seventh is with a win and a Wolfsburg defeat.

RelegationHertha Berlin (26, -28) were the first club to be relegated, which leaves one automatic place to be decided and another in the relegation playoff vs. a 2.Bundesliga side, and five clubs remain in danger of the drop. The automatic berth will fall to Schalke 04 (31, -34), VfB Stuttgart (32, -35), Bochum (32, -12) or FC Augsburg (34, -19) — though in truth goal difference means only the first three clubs have worries. Schalke have a tough task away to Leipzig, and must win to have a chance of being completely safe. Bochum, too, have a difficult fixture against Leverkusen. Stuttgart, meanwhile, host Hoffenheim.

Augsburg could drop into the relegation playoff if they lose at Borussia Monchengladbach, and both Stuttgart and Bochum win. TSG Hoffenheim (35, -9), have a mathematical chance of going into the playoff, but in reality are safe because of goal difference.

LaLiga

Title: Barcelona (85, +48) were formally anointed LaLiga champions for the first time in four years when they beat neighbours Espanyol 4-2 in the local derby earlier this month.

Champions LeagueReal Madrid (74, +38) and Atletico Madrid (73, +36) join Barca in the UCL. With two full rounds left to play, Real Sociedad (68, +16) are almost certain to take the last place. Villarreal (63, +20) must win their two remaining matches with La Real collecting no more than one from their two fixtures.

Sevilla face Roma in the Europa League final, so they could claim Champions League football if they win it.

Europa League: Villarreal are set to take the first place, with the second likely to go to Real Betis (56, +5). Betis have a six-point advantage over Athletic Club (50, +7) with the latter having a game in hand.

Europa Conference League: Six clubs could yet take seventh. After Athletic, it’s Girona (49, +5), then Sevilla (49, -5), Osasuna (47, -7), Rayo Vallecano (46, -6) and Mallorca (44, -7).

If Sevilla win the UEL and finish seventh, LaLiga will have no team in the UECL. If Sevilla win the UEL and finish eighth or lower, LaLiga will have eight teams in Europe (five in the UCL.)

Relegation: Adrift at the bottom, Elche (20, -38) were relegated in early May. Two more teams will go down; Espanyol (35, -17), Real Valladolid (38, -30), Cadiz (38, -24), Getafe (38, -12), Almeria (39, -16), Celta Vigo (40, -10) and Valencia (40, -2) are all still in danger.

Serie A

TitleNapoli (86, +47) cantered to their first Scudetto in 33 years after wrapping things up with a pivotal 1-1 draw against Udinese on May 4.

Champions League: With Juventus (59, +23) docked 10 points for false accounting in the club’s transfer dealings, the UCL race is not quite as intense as it was. Lazio (68, +27) have booked their passage, leaving two slots to play for. Internazionale (66, +27) have enjoyed a hot run of form and need two points from two games. AC Milan (64, +18) have been lifted up to fourth, and are favourites to take the last UCL position. Atalanta (61, +16), AS Roma (60, +12) and Juve could yet gatecrash.

Europa League and Europa Conference League: Whoever missed out on the UCL from the above, finishing in fifth and sixth, will go into the UEL, with seventh into the UECL.

Fiorentina (11th) will qualify for the Europa League if they beat West Ham in the final of this year’s UECL, which would give Italy eight clubs in Europe next season.

Relegation: Bottom club Sampdoria (18, -45) were relegated with four games left to play, closely followed by Cremonese (24, -34). Hellas Verona (30, -26), Spezia (31, -26) and Lecce (33, -13) will battle it out to avoid the last relegation place.

Ligue 1

TitleParis Saint-Germain (84, +50) are six points clear of challengers Lens (78, +34) at the top of the table with two games remaining. PSG will be champions on Saturday if they avoid defeat to Strasbourg, or Lens take anything less than three points against AC Ajaccio.

Champions League: PSG are sure of an automatic group stage place, with Lens almost certain to take the second. Marseille (73, +29) will enter the UCL in the third qualifying round unless they catch Lens.

Europa League and Europa Conference LeagueToulouse have already qualified by winning the Coupe de France. That means fourth will be in the UEL, and fifth in the UECL. AS Monaco (65, +15) hold fourth ahead of Lille (63, +20) and Stade Rennais (62, +27); two of these clubs will get European football, and the third will miss out completely.

Relegation: Ligue 1 is to be reduced from 20 clubs down to 18 from the 2023-24 season, meaning that four will be relegated this season in order to facilitate the change. Angers (15, -48), Ajaccio (23, -49) and Troyes (23, -35) are already doomed. The final place is effectively between two clubs, with Nantes (33, -18) and AJ Auxerre (34, -26) hoping to avoid the slide into Ligue 2.

Bundesliga’s Dortmund-Bayern title fight unmatched in Europe

  • Derek Rae May 25, 2023, 09:40 AM ET

It’s often said the German language has a compound word for absolutely everything, and of course that maxim applies to the scenario we have in store for us Saturday.The word “Fernduell” (a long-distance duel) is a universally understood concept in Germany. It’s a contest involving two teams competing for the same thing and playing at the same time but in different venues. Maybe the English language should just adopt the word as it has done with Gegenpressing considering no such exact equivalent exists!Saturday’s Fernduell promises to be in keeping with the excitement Bundesliga followers have lapped up for many a long weeks now. The events of last weekend, with Bayern Munich losing 3-1 at home to a highly motivated RB Leipzig and Borussia Dortmund taking care of FC Augsburg 3-0 away in the Fuggerstadt, means BVB hold the cards — again. With just one game to go, Dortmund will be crowned champions with a win, while a loss or a draw will open the door to an 11th straight crown for Bayern.

– Dortmund-Mainz, Saturday at 9:30 a.m. ET, ESPN+
– Cologne-Bayern, Saturday at 9:30 a.m. ET, ESPN+
– Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga, more (U.S.)

Since March, the pendulum has swung almost violently back and forth between Germany’s big two, with neither side able to pull away from the other, both experiencing ups and downs and anticipation levels generally off the charts. There have been eight changes at the top of the Bundesliga table this season, with these two swapping positions four times in the past nine weeks.No other top league has been able to offer this level of uncertainty and unpredictability. Sorry, Premier League fans who insist on telling me only riveting things happen in that league. It’s not even close this term.Commentating for the Bundesliga world feed last week in Munich, even when Bayern took the lead against Leipzig through Serge Gnabry, there was doubt in my mind as to whether it was portent of a crucial win to come for the Rekordmeister. On air, I almost unconsciously added the qualifying word “maybe” to the question, “another step towards the Meisterschale?” Bayern were the better side for 30 minutes, but the wobbles crept in thereafter, conceding a pair of penalties and a logic-defying four-on-one counterattack that led to the visitors’ opening goal. Leipzig, who needed a win to secure Champions League football, deserved their first-ever triumph at the Allianz Arena against the Bavarians.

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The next day, 60 miles along the Autobahn, Dortmund, backed by a loud and vibrant away support, had to wait 58 minutes for their opening goal. That despite a season-high 17 first-half goal attempts playing with a one-player advantage from the 38th minute onward.That they were twice denied by the aluminium (what English speakers refer to as “the woodwork”) only added to the general nervousness. But Sebastien Haller‘s strike to give the visitors a 1-0 lead settled everyone down, and it was no surprise when he bagged a second before Julian Brandt put the game to bed.

Now Dortmund are just 90 minutes away from their first Meisterschale in 11 yawning years. On one level, the Schwarzgelben, who will host Mainz on Saturday (9:30 a.m. ET, stream live on ESPN+) before a crowd of 81,000 at the Signal Iduna Park, need not worry at all about what Bayern are doing at the same time at FC Cologne (stream live on ESPN+). A BVB win will render that irrelevant. However, imagine if Bayern score first and then add a goal or two before BVB have managed to get off the mark. Or if Dortmund fall behind against Mainz.

This is the Fernduell tension in all its glory. Dortmund and Bayern might be on different pitches this weekend, but mentally, psychologically, it’s still a two-team race for the crown. Expect multiple showings on broadcasts of the Blitztabelle (the live, as it stands, table).

BVB are undoubtedly favourites to take the title now, and it seems a bit like 2002 to me. That year, the Schwarzgelben caught longtime leaders Bayer Leverkusen on the penultimate matchday, when the Werkself lost in Nürnberg and Dortmund won in Hamburg.https://www.youtube.com/embed/N99DQ6E1XUw?wmode=transparent

Then on the final day, with Dortmund in control of the board at home against Werder Bremen, there was edginess when they fell behind while Leverkusen forged ahead. All was finally settled on 74 minutes, though, with Brazilian attacker Ewerthon, who had just come on, netting the decisive goal of the season. BVB finished a point ahead of Leverkusen.Bayern fans might hang their hats on what occurred a year earlier, the famous Patrik Andersson afternoon. Schalke 04, who had beaten Unterhaching, were champions-elect for four minutes, with their game over and everyone in Gelsenkirchen waiting to see if Bayern, losing 1-0 in Hamburg well into stoppage time, would hand them the Meisterschale.

LIVE ON ESPN+ (SELECTED GAMES)

SATURDAY, MAY 27 (all times ET)
• Cologne vs. Bayern Munich (9:30 a.m.)
• Dortmund vs. Mainz (9:30 a.m.)
• RB Leipzig vs. Schalke (9:30 a.m.)
• Union Berlin vs. Bremen (9:30 a.m.)
• Frankfurt vs. Freiburg (9:30 a.m.)
• Bochum vs. Leverkusen (9:30 a.m.)
• Wolfsburg vs. Hertha Berlin (9:30 a.m.)
• Gladbach vs. Augsburg (9:30 a.m.)
• Stuttgart vs. Hoffenheim (9:30 a.m.)
• Sevilla vs. Real Madrid (1 p.m.)

However, Andersson’s strike from an indirect free kick in the 94th minute burst Schalke’s bubble, entering Bayern and Bundesliga folklore and securing a 17th league title for the Bavarian giants.Saturday is going to be about pure emotion. Dortmund coach Edin Terzic summed it up nicely by saying that while his players are very well paid and can buy a new house or a new car, you can’t buy moments like this: a chance to become Bundesliga champions in front of their own fans.The home form speaks for Dortmund. The Schwarzgelben have, after all, reeled off 11 successive home victories in the Bundesliga and last failed to win in the league at the Signal Iduna Park when they drew 2-2 with Bayern on Oct. 8.If you think everything is now a foregone conclusion for Dortmund, though, just consider the remarkable trajectory of the past few weeks.I’ll be commentating for international viewers live from the Cologne-Bayern game and can’t wait to be part of a special day in Bundesliga history. I hope you can join in the Fernduell fun on Saturday amid an unmatched atmosphere.

The night Vinicius Jr decided enough is enough – he now doubts his Real Madrid future

Mario Cortegana and Dermot Corrigan May 22, 2023

“The championship that once belonged to Ronaldinho, Ronaldo, Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi, today belongs to racists.”These words were posted by Vinicius Junior on social media after another shocking and deeply saddening episode in the story of Spanish football’s racism problem on Sunday night.ADVERTISEMENT

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The impact of what happened at Valencia, and Vinicius Jr’s long-held frustration over how authorities have approached tackling the subject, now leaves Real Madrid’s star player with doubts over his future at the club because he does not feel supported. He feels it is a battle he has been left to take on alone.The 22-year-old Brazil forward ended his social media message on Sunday by writing: “I am strong and I will go all the way against the racists. Even if it’s far from here.”The Athletic contacted Vinicius Jr’s staff, asking if this meant he was contemplating an exit from La Liga and Madrid.Sources from his entourage, who asked not to be named in order to protect their position, replied: “Yes. When you have to fight on your own…”Another such source was even more categorical: “Until today, there was no chance. From today, yes.”If Vinicius Jr were to decide he wants to leave Madrid due to the regular racist abuse he suffers and the lack of support he receives, Spanish football will lose its brightest talent and it alone will be 100 per cent responsible.It would be a huge blow for the Bernabeu club. It would be a huge disappointment for La Liga. It would be a shame for Spanish society. But nobody should blame the player given how he has been left to suffer almos alone for two years now, adding in an Instagram post on Monday that what he is experiencing “is not football, it’s inhuman”.Because as he himself said, Sunday night “wasn’t the first time, nor the second, nor the third”.


The racist abuse targeting Vinicius Jr started well before kick-off at Valencia’s Estadio de Mestalla. As Real Madrid’s players left their team bus after arriving at the gates, a large crowd of Valencia fans gathered on the opposite side of the street chanting: “Vinicius, you’re a monkey”.This kind of abuse — and worse — continued during the match. In the 72nd minute, Vinicius Jr confronted fans in a stand behind one of the goals, pointing to them and accusing them of racially abusing him.“You, you, you’re the one who called me a monkey,” he appeared to be saying, as players from both sides gathered on the scene. He beckoned the referee to come over. He made a gesture as if to say they’d been calling him a monkey or making monkey noises towards him.

Play was stopped for around six minutes. Police officers could be seen among the crowd and two fans were removed from their places. Vinicius Jr went over to speak with Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti on the sidelines. Visibly distressed, he returned to the field of play, having also spoken further with the referee.

Vinicius Jr pictured with Sunday’s referee, Ricardo de Burgos Bengoetxea (Photo: Aitor Alcalde/Getty Images)

After the match, Madrid’s goalkeeper, Thibaut Courtois, said he’d heard racist chanting as early as the 20th minute and that he would have supported his team-mate in refusing to continue if he’d decided to do so.Instead, Vinicius Jr left having been shown a red card after pushing and shoving between multiple players on both sides in injury time. The VAR noticed him raising his hand towards Hugo Duro’s face but missed the Valencia forward having had an arm around his neck just before.The Brazilian arguably deserved to be shown the red card, but the image of him being the only individual punished, before Valencia’s players then celebrated their victory, was again damaging for the image of Spanish football. As he walked off the pitch, more monkey chants could be heard from the home fans.After Madrid’s 1-0 loss, Ancelotti said: “I don’t want to speak about football today, but about what happened. That is more important than a defeat.

Read more: The shocking abuse Real Madrid’s Vinicius Jr faced at Valencia revealed in new report

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“What happened today cannot happen. I asked him (Vinicius Jr) but he wanted to continue. I told him I did not think it was fair that he had to play this game: ‘You are not the guilty party, you are the victim’. He continued to play. On top of that, they show him a red card which makes no sense, as it was not an aggression.“We have a problem, he does not have a problem. For me, Vinicius is the greatest player in the world, the strongest. La Liga has a problem. With this racism, for me, they have to stop the game. There is no other way.“Vini is very sad, angry, but more sad. It cannot happen.”La Liga said it had “requested all available images in order to investigate what took place” and that it would “take the appropriate legal action if any hate crime is identified”. Since October 2021, it has done so already nine times in cases involving Vinicius Jr at La Liga matches. Of these, only two cases have led to punishments such as fines or stadium bans for individual fans. Four cases remain open.One of the three cases to have been closed without charges being brought relates to an away match against Atletico Madrid in September last year when fans were recorded chanting: “Vinicius, you are a monkey”. Prosecutors said that because the chanting had lasted “just a few seconds” and took place within the context of “a football game with maximum rivalry”, it was therefore “not a crime against the dignity of the person affected”.Off the pitch, Vinicius Jr was compared to a monkey on mainstream Spanish TV show El Chiringuito de Jugones, whose host later apologised. In January, an effigy of the player was hung from a motorway bridge close to Real Madrid’s training ground before a match with city rivals Atletico.In the Spanish media, he is often portrayed in a negative light; as tempestuous, unruly or disrespectful. Often, more airtime is given to this than the racist abuse he receives. This was a feature of some of Sunday night’s post-match reaction, too.Many commentators and major media outlets qualified their condemnation of racist abuse with reference to gestures Vinicius Jr made towards the crowd. At several points he held up two fingers, symbolising Spain’s second division — Valencia are still in danger of relegation despite Sunday’s win.Even Madrid midfielder Dani Ceballos said on Movistar TV that Vinicius Jr was “disrespected” at stadiums all around Spain, but also that his team-mate should apologise for his ‘down to Segunda’ gesture.This echoed a stance held by many in and around the Bernabeu as Vinicius Jr has so regularly suffered horrible abuse over the past two years. Everyone says racism is bad and should not happen, but many also argue that he has to learn to not allow rival players and fans to get to him and affect his performances.

Valencia’s response to what happened in their stadium on Sunday was also instructive. The only representative to apologise to Vinicius Jr was Netherlands attacker Justin Kluivert during his Spanish TV interview.

Other Valencia figures appeared much more worried about defending their own fans rather than addressing what had happened. Club captain Jose Gaya said those who had racially abused Vinicius Jr should be banned from stadiums for life, but he also “condemned” Vinicius Jr’s two-fingered gesture, drawing a false equivalence between the two behaviours.

Very few at Valencia seemed capable of putting themselves in the shoes of a young black man who had again been racially abused.

There was a similar defensiveness to La Liga’s response on Sunday night. La Liga said it would act again as they had repeatedly in similar instances of abuse over the past two years, actively helping to identify and then punish those individuals who can be seen on camera committing the abuse.They have done this and there is frustration among at least some at La Liga that other authorities with more power to take significant steps like closing stadiums — the Spanish Football Association, the Spanish legal system, the Spanish government — are not doing as much as they are.ADVERTISEMENT

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But this was not helped by La Liga president Javier Tebas getting involved in a social media exchange with Vinicius Jr, noting that he had not turned up to meetings with La Liga to deal with the issue.In his tweet, Tebas also suggested that Vinicius Jr did not understand what was happening, had not informed himself sufficiently and was allowing himself to be manipulated. Again the blame was back onto the 22-year-old for somehow being responsible himself.

Ancelotti and Vinicius Jr during the stoppage in Sunday’s match (Photo: Jose Miguel Fernandez/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Could Vinicius Jr actually leave Madrid? He renewed his contract with the club last summer, extending a deal that was due to expire in 2024 until 2027, raising his release clause from €350million (£305m; $380m) to €1billion in the process. His salary was also increased, from €3.2m a year plus bonuses to around €12m a year.On Monday, a Madrid source described the club’s view on the situation to The Athletic. “Vinicius has been working indoors and has been doing physical recovery work,” the source said. “His mental recovery is another matter. It has been the most intense day since he arrived at Madrid. It has been the morning in which he has received the most messages and news of his life.“Vinicius is very worried about the drift that this situation has acquired throughout the season. He received a visit from the club president and met privately with him to show his support and to explain the steps the club is taking in his defence.“In the dressing room, he has received even more support than yesterday from his team-mates. The truth is that the man is disoriented and overwhelmed by all this. And of course, he is quite sad.“Now, to say he is already thinking about leaving for other leagues is stupid.”Madrid also published photos of this meeting between president Florentino Perez and Vinicius Jr. When contacted by The Athletic, sources close to the player, who asked not to be named in order to protect their position, said it did not change the way the player feels.They said they would wait with interest to see what action Madrid take as they want real actions beyond good intentions. On Monday morning, the club announced it would file a complaint with Spanish prosecutors over the racist abuse. A statement released in the afternoon added further support to Vinicius Jr, pointing the finger at the Spanish FA and Spain’s referees over “inaction”, before adding: “The victim who suffers should never be held responsible for the crime”.

Fierce support for Vinicius Jr came from Ronaldo Nazario, his fellow Brazilian, who is president of La Liga club Valladolid. There was also very strong backing from his home country, including Brazilian president Lula da Silva and Brazil FA president Ednaldo Rodrigues, who were among those to angrily demand more protection for Vinicius Jr and more punishments for those who racially abuse him.Most of the reactions within Spanish football to Vinicius Jr and Ancelotti’s words were to attempt to correct them. Some commentators claimed they do not know Spain well, do not speak the language perfectly, that they are foreigners mistaken in their understanding of what is happening.

The truth is the game here has long been marked by the ignorant attitude of fans who believe calling a black player a monkey is no different to any other abuse they might direct at the opposition, and Ancelotti and Vinicius Jr understand this perfectly.On Monday morning, Spain’s equality minister Irene Montero called for a new ‘anti-racism’ law. Spanish FA president Luis Rubiales said it was time to recognise that Spanish football does have a racism problem.But everything that has been said in response to the events of Sunday night feels very late — and draws attention to how little has previously been done to deal with the issue, which has been around Spanish football for decades.The question now is how much longer Vinicius Jr is prepared to stay and suffer this situation.

Additional contributor: Guillermo Rai.

Premier League permutations: What is left to be decided ahead of the final day?

Ed Mackey May 22, 2023

We are into the final few games of the 2022-23 Premier League campaign.Some clubs know their end-of-season fate while other face a nervous wait at both ends of the table.Manchester City lifted the trophy on Sunday after a third successive title was confirmed following Arsenal’s defeat to Nottingham Forest the day before.That result ensured safety for Steve Cooper’s side, leaving three sides fighting to stay out of the final two relegation places.And there were decisive results in the battle for the European places.Here, The Athletic breaks down what is left to settle in the final days of the season, exploring what is needed for the sides with places left to play for.This article will be updated after each round of matches.


The title race

Another gripping title race was decided this weekend before Pep Guardiola’s side even kicked a ball.A battle against seasoned trophy-winning veterans proved too much for Arsenal, a team who were not expected to be anywhere near a title race at the beginning of the season.

(Photo: Isaac Parkin – Manchester City FC via Getty Images)

Their disappointing defeat away to Nottingham Forest meant City made it five titles in six years with three games to spare.

Now for the champions, attention refocuses on the potential treble that awaits at the end of the season. They dismantled Real Madrid in the Champions League semi-final to set up a meeting in Istanbul with an Inter side who ran out comfortable winners against their city rivals, Milan. By the time they play in that final, they will know whether the treble is a possibility as, a week before on June 3, they face Manchester United in the FA Cup final at Wembley. If they were to add to the Champions League and FA Cup trophies to their haul this season, they would become the first English team since 1999 to complete the treble.

The title race

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1 (C)Manchester City358561
2Arsenal378140

The Champions League & Europa League battle

The battle for the Champions League places looked sown up a few weeks ago as Manchester United and Newcastle United held an almost unassailable lead over the challengers. However, slip ups for both teams, as well as Liverpool’s immaculate form, opened the door for the late change. Now, that door seems to have been shut on Jurgen Klopp’s side who — after only managing a 1-1 draw at home against Aston Villa — need a minor miracle to leapfrog Manchester United.

(Photo: Jan Kruger/Getty Images)

They hold a three-point lead over Liverpool, needing just another point from games against Chelsea and Fulham to secure a return to the Champions League.Newcastle, meanwhile, ensured they would be playing Champions League football for the first in two decades, earning their decisive point against Leicester City on Monday evening. They did more than enough to win the game against Dean Smith’s relegation-threatened side, but a draw was enough to see them over the line.

Liverpool visit bottom of the table Southampton on the final day with a top-four finish likely to already be beyond them. They need Manchester United to lose both of their final two games to have a chance to leapfrog them on the final day.

While a place in European football’s secondary competition will not be considered a success for Liverpool, the teams beneath them would love that outcome.

Sixth-placed Brighton & Hove Albion have confirmed a European finish, but have not quite done enough yet to secure a Europa League place.

Brighton(Photo: Robin Jones/Getty Images)

Roberto De Zerbi’s side need just one more point from their last two games — against Manchester City and Aston Villa — to absolutely confirm a Europa League spot, but their superior goal difference means they have already, realistically, done enough.

Unai Emery and his players will be focused on keeping Tottenham at bay beneath them. A win against Brighton on the final day will confirm a place in the Europa Conference League for them next season.

Then come Tottenham who dropped out of the European places entirely on Sunday after defeat to Brentford. Ryan Mason’s side will need to better Aston Villa’s result on the final day of the season if they are to secure European football next season — they face Leeds United.

Brentford’s impressive victory against Tottenham helped them back into contention, but it may be too little, too late as they would need to beat Manchester City and hope both Aston Villa and Tottenham slip up on the final day.

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How does European qualification work in the Premier League?

Champions League

The top four teams in the Premier League qualify for the group stage of the Champions League. The top four is currently made up of Manchester City, Arsenal, Newcastle United and Manchester United.

Europa League

The team that finishes fifth in the Premier League — Liverpool currently occupy that spot — will earn one of the two Europa League places, with the other given to the FA Cup winners. Because Manchester City and Manchester United are contesting the FA Cup final and both confirmed to finish inside the top five, then the team that finishes in sixth will get the second Europa League place — that is Brighton at present. The winners of the Europa Conference League earn a place in the Europa League. West Ham booked their place in the final after a 3-1 aggregate win against AZ Alkmaar in the semi-final — they will face Fiorentina in Prague on June 7.

Europa Conference League

The only Europa Conference League place is given to the winners of the Carabao Cup. If the Carabao Cup winners finish inside either the Premier League’s Champions League or Europa League places, the place is deferred to the next highest-finishing team. As Manchester United won this season’s Carabao Cup and will finish in the top five, the next-highest team in the Premier League that has not qualified for Europe will play in the Europa Conference League play-offs. The Europa League place for the FA Cup winners will also be deferred to the league table, which would mean the seventh-place team will qualify for the Europa Conference League.Currently, that is Aston Villa.


The battle for survival

The relegation battle in the Premier League has been as enthralling as ever over the last few weeks, but we are reaching the stage where time has run out for the teams in the bottom three.Nottingham Forest ensured they would not be returning straight back to the Championship with their unlikely 1-0 win against Arsenal on Saturday.Meanwhile, Southampton’s fate was sealed last Saturday in their limp 2-0 home defeat to Fulham.Following a run of poor results, Leicester were able to keep themselves just in contention following their goalless draw away to Newcastle.

(Photo: Robbie Jay Barratt – AMA/Getty Images)

A first clean sheet since the World Cup moved them above Leeds United into 18th. To stay up, they need to beat West Ham at home on the final day with Everton dropping points against Bournemouth.Leeds sit second from bottom and remain two points from safety after their drab defeat away to West Ham. They will have to win against Tottenham in their last game, while simultaneously hoping Everton lose and Leicester fail to win.

Yerry Mina’s equaliser in the ninth minute of stoppage time against Wolves moved Everton a point further away from the drop zone. A somewhat favourable home clash against Bournemouth on the final day gives them a great opportunity to remain one of the Premier League’s ever-presents.Their fate is in their own hands, but they need to a final-day victory to make absolutely sure of survival. If Leicester and Leeds fail to win, they will not need another point.The relegation battle will go down to the final day regardless of results over the next couple of days.

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(Top photo: Robbie Jay Barratt – AMA/Getty Images)

Ed Mackey is an Explainer Journalist for The Athletic, based in Leicester. He is a Football Journalism graduate from the University of Derby.

What Leeds’ relegation would mean: Takeover, head coach, stadium and more

By Phil Hay May 23, 2023


The sobering reality for Leeds United is that relegation next Sunday, if indeed there is no way out, would barely be even the start of it. The club are all but sunk with one game left, reliant on the biggest stroke of luck they could ask for, and Elland Road can see a monumental summer looming.The close-season promises to be manic if Leeds survive and more frantic again should they return to the Championship, heralding changes which have to amount to an almost total reset. They got away with it last season, rescuing themselves on the final day against Brentford, but the drop feels more inevitable this time and nothing in their sorry surrender away to West Ham United on Sunday suggested they are about to dodge disaster for a second year running.

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What next, then, for the club who stormed the Championship in 2019-20?

Their head coach, Sam Allardyce, has a short-term contract that covers one more match. They have been without a director of football since Victor Orta parted company with them three weeks ago. The proposed takeover by 49ers Enterprises is still only a proposal. And what of other issues, like the future of individual players, the management of a sizeable Premier League wage bill and the impact of reduced income?

What would relegation on Sunday actually mean for Leeds United? What are the nuts and bolts and the brass tacks for the months ahead?


The takeover

A change of ownership is what everything at Elland Road hinges on — and it can be credibly argued that the impasse on that front is a reason why Leeds have stagnated to the point where relegation is nigh.

At present, the arrangement in the boardroom is this: Andrea Radrizzani is majority shareholder with slightly more than 50 per cent of the shares. The remainder is held by 49ers Enterprises, a US investment vehicle with close connections to the NFL’s San Francisco 49ers. Were Leeds to stay up following their season-finale at home to Tottenham Hotspur this weekend, contracts are in place for 49ers Enterprises to buy out Radrizzani for a sum which would value Leeds somewhere between £400 million ($496m) and £500million ($621m).

The expectation is that the sale would go through by July 1 at the latest but in effect, the handover would start more rapidly.

The investment group behind this 49ers Enterprises project — made up of entrepreneurs, private equity firms, businessmen such as current Leeds director Peter Lowy and at least one unidentified US political figure — has been in place for some time and ready to buy Radrizzani out under the agreed terms, provided Leeds retained their Premier League status. While that collective is providing the funding, the day-to-day management of the club would be the responsibility of 49ers Enterprises figures including Paraag Marathe and Collin Meador.

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However, the agreement with Radrizzani in its current guise will be void if Leeds go down.

Radrizzani is part of a group looking to buy Italy’s Sampdoria (Photo: Jan Kruger/Getty Images)

Nonetheless, 49ers Enterprises remain intent on buying Radrizzani out, or at least securing majority control, even if relegation happens. Discussions to that effect have been taking place and gathering pace over the past few weeks, driven by the realisation that a bottom-three finish was increasingly likely and that the amount of work to be done this summer would be substantial either way.adrizzani is open to selling in the event Leeds find themselves back in the EFL next season, so long as the numbers work for him.That is the crux of discussions as it stands: relegation promises to significantly reduce Leeds’ value and 49ers Enterprises would only be willing to buy at a much lower price, somewhere in the region of £150million ($186m). It is not clear if Radrizzani is prepared to drop his valuation to that level.He was pictured in his Italian homeland yesterday (Monday) and, as reported by The Athletic over the weekend, he is part of a group who are attempting to buy Sampdoria, who were relegated from Italy’s top flight two weeks ago. Radrizzani would almost certainly require funds from the sale of Leeds to help secure the purchase of the Genoa-based club.His involvement in those talks, all while Leeds are themselves on the brink of going down, suggests he is going to exit Elland Road, and soon — but even so, he and 49ers Enterprises are not yet agreed on the terms of a post-relegation takeover.What is clear is that the club cannot afford to get stuck in a prolonged ownership wrangle after this season ends. They have too much to do and no time to lose, making urgency in negotiations essential.


Income

Revenue at Elland Road has reached a record level for the club, falling just short of £190million for the 2021-22 season. Pushing up their turnover to new heights is one area in which they have been consistently successful over their six years with Radrizzani as chairman. Even in the Championship, English football’s second tier, they were pulling in more money than any of the 71 other EFL sides — albeit while also posting hefty losses.But it is no secret that the bulk of Premier League earnings come from central distributions, consisting mainly of money earned through the league’s lucrative broadcast deals. The EFL has just renegotiated its TV deal with UK broadcaster Sky Sports but the figures involved are still a world away from the cash earned by the Premier League through such rights. Last season, for example, Leeds’ central distributions were £95million — more than three times Nottingham Forest’s entire turnover in the Championship that year. So at a stroke, a large chunk of that funding disappears with relegation. But as it has for years now, the parachute payment scheme exists between the Premier League and the Championship, giving those clubs who go down assistance to cope with the financial hit of dropping divisions. In year one back in the EFL, Leeds would receive 55 per cent of the basic payment made to Premier League clubs — around £45 million. If they then fail to bounce straight back, the year two figure drops to 45%. In year three, the final season of parachute payments, it’s 20%.Used smartly, parachute payments can help a relegated club reframe their squad, be competitive in the promotion race and go again. That cash can facilitate signings other sides in the Championship cannot afford and support larger salaries. But they don’t last forever and they won’t avert sizeable losses, because virtually every club loses money in the second tier. They are no guarantee of promotion either.Relegated clubs have little choice but to substantially reduce budgets, and Leeds would be no different.


Wage bill

Leeds’ last recorded wage bill, for the 2021-22 year, was £121million, and after so many signings made this season it can only have increased. Plainly, they could not afford to carry such high costs while in the EFL, but they would be helped at the outset by substantial reductions in the salaries earned by their first-team squad.The players stand to incur hefty wage cuts in the aftermath of relegation, with drops of up to 60 per cent (some in line with the increases a number of them received after winning promotion three years ago). Clauses in their contracts allow Leeds to automatically decrease their earnings when in the EFL, bringing down the outlay overnight.None of that would stop Leeds having one of the highest Championship wage bills but between parachute payments, transfer income and shareholder investment, it is possible to manage a large salaries figure for a finite period.The problem comes if a relegated club find themselves stuck outside the Premier League for a sustained spell. An expensive squad becomes harder and harder to maintain in those circumstances.


Players

Whatever happens against Spurs at Elland Road this weekend, this summer will be an intensive and busy transfer window for Leeds. Many of the first-team squad have relegation-related release clauses in their contracts, giving other clubs the right to buy them for a fixed fee (usually one that is less than their true market value). Leeds pulled in almost £100million by selling Raphinha and Kalvin Phillips last summer. Because of release clauses applying to both players, the club would have recouped merely half as much had they been auctioning them on the back of relegation.Departures from Elland Road in the coming window could well run into double figures if Leeds are relegated.Weston McKennie is certain to leave, however the season finishes. Neither he nor Leeds are minded to activate the option to make his half-season loan from Italian giants Juventus permanent. Goalkeeper Illan Meslier has endured a difficult season but his valuation remains relatively high and Leeds were always open to the possibility of accepting a worthwhile offer for him in this window. Robin Koch has a year left on his contract and, as a Germany international, would naturally attract bids if Leeds are an EFL club again. So too would Colombia international Luis Sinisterra, a footballer with high-level potential provided he stays fit.

McKennie is not expected to stay even if Leeds remain in the Premier League (Photo: Robbie Jay Barratt – AMA/Getty Images)

Jack Harrison has only just signed a new five-year deal but it is understood to include a release clause, and there is ample Premier League interest in him. Rodrigo is on course to be a free agent in 12 months’ time and, as a top earner, would cost too much to keep in the Championship.There are some who Leeds would be very keen to retain, though. McKennie’s fellow USA midfielder Tyler Adams is one. They would be reluctant to lose Wilfried Gnonto too, though his performances have put him on the radar of clubs in Europe.But it is accepted that a large turnover is inevitable, partly because some names are too expensive, some names have no further part to play and some names are a route to transfer fees which can help to build a suitable team to contend in, and win promotion from, the Championship.The window ahead will be active from start to finish for Leeds. A critical part of it will be finding takers for surplus players — a task which is never simple on the back of a relegation.


Head coach

Unlike short-lived predecessor Javi Gracia, there is no agreed provision in place for Sam Allardyce to remain as head coach beyond the end of the season. His contract was as short as four games and no discussions have taken place about his future. Whether Leeds are in any way tempted by the idea of Allardyce in the Championship, a division he has got Bolton Wanderers (2001) and West Ham (2012) promoted from in his career, remains to be seen but there will be a clamour among the fanbase for fresh thinking.Over the past couple of weeks, 49ers Enterprises gave thought to Marcelo Bielsa returning as an avenue worth pursuing if they went down, but he has now taken the Uruguay national-team job and, in any case, the doubts about the ownership structure at Leeds would not have made his old job easy to sell to the Argentinian — without even touching on the two sides’ uncomfortable parting in February last year.If Leeds were to stay up, they would like to try to engage someone such as Graham Potter, who did well in three Premier League seasons at Brighton but lasted just seven months of this one after joining Chelsea last September. Should they go down, recently-sacked Leicester manager Brendan Rodgers is likely to come into the equation, at least in terms of the sort of coach they would want. Whether Rodgers is open to working in the EFL again, having led Swansea City up from it in 2011, is another matter altogether.Expect a swing towards more established domestic candidates, or coaches with experience of that league, because nobody at Elland Road is trying to pretend going out on a limb with Jesse Marsch as Bielsa’s replacement worked.But Leeds will not be able to sell themselves on name or reputation alone. They have masses to do to make sure that, on the other side of this summer, they are ready to attack the new season.


Director of football

Leeds have operated under a director of football model since Andrea Radrizzani bought out Massimo Cellino and appointed Victor Orta in 2017. But Orta’s exit this month leaves that position vacant, and dealing with it is one of various priorities facing the board.

The first thing for Leeds to decide is whether they want to stick with precisely the same model — a structure in which a single director of football oversees that side of the business. In contrast, certain teams split authority between a specific head of their recruitment department and a figure who takes charge of other football operations.

While some of Orta’s staff are departing with him — scout Gaby Ruiz, for example — some other scouts remain in place, but Leeds need a fresh tier of management around whoever ends up becoming their next head coach.

Orta’s departure means Leeds need a new director of football (Photo: Robbie Jay Barratt – AMA/Getty Images)

Norwich City’s Stuart Webber, a lifelong Leeds fan, and Kieran Scott of Middlesbrough are two names from the Championship touted as possible options, but at this stage the club have not taken any firm steps towards filling the void. In many ways, recruitment on that front will be as crucial as any player-transfer business — because the director of football’s input is what tends to create ethos and philosophy, for better or worse.


Stadium

The capacity of Elland Road has not just been inadequate in the Premier League, but inadequate since the start of the Marcelo Bielsa era five years ago next month. Leeds’ home games sold out consistently from his arrival onwards and the waiting list for season tickets soared very quickly, to a peak of 22,000 names.

This is a handicap in two senses. Firstly, supply is a long way below demand and supporters who would like to attend matches cannot. And secondly, Leeds are missing out on the commercial and corporate income a bigger stadium would let them generate.

But for all the talk, the idea of redeveloping the ground has been exactly that for a few years now — an idea.

The proposed project would start with the rebuilding of the West Stand and the club have architectural designs for that in place but they would have to go through the process of applying for planning permission and that was only due to happen once 49ers Enterprises assumed control of the boardroom. In itself, planning could take 12 months to secure.

The project would also require large amounts of funding, many tens of millions of pounds predominantly secured via loans, and it has been clear for a while that any such work was not going to start on Radrizzani’s watch. It is a sad aspect of these three seasons aboard the Premier League gravy train that Elland Road has hardly been touched to any great extent.

If Leeds go down on Sunday, there is no expectation that redevelopment would move forward in the Championship.

Upgrading Elland Road has long been described as Premier League-dependent and, given the financial impact of relegation, it is not something the club can prioritise — and there is very little point securing planning permission for the project if they are not able to push the button on it rapidly.

Back in a division where every penny counts, increasing the capacity of Elland Road would slip into the background once more, delayed by the immediacy of trying to get promoted again.

The question is essentially this: do Leeds need a 50,000 or 60,000-capacity home playing in the EFL?


Season tickets

This is about as close as you’ll get to an upside of relegation.

Those 10 per cent rises in costs for next season? They’ll be canned if Leeds go down. You’ll get more games for your money (46 league matches in the Championship, up from the Premier League’s 38) and if you’re on that long, long waiting list, your chances of reaching the front of it might be slightly enhanced.

Still, good news about the chocolate oranges.

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Marco Silva and Fulham need Willian to extend his stay at Fulham

By Ahmed Shooble May 22, 2023


When Willian moved to Fulham in the summer, the reception from most of British football was lukewarm at best.After seven successful years in which he won the Premier League twice at Chelsea, the Brazil international had undergone a disappointing 2020-21 season at Arsenal where he and the club mutually agreed to terminate his contract at the end of the campaign. A season and a half in Brazil’s top flight with his boyhood club Corinthians did not do much to raise his profile either.But few would argue that Willian has been one of Fulham’s most important players this season — particularly as a key part of Marco Silva’s more mobile front line during Aleksandar Mitrovic’s eight-game suspension.The Fulham head coach has reiterated the club’s eagerness to renew Willian’s contract – he only signed for a season last September, as a “priority”. Silva has spoken of his desire to improve the squad this summer and extending Willian’s deal makes so much sense given his proven Premier League pedigree. It would also allow Fulham to spend their budget elsewhere.His performance in Saturday’s 2-2 draw against Palace provided another glimpse into why the club are so keen to keep him.At 34, most wingers simplify their game, drift inside to do less running and go stretches of a match without much involvement. But not Willian. Against Palace, he pressed from the front with youthful vigour, created chances from set pieces and open play and ran at Crystal Palace right-back Joel Ward for the entire game.Willian’s performance showed he is one of few Fulham players capable of creating something from nothing in an instant. As right-back Kenny Tete sent a long switch out towards him just before the half-hour mark, the pass looked destined to be intercepted by Ward. But Willian had other ideas, stealing in on the defender’s blind side to turn what looked to be a turnover into a cross, which Crystal Palace left-back Tyrick Mitchell frantically cleared.

(Photo: Warren Little/Getty Images)

He does not need a particular type of service to thrive, he is not one-dimensional in his wing play and his ball retention in advanced areas is a coach’s dream.“Top class,” is how Silva described Willian after the game. “I don’t need to see this afternoon’s performance to have this opinion. What he’s been doing this season shows that he is a top-class player.ADVERTISEMENT

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“When he’s in a good day, he can make the difference, like he did most of the afternoon. It was clear in any moment he always tried to take the right decisions, he’s just a player with great class. Any time he makes decisions, it is almost always a good one. It just shows the quality he has — it’s a priority for us to keep him.”That sustained level of form and maturity in his decision-making in the final third are the main reasons Willian has kept his spot in the starting XI despite Manor Solomon’s purple patch in front of goal in February.Not for the first time this season, Willian was the instigator and creative engine of attacks in Fulham’s left-sided cluster alongside midfielder Tom Cairney and left-back Antonee Robinson. Inside the first five minutes, Willian was surrounded by at least four red and blue shirts but zig-zagged his way through in a flash to send a cross into the box.His assist came from poor Crystal Palace marking as Mitrovic headed in Willian’s fizzed-in free kick.The winger was a fingertip save away from adding a spectacular goal to an impressive performance, veering inside a weary Ward and letting fly from just outside the penalty area.Fulham scored their 53rd and 54th Premier League goals of the season against Crystal Palace, their most in a top-flight season since 1967-68 (56) — in no small part thanks to Willian. His individual statistics reflect his dominance, completing the most passes ending in the final third (19), most dribbles (two), most passes played into the box (eight) and creating the most chances (four).Across the whole season, Willian has created more chances overall (2.1 per 90 minutes), from open play (1.58), and created more big chances (0.31) than any other Fulham player with a minimum of 500 league minutes — making it clear why Silva and Fulham are desperate to keep him beyond the summer.For Willian himself, this season serves as vindication to those who doubted him on his return to English football. “I think it was a good performance from me,” he said. “One assist and almost scored an unbelievable goal! But I’m also proud of what I have been doing this season. A lot of people didn’t believe I could come back to the Premier League and do the same job I had been doing for a lot of years.“I just want to keep going and playing with a smile on my face.”Silva and the Fulham fans will be the happy ones if an extended deal can be agreed for next season.

Farewell James Milner, Liverpool’s Mr Everything

Caoimhe O’NeillMay 24, 2023

“Trent! Get on that fucking ball, you!”That was James Milner’s gentle message to Trent Alexander-Arnold as Liverpool trailed 1-0 to Aston Villa at Anfield on Saturday. It was not sent in a bottle but could have been heard down the road in Bootle.Four minutes later, Milner’s time on the bench was up. He was on the pitch, conveying similarly expletive-laden messages in closer proximity to their recipients.Milner did not want his final game at Anfield to be a leaving-do. He wanted Liverpool to win, and the focus to be nowhere near him.When he was first sent to warm up alongside Roberto Firmino – who did have a full-blown leaving-do on Sunday – during the first half, that became clear. Milner returned the raucous applause like a sideway pass. He wanted to shift that ball on.The 37-year-old wanted to do zig-zagging runs and hamstring stretches. He wanted to avoid the artificial grass that surrounds the Anfield turf because even when he is on the sidelines, he is somehow on the pitch. Any chance he got to sprint on the proper stuff, he took. https://theathletic.com/report/podcast-clip/?clip_id=7530

Liverpool cancelled out Villa’s lead through Cody Gakpo 10 minutes into the second half. Or so we thought. About 30 seconds later Milner, still warming up, whistled with uncle-like approval in the direction of nobody in particular. The goal was then ruled out and Milner turned to Firmino and their fellow replacement Diogo Jota. His hand signals suggested he was telling them to pass with speed and make nifty runs into the box once they got on.

When Firmino did score the equaliser (his final Anfield goal) in the 89th minute having done just that, Milner did not celebrate. His pass was one in the sequence that helped create the opportunity for the Brazilian. But Milner had no time for an after-party. He trudged back into his own half and got on with business.

He wanted Alexander-Arnold to get on the fucking ball, he wanted Firmino or Jota, or anyone in red, to score a stoppage-time winner. When the whistle went, he just wanted to leave quietly, just as he had planned to do last season until a one-year extension to his contract was offered. Before that proposal was made, Milner was planning to let Divock Origi have his moment in the final game of the campaign. Twelve months on, he wanted to do the same with Firmino, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and Naby Keita.

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But he could never leave like that. His contribution during eight years wearing the Liverpool shirt had been far too great for the club and fans to have allowed it.

The Kop piped up as he came out of the tunnel into a guard of honour. Milner’s 331 appearances and 206 wins warranted a theme tune he never got, so “There’s only one James Milner!” was a quick-thinking tribute. Not the most original, but perhaps the most fitting.

Liverpool fans send Milner fondly on his way (Photo: Peter Powell/AFP via Getty Images)

Sir Kenny Dalglish, who laced the Liverpool No 7 shirt with so much weight and meaning during his playing days, was waiting to congratulate a man who did exactly the same. After photographs with Dalglish, chief executive officer Billy Hogan and two big framed mementoes of his Anfield career, Milner walked right into a Jurgen Klopp hug.

The manager did not want this to be Milner’s last home game for the club. Milner felt the same.

But the call from Boston, where Liverpool’s owners and ultimate financial decision-makers Fenway Sports Group are based, never came. And so, at age 37, he will move on after Sunday’s final game of the season away to already-relegated Southampton, departing as probably the greatest free-transfer signing in Liverpool’s history.

He joined from Manchester City, where he helped win two Premier League titles in his five years, on a promise from then-manager Brendan Rodgers he would play in central midfield; when Klopp took over from Rodgers four months later, the German learnt he had inherited a unique, utility-belt of a player. And the rest, really, was history.

These, then, are the seven faces of James Milner — Liverpool’s ‘Mr Everything’.


Mr Versatile

It was before a Europa League last-16 second leg away to Manchester United in March 2016 that Klopp approached Milner about changing his midfield role.

Alberto Moreno had picked up an injury and Klopp asked whether he preferred to play at left-back or right-back. Milner, not keen on either, eventually chose the left side to enable Nathaniel Clyne to keep his place on the right. The game ended 1-1 with Philippe Coutinho’s goal ensuring Liverpool would reach the quarter-finals (en route to the final, where they lost to Europa League black-belts Sevilla).

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Milner did not start another game at full-back during that first season under Klopp but, on tour in the US the next summer, the manager asked him to stay behind after a team meeting and explained he wanted to play him left-back in the coming campaign. Milner was far from thrilled. But, ever the professional, he agreed and gave it his all in his new role.

In the six years since 2016-17, Milner has spent almost half his Premier League minutes playing one full-back spot or the other, 32 per cent on the left and 12 per cent on the right.

And as we can see, Milner has been heavily trusted in the Klopp era in general. He is in the top 10 Liverpool players for minutes played since 2015-16, when Klopp replaced Rodgers in the October of that season.

Of those 18,899 minutes, Milner has touched the ball 18,911 times. And it is no surprise to see his touches happened all over the pitch.

The true essence of his work rate is best summed up by all those red dots – and by one of them in particular.

See the one nearest Liverpool’s goal-line?

That was a clearance that stopped a certain Ryan Fraser goal for Bournemouth. The game concerned eventually ended 2-1 to Liverpool — a win that pulled them closer to ending the club’s 30-year wait for a league title.

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As the map also shows, Milner’s touches have happened all over the pitch, but he has rarely carried the ball into the opposition box. With one notable exception…

The penalty king

Before the days of Mohamed Salah as Liverpool’s chosen penalty-taker, Milner had the job… and he never missed the target once. He scored 19 and had two saved, both in 2017, with the majority of them struck into the bottom corners of the net.

Perhaps his most memorable penalty was the one he scored with the last kick of the game at home to Leicester City in October 2019.

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Liverpool went on to win the Premier League comfortably, but it was a campaign that had its momentum hole-punched by crucial moments such as Milner’s late winner that day at Anfield.

To add to his 19 penalties, he also scored seven times from open play, many of them coming from range.

The assister

Opta’s definition of a winning goal is a goal that puts a team’s score to one above their opponent’s final score. Milner has eight of them in his eight years at Anfield.

Winning assists are measured in the same way and Milner has 10 of those, with the most famous of them being for Dejan Lovren in one of Liverpool’s formative nights under Klopp – a 4-3 comeback win over Borussia Dortmund that booted the manager’s former team out of the Europa League quarter-finals in 2016.

It was in the Champions League, though, where Milner’s love of an assist really shone through.

In 2017-18, he had nine assists in 11 European appearances as Liverpool reached the final — no player has recorded more in one season.

As for assists in general, Milner provided 45 in total for Liverpool, with 33 of those arriving in open play.

The diagram below highlights his threat from corners, particularly those outswingers played from the right-hand side, but there is no shortage of passes from deep that teed up team-mates.

The closer

One of Milner’s most impressive records is that his team has never lost a Premier League game in which he has scored. Of the games that have delivered his 55 goals (54 in total), he has won 43 and drawn 11. It’s a record bettered only by Gabriel Jesus, who has scored in 55 games (68 goals) and won 50 of them with Manchester City and now Arsenal.

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Milner does not like to lose. That is clear. And if he is coming on as a substitute then he is going to shore things up and see out the game. He’s a closer, to borrow a term from baseball, and actually holds the club record for the most appearances from off the bench (130, so far).

Most subbed on players at Liverpool

PLAYERSUBBED ON
James Milner130
Divock Origi107
Jordan Henderson82
Ryan Babel81
Lucas Leiva80
Roberto Firmino79
Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain76
Vladimir Smicer74
Danny Murphy71
Steven Gerrard63
All competitions since subs introduced

It is not a record Milner will actively welcome, though. In his Ask A Footballer book from 2019, he says being a substitute is hard to take. “I don’t know if there are players who are happy just to be on the bench, but I’ve never been one of those,” he wrote.

Still, that’s not to take away from Milner’s savviness when coming on and helping to see games out – it is a quality that has proved invaluable over his years at Anfield.

The disruptor

It is no surprise to learn the majority of Milner’s Premier League bookings as a Liverpool player have been picked up in the second halves of games. He is disruptive and a master of the tactical foul.

Of his 37 Liverpool bookings in the league, 35 have been for fouls (he also has one for dissent and another for handball) but what is most striking is that 19 of his cautions have come in the final half-hour of matches, and 12 of them in the final 14 minutes.

When Milner was booked at Liverpool

PHASE OF GAMEBOOKINGS
1-15 mins3
16-30 mins6
31-45 mins5
46-60 mins4
61-75 mins7
76+ mins12

Nobody at Anfield is complaining, though. Some of Milner’s best moments have come in the tackle: take, for example, his shutdown of Paris Saint-Germain’s Neymar in a Champions League group game at Anfield in 2018. Milner scored a penalty in the game (a 3-2 home win) but the moment he hoofed the ball from under Neymar and flung him out of play is remembered far more fondly.

From the video, it appears as if Milner is playing right-back. In fact, he started on the left of midfield that night but drifted over to the right to introduce himself to Neymar.

Lionel Messi was also on the end of one of Milner’s sideline tackles during the first leg of that Champions League semi-final in 2019. With the ball already out of reach, Milner did the only thing he could and barged Messi out of play. The Argentinian did not respond kindly, issuing a verbal volley in Spanish – perhaps not realising that the Yorkshireman could understand every word.

“He called me the (Spanish) word for donkey, but it also translates to kicking people,” Milner recalled.”We’re going up the tunnel and he’s going mad at half-time saying, ‘(it was) just because I ‘megged you’.

“I feel like players like that have their own way and, (if you) give them too much respect, they are going to run the game. Sometimes you have to let them know you’re there and knock them out their stride.”

The fitness freak

It became a running joke at Liverpool’s training ground that, no matter his passing years, Milner would always win the bleep and lactate tests when the squad returned for pre-season training.

“He’s an elite, perfect, professional footballer,” said Trent Alexander-Arnold, when asked about Milner ahead of the 2019 Champions League final. “He is completely dedicated to his craft. He never steps out of line in any way. He’s always focused, always putting his body on the line for the team.

“It’s unbelievable to see his fitness and energy levels. It’s testament to how well he’s looked after himself and how professional he’s been throughout his career.”

Milner, whose career began when not every Premier League dressing room was a bastion of professionalism, is also a teetotaller.

“I lost count of the amount of times people said, ‘Oh, just have one,’ or ‘Can I be there when you have your first drink?’ They would probably have regretted being there, I could have turned pretty ruthless,” he once told The Guardian.

“You are just learning at that age and thinking: ‘What can I do to be the best? Alcohol is not the best thing for you? Right, I won’t do that.’”

And in his final days of training with Liverpool this week, he will surely continue to be at the front of the running group, setting the pace.

The dressing room glue

Milner has fulfilled several leadership roles at Liverpool, including being a vice-captain and occasional skipper, but the standards he set, and demanded of others, were not linked to the armband he was wearing by the end of the Villa game on Saturday.

Alexander-Arnold has spoken of Milner being “intimidating” for young players when they first enter the senior dressing room at Liverpool. But that toughness flowed from an expectation that everyone playing for the club at that level should meet a high bar.

Former Liverpool under-23s manager Neil Critchley put a strong emphasis on first impressions. Whenever his youth players were called up to senior training, it was important to make a good impression — and not just on Klopp.

“We used to speak to our players about not failing your audition,” Critchley tells The Athletic. “You don’t want to train with the first team for the first time and make a bad impression. And not only are you trying to pass that test with the manager and the staff, but with the players too.

“Our players had to pass ‘The Milner and (Jordan) Henderson Test’, if you like. They both came through academy systems (at Leeds and Sunderland respectively) to play with the pros. They want to know about your character, whether they can trust you, whether you’re going to fit into the group. They test you, in a good way.”

(Photo: Paul Ellis/AFP via Getty Images)

When Klopp told his players to recharge during a winter break in February 2020, many went away on holiday. But Milner stayed behind. In a strange twist of scheduling, Liverpool had an FA Cup replay in that period against Shrewsbury Town of the English third tier, with the club deciding to field Critchley’s youth side in their absence.

Milner, as the sole senior player still on Merseyside, duly helped out. He asked to train with the squad in the days leading up to the game, which Liverpool won 1-0.

“James Milner, being James Milner, didn’t go away because he wanted to get back fit as soon as possible,” Critchley said. “He trained with us because we were preparing for the game and he used that as a chance to get fit. I’m pretty sure he was pushing to play, but it came too soon for him.

“His experience and voice in training leading into that game was really important. Before the game, he actually came up to me and asked whether he could come and be in the dressing room and talk to the players. It was very respectful of him. He didn’t need to do that, because it was his dressing room more than ours. We were just loaning it for the night. The fact he asked shows you the mark of the man.”

Milner also popped his head in at half-time and throughout the game was shouting encouragement from his seat behind the dugout.

“Sometimes, the best coaching isn’t always from the coaches,” Critchley says, thinking back to Milner’s role that week. “It’s from players, usually senior ones, and they don’t get any better than James Milner.”

Everton fan

What Everton’s relegation would mean for their finances, stadium and transfers

Greg O’Keeffe and Patrick Boyland May 25, 2023 Existential angst, blue underwear, endless permutations and 90-plus minutes of torture. They are all in the mix for anxious Everton fans this weekend as a tumultuous season approaches its monumental conclusion.The club’s fight to avoid being outside the top flight for the first time since 1953-54 goes to the final game against Bournemouth at Goodison on Sunday, a side who have already beaten the Merseysiders twice this term and long since secured their own safety.The Athletic spoke to supporters and experts to find out what it’s been like living with the fear of relegation and what dropping to the second tier would mean for one of English football’s most storied clubs.


David Bond is the licensee of the Winslow Hotel, which had been on Goodison Road since before Everton’s stadium was built on the site of Mere Green field in 1892.Like others who run businesses in the footprint of Goodison, their livelihoods entwined with the club, he is planning for an uncertain future when Everton move to their new stadium, currently scheduled for the 2024-25 season.But the life-long Evertonian’s more immediate concern is that relegation would taint a symmetry he has been hoping to complete while landlord of this old pub.“The Winslow has been here from the first kick of the ball at Goodison and we’ll be here until the last. But for it to be in the Championship would be sad,” he says. “I think we’ll win. I haven’t allowed myself to sit down and think too much about relegation. There’s no plan B in my mind really.“I’ve felt it’s been 50/50 whether we survive for a while, so to go into the last game in control of our own fate is the most important thing.“The tension has been growing for months, as well as the deja vu and frustration of being in the same situation again. I think the atmosphere in the ground will be amazing again on Sunday, but it’ll be nervous, too, obviously.

“We’ve maybe had 10 coach greetings since they started last season now and you wonder if the effect might have worn off a bit. The players have to do the business on the pitch.”

David BondDavid Bond, licensee of the Winslow Hotel next to Goodison Park (Photo: Greg O’Keefe)

David is planning for the best; as usual, he will open at 10am and has hired two singers to entertain customers he hopes will be celebrating and unwinding late into the evening.“I would hazard a guess it’s going to be the busiest day I’ve had as the landlord because of everything riding on it,” he says. “Against Wimbledon in 1994 we went behind and we were 2-0 down against Palace last season, so we’ve got a habit of making life difficult for ourselves and really cranking up the pressure. I just hope that doesn’t happen on Sunday.”

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Around the corner at the Royal Oak, another matchday favourite for supporters, Evertonian Tony Kelthy is nervously sipping his pint of Staropramen. Ensconced in the sunshine of its beer garden next to the bustling County Road, he contemplates the enormity of Sunday as traffic rattles past and offers some solace for equally nervous readers — this lifelong blue has positive omens lined up, or rather freshly washed in his laundry cupboard.“I’ve got my blue underpants ready,” he says. “I was wearing them for the Wolves game and they came good for us in the end, so I’ll be hoping all the superstitions do the job again.”A former season ticket holder in the Upper Gwladys Street, Tony is unlikely to be there on Sunday and plans a nervous afternoon glued to the BBC Radio Merseyside commentary.“It’s not just the worry about going down, it’s the questions over bigger things like the new stadium,” he says. “But I believe that will go ahead whatever happens.“It does get a bit irrational at this stage, but that’s what it’s like. I was there in 1994 with my girlfriend and when we were 2-0 down I thought maybe I was the jinx. But she didn’t come again and we won the cup the next season, so now I tell her she was the jinx.“Here we are again, though, going down to the final day. I’ve been nervous for weeks; watching all the other games involved in relegation. It’s going to be horrible if Leicester or Leeds go ahead on Sunday and we don’t.

“I’d be more confident if Calvert-Lewin was fit, but at least it’s in our own hands.”A five-minute walk away in Everton’s megastore, Hazel from Seaforth is perusing the aisles, wearing the current pink away shirt. In 1994, when Everton so memorably survived by the skin of their teeth against Wimbledon, the store was still being built and the following year after the club’s FA Cup victory, supporters climbed its bare frame to wave at the trophy parade.

EvertonEverton celebrate beating Wimbledon and staying up in May 1994 (Photo: Clive Brunskill/ALLSPORT via Getty Images)

The 48-year-old’s first game was in 1987, the season Everton last won the league under Howard Kendall. Her uncle gave her a choice of clubs to follow and despite the ups and downs since, she doesn’t regret her choice.

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“I’m waiting to see if I can get a ticket for Sunday,” she says. “But I’ve already planned my weekend. I won’t wash my hair on the day of the game because the last time I did we lost.

“I follow Everton Women, too, and we’ve had a great season, but the men’s team has been a tough watch. Now it’s all on one game. I feel like I need to be there but it’s going to be stomach churning.”


The nerves come from a sense of almost existential dread.

Buried at the bottom of Everton’s accounts for the 2021-22 season, published this March, was a grave warning.

Summarising their findings, new auditors Crowe LLP cast “significant doubt” on the club’s ability to continue as a ‘going concern’ in the event of relegation.

Crowe noted that demotion to the Championship would necessitate additional funding from majority shareholder Farhad Moshiri, who remains “supportive” but is not “legally obliged” to cover the shortfall.

Key to their assessment was the potential repayment of debt to long-term lenders Rights and Media Funding. To date, monies owed to Rights and Media Funding sits at around £150million.

“Some of these facilities include a covenant that assumes the club will remain in the Premier League, therefore the board have had to consider the scenario of relegation and the availability of these facilities in that scenario,” Everton wrote in their accounts.

“The providers have indicated that they remain supportive under each scenario. However, at the time of approval of the financial statements, there are no contractual commitments in place that would guarantee a waiver of the amounts payable in full or in part and therefore relegation would require a material repayment of debt as per the contract.”

For a club already stretched beyond its means at Premier League level and has posted losses totalling over £430m in the past five seasons, not to mention currently financing a new stadium project worth £760m, it is a chastening prospect. Some would say the kind of “existential moment” mentioned by Moshiri in his message to supporters earlier this year. But it is also one that could well become reality if survival is not secured on the final day of the season.

Everton’s new stadium at Bramley-Moore Dock (Photo: Michael Regan via Getty Images)

Besides Moshiri’s investment, the other avenue available to Everton is a series of cost-cutting measures. As they explained in their accounts, relegation would lead them to “review our costs base, trading strategy and defer other planned discretionary expenditure in the short term to offset any likely reductions in revenue”.

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It has been clear for some time that Everton have needed to plot a new, sustainable way forward. In a footballing sense, the heavy expenditure of the early Moshiri years has gone, replaced out of necessity by something far more frugal.

Moshiri’s initial gamble was that fresh finance could help catapult Everton back into Europe and bring increased revenues to help bankroll the remainder of the project. Yet regression on the pitch has created a new financial reality. In March, they were referred to an independent commission over an alleged breach of the Premier League’s Profitability and Sustainability rules. Despite needing reinforcements in January, they spent nothing and sold Anthony Gordon to Newcastle for an initial £40million.

Even with savings, it is fair to assume Everton’s wage bill would be comfortably the largest ever seen in the second tier. Their staff costs dropped £20million to £160m last season but are still considerable even by Premier League standards.

Last season, their wage-to-turnover ratio was 90 per cent, or 87 per cent when factoring in the outsourcing of the club’s retail and catering operations. Typical Championship wage bills tend to range from around £70million at the top end to around £15m at the other end of the scale.

With estimates suggesting a loss of almost £70million in broadcast revenue overnight in the event of relegation — parachute payments in the first year are currently around £45m, while the club reported £115m in broadcast revenue last season — Everton would need to drastically reduce costs. Most newer contracts signed since director of football Kevin Thelwell’s arrival last February are said to contain mandatory wage reductions in the event of relegation, but others agreed before then do not.
https://flo.uri.sh/visualisation/13882557/embed
Then there is the much more stringent FFP threshold in the EFL, where clubs are permitted to lose up to £39million over a three-year period. The Premier League allows for losses of £105m over the same period.

The most logical scenario would involve Everton’s high earners being sold and, while there would almost certainly be no shortage of interest in Amadou Onana or Jordan Pickford, the challenge would be in shifting fringe players on sizeable Premier League salaries. The club is currently in discussions with several soon-to-be-out-of-contract players, but their precarious position in the table complicates matters. Goalposts could well shift depending on which division they’re playing in next season.

With Everton increasingly reliant on Moshiri’s funding, the club’s majority shareholder has long been clear of the need for fresh financing. After talks with multiple interested parties, US-based MSP Sports Capital have been granted exclusivity in talks over a potential minority investment. MSP’s backing is seen as crucial in funding the final part of the stadium project, with a deal not thought to be dependent on Everton’s Premier League status.

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There remains some way to go before completion, but MSP’s arrival onto the scene would allow Moshiri to focus on allocating resources elsewhere.

Yet the spectre of relegation remains concerning — as it would be for any club — but it is even more so for this version of Everton at this moment in time.

MLS Go: How does the league’s new ‘youth soccer experience’ compare to other countries?

By Alexander Abnos and Elias Burke ay 24, 2023


On Tuesday, Major League Soccer announced MLS Go, a youth soccer program the league claims is “designed to increase participation and access for boys and girls outside of the existing soccer ecosystem.”

The program, aimed at kids aged 4-14, straddles the line between MLS’ efforts in youth development and its commercial endeavors, while also purporting to help solve one of the major issues in developing interest and/or participation in soccer in the United States: the lack of grassroots, accessible clubs for young kids. 

It’s an interesting mix, to say the least; a combination of influences that drove U.S. soccer editor Alexander Abnos to have his own knee-jerk reaction. Here, he discusses it with Elias Burke, a native of Birmingham, England, who has been learning the landscape of U.S. Soccer this year as an LA-based reporter. 


Abnos: Elias, I’m pretty sure I’m going to come off as ridiculously cynical in all this. So I want to start with an immediate disclaimer: I believe the stated aim of this program is noble and good. The more kids that play soccer at a younger age in the country, the better for the sport writ large – exponentially moreso if the programs are low-cost, as MLS Go claims they will be. So it’s nice to see that MLS is at least acknowledging that this gap in our soccer culture needs to be remedied, and doing something about it.   

It’s the execution, in particular the promotional push, that I don’t really care for. There are so many elements that make me roll my eyes. We can get into specifics in a bit, but let’s start with overall impressions. You grew up in a country that has an established, highly-effective system for developing footballers and football fans. What is your reaction as you read through what MLS is planning to do here? 

Burke: Before I’m exposed to reasons why it may not work, it sounds pretty exciting. 

Growing up in Birmingham, I had three professional football clubs playing within 10 miles of my home. Many of my school friends already had allegiances passed down from their parents, but coaches from local clubs (most typically Aston Villa, in my school’s case) would frequently arrange free sessions after school for boys and girls to participate. Outside of the coaching, we occasionally went to their training ground and learned about the benefits of exercise and healthy eating, and even sometimes to matches. For my classmates who had not already caught the football bug, exposing them to the sport through a professional club encouraged many of these children to join a club team outside of school and begin a lifetime of supporting Aston Villa.

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There is no shortage of grassroots clubs for children in the UK, making the pathway easier from first involvement to joining a local amateur club. Still, having seen the effect of Premier League and professional club involvement on increasing participation at grassroots level, this seems like a good idea. 

Abnos: Those sound like good programs but I think MLS Go is pretty different. The whole thing sounds like a living breathing infomercial – a “brand activation” in industry parlance. The program is being run in conjunction with RCX Sports, which does similar programs with the NFL, NBA, NHL, and MLB. The announcement makes a point of mentioning that MLS Go, which has “MLS” right there in the name, is in fact “powered by MLS.” It touts that participants will wear “MLS Club-branded uniforms” and play in “18 markets: 12 MLS, three MLS NEXT, and three additional cities that will be introduced to the MLS ecosystem for the first time.” MLS senior director of properties Kyle Albrecht said in the release’s first quote that MLS Go is an opportunity to “create a direct connection between our MLS clubs and future soccer fans.” It’s hard not to feel like MLS’ first intention here is to build MLS brand equity, not passion for the sport at large. 

The Birmingham programs seem to be more focused on the basics of participating in the sport, even if only as a fan. Are the clubs you mention quite so insistent on having their name and logo all over everything? And perhaps more to the point: Does the Premier League itself do something like this? If so, is it taken seriously?

Burke: Since coming here, I’ve noticed that the language accompanying these initiatives, which are undoubtedly positive on the surface, can feel quite uncomfortable.

For sure, we’d wear Aston Villa pinnies during the training sessions and compete to win club-branded merchandise (which I, as a West Bromwich Albion fan, was not interested in). Still, it never felt like it was an outreach program to increase attendance at Villa Park or usher in the next generation of supporters. While it may have been their intention, it was not marketed that way – it felt a natural byproduct of clubs lending their time to schools and communities through outreach programs. 

The Premier League do similar events, now called Premier League Kicks, where they offer children from varying backgrounds the opportunity to play free of charge. The branding is on full display, from the water bottles they hand out at the start of the session to the certificates awarded at the end, but they do a better job of integrating it. Describing a city and community as a “market” exemplifies how MLS, and American sports in general, unashamedly present the next generation of potential supporters as commodities. 

Abnos: Completely agree with you there. I think to some extent it’s a byproduct of the United States’ general form of hypercapitalism, but also its pro sports history. In the vast majority of American soccer, clubs and leagues are businesses that must work to become community assets, whereas in the UK and other places my impression is that it’s the opposite. The end result Stateside is that the people in charge seem to be constantly delivering a sales pitch. But soccer isn’t a product that needs selling; it’s a passion that needs fuel. And I guess I just don’t see how MLS Go does that in a sustainable, long-lasting way. 

Elias, soccer people in this country have a (probably romanticized) view of kids playing pickup games in small patches of land or dirt fields or alleyways all over the world, and we want that same thing to happen here. MLS Go seems oriented toward that goal, but it plans to charge local operators a licensing fee per player, and a registration fee to participants. Do you think that serves the “soccer for all” vision it claims?

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Burke: The romantic view of people playing on patches of dirt and rugged concrete cages is legitimate; some of the world’s best players developed their skills in these environments, but the “pay to play” issue is not exclusive to the States.

For every Jadon Sancho, Wilfried Zaha, or Rio Ferdinand who spent their childhoods playing in south London cages, there are plenty of Jude Bellingham’s and Mason Mount’s who grew up in leafy suburbs, developing their skills in more controlled and affluent environments. 

Scandinavian and Nordic nations, for example, have a very regimented football infrastructure. To maximize their small population, children who play football in Denmark and Finland attend training sessions with qualified coaches almost daily, which are expensive and require significant discipline from families. Even in these countries that have enjoyed relative recent success (Finland won their first game at a major tournament at Euro 2020, and Denmark reached the semi-final), debate is rife regarding whether this method is the most fruitful as it effectively ignores children from poorer backgrounds unless academies pick them up at a young age.

England’s system of producing young talent, for its historical faults, has hit this balance well in recent years. Eberechi Eze, a player who grew up playing in south London’s cages, spent his teenage years jumping between London academies, starting at Arsenal. When he was released, he played organized grassroots football while continuing in the cages until Queens Park Rangers picked him up. At 24, he had the best season of his professional career with Crystal Palace and is an ambassador for McDonald’s Fun Football sessions, providing free coaching for five to 11-year-olds across the UK. While MLS Go is not going to be without cost, there are lots of these sponsored coaching initiatives knocking about across the pond, and they’re very popular. 

To build a passion for the sport, youngsters need environments to play recreationally while offering access to proper coaching if they want to take it more seriously. If it takes in-your-face branding for MLS to push through with this, then so be it. 

Abnos: That’s all really interesting — the commercial element is apparently way more present at the grassroots level in the UK than I initially thought. I’m also struck by another important difference, which is that all these programs in the UK and elsewhere have established physical environments where they take place. You talk about the south London cages, but most U.S. communities don’t have an equivalent of that for soccer, and MLS Go isn’t talking about creating a similar type of physical space. You also mention Nordic countries where kids play almost every day, but most U.S. communities aren’t close-knit or soccer-mad enough to make something like that happen, and MLS Go isn’t creating that type of scene either; its website specifically says its programs will not run more than two practices per week. 

What we lack is not enforced programming; it’s venues and community. It’s infrastructure. If the people running soccer in the U.S. want to grow the game meaningfully, they need to build way more environments where the game can grow organically, in places where people already are. 

There are some good recent examples involving mini-pitches: The Station Soccer program in Atlanta brought them to public transportation stations, and a community has sprung up in these spots. MLS itself has built mini-pitches through its charitable arm, including in Minnesota during last year’s All-Star Game. NYCFC alone has built 50 mini-pitches throughout the five boroughs, many of which are located in or near school communities. But the U.S. is a gigantic country; we need more places like this. If MLS Go was instead a campaign to multiply these sorts of projects, they could market and brand it however they want and I’d be happy (not that I’m the target audience!). I’d also be supremely jealous of the younger generation. I would have killed to have a mini-pitch anywhere near my neighborhood growing up — someplace I could go for free and meet other people that liked the weird “foreign” sport I liked, and maybe get in a game or two. 

Burke: Wow, mini-pitches across the country would be excellent and the envy of most of the world. Lack of access to affordable purpose-built football facilities is a problem in the UK, too; I can count on two hands the number of venues in Birmingham that have turf fields and are open to the public, all of which are rather expensive. This is where the relative lack of a tight football community and culture shows itself as the most significant factor in breeding the next generation of football players and fans, in my opinion.

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Where there’s a will, there’s a way. My friends and I grew up playing football at the park with our jumpers for goalposts, or we’d set up a game on concrete with a goal painted on a wall. I could do that because my friends lived within walking distance of my house and were also obsessed with football. You could have set us up anywhere, and we’d have made a game; I imagine the same is true for basketball in the States.

Abnos: It is, and to be clear that sort of improvised soccer scene does absolutely exist in the U.S. as well – that’s how my family and I played games together growing up. A big question in American soccer right now is how best to grow that level of passion to the point where it stops being a niche. I think we may be looking at a chicken/egg problem: does a soccer culture create soccer spaces, or do soccer spaces create a soccer culture? 

Burke: Very few other sports are easier to pick up and play than football, if any. Undoubtedly, there must be a greater emphasis on building pitches across the States for young people to use, ensuring they are accessible and in diverse communities. But MLS Go is increasing accessibility by bringing football directly to children across 18 cities, most of which have some football heritage already.

Ok, the branding is a bit gross, and they might have built a few hundred pitches across the nation to develop the initiative further, MLS Go is broadly a good thing if it delivers a space for youngsters to get involved in football while keeping the licensing fee for the program, which is said to include the cost of kit and equipment, and registration fees affordable for all.

Abnos: That last part is especially important, as is the nature of the partnerships with local organizations that MLS Go says it’s forging to carry all this out – I will give them some credit for choosing that approach as opposed to trying to run it all themselves. The marketing side still rankles me a bit, but that may just be down to my own personal politics. Thanks for indulging my cynicism, Elias. And as a bonus, I now know Eberechi Eze’s developmental history! A productive conversation indeed. 

(Photo: Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images)

ANGEL CITY – MATCH HIGHLIGHTSMATCH RECAP
Angel City drew the Courage 0–0 on the road Saturday, starting a multi-game stint on the road with a point and a clean sheet—the team’s first of 2023. ACFC’s next match is Saturday, May 27 in Seattle against Megan Rapinoe’s OL Reign.  ACFC returns home to take on the Chicago Red Stars on Monday, June 5 at 7 PM. Purchase tickets for MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL ACFC EDITION below! 

Indy hosts Louisville City for the first of two matchups this season

#LIPAFC Preview 
Indy Eleven vs Louisville City FC
Saturday, May 27, 2023 – 7:00 p.m. ET
Michael A Carroll Stadium – Indianapolis, Ind.

Follow Live:
Local TV: WNDY   
Streaming Video: ESPN+ (click to subscribe) 
Spanish Radio: Exitos Radio 94.3 FM & exitos943.com
In-game updates: @IndyElevenLive Twitter feed
Stats: #INDvCOS MatchCenter at USLChampionship.com

2023 USL Championship Records:
Indy Eleven: 3W-4L-3D (-4 GD), 12 pts; 7th in Eastern Conference 
Louisville City FC: 5W-3L-2D (-2 GD), 17 pts; 3rd in Eastern Conference 

Community Health Network Sports Medicine Indy Eleven Injury Report:
OUT: DF Robby Dambrot (L knee)
QUESTIONABLE: None

Discipline Report:
IND: none
COS: none

Setting the Scene

The Boys in Blue remain at home Saturday for a USL Championship match-up vs Louisville City FC. The Eleven sits at 3-4-3 on the season after a 1-0 win vs Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC last Saturday. The victory snapped a four-game home winless streak.

SERIES VS. LOUISVILLE CITY

All official competitions: 5W-8L-6D (20 GF/30 GA)
All competitions at home: 4W-5L-1D (9GF/15 GA)
All competitions away: 1W-3L-5D (11 GF/15 GA)

USL Championship regular season: 4W-5L-6D (16 GF/20 GA)
USLC regular season at home: 3W-3L-1D (6 GF/9 GA)
USLC regular season away: 1W-2L-5D (10 GF/11 GA)

ELEVEN ADDS TO ATTACK WITH ROBERTO MOLINA SIGNING
MAY 18, 2023
Indy Eleven announced the signing of forward Roberto Molina. Per club policy, details of the contract will not be released.

Molina spent the 2021 and 2022 seasons with USL Championship side Las Vegas Lights. In 45 appearances, including 30 during his rookie campaign, Molina tallied three goals and seven assists.

The Salvadoran was selected as the 45th overall pick in the 2022 MLS SuperDraft by the Colorado Rapids and has registered five caps with El Salvador’s National Team in International Friendlies and CONCACAF Nations League action. In one season at UC Irvine (2019), Molina appeared in all 19 matches, making 17 starts, and was named to the Big West All-Freshman Team. He was third on the team with nine points, netting three goals and adding three assists.

Indy has also announced the addition of Academy signing Grayson Elmquist. As part of this season’s U19 USL Academy Championship team, Elmquist earned Golden Boot and Golden Ball honors. He will join the Eleven until he reports to Xavier for the 2023 season.

LAST TIME OUT
MAY 20, 2023
IND 1:0 COS

Bryan Rebellon’s early tally would be enough to give Indy Eleven their first home win of the season in USL Championship play. The win moved Indy to 3W-4L-3D on the season, while Colorado fell to 5W-5L-1D..

Rebellon scored the game’s only goal in the 16th minute, on a late run into the box with a ball left from Sebastian Guenzatti. He was injured on the play and would end up being substituted for by Jesus Vaquez in the 19th minute. 

Although Colorado would dominate possession for the first-half (61%-39%) they were not able to get a shot past Yannik Oettl, and only managed one shot in the half. Indy had a prime chance to extend their lead in the 2nd half, beginning with four consecutive corner kicks, but were unable to find the back of the net, twice being denied by Colorado goalkeeper Christian Herrera and also had a Guenzatti shot hit the frame and bounce wide. 

Despite losing the possession battle 59%-41% and being outshot by Colorado 12-9, Indy was able to hold on for the win. Dambrot led the Eleven with three shots, while Yannik Oettl had seven saves in the net.

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5/19/23 Forward Balogun Chooses US, Indy 11 home Sat 7 pm, Champ League Final set Man City vs Inter Milan, Big Games, Prez/State Cup Weekend

Notes

FIFA unveiled the World Cup 2026 logo this week for the USA, Canada & Mexico’s Men’s World Cup and its well horrific in my eyes, FIFA could mess up a great dream – here was the reveal party.  MLS welcomed their 30th team this week with the news that San Diego is paying $500 million to join the league (CRAZY) interesting development approach they are taking,  MLS had midweek games this week and they were rocking it in Charlotte and Atlanta.  Great to see Cincy top of the Table in the East-I gotta get to a game this summer! PS some good games this week but 2 crappy ones on Apple TV Free. Of course the Expected Champions League Final is Man City vs Inter Milan as both teams stood tall at home. Real’s Goalkeeper Courtois (Cor-Twah) was spectacular and still gave up 4 to Man City, that’s how dominant the favorites were at home vs the holders. (tons of stories below)

Arsenal #9 Foleran Balogun Switches to US National Team

Huge news that the US Men welcome Arsenal Stricker Foleran Balogun Forward to the fold as the 20 year old announced he will play for the US instead of England.  This young striker is one of the top rated under 21 players in the world and joins young US dual nationals Yunus Musah, Sergio Dest and   .  Balogun has scored 19 goals this season on loan at Ligue 1 side Stade de Reims and is a legit scorer the likes of which the US hasn’t seen in years. (lots of stories below about him).   It looks like former Leeds United and Red Bull Coach Jessie Marsch is all but a lock for the US head job – I don’t know why they don’t just have him start this summer before the Nations League and Gold Cup.  That 2nd round Gold Cup game will be in Cincy on July 9th tix still available, I’m planning the road trip.

Indy 11 home Sat 7 pm vs Colorado Springs

A hat trick for Sacramento Republic FC’s Russell Cicerone led the home team to a 3-1 victory over Indy Eleven Saturday night at Heart Health Park in Sacramento, California. The loss dropped Indy to 2W-4L-3D on the season, while Sacramento improved to 6W-0L-3D to stay atop the USL Championship’s Western Conference standings. The Eleven returns home this Saturday, May 20, against Colorado Springs for Military Appreciation Night.  @ the Mike and on WISH TV8. A portion of each ticket purchased via this link will directly support HVAF of Indiana. Indy Eleven will match each ticket purchased via the Military Giveback Link, ensuring that a veteran/military member will have the opportunity to attend and be recognized. Our U13 Boys teams are headind downtown on Saturday for the game!!  Buy Tix now via indyeleven.com/tickets  or by calling 317-685-1100   Full Schedule   Promotions 

American GK Horvath Leads Luton Town to Promotion Playoff Final

Luton Town, with American Goalkeeper Ethan Horvath, advanced to the EFL Playoff Final where they will face Coventry City at Wembley Sat, May 27th at 11:45 am on ESPN+ for the chance to move up to the EPL next season. Highlights from the 2-0 victory. Luton Town is Carmel FC Director of Coaching Goalkeeper Juergen Sommer’s first employer in 1990 when he became the first American to play in the first flight of English football.  He later was named GK of the year the same year he lead them to the FA Cup Semi-Finals in Wembley.  Unfortunately fellow American GK Zach Stefan’s mistake cost Middlesborough as they lost to Coventry City 1-0 to keep it from being an All-American GK Final. 

U-20 Men’s World Cup on Fox Starts Fri

The U20 World Cup Starts this weekend on Fox Sports and Telemundo as the US faces Ecuador Sat 2 pm on Fox Soccer, then Fiji at 2 pm on Fox Sports 2 Tues, followed by Slovakia Fri, May 26 at 2 pm on FS2.  While the US had issues with MLS & other clubs not releasing some of our top players to play – with GK Gaga Slovina, Cade Cowell, Kevin Paredes, Owen Wolf, & Caleb Wiley, on board the US still has a good chance to advance to at least the Quarter Finals if not further. I will be tuning in (see stories and TV schedule below). 

Good Luck to all the Teams in President & State Cup games this weekend at Grand Park – especially our Carmel FC Teams.  I will be reffing some on Sunday. Speaking of reffing – we are in desperate need of good refs for both High School and USSF. Its honestly the best job a high school aged kid can have – you get paid well over $20 per game min and you can control your own schedule and games are mostly on weekends.  Where else can you make $20+ an hour as a 13-18 year old and tell your boss you can’t work on Sat at 4 pm?   Become a Referee Must be 13.  Also huge news that Liverpool’s Klopp has been suspended the last 2 games after his comments about the ref a couple of weeks back.  Check out the Full Referee section below.    

The Carmel FC 2010 Gold and Blue along with the 2012 Grey Girls are headed to the game tomorrow – section 109 come by and say hello ! Buy Tix now via indyeleven.com/tickets  or by calling 317-685-1100   Full Schedule   Promotions 



2023 Alumni Summer Soccer

Location: Shelborne Fields – CCCSC – 3451 W. 126th St., Carmel  (Ages: 18 – 35)  $105  Sign Up

Grab your friends and make your own team or sign up and we’ll place you on a team, you don’t have to live in Carmel.
Games will take place on Wednesday and Sunday evenings. Dates: June 18, 21, 25, 28 & July 9, 12, 16, 19, 23, 26 Sign Up

GAMES ON TV

(American’s names in Parenthesis)

Sat, May 20

7:30 am USA                       Tottenham vs Brentford  

9:30 am ESPN+                  Union Berlin (Pfok) vs Hoffenhiem

9:30 am ESPN+                  Bayern Munich vs Schalke

10 am USA                          Bournemouth vs Man United

10 am ?                                 Liverpool vs Aston Villa

10 am Peacock                  Fulham (Robinson) vs Crystal Palace  

10 am Peacock                  Wolves vs Everton

12:30 pm NBC or USA     Nottingham Forest vs Arsenal

12:30 pm ESPN+               Bayern Munich vs RB Leipzig  

2 pm FS2?/Tele                 US U20s vs Ecudor  U20 WC 

2:45 pm  Para+                  Milan vs Sampdoria

7 pm ESPN+                Indy 11 vs Colorado Springs  

7:30 pm Apple TV        

7:30 pm Apple TV        

7 pm Para+                 NC Courage vs  Angel City (Ertz)  NWSL

8:30 pm Para+                   KC Current (Franch) vs San Diego (Morgan, Girma)

10:30 pm Apple+       

Sun, May 21                      

8:30 am USA               West Ham vs Leeds United (McKinney, Aaronson)

11:30 am USA             Man City vs Chelsea  

12 noon CBSSN          Napoli vs Inter Milan

12:30 ESPN+                Valencia vs Real Madrid

2:30 pm beIN Sport     Auxerre vs PSG (Messi, Mbappe)

5 pm FS2                     Italy vs Brazil U20 World Cup

5:30 pm Para+, Sirius  Portland Thorns (Rapino) vs Chicago Red Stars NWSL

6 pm  Para+                OL Seattle Reign vs NY Gotham FC (Williams) NWSL

Mon, May 22

2 pm FS2                              England vs Tunisia U20 WC

2:45 pm Para+                   Juventus vs Empoli

3 pm USA                            New castle vs Leicester City

5 pm FS2                              Gambia vs Honduras U20 WC

Tues, May 23    

2 pm FS2/Tele                   USA U20s vs Fiji  U20 WC

4 pm ESPN+                        Real Valladiod vs Barcelona

5 pm FS2                              Argentina vs Guatamala  U20WC

7:30 pm                                NY Red Bulls vs Cincy US Open Cup

7:30 pm                                Inter Miami vs Nashville US Open Cup?

Weds, May 24    

3 pm USA                            Brighton vs Man City

4 pm ESPN+                        Espanol vs Atletico Madrid

5 pm FS2                              Brazil vs Domincan Republic U20 WC

7 pm                                      Pittsburgh Riverhounds vs Columbus Crew US Open

7:30 pm ESPN+                  Louisville vs FC Tulsa USL

8 pm                                      Birmingham Legion vs Charlotte USOC

9 pm                                      Austin vs Chicago  USOC

10 pm                                    Colorado vs Real Salt Lake USOC

Thur, May 24    

2 pm FS2                              Uraguay vs England U20 WC

3 pm USA                            Man United vs Chelsea

4 pm ESPN+                        Real Madrid vs Rayo Vallencano  

Fri, May 26    

2 pm FS2/Tele                   USA U20s vs Slovakia U20 WC

Sat, June 10                       

2 pm CBS                             Champions League Final

Thurs, June 15

10 pm                                    USMNT vs Mexico  Nations League Semi’s

Sat, June 24

9:30 pm                                USMNT vs Jamaica (Soldier Field) Gold Cup

Fri, July 21                           USWNT vs Vietnam Women’s World Cup

Indy 11 Schedule

NWSL Schedule

Soccer Saturday’s are every Sat 9-10 am on 93.5 and 107.5 FM with Greg Rakestraw

U20 World Cup Schedule – Go USA !!

USA

Balogun given green light to play for USMNT  ESPN

What will Arsenal striker Balogun bring to USMNT? ESPNFC Jeff Carlisle and Julien Laurens

Balogun given green light to play for USMNT  ESPN

U.S. beats England for coveted striker
USMNT upcoming schedule – Nations League, friendlies, Gold Cup

The New Logo for the US World Cup 2026  

NY, NJ promise ‘8 Super Bowls’ for ’26 World Cup 3hReuters

Champions League

Is ‘unstoppable’ Manchester City the best team in the world?
Man City are already the world’s best team, but UCL win would make them legends
Mark Ogden

Pep: Victorious City can ‘visualise’ treble now Rob Dawson

Silva shines as Man City show Champions League swagger to dismantle Madrid

City flawless in thorough UCL dismantling of Real Madrid
Guardiola’s masterpiece puts Man City on brink of ending Champions League wait

Guardiola salutes ‘special’ Man City after Real rout seals final berth

Pep Guardiola: ‘The Treble is there now – we can think about it’

Kevin De Bruyne will have his legacy moment – but this time he has
Haaland
Madrid’s miracle well runs dry in Manchester

Manchester City vs Real Madrid player ratings: Kyle Walker shuts down Vinicius Junior

Inter will hope to thrive as underdogs in Champions League final

Inter Milan see off AC Milan to reach Champions League final

Univision Wins UEFA U.S. Spanish Media Rights in $225M Deal


Who will be in the Champions League 2023/24? Here’s every team who have qualified so far

EPL

The 7 best storylines at season’s end: Liverpool magic, Haaland’s goals and Serie A success Bill Connelly

Luton Town currently won’t be allowed to play Premier League football if they get promoted
Luton advances in playoffs, earns shot at playing in Premier League for first time

Luton or Coventry would provide Premier League with overdue burst of warm nostalgia
Mark Robins might be the most underrated manager in the country

Who should be coach of the Year in the EPL?

Indy 11

Indy Eleven Acquires Top-Tier Women’s Professional Franchise as Part of USL Super League

Recap – SAC 3:1 IND

Macauley King Returns to Indy Eleven via Transfer from Colorado Springs

RECAP – LDN 1:2 IND

Season tickets

Full Schedule   Promotions 

new stadium

MLS


MLS Inks $500 Million Deal for San Diego Expansion

MLS to unveil new team in San Diego after record fee

San Diego named 30th MLS club; debut in ’25  Cesar Hernandez

TelevisaUnivision has won the Spanish-language rights to broadcast UEFA club competitions 

Reffing

Reffing National League Games with the Cream of the Crop baby HT Pham (C) and Marc Emenhiser (L) – over 41 years of High School Reffing Experience right here !!


Jurgen Klopp will watch Roberto Firmino and James Milner’s Anfield farewell from stands

Klopp given two-match touchline ban for referee rant
Monday Night Football reveals what referees and Var are really saying to each other

Angel City Ower fined for Ref comments

Become a Referee Must be 13

Hey we got the Big man Nate Sinders (left) he blessed us with his presence and gave out Nate Coins to me and Chris (right)
A little later ENCL U19 Girls Action on the A Field under the lights baby with Blake Gibson (left)

Goalkeeping

Fantastic Saves Champions League 2nd Legs

Maignan reflexes deny Dzeko for AC Milan
Arsenal goalkeeper Ramsdale signs new Gunners deal

What will Arsenal striker Folarin Balogun bring to USMNT?

ESPN Jeff Carlisle Julien Laurens May 18, 2023, 09:00 AM ET

The U.S. men’s national team has had its share of victories when it comes to recruiting dual nationals. Right-back Sergino Dest and midfielder Yunus Musah both saw extensive playing time at the 2022 World Cup after making the difficult choice of which country to represent.The USMNT’s biggest recruiting coup of all might have happened on Tuesday, though.

ADVERTISING

Striker Folarin Balogun, on loan at Ligue 1 side Stade de Reims from Premier League giants Arsenalpledged his international future to the U.S. by filing one-time switch with FIFA. He could have played for Nigeria or England, the latter of which he represented at youth level. (Balogun also logged minutes for the U.S. U18 team under then-U.S. U20 manager Tab Ramos.)What makes Balogun such a prize catch is the position he plays and the form he’s in. While in recent years the U.S. has increased its quality at positions like defender, central midfield and on the wing, the center-forward position has been a glaring hole in the depth chart.Right now the position is manned by solid, but not spectacular options such as Norwich City ‘s Josh SargentRicardo Pepi, who just finished a loan spell at Dutch side Groningen, Antalyaspor’s Haji Wright and FC Dallas‘ Jesus Ferreira. The lackluster play of Wright and Ferreira, in particular, at the World Cup revealed just how much of a weakness the position is for the USMNT.Balogun could change all of that. He has enjoyed a scintillating club season on loan, scoring 19 goals in league play, which is tied for fifth in Ligue 1. Along the way he has shown immense skill in terms of finishing, taking players on and linking up with teammates, combined with the ability to ride challenges from opposition defenders. And there’s more.”I think in terms of being on the field, obviously [Balogun] makes great runs,” Ramos told ESPN. “He sacrifices for the team, so he will pressure the ball. He will do all of the things that a team environment requires on and off the field, so I think he’s a full package.”That skill set — one that is more complete than any other forward in the USMNT pool — could have a knock-on effect for teammates like Christian Pulisic and Giovanni Reyna. That duo, as well as other wingers like Brenden Aaronson and Timothy Weah, are often the target of persistent fouling from opponents. The respect level from opposition defenders toward Balogun could create a bit more space for U.S. wingers and central midfielders to maneuver.And what of the existing complement of forwards? At the least it would demand that they raise their respective games.Pepi is just 21, and has his career on an upward trajectory again after scoring 12 goals for Groningen, this after struggling with Bundesliga side FC Augsburg, who still hold his contract. There is still time for him to hone his game further. Sargent recaptured some goal-scoring form in the English Championship with 13 goals, although he did spend considerable time as a winger with license to tuck inside. Ferreira and Wright, despite their club successes, would appear to be the odd players out.Granted, Balogun’s arrival isn’t a guarantee of anything. The U.S. Soccer Federation still has to hire a coach after all, and it remains to be seen how Balogun would fit in the new manager’s system. The onus is still on his teammates to get him the ball in dangerous spots, something the U.S. struggled with at the World Cup.The more dangerous players a team has on the field, though, the better off it will be. Balogun’s arrival does precisely that. — Jeff Carlisle.

The view from France

The only reason why Balogun was not nominated for Ligue 1’s Best Young Player of the Season award is because he turns 22 in two months’ time. The Arsenal loanee is slightly too old for the prize — Lyon‘s Bradley Barcola and Rayan Cherki, Monaco’s Eliesse Ben Seghir, Montpellier‘s Elyi Wahi and PSG’s Nuno Mendes are 20 or under.

However, there is an argument that he could have been part of the senior Ligue 1 Player of the Season race, alongside PSG’s Kylian Mbappe and Lionel MessiLens‘ Lois Openda and Seko Fofana and Lille‘s Jonathan David. With 19 goals and two assists in 34 league games (31 starts), Balogun has been Reims’ best player, Ligue 1’s revelation of the season, and one of the best players in the league, period.

To say that we saw it coming would be a lie. Even at Reims, no one could have predicted a season like this. He arrived in the Champagne region on loan from Arsenal (without an option to sign permanently) at the start of August, having not had a preseason with his new teammates. Yet, under then-Reims manager Oscar Garcia, he adapted quickly and scored in his first game, away at Marseille on Aug. 7, off the bench.

The following game, against Clermont, he started, scored again and never looked back. He scored against Marseille (both home and away), Lens (home and away), PSG, Monaco and managed a hat trick against Lorient in January.

More than the goals and his finishing ability, the most impressive attribute Balogun shows is his maturity. His intelligence and awareness is great, his first touch always has a purpose, while his runs are smart and well-timed.

This season in Ligue 1 has proved, if needed, what a talent he is. He deserves a chance to shine internationally too. — Julien Laurens.

Folarin_balogun_-_asn_top_-_usmnt_-_intro_-_6-16-23_-_us_soccer_-_2US SOCCER

USMNT analysis

Analysis: Balogun switches to the USMNT, raises the bar for the team

While this has been coming, Folarin Balogun has switched his international affiliation to the USMNT. ASN’s Brian Sciaretta offers up a lot of thoughts on the matter. 

BY BRIAN SCIARETTAPOSTED MAY 16, 2023 3:00 PM

N A PROCESS THAT has actually taken several years, U.S. Soccer today got the man they wanted when Arsenal forward Folarin Balogun’s one-time change of association with FIFA was approved thereby permanently switching his international affiliation from England to the United States. The moves gives the U.S. team a much needed boost in the attack.

For fans of the U.S. program, this is very exciting because it boosts the team’s goal scoring capabilities by giving an option in perhaps the team’s biggest need – the No. 9 position. Balogun in in the midst of a breakthrough season at Stade de Reims in France’s Ligue 1.“We are delighted that Folarin has chosen to represent the United States,” said USMNT head coach Anthony Hudson. “Not only is he an extremely talented player, he’s also a good man who is going to add value to our National Team both on and off the field at a time when the team is continuing to improve. It’s clear that he values his U.S. roots and we can’t wait for him to come in and be a part of the team.”Here are a bunch of thoughts on Balogun’s move.

By the numbers

This season has been a tough go for Americans abroad. The numbers just haven’t been there for Americans, especially in the top five European leagues. Leaving out defenders and goalkeepers, here is a look at midfielders, wingers, and forwards regarding their production in league play.The numbers aren’t productive. It total, this group of players produces a goal every 1012 minutes of league play and an assist every 843 minutes of league play. Sure, Tim Weah has spent a lot of time as a fullback this season but that is also part of the problem. If he wasn’t playing fullback, he probably would have played significantly less minutes.

This season has just seen the productivity of most of the top players of the U.S. national team player pool decline. Gio Reyna’s goal scoring ratio is excellent but the flip side of that is that he has not played much at all. Some of his goals, such as over this past weekend in a lopsided win over Borussia Monchengladbach, have come at times when the game has already been decided.For the second-best producer on this list, Jordan Pefok, he has four goals but has only scored once since mid-September and has seen his minutes drastically cut in the second half of the season.The result has seen Gregg Berhalter and later Anthony Hudson attempt to bolster the attack with players based outside of the top five European leagues. The results have been mixed. Ricardo Pepi started off well in 2021, struggled in 2022, but is back on track in 2023. Haji Wright, Jesus Ferreira, and Josh Sargent have all been uneven. Daryl Dike has played well at times but can’t stay healthy.

But now you add Balogun to the mix.



Balogun has more goals this season in Ligue 1 than all other Americans in the top five European leagues combined.

Numerically it’s a huge boost. It’s easy to see why this could be a huge help  to the U.S. team. But he’s not going to fix some of the key issues – such as the ongoing concerns for most of the players. 

But, as always, sometimes things on paper do not always translate over into reality. Balogun still has only top season under his belt. It’s not yet determined if this will be his true level going forward. But it is still a high potential add to the program.

It is also beneficial to the U.S. team that he is doing this at the beginning of the cycle. If this was in the run up to a World Cup, figuring out how to add him into the team would have taken away from the time needed for what is normally final preparations.

Now Balogun will get the Nations League followed by a long series of friendlies leading up to the Copa America next summer. There is plenty of time for Anthony Hudson followed by the next U.S. manager to make this work.

A long process

This has been a process for nearly five years in the making. Soon after he was identified as a dual U.S. citizen, Balogun was called up to a U.S. U-18 team camp in August 2018. That camp was run by U.S. U-20 head coach Tab Ramos. Prior to that, he had been playing for English youth national teams. Following that, he returned to playing for English youth national teams.

But the following year, Ramos offered Balogun a spot on the 2019 U-20 World Cup team but Balogun was still unwilling to file his switch with FIFA.

In March 2022, when Balogun was on loan at Middlesbrough, Gregg Berhalter attended Balogun’s match but Balogun opted to play for England’s U-21 team later that month.

Things began to take a significant turn in March 2023 when Balogun withdrew from a camp with England’s U-21 team and decided to vacation in Orlando – where the U.S. team was training for Nations League games. From there, it only was a matter of time.

“My decision to represent the United States, it came together with my family,” Balogun said in an interview with U.S. Soccer. “We decided it would be the right thing for me, to represent the country I was born in. In the end it became a no-brainer, but for sure, it’s just something I wanted to do and it feels like I’m at home here.”

“When I broke the news to my family they were all just over the moon, especially my mom,” he added. “She said, ‘What took you so long?’, so for sure we were all on the same page. Then after that conversation, I just sent the message across to my agent and said ‘Let’s make it happen.’”

England botched this

On of the big takeaways from this dual national “recruitment,” is that this was almost as much of a case of England botching it as the U.S. winning it.

Once Balogun began breaking out in Ligue 1, England continued to show no interest in calling him up or even communicating with him as a member of the senior national team pool. England’s player pool is deep, but there isn’t any national team program that should be detached from an eligible player who is pushing towards 20 goals in a top five league. It’s hard to see Argentina, Brazil, Germany, or Spain being detached from such a player. That is not the same as saying a player like Balogun would get an automatic call-up to any of those powerful national teams. But each of those teams would likely be communicating with a player performing like Balogun in a top five league.

But England was detached. When Balogun returned to Reims from visiting the U.S. team in Orlando in March, England’s FA decided to meet with Balogun – but it sent England U-21 manager Lee Carsley. It was a surprisingly tone-deaf move that probably hurt England’s effort to keep Balogun.

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Balogun’s problem with England is that he had one of the top scorers in a top-five league but was stuck with England’s U-21 team. If England was serious about keeping him, full national team manager Gareth Southgate or someone high within the FA would have met with Balogun. Instead, they sent the U-21 manager to meet with him when Balogun’s problem with England was playing with the U-21 team.

Balogun is now talking about how this decision to play for the U.S. team was a decision from the heart. But it’s hard to think that this wasn’t very avoidable for England, if the FA wanted to keep him. Balogun likely would have accepted a March call-up from England’s full team. He might have also have stayed if Southgate had been the one communicating with him telling him to be patient for a few more months into the summer.

The U.S. hasn’t really been in a position to pitch a long-term vision to Balogun either given that it has an interim manager and its Sporting Director wasn’t even announced until May and he won’t even begin until August.

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“The conversations I had with the coach were very brief. We spoke numerous times, but he was just obviously telling me about the plan and how much he wants me to join the team. Of course, I just told him that I was keen and I understood the project. It was just a matter of when.”

“To represent the United States means a lot, more than people would know. I’m very proud and honored to have this opportunity, and I want to give everything I have to make our team successful.”

While Balogun is all in on the United States now, this seems like this was winnable for England, but the FA either didn’t care enough or it didn’t respect the attractiveness of the U.S. option for Balogun.

Next steps for Balogun

For Balogun, the next steps are obvious. He needs to show up for the Nations League and show chemistry with the U.S. attackers. The U.S. team’s offense has been struggling because there are just not enough scoring options. The midfield doesn’t score a lot and the team’s forwards haven’t been consistent. It comes down to Christian Pulisic and occasionally Brenden Aaronson or Tim Weah.

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But now, Balogun is going to have an opportunity to prove himself and he’ll have a grace period to get adjusted. And while Balogun has a lot on his plate on the field, he has almost as much off the field. The U.S. team has a strong comradery and most of the players have been together for years. Fitting into that group will also be part of a process for Balogun.

“Luckily for me, my first time is going to be in a competitive tournament so of course the ambition is to win and there’s not really much more to it,” Balogun said. “I’m going to have the opportunity to get in and train with the boys, but for sure it’s just straight down to business when we head to Vegas.”

The U.S. team will continue to need more forwards. Even if Balogun plays well initially, players get injured, form changes quickly and players can fall into an extended dip, and other players simply raise their level. This doesn’t mean players like Ricardo Pepi or Josh Sargent are locked into being backups for the foreseeable future.It just means the bar is raised for everyone.

It’s So Good to Have Good USMNT News: FOLARIN BALOGUN CHOSES USA
Folarin Balogun  chose to represent the USMNT on a one-time switch from England on Tuesday. The fleet-footed 21-year-old striker has had a breakout season, blasting 20 goals in all competitions for Stade de Reims in Ligue 1. Expect the Arsenal loanee to be on the U.S. Nations League roster this summer.
Balogun’s is a remarkable story. Born in Brooklyn to Nigerian parents who were visiting family here, living in London at the time, and they moved back shortly after his birth. He could have played for England, the United States or Nigeria, and he represented both England and the U.S. at youth level, before becoming a fixture in the England Under-21s.
Rumors about him changing to the United States bubbled throughout the last World Cup cycle — and we at MiB have heard that he came incredibly close to joining the U.S. — but the switch didn’t materialize. And the reality is, this is a hungry gent. In that England National Team depth chart, there’s so many strikers ahead of him. But in the United States by comparison, we not only have a World Cup coming to home turf in 2026, but remember, we scored three goals total at the last World Cup: one intentionally, one off Christian Pulisic’s crotch, and one completely by accident. The U.S.’s entire World Cup campaign was in many ways an infomercial crying out for just how badly we needed a striker.
Back in March, Balogun was courted by the U.S. in Florida. Name another football federation who can get you on the field with the Yankees, or courtside with the Orlando Magic. And now he rides with us.
How good will he be? He’s still young. And there is uncertainty about his club situation. But there is no doubt that this is a gent who can score, who thrives on the counter, who lives to pursue through balls, and can create and take his own chances. He’ll be a wonderful, badly-needed addition to this young United States squad.
But we’ve got to steel ourselves against the weight of our own expectations. We dream so much as U.S. fans, and one player alone is not going to allow us to silver bullet our way to fulfilling those dreams.
But big picture, it’s so good to have some good news coming out of the men’s national team program after the past few months. And this announcement feels like a symbol of new direction, new momentum, new possibility. It’s a great day for the United States team, for U.S. fans across the nation. Go, go USA.
More Balogun Coverage … 📹 Flo talks about what it means to represent the U.S. … 📹 How Balogun’s decision was covered in England … 📹 Balogun talks about U.S. fans on social media playing a role in his decision … 🧵 The Complete Folarin Balogun Origin Story … 📹 Balogun’s Announcement Video … 📹 Balogun Ligue 1 Highlight Reel … 📹 Flo scores at Lens last Friday.
US World Cup Champions in Europe:
More hardware for The Great Lindsey Horan 🇫🇷(28; Golden, CO), as Olympique Lyon topped PSG, 2-1, in the Women’s French Cup Final, marking the 10th time they’ve won the national cup trophy. Horan and OL can make it a double on Sunday, as a win over PSG — or likely a draw, given their +22 goal differential lead — would give them the French League title as well.
On loan at Lyon, Horan is set to return to Portland Thorns at the end of the season. She isn’t the only USWNT star who looks set to depart OL, as Cat Macario 🇫🇷(23; São Luís, BRA)is reportedly going to sign with Chelsea when her contract with the French side expires this summer.
Eagles Going Up 🤞:
Ethan Horvath 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 (27; Highlands Ranch, CO) made two saves — and heard some USA! chants — in Luton Town’s 2-0 win over Lynden Gooch 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 (27; Santa Cruz, CA) and Sunderland in the Championship Promotion Playoff Semi Final on Tuesday. The Hatters, who have never been promoted to the Premier League, are now off to Wembley for the final on May 27, where they could face Zack Steffen 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 (28; Downington, PA) and Middlesbrough. Boro face Coventry City in the other semi final Wednesday at 3 p.m. EST, live on ESPN+.
News and Notes:
Reports this week revealed that Chelsea tried to send Christian Pulisic 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 (24; Hershey, PA) to AC Milan in a deal for Rafael Leao before the start of the season. Now the latest, according to the Daily Mail, is that Napoli are interested in CP10.
LONDON, ENGLAND - MAY 16: Folarin Balogun poses for a portrait in London, England. Balogun announced his commitment to represent the United States in international soccer competition. (Photo by Matt Gordon/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

Inside Folarin Balogun’s USMNT reveal: Years of discussions and a late push from England

Paul Tenorio May 19, 2023

The purpose of the Zoom call on May 4 was a mundane one — to go over the U.S. men’s national team’s timeline for the upcoming summer — but it carried significant implications for a years-long chase. 

On one end of the call was Tom King, U.S. Soccer’s associate secretary general, and Michael Kammarman, the U.S. men’s national team director of communications. On the other was Folarin Balogun’s agent, Eddie Bonsu.

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The 21-year-old Arsenal striker is in the midst of a breakout season on loan with Reims in Ligue 1. His 19 goals are tied for fifth-best in the French top division. Going into this discussion, Balogun was eligible to play for three different national teams: the U.S., where he was born; England, where he was raised; and Nigeria, the country where his parents were born. The U.S. saw Balogun as a potential game-changer at a No. 9 position that was a problem spot in the last World Cup cycle.

Balogun’s representatives had made clear they wanted any decision they made on his international future to stay quiet until June 3, when the forward’s club season in France was over. King and Kammarman wanted to make sure Balogun was aware of the roster deadlines for the summer tournaments, most specifically a May 15 deadline for CONCACAF Nations League provisional rosters. CONCACAF intended for those squads to be made public on May 19. Balogun would be on the U.S.’s list, even if he had not yet made a decision.

When the call started at 11:30 a.m. Central Time, Bonsu opened with a surprise: a decision had been made. King and Kammarman feared it would be a short call. They hadn’t been expecting any news at this stage.

“Unfortunately,” Bonsu started, letting the word hang in the air. 

Kammarman and King’s shoulders sagged. Bonsu joked later he had never seen two people go so pale. Then he dropped the news. 

“You’re stuck with us.”

Kammarman and King jumped up from their seats. A courtship that began more than two years ago, morphed into a “Where’s Waldo?” social media flurry during a U.S. camp in Orlando in March, and eventually led to hundreds of American-flag Instagram comments was officially over. On a separate call a few minutes later, Balogun let USMNT interim manager Anthony Hudson know: He was choosing to play for the U.S. 

“A lot of work by a lot of people had gone into getting to that point,” Kammarman said. “We were obviously elated.”

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The calls set off a flurry of activity over the following two weeks, including rescheduled itineraries for transatlantic flights, a Slack channel called “Mr. X’s Decision” and, eventually, a leak to the press that turned the timing for the planned announcement on its head. 

In the end, all that mattered was that the USMNT may have found a No. 9 to help solve some of its goal-scoring woes.

This is the behind the scenes story of how Balogun chose the USMNT.


The internet sleuthing that pinned Balogun as being in Orlando in March set off a firestorm on USMNT Twitter, but it only made public a recruitment process that dated back much further.

As Balogun was working on a new deal with Arsenal in 2021, then-USMNT general manager Brian McBride made contact to gauge his interest in playing for the U.S. Balogun had previously played for the U.S. Under-18 team in 2018, and youth national team coaches had remained in touch, but the player had also featured for England youth sides. When McBride reached out to Bonsu, Balogun said he wanted to focus on his contract talks and make a claim to a role at Arsenal.

McBride stayed in touch, and he reached out again last year before the World Cup to continue the dialogue. Balogun was again focused on his club career, but with the U.S. making its interest known, he started to explore the possibility. He took a trip to New York to get a feel for the country where he was born and came back feeling a real connection. 

When Hudson reached out in recent months, Balogun was open to talking more. And when a window opened up for him to go to Florida that lined up with a U.S. camp in the Orlando area, Balogun and his team hopped on a flight.

U.S. Soccer tried its best to keep Balogun’s presence quiet — notably, he had pulled out of an England Under-21 team camp as they were preparing for this summer’s UEFA Under-21 Championship — but he posted a photo to Instagram that included the partially-obscured name of a bar on the building behind him. The set off the U.S. fandom’s amateur investigation team. 

U.S. Soccer set up a meeting between Hudson and Balogun, and the Greater Orlando Sports Commission and New York Yankees chipped in by setting Balogun and his associates up with tickets to see the Orlando Magic and a Yankees spring training game. He also went to dinner with several U.S. players, including Arsenal teammate Matt Turner and former Arsenal youth teammate Yunus Musah. 

On Twitter and Instagram, every Balogun post was met with dozens of American flag emojis. At his hotel a few miles from where the U.S. was staying, people recognized Balogun and asked him to choose the U.S. It all made a big impact on the 21-year-old.

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“I think that’s when I really saw the full force of the U.S. fans,” Balogun would say later. “I was there and I just posted a photo with my friends thinking that it was just a holiday picture. Before I knew it, I just saw loads of comments and people knew I was in America, and I just really felt the love from there.”

When he left the U.S. and got back to France, Balogun took a month to think things over. The FA remained in touch and presented a plan for Balogun to play for the Under-21s this summer, and then potentially integrate in with the first team after that, where there would be considerable competition at his position. The U.S. was clear that they believed he would add immediate value to their senior men’s team. Balogun weighed it all up and spoke to family.

“His parents had been pushing the U.S. narrative for years,” Bonsu said in a phone call this week. “They always wanted him to play for the U.S., For them, you’re American, you were born there. This is where you should be. … He came back to me and said, ‘Ed, I know what I want to do. I’m going to go play for my country of birth. I feel it more than anything else. This is what I want to do.’” 

Soon after that, Balogun and Bonsu made calls to the FA to let them know the decision. They tried to change his mind and sell him on their plan for him this summer, with a chance to integrate into the senior team over time if he continued on his current trajectory.

“He told them he feels like his heart is set on playing for the U.S.,” Bonsu said. “He’s very much about that feeling. He said, ‘I feel it. This is where I feel like I need to be.’”  

Then, on May 4, Bonsu signed on to the video call to deliver the news to King and Kammarman.


Two and a half hours after ending that Zoom, at precisely 1:57 p.m., King submitted to FIFA the bulk of the paperwork needed for a one-time switch. 

The package he sent was missing just one document, but King knew the earlier he started the process the better chance U.S. Soccer had to finalize the switch before rosters were due for the Nations League finals, which begin on June 15 when the U.S. faces Mexico in their side of the semifinals.

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Conversations with Balogun’s team to plan out the announcement also started immediately. Balogun wanted certain themes to be prominent: the idea of coming home, and elements of New York and Brooklyn. They needed to schedule a photoshoot and went to work planning content for social media. U.S. Soccer senior manager of content Jeff Crandall reached out to an artist, Robert Generette III, who goes by the name Robzilla on social media. Generette had previously done a comic-like illustration of Yunus Musah for U.S. Soccer. They asked him to get to work on another piece, but they couldn’t name the player. He mocked up a newspaper front with a U.S. player, art that would eventually publish on the announcement day. 

Internally at U.S. Soccer, a group of 10 employees started the behind-the-scenes work on a Balogun announcement. Crandall started a Slack channel called “Mr. X’s Decision” to coordinate the announcement, while also trying to keep the circle of those in-the-know small. The hope was that Balogun would be able to break the news himself at the right time. 

Those in the loop included Mike Gressle, U.S. Soccer’s director of retail development, who was alerted to be ready for jersey orders (no more homemade Balogun U.S. jerseys would be needed). Head equipment manager Kyle Robertson overnighted U.S. jerseys from Los Angeles for Balogun’s photo shoot, as well as for his family members, and an American flag and U.S. crested ball.

Kammarman, video manager Nick Burton and team videographer Kevin Zemanski prepared to fly to France to meet with Balogun for photo, video and audio content. A day before they were set to fly, however, the location was changed to London. Balogun was scheduled to play Friday, May 12, and had a few days off. He was going home to see family. U.S. Soccer changed their flight. Balogun’s team booked a photo studio in Kentish Town, an area of Northwest London, with a photographer who had worked with Balogun before.

On Friday morning, King submitted the final papers to FIFA. The trio of U.S. Soccer employees got on their flights to London, and on Saturday evening at 5 p.m. they met Balogun at the studio. Balogun arrived and introduced himself to everyone in the room. He joked about his mom asking why it took so long to choose the U.S. The shoot lasted about an hour and a half.

Balogun in a U.S. shirt and draped in an American flag during his photo session in London. (Photo: Matt Gordon/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

By Sunday morning at 8 a.m. Kammarman, Burton and Zemanski were on a flight back to Chicago. The plan was for the news to drop on Wednesday, May 17, pending final word from FIFA.

On Tuesday morning at 6:04 a.m., a WhatsApp message from King pinged the group.

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“Done!!!”

Attached was a letter from FIFA. 

“Decision of the Single Judge of the Players’ Status Chamber – Change of Association,” it read. The key news was below. FIFA had approved Balogun’s one-time switch from England to the U.S. national team. 

Exactly 29 minutes later, the news leaked. An English tabloid published a story about the switch. U.S. Soccer and Balogun, who were prepared for a Wednesday announcement, went into scramble mode to go public. The video wasn’t finished yet, nor was the written content. Employees behind the scenes rushed to get things polished. Cody Sharrett, U.S. Soccer’s social media manager who edits and posts all content to social channels, didn’t check Slack until 7:30 a.m., when he was on the El train on his way into the office. A press release had to be finished and a quote from interim manager Anthony Hudson gathered. At 7:41 a.m., Balogun and his team sent a video they had conceived and produced for the announcement. U.S. Soccer shared the art from Robzilla. 

At 9:13 a.m. Central time, Balogun’s post went live. 

“He was buzzing,” Bonsu said. 

Back at U.S. Soccer, Dylan Abeles, the senior coordinator of digital media, loaded things onto the website. At 9:58 a.m., Crandall sent one more Slack message: “Let this stuff fly.”

The first U.S. Soccer social media posts went public. Two and half years of recruitment, two weeks of preparation and two and a half hours of scrambling were done. Balogun to the USMNT was officially official. All the focus now turned to the Nations League in June, and an official debut.

“One thing Flo knows: he’s not walking into the team as ‘I’m the man,’” Bonsu said. “He knows he’s got to fight and prove himself.” 

With the intrigue now over, it’s time to prove it was all worth it.

(Top photo: Matt Gordon/USSF/Getty Images for USSF)

FOLARIN BALOGUN JOURNEY TO THE USMNT, A THREAD

America, rejoice. Folarin Balogun has announced his international future is with the USMNT, over England & Nigeria. So how did “Flo” go from Brooklyn to one of the top young strikers in Europe? Here’s his story. (1/14)

Folarin Balogun was born in Brooklyn on July 3, 2001 while his parents were on holiday visiting family—one of his mother’s aunts—in the U.S. His parents then took the family back to London soon after he was born. (2/14)·

Balogun started playing organized football around the age of 6 or 7, first joining a club called Aldersbrook in East London as a center back. Growing up, he says he wasn’t a fan of any particular club, but was a fan of “the Brazilian Ronaldo.” (3/14)

Balogun was discovered by Arsenal when he was “about 10 or 11” and had switched to striker. As he tells it, he was playing in an all-day tournament with Aldersbrook—”playing well and scoring goals”—when he noticed a man speaking to his father on the sidelines. (4/14)

Balogun thought this man was “looking for the toilets” so he continued playing, eventually scoring the winner in the tournament final. It turns out this man was actually an Arsenal scout who offered Balogun a trial on the spot. (5/14)

Balogun began his trial with Arsenal, but his father also received a call from Spurs, who also offered him a trial. Balogun then trained with Arsenal three days per week, and Spurs the rest, before Arsenal offered him the chance to sign, which he accepted. (6/14)

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Balogun admits he struggled to keep up at the Arsenal Academy his first few years. He says he almost got cut at 15, but at 16 had his best season ever. “I must have had 40 goals. Even I was shocked at the transformation.” (7/14)

Around this time, Balogun’s international career was also starting to take off, as he accepted invitations from both the England U17s and the US U18s. In August 2018, he played 4 times for the U18s in a tournament in the Czech Republic, scoring twice. (8/14)

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Man City are already the best team in the world, and Champions League win would seal legendary status

  • Mark Ogden, Senior Writer, ESPN FCMay 17, 2023, 06:59 PM ET

MANCHESTER, England — Manchester City are the best team in Europe, which automatically makes them the best in the world, and whatever happens in the Champions League final against Inter Milan on June 10 won’t change that. Just ask Real Madrid, the reigning European champions, who were torn apart in a 4-0 dismantling in the semifinal second-leg at the Etihad Stadium.But nobody wants to be remembered as the best team never to win the European Cup, so Inter had better brace themselves for the toughest game of their lives against City in Istanbul next month. Man City under manager Pep Guardiola are hurtling towards sporting immortality.

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With City still appealing 115 charges for breaching Premier League rules between 2009 and 2018, history may yet view this team’s achievements through a different lens, but right now their football is the only barometer by which they can be measured. And having dethroned Real with a brutal display of dominance and ruthless efficiency in Manchester after a 1-1 in Madrid last week, Manchester City proved themselves to be the new kings of Europe.It was a rout, matching Real Madrid‘s biggest-ever Champions League defeat, which came at Anfield against Liverpool in 2008-09. Every single City player dominated his Real opponent and if they were chasing revenge for last season’s dramatic semifinal defeat against manager Carlo Ancelotti’s side, they secured it.It was like watching the heavyweight champion of the world swatting aside a no-hoper challenger. But Real Madrid aren’t no hopers — they are Real Madrid. This was a night when Kevin De BruyneJohn StonesKyle WalkerRuben DiasRodriJack Grealish and Bernardo Silva, the two-goal hero in the first-half, produced 10 out of 10 displays to leave world-class opponents reeling.No team can live with City right now. They have won 19 of their last 23 games and haven’t lost any of them. Three wins in three competitions is all they now need to secure the so-called treble.Inter Milan might yet produce one of the biggest upsets of all-time by beating Man City at the Ataturk Stadium in Istanbul next month, but nobody could argue that it would make manager Simone Inzaghi’s team better than Guardiola’s. The Nerazzurri would simply have the minor detail of a huge silver trophy as reward for winning one single game.Perhaps that’s a little too simplistic, but Guardiola has already done what he was tasked to do by Manchester City‘s Abu Dhabi-based owners when he was appointed as manager in 2016. The former Barcelona and Bayern Munich coach was hired to make City the best team in Europe and the world. He can tick that box as mission accomplished, but nobody at the Etihad will truly believe it or feel it until the European Cup sits in the club’s trophy cabinet.

City lost to Chelsea in their only previous Champions League final appearance in Porto in 2021, but this time around there seems to be an unstoppable momentum with Guardiola’s team.A final against an Italian team is not the best gift, honestly,” Guardiola said. “They [Inter] are competitive. This victory will get a lot of compliments, but we have time to prepare mentally. When you reach the final of the Champions League you have to celebrate. Unfortunately, we won’t have time because Sunday we can win the Premier League. Tomorrow will be with our families then prepare for Sunday.”Forget talk of the treble for now. There is plenty of time to dissect City’s prospects of winning the Premier League, FA Cup and Champions League between now and next month’s final.The Premier League is virtually in the bag, with Guardiola’s players needing just three points from three games to win the title for a third successive season, while Manchester United — the only English club to previously achieve the treble in 1999 — stand between Man City and glory in the FA Cup final on June 3. If Manchester City reach Istanbul a week later needing to beat three-time European champions Inter to win their first Champions League, there will be an inevitability about their success.So how good are Man City? Well, they will win a fifth Premier League title in six seasons within the next 10 days and are strong favourites to beat Man United in the FA Cup Final at Wembley. The Champions League has evaded their grasp, but this performance against Real was perhaps the most one-sided display by a team at this level since Guardiola’s Barcelona destroyed United in the 2011 Champions League final.That 2011 final, by the way, was when Guardiola’s legendary Barca team was at its peak, with Lionel Messi, Xavi and Andres Iniesta putting United on what manager Sir Alex Ferguson called a “passing carousel.” Barca were so good that United couldn’t get the ball — and Real Madrid on Wednesday had a similar experience, with Man City dominating possession by enjoying 60% of it.When Real Madrid winger Vinicius Junior attempted to race past Kyle Walker in the first half, it looked a no-contest with the Brazil international the favourite to win the foot-race. But Walker somehow turned the tide in his favour and beat Vinicius with his and strength. The Real star looked bereft, turning to Ancelotti as if to say, “What could I do?”That was a theme that ran through the Real Madrid team. They were all helpless to repel the waves of Man City attacks and endless possession, as full-back Dani Carvajal said: “We played a rival who were better than us in this match — they pretty well overwhelmed us.”Goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois was perhaps the only Real player who came off the pitch having stood up to City, with the former Chelsea No. 1 producing a series of important saves, particularly from Erling Haaland, as Real attempted to weather the storm.But this was City’s night, emphatically so, and it is going to be their season. It is merely a question of how many trophies they win.

Pep Guardiola: Man City produced one of their greatest performances to reach Champions League final

Pep Guardiola: Man City produced one of their greatest performances to reach Champions League final

By Omar Garrick


Pep Guardiola says his Manchester City side produced one of their greatest ever performances as his side defeated Real Madrid to reach the Champions League final.City kept their treble aspirations alive following their rampant 4-0 second-leg victory at the Etihad against the 14-time European champions. A brace from Bernardo Silva plus goals from Manuel Akanji and Julian Alvarez secured a 5-1 aggregate victory for City.Guardiola said to BT Sport: “Yeah definitely (one of the best-ever performances by Manchester City).“I said many times we don’t have to come back 1, 3-0 down, so just win one game, be ourselves. Madrid, oh my god, what a team but we beat them two seasons ago.“Last season, what happened, happened, because the game last season was similar to this season, so we had the feeling today that the people was calm mentally, that they make a lot of jokes, so I didn’t feel tension, anxious, in any phase, in any behaviour.“I had the feeling that today we were ready to do a really good performance.”

Guardiola’s side started on the front foot and broke the deadlock in the 23rd minute, with Bernardo firing past Thibaut Courtois to give the home side the advantage. Bernardo scored his second 14 minutes later after his looping header found the back of the net just before half-time. Real pushed for a goal back in the second half, but the tie was sealed when Akanji’s effort deflected off Eder Militao as the full-time whistle approached. Alvarez wrapped up the memorable victory with a cool finish to send City on their way to Istanbul. “It was so painful last season (not reaching the final), when the people say lack of character of these players,” Guardiola added. “During one year we show again how special these players are. I want to say big congratulations to our whole organisation, the chairman, our owner, until the last person, because they work with a real purpose and we are there.”Speaking after the match, Bernardo expressed his delight at City reaching the final. “It’s a beautiful night for us,” he said. “We knew it was going to be tough but to beat this Madrid team 4-0 at home, it was wonderful. Wonderful feeling to be in the final again and hopefully this time we can try to win it. We were very resilient, very passionate and organised at the same time.”

Manchester City 4-0 Real Madrid: Domination, Bernardo brilliance, what now for Ancelotti and co?

Manchester City Real Madrid Champions League result

By The Athletic UK Staff


Manchester City booked their place in the Champions League final by beating Real Madrid 4-0 at the Etihad Stadium with Bernardo Silva scoring twice, a second-half own goal from Eder Militao and a late strike from Julian Alvarez.Pep Guardiola’s side will hope to lift their first European Cup against Inter Milan in the Turkish city of Istanbul on June 10, as their bid for the treble continues — with the Premier League title and FA Cup also within their grasp.Here our writers analyse the key talking points from a dominant display.


Opening salvo to savour for City

Bernardo Silva’s opening goal of Wednesday’s second leg hit the back of the Real Madrid net after 22 minutes and 42 seconds.Before that, Manchester City had 81 per cent of the possession. They had completed 202 passes to Real’s 28. Two City players had made more passes on their own than Real had as a team. Vinicius Junior and Federico Valverde had not completed a pass at that stage. City goalkeeper Ederson had found a team-mate on four occasions: only two Real players had more than that.But the numbers hardly do justice to what a visceral thrill those first 22 minutes and 42 seconds were. City charged in, delivering precision jabs with the speed and intensity of a crazed, windmilling MMA fighter. This was Operation: Overwhelming Force, shock and awe, whatever you want to call it.

Thibaut Courtois made at least one miraculous save, put in one of the best halves of his life and still went in at the break 2-0 down. After the first goal, Vinicius Junior went over to Carlo Ancelotti on the touchline as if to ask, “What do you expect us to do with that?” After the second, Ancelotti stared blankly into the middle distance, his hand over his mouth, Real Madrid’s four-time Champions League-winning manager at a complete loss. The reigning European and world champions had absolutely no idea what to do.

“It’s nothing special,” said City manager Pep Guardiola before the game, about his attacking plans. In one sense he was telling the truth, because the theory here wasn’t especially complicated or intricate. In another, it was about as special as you can get, because who else could do that?

Nick Miller


Real ‘suffer’ too much

“To have moments of suffering, when you have to hold on, is normal,” said Carlo Ancelotti pre-game. His stalwart midfielder Luka Modric also stressed how Real’s experience meant they were confident they could deal with any situation they found themselves in.

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And suffer they did during the game’s opening quarter. City completely dominated and Modric and his team-mates hardly had a kick. Yet neither Ancelotti nor his team did anything different in response, they seemed completely passive. It appeared they assumed Thibaut Courtois could keep them in it with his saves, and expected City’s dominance to eventually pass.

After Bernardo Silva’s opener, Madrid did stir a bit, with Toni Kroos hammering a 25-yarder off the crossbar. But they were again complacent at the back as Bernardo soon made it 2-0.

Ancelotti’s side have extricated themselves from many tight spots in this competition over the last few seasons. At this stage against City last year, they needed two goals with just minutes left in the second leg at the Bernabeu, and they got them to eventually progress.

But this time it was different, and Real’s confidence they could come through any amount of suffering had caught up on them.

Dermot Corrigan


Bernardo Silva: Space man

Oh, Bernardo. It is very hard not to wonder how you do it. How do you find space so effortlessly, so frequently, so naturally? One swish of that left boot to lift the ball over Thibaut Courtois. A perfectly weighted header to drop the ball into the net for a second time on the night. The smallest man on the pitch, wearing a shirt that always seems a size too big.

Seriously, is it just an innate gift? That movement, that appreciation of space, the anticipation of knowing where the ball is going to come. And then the calmness to make sure that, if Toni Kroos isn’t going to follow your run, or Luka Modric stands as still as a stalagmite, they aren’t going to get away with it.

This isn’t the first time Bernardo, given a licence to roam, has shaped a big occasion to his will. Never before, though, has this diminutive, elusive player been so effective among a Who’s Who of the Champions League’s elite.

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We were reminded in the process why Bernardo is a Pep Guardiola favourite. Take the ball, cherish it, treat it like a friend. Pass it to a team-mate, keep moving, make yourself available to take it again. And repeat. Make an impact, get behind the opposition lines.

It’s a simple formula, but it also takes something special to perfect it at this level. And Bernardo, plainly, is special.

Daniel Taylor


Real Madrid: Bizarrely blunt

This was a night every single one of Real’s players will be desperate to forget — seriously, the Madrid press pack are going to need Geiger counters when they sift through the wreckage of this one — but the champions’ three forwards came up particularly short. 

At his best, Rodrygo is a subtle, nagging force, adept at finding little pockets of space. Here, he was subdued to the point of absence. An overhit would-be through ball to Karim Benzema was his only contribution to the first half and the only surprise was that he lasted until 80 minutes before being hooked.

(Photo: Michael Regan/Getty Images)

Vinicius Junior had a couple of fleeting moments of promise at the start of the second half, getting two City players booked with trademark surges, but that was pretty thin gruel compared to what we have come to expect. It was notable that he spent the latter stages of the game miles away from the left wing — as good a summary as any of how well Kyle Walker had managed him all night.

Benzema was arguably the biggest disappointment of all. The Frenchman barely mustered a touch of note all evening, repeatedly getting manoeuvred off the ball by Ruben Dias and John Stones. There are some mitigating factors here — Benzema has missed three of Real’s last four league games due to lingering fitness worries — but it was galling to see such a brilliant footballer so far from his best.

Jack Lang


Rodri and Walker flawless

How many player of the match trophies does UEFA have? Because it is impossible to split the contributions of Bernardo Silva, Kyle Walker and Rodri to what we just watched.

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There were plenty of others, too, but those three may not have put a foot wrong all evening.

Considering the stakes, the opposition, the importance of every little detail, there can be no higher praise than that. Walker said he did not want to become a meme ahead of the game, after Vinicius Junior tried to rainbow flick him last week, and their battle was billed as key to this game. It was not quite key but Walker won it hands down. Did the Brazilian get the better of him even once? Incredible.

And then Rodri, the octopus in midfield who always picks the right passes and just knows where to be to mop up the loose balls. Real fought harder in the second half but it was often Rodri who stopped them, nicking the ball back at the right moment. Monstrous performances from the three of them, closely followed by everybody else in blue.

Sam Lee


What now for Ancelotti, Modric and Kroos?

Asked on Spanish TV before the game, Carlo Ancelotti said that, “If we win, to the final; if we lose, the door.” When the reporter paused for a second, the Italian quickly clarified that he meant his team leaving the competition, not him leaving his job as Real Madrid coach.

The mini-confusion was due to so much speculation over Ancelotti’s future through recent months. Real president Florentino Perez dismissed the possibility after they won the Copa del Rey final against Osasuna earlier this month, but the Bernabeu hierarchy have been unhappy at how their team gave no challenge at all to Barcelona as defending champions in La Liga this year.

Perez has often complained about how Manchester City being owned by Abu Dhabi makes it impossible for his club to compete with them financially. So it would be incoherent to then sack a coach for being unable to beat them in a Champions League semi-final. But then, Perez is a man who makes his own rules. And losing to Pep Guardiola will have hurt him personally.

Just like last year, Ancelotti took off both Luka Modric and Toni Kroos with his team needing two goals late in the second half.

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The Croatian, 37, and German, 33, are out of contract at the end of June, so in theory this could have been their last games for Real in the competition. Both have been seen as more likely to renew for one more year, but how City dominated midfield in large periods of both legs may make Perez think again about pushing harder for Borussia Dortmund’s 19-year-old Jude Bellingham.

Although Karim Benzema, 35, also struggled to have any impact on the tie, the current Ballon D’Or will stay at the Bernabeu next year. Real scoring just once across both legs against City could well mean he has competition from another top striker come August, however.

Dermot Corrigan


Where does this win rank?

Where does that stand among the great performances by English clubs in the Champions League? In the last few years at least, it’s tough to think of one that compares.

The mind immediately goes back to those extraordinary semi-finals in 2019, when Liverpool and Tottenham produced implausible comebacks to beat Barcelona and Ajax respectively. But they were more collective acts of will, combined with a bit of luck, rather than expressions of outright dominance.

Manchester United’s 7-1 demolition of Roma in 2007 has to be up there, but that wasn’t against a team who had previously held some sort of psychological hold over this competition, overcoming the sense that if Real Madrid want to win, they will.

Chelsea’s remarkable rearguard in Barcelona in 2012 is memorable, and was great in a manner of speaking, but it was also something of a freak, the sort of game that if you replayed it another 100 times, Chelsea would lose 95 of them.

Tonight was a perfectly constructed expression of dominance by Manchester City, starting off with the early blitz, slowing down and maintaining control once a lead had been established, then picking off a team that had to chase things to make the scoreline more accurately reflect the performance. Perfection.

Nick Miller


So what do I need to know about the final?

City will face Inter Milan — the clubs’ first ever competitive meeting — on Saturday, June 10 at the Ataturk Stadium in Istanbul, Turkey. It is the third time UEFA has tried to stage a recent Champions League final there after it had to be moved in 2020 and 2021 — to the Portuguese cities of Lisbon and Porto respectively — because of that country’s COVID-19-enforced travel restrictions.

Simone Inzaghi hails Inter ‘dream’ after reaching Champions League final with 3-0 victory over Milan

Simone Inzaghi hails Inter ‘dream’ after reaching Champions League final with 3-0 victory over Milan

By Omar Garrick May 16, 2023


Inter Milan manager Simone Inzaghi says reaching the Champions League final is a “dream” following his side’s 3-0 aggregate semi-final victory over rivals AC Milan at the San Siro.Inter carried a two-goal lead from the first-leg thanks to goals from Edin Dzeko and Henrikh Mkhitaryan, but it was Lautaro Martinez’s second-half strike that secured a 1-0 second-leg victory and place in June’s final. “In the next few days we will realise what we did,” Inzaghi told Sport Mediaset.“It was a dream at the start, but we always believed, we had an extraordinary run and to win the semi-final in a derby this way is immensely satisfying.“I had said a long while back we would put in a crazy effort without looking at one competition or the other, just trying to achieve our best.”With a lack of chances in the second half, striker Martinez scored in the 74th minute with a low strike past Mike Maignan to seal Inter’s place in the final following an assist from substitute Romelu Lukaku. Martinez said to Sky Italia: “We did a great job in both matches. The key was the group.“I had a similar experience at the World Cup – if you are united, you get to play these very important matches in the best possible way.“Every time I take the pitch I try to give my best in order to help my team-mates. We knew we had this opportunity to reach the Champions League final and today we completed our job.”It will be the first time Inter have played in a Champions League final since they won the trophy in 2010.Inzaghi’s side will face either Manchester City or Real Madrid in the final of the competition.“It’s normal that when you go to face City or Real you start underdogs, but football is always open,” added Inzaghi. “We met Real Madrid last year and we lost two games, but playing well. Manchester City needs no introduction: we will watch and whoever arrives will arrive.”

When is the 2022-2023 Champions League final?

The 2022-23 Champions League final will take place on Saturday, June 10. The kick-off time is 8pm BST (3pm ET/12pm PT).

Where will the Champions League final take place?

Istanbul, Turkey will be where the Champions League final is played this season.

The match will take place at the Ataturk Olympic Stadium, which opened in 2002 and is home to the Turkey national team. It has a capacity of over 75,000.There were reports that UEFA had been in talks about moving the Champions League final to Lisbon’s Stadium of Light, Portugal. However, this was categorically denied.UEFA said in a statement: “Following some inaccurate and unfounded media reports, UEFA would like to clarify the position on the 2023 Champions League final.“The 2023 UEFA Champions League final will take place in Istanbul as scheduled, on 10 June 2023.”

Inter have gone from the brink to the jackpot — reaching final matters for so many reasons

MILAN, ITALY - MAY 16: Lautaro Martinez of FC Internazionale celebrates scores the opening goal during the UEFA Champions League semi-final second leg match between FC Internazionale v AC Milan at Stadio Giuseppe Meazza on May 16, 2023 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Chris Brunskill/Fantasista/Getty Images)

By James Horncastle May 17, 2023


Rippling down the Curva Nord, the choreography unfurled by Inter Milan’s ultras before their Champions League semi-final second leg showed a knight in shining armour, his shield pock-marked with arrows, a depiction of Inter’s quest for the holiest of grails. If the knight were to have suddenly animated and taken off his helmet, it would not have come as a surprise to see the face of Simone Inzaghi revealed. He may as well have ridden in on a white charger when he joined Inter two years ago. They were champions of Italy at the time. But they did not look like a club who were going to dominate Serie A in the way Inter did between 2006 and 2010, when five domestic titles in a row culminated in an unprecedented treble. Inzaghi’s predecessor Antonio Conte had walked out a month after delivering that 2020-21 title, convinced Inter were no longer capable of matching his ambition. A week after winning the league, president Steven Zhang had shown up at the training ground to ask the players if they might waive or cut their salaries to help the club get through the financial damage caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. The situation was desperate. Zhang had spent the previous few months looking for an emergency loan to prop the whole thing up and even when he obtained €292million (£254.5m/$316.4m at current exchange rates) from Oaktree Capital Management, it didn’t stop Inter needing to sell. Achraf Hakimi went to Paris Saint-Germain in the July. Next out the door was Romelu Lukaku to Chelsea. Shockingly, amid it all, Christian Eriksen suffered a cardiac arrest while playing at the European Championship. The subcutaneous defibrillator he subsequently had fitted made him ineligible to play in Italy. No one would have predicted that, two years after all that, Inter would make it to a Champions League final.

“The first thought going through my head right now is that when I was appointed, Inter asked me to make the knockout stages for the first time in 11 years,” Inzaghi said after the final whistle last night.By doing just that in his first season, as a 1-0 win over neighbours AC Milan completed a 3-0 aggregate victory and set up a meeting with Manchester City or Real Madrid in Istanbul on June 10, Inzaghi succeeded where Conte and his predecessor Luciano Spalletti failed. Inter were knocked out by Liverpool in the round of 16 last year but did beat them 1-0 at Anfield in the second leg, and gave Jurgen Klopp’s team as good a game as anyone until they played Real Madrid in the final. Progress in Europe was overshadowed by relinquishing the Scudetto on the final day of last season to cousins and rivals Milan. The past week has avenged it. “We’re going to Istanbul, you shits,” proclaimed a banner in the Curva Nord at full-time last night. The word ‘Merde’ spelled out in the red and black of their old enemy.  Lautaro Martinez made sure of that by surprising the otherwise excellent Mike Maignan at his near post to make it 3-0 on aggregate, causing San Siro to tremble under the weight of all the bouncing Interisti.“I’d been thinking about having an operation on my ankle because it’s destroyed,” Argentina forward Martinez said. “During the World Cup, I had pain-killing injections in order to stay in the squad.” Pain turned to joy on Tuesday. Inzaghi couldn’t quite believe it.“After the draw, there was some disappointment. We didn’t get very lucky (landing in a group with Barcelona and Bayern Munich). We went to Plzen (for the second group match, after an opening loss at home to Bayern), knowing that if we didn’t win we might not even make it through the group.” And yet here Inter are. Back in the final for the first time in 13 years.It’s hard to understate the scale of this achievement.Inzaghi has done more with less. He lost Ivan Perisic last summer when he left for Tottenham Hotspur at the end of his contract. He then missed out on Paulo Dybala and Gleison Bremer to Roma and Juventus respectively. He will see Milan Skriniar walk for nothing in June as a free agent. “Giovanni Invernizzi was the only Italian to take Inter to a European Cup final,” Inzaghi observed. That was more than 50 years ago. “I’m proud.” Proud, most of all, because of the circumstances he walked into. Inter overspent in Conte’s two years, breaking the club transfer record twice in the summer of 2019 to sign Nicolo Barella and then Lukaku. “The (last) Scudetto caused some financial problems,” Inzaghi pointed out.Remarkably, Inter’s unexpected run to this Champions League final may go some way to solving them. It has the potential to be transformative. The club has earned more than €100million in prize money and TV rights from Italy’s market pool. “I’m not saying the Champions League is a competition that enriches clubs, but it does bring the concept of sustainability closer,” Inter’s chief executive Beppe Marotta explained this month during Milan Football Week.

James Horncastle called it in March:

Next month’s Champions League final will be Marotta’s third in eight years. The first was with Juventus in 2015,  a year after Conte famously claimed being their coach was like going to a restaurant with €5 in your pocket when the menu is €100 a head. The third arrives two years after Conte once again left a club adamant the project had stopped. The windfall Inter are now due is like manna from heaven.

Nine U.S. U-20 World Cup players who could graduate to the senior USMNT

LOS ANGELES, UNITED STATES - JANUARY 27:  Cade Cowell #20 controls a loose ball during a game between Serbia and USMNT at BMO Stadium on January 25, 2023 in Los Angeles, United States during a game between Serbia and USMNT at BMO Stadium on January 27, 2023 in Los Angeles, United States. (Photo by Robert Mora/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

By Tom Bogert May 11, 2023


At his press conference to discuss the United States’ roster for the U-20 World Cup, head coach Mikey Varas repeatedly came back to his ultimate goal: To develop players from this group to graduate into the senior national team.

Of course, Varas would like to win the tournament, but success isn’t measured exclusively by results. It’s results and development. History shows around half the team should be expected to make at least one senior USMNT cap, with a handful graduating to a World Cup squad.

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Among recent U.S. U-20 World Cup squads:

• 10 players from 2017 squad made at least one USMNT appearance.

• Four players from 2017 (Tyler Adams, Josh Sargent, Cameron Carter-Vickers and Luca de la Torre) made the 2022 senior World Cup squad.

• 11 players from 2019 U-20 World Cup squad made at least one USMNT appearance.

• Two players (Sergiño Dest, Tim Weah) from 2019 made the senior World Cup squad, and a third (Chris Richards) very likely would have if not for injury.

The USMNT’s annual January camp may help inflate those cap numbers. With most of the first choice team unavailable for the annual camp during non-FIFA-mandated windows, the squad list is more experimental in nature and digs deeper down the pool to fill. Four of those 10 players capped from the 2017 squad have made only one senior appearance. Five of the 11 capped players from the 2019 team are nowhere near the senior squad at the moment.

With the second-youngest squad at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, the USMNT won’t be naturally losing players from the pool at a high rate in the near future. That could mean less opportunity for this year’s U-20 players to break through. It’s also worth remembering that, with Ricardo Pepi and Paxten Aaronson among age-eligible players not on the squad by their clubs, this isn’t the strongest possible U-20 group.

Despite all of that cold, hard nuance, the roster features plenty of talented players, a number of whom stand a good chance of breaking into the senior pool.

These are the best bets to do so.


Gaga Slonina

Goalkeeper, Chelsea FC, 18 years old

After a year as a first choice goalkeeper in MLS followed by a huge transfer to Chelsea this winter, Slonina is perhaps the best-known player in the squad. He’ll be the top choice between the sticks for Varas.

Slonina, turning 19 next week, is one of the most expensive teenage goalkeepers of all time after his transfer from the Chicago Fire for an up-front fee of $10 million with another $5 million in add-ons. He made 43 appearances with the Fire before heading to Chelsea in January.

He’s a potential No. 1 goalkeeper for the USMNT one day. Matt Turner (28 years old) is the current first choice, with Zack Steffen (also 28) among the top challengers for the spot.

Caleb Wiley 

Defender, Atlanta United, 18 years old

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It’s been a dream start to 2023 for Caleb Wiley.

The Atlanta United homegrown has become an indispensable starter in MLS, delivering three goals and two assists while splitting time between left wing and left back. Long-term, he projects as a left back — that’s how clubs in Europe see him and where he’ll play mostly for the U-20s.

“We anticipate Caleb will have a big tournament,” Varas told media on a virtual press conference Wednesday.

Behind presumed starter Antonee Robinson, the USMNT left back depth chart is wide open. The current backups are right-footed players capable of playing on the left (Joe Scally, Sergino Dest), Wiley offers something more similar to Robinson: an attacking overlapping outlet down the left, allowing the winger (presumably Christian Pulisic, in the USMNT’s case) to cut in.

Wiley, 18, will be in Europe before long. Atlanta already rejected a transfer offer for him last year. A lot of scouts will be paying close attention to him in Argentina.

Josh Wynder 

Defender, Louisville City, 18 years old

Center back Josh Wynder is playing up a group, as he’s age-eligible for the 2025 U-20 World Cup as well.

Currently with Louisville City, Wynder will soon join Benfica in a USL league-record transfer this summer, with the Portuguese club winning his signature ahead of a number of MLS and European clubs this spring. Wynder just turned 18 this month but has already made 45 first team appearances.

“Josh is clearly a very technical center back with a great physical profile,” Varas said. “What really put the exclamation mark for me, in the last camp, he showed me he has ‘savage’ inside him as a defender. Your job is to be a physical player who wants to protect the goal. That takes a certain type of personality.”

Kevin Paredes

Defender/midfielder, Wolfsburg, 19 years old

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Kevin Paredes had been thought of as a future USMNT left back, but most of his minutes at Wolfsburg have been at left midfield after he broke through at D.C. United as a wingback. He’s versatile, so still could end up at left back, but will play as a winger for the U.S. U-20s.

Paredes has made 20 Bundesliga appearances this season, 19 of which came from the bench. His importance as a squad player for his club means he won’t join up with the United States until after the group stage. He joined Wolfsburg from D.C. United for a $7 million fee in 2022.

With Paredes and Wiley as young options behind Robinson at left back, the national team should be covered there for the foreseeable future. 

Cade Cowell

Winger, San Jose Earthquakes, 19 years old

Cade Cowell’s athleticism is already at an elite level. If he can polish his final third actions, he’ll be in the senior national team on a regular basis. Even if he doesn’t, he’ll still get chances because of his dynamism. He had the fastest recorded sustained sprint in MLS last season, as per Second Spectrum.

Cowell, 19, already has three senior USMNT caps. He put in a man of the match performance against Serbia in January, albeit with both groups severely undermanned due to the friendly falling outside of a FIFA-mandated window.

The San Jose Earthquakes winger has 92 MLS appearances under his belt, starting all 11 of the club’s games this season before heading to Argentina with the U.S. U-20s. The Quakes rejected a bid from French Ligue 1 side Reims last summer for him.

Jack McGlynn

Midfielder, Philadelphia Union, 19 years old

Philadelphia Union midfielder Jack McGlynn has an elite skill that can translate to the senior international level: Distribution. Specifically, with his preferred left foot.

“McGlynn has a left foot that you can’t teach,” Jim Curtin told me in 2022. “It’s really special. His passing ability I equate to Haris [Medunjanin]. That’s the best passer I’ve worked with. And Jack is right there. His IQ is up there with [Alejandro] Bedoya, who has played in World Cups and in Europe. He’s worked really hard defensively, but he’s special. He’s still growing, he’s getting stronger.”

McGlynn, 19, is already the Union’s best midfield passer and is among their top options on set pieces. He’ll be a crucial part of the U-20s midfield. He has grown into his body and improved athleticism over the last year or two, and if that continues, he’ll be in the senior national team pool.

Obed Vargas

Midfielder, Seattle Sounders, 17 years old

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The youngest player on the United States roster, Seattle Sounders midfielder Obed Vargas broke onto the scene last year playing a key role to the Sounders winning the CONCACAF Champions League as a 16-year-old.

Vargas, now 17, missed the second half of 2022 with a back injury, forcing him to miss the 2022 U-20 CONCACAF Championships with this group.

Owen Wolff

Midfielder, Austin FC, 18 years old

Austin FC midfielder Owen Wolff has displaced key veteran Alex Ring to establish himself in his club side’s first choice XI. He broke into the U-20 group this cycle and could be in line for a big role at the World Cup.  

“What we love about Owen, he’s got a fighting spirit,” Varas said. “He’s not afraid of confrontation and, on top of that, he’s very skillful and very smart. You see this in MLS, how he fought into the starting lineup this year.”

Wolff was been linked with PSV earlier this year. He projects to make a big move to Europe within the next few years.

Daniel Edelman 

Midfielder, New York Red Bulls, 20 years old

While the defensive midfielder isn’t thought to have as high a ceiling as others on this list, Daniel Edelman is already a steady professional and could find himself on the outskirts of the senior pool with his consistency if he keeps developing.

It would be a stretch to say he projects to be a first choice starter for the national team, particularly given Tyler Adams occupies his position, but depth behind Adams is unproven. Edelman is the U.S. U-20 captain and won a starting spot in the New York Red Bulls competitive midfield last season. He fits very well in a pressing/transition system, which could be the direction the senior team goes in the future. If so, it’s not hard to see a scenario in which he gets some caps.

. If so, it’s not hard to see a scenario in which he gets some caps.

Luton Town currently won’t be allowed to play Premier League football if they get promoted

Mark White Wed, May 17, 2023, 7:09 AM EDT·4 min read

 General view outside the stadium prior to the Sky Bet Championship match between Luton Town and Watford at Kenilworth Road on April 17, 2021 in Luton, England. Sporting stadiums around the UK remain under strict restrictions due to the Coronavirus Pandemic as Government social distancing laws prohibit fans inside venues resulting in games being played behind closed doors.
General view outside the stadium prior to the Sky Bet Championship match between Luton Town and Watford at Kenilworth Road on April 17, 2021 in Luton, England. Sporting stadiums around the UK remain under strict restrictions due to the Coronavirus Pandemic as Government social distancing laws prohibit fans inside venues resulting in games being played behind closed doors.More

Luton Town are on the cusp of completing the Football Manager dream, having worked their way up from non-league to the Championship play-off final. The promised land of the Barclays glitters in the distance like a mirage in the desert.

But while most owners think primarily about what Premier League football can offer them, Luton will have to pay to join the top table. Kenilworth Road desperately needs a makeover – and granted, the Hatters started exploring ways to leave their old home as long ago as 1955 – but competing at the very top of the English footballing pyramid would enforce this long-overdue stadium renovation.

The alternative would be Luton leaving their ground altogether. Surely things can’t be so bad that they’d have to play in Milton Keynes, right?

Luton Town have to pay £10m in stadium refurbishments to abide by Premier League rules

General view of the seats inside the stadium before the EFL Checkatrade Trophy Third Round match between Luton Town and Peterborough United at Kenilworth Road on January 9, 2018 in Luton, England.
General view of the seats inside the stadium before the EFL Checkatrade Trophy Third Round match between Luton Town and Peterborough United at Kenilworth Road on January 9, 2018 in Luton, England.

Luton have played at Kenilworth Road since 1905. It’s a classic stadium in the mould of many at the time that seem to flummox foreigners when they see them for the first time: it’s wedged tightly between terraced houses, can’t be expanded without serious disruption to the neighbourhood and not much has architecturally changed over decades.

“There’s rather a lot of work to do,” chairman and chief executive Gary Sweet understated of the ground, which would become the smallest-ever in the Premier League – yes, even smaller than Bournemouth‘s Vitality Stadium. At the start of 2008, both teams were docked points in League Two – Luton -30, Bournemouth -17 – facing expulsion from the Football League altogether. Now, they could both be playing each other in the very stadiums in the top tier of English football.

But while Dean Court in Bournemouth complies with regulations, essentially, the Hatters would have to invest up to £10 million in rebuilding one of the stands in less than three months, should they go up, in order to meet with the Prem’s broadcasting and facility requirements.

Luton are actually in the process of moving

Carlton Morris of Luton Town celebrates after scoring the team's second goal during the Sky Bet Championship between Luton Town and Blackpool at Kenilworth Road on April 10, 2023 in Luton, England.
Carlton Morris of Luton Town celebrates after scoring the team’s second goal during the Sky Bet Championship between Luton Town and Blackpool at Kenilworth Road on April 10, 2023 in Luton, England.

Luton are preparing to move ground anyway – so whatever updates they give to Kenilworth Road would be extremely temporary. The proposed Power Court ground is actually closer to the town centre, too, rather than dragging the club out to the middle of nowhere, like some new stadiums unfortunately do.

But the new ground isn’t far enough along that Luton could move in early. Luckily, the club are looking at raking in £100m, should they make it up to the big time – so money won’t be a problem – the bigger issue concerning fans is whether or not Kenilworth Road would get to host the biggest clubs in English football. It’s an atmosphere and an experience unique to English football – and certainly unlike anything that the top flight has seen since the turn of the century.

It’s possible that the Premier League could defer home games from the opening few weeks of the season if building work needs to be completed – the alternative would be a groundshare while Luton are in the top flight. It’s safe to say that Premier League money would certainly help with the construction of the new ground, however, which was delayed due to COVID-19.

“It’s quite a heavy investment for football at that level for us and will firmly put us into the Premier League bracket,” chairman Sweet said about doing up Kenilworth Road. “But just to be able to get [the ground] ready now, just for maybe two or three years, is maybe more of a gargantuan task than building a new stadium.”

Marc-Andre ter Stegen is Barcelona’s shot-stopper, leader and so much more

Marc-Andre ter Stegen is Barcelona’s shot-stopper, leader and so much more

Dermot Corrigan and Pol Ballus May 17, 2023

When Barcelona finished last season without a trophy — again — nobody was more disappointed than Marc-Andre ter Stegen.The 2021-22 campaign had not been a good one for the goalkeeper on a collective or personal level. Barca finished second in La Liga but were a distant 13 points behind arch-rivals Real Madrid. Ter Stegen conceded 34 goals in 35 league matches. adrid, Sevilla, Athletic Bilbao, Real Sociedad and Villarreal all had better defensive records over the 38 games.The German’s tally of 11 clean sheets was the fewest since he established himself as Barca’s first-choice La Liga keeper in the 2016-17 season. His shot save percentage was also well down — and many fans and pundits noted how the opposition often scored from their very first shot on target.Ter Stegen knew that without Lionel Messi, and with Barca’s financial problems, the season was likely to be tough, but he also felt he could do much better in terms of his own performances.The graph below shows how the German’s form had suffered through the campaign. A goalkeeper who had previously made sure his team conceded fewer goals than they statistically should have was instead finding himself picking the ball out of the net more often than expected.

Something different was required. So before the 2021-22 season ended, Ter Stegen had a conversation with his Germany international manager Hansi Flick. They agreed he would not be in the squad for their four UEFA Nations League games in June. This was to ensure he could “get the full six weeks just doing nothing, with the family, taking it easy, not thinking or talking or even dreaming about football,” says a source close to the goalkeeper. (Like all sources cited in this story, they preferred to speak with anonymity in order to protect relationships.)Ever since joining Barca from Borussia Monchengladbach in 2014, such a summer break had been impossible for Ter Stegen. International tournaments often led to rushed pre-season preparations. There had also been a need for regular medical treatment. In summer 2021, he had knee surgery to correct an issue which had been troubling him going back to the 2018-19 season.Last summer’s rest period was then followed by his first complete pre-season since 2017. It had an immediate impact.

Ter Stegen conceded just one goal in Barca’s first eight La Liga games of the season — saving 19 of the first 20 shots on target he faced. At Sevilla in September, he saved brilliantly from Ivan Rakitic and Erik Lamela when the game was still goalless, and Barca went on to win 3-0. Against Real Mallorca in October, a last-gasp point-blank stop from Jaume Costa secured a 1-0 victory.Ter Stegen was hitting prime fitness and form for the first time in some years, but he was also receiving more protection from his team-mates. In previous seasons, many of the goals conceded from a rival team’s first shot on target came after opposition attacks had cut right through the Barca defence, leaving Ter Stegen exposed.Jules Kounde and Andreas Christensen were both signed last summer and have helped Barca’s defensive resilience; the Denmark international has also formed a strong partnership with Ronald Araujo in the middle of a settled back four. At right-back, Kounde was asked not to push too far forward. Tweaks through the season led to a more compact structure in midfield, especially when Frenkie De Jong was used alongside Sergio Busquets in the centre.But Ter Stegen’s shot-stopping has also been hugely impressive, as shown by the shot map below. According to the data, the German has prevented around 8.6 non-penalty goals throughout the season.

“Many things have changed since Xavi arrived, probably mentality (and) the way we defend,” Ter Stegen told The Athletic in February. “Everything got a different focus. I wouldn’t say that before was worse or better, just that focus shifted a bit, and right now we are in a good moment. We are deciding games. We know how to suffer as well, in complicated moments, and I think that makes us very strong.”There has been plenty of nervous ‘suffering’ in the stands, as Barca’s most common scoreline this season has been 1-0. They have won a joint-record 11 La Liga games by that margin.The team has not often played the sparkling attacking football associated with the days of legendary former managers and players Johan Cruyff and Pep Guardiola. There has been an awareness they need to be tighter in defence, take fewer risks and protect leads better, as they no longer have Messi, Neymar and Luis Suarez to fall back on in attack.

“Jose Mourinho would be a perfect coach for this Barca team if they’re going to play this way,” one source close to a senior player joked to The Athletic.Unlike his former Real nemesis Mourinho and Atletico Madrid boss Diego Simeone, Xavi does not spend lots of time training the team’s shape when out of possession. But the work they do on team shape in possession is also designed to make sure they are solid when they lose the ball.“Xavi’s approach is not to do specific work on defence, but his style of play positions the defenders to maintain the scoreline,” says another source close to a long-serving defender.Generally, Ter Stegen is being asked to do the same job he has since he signed for Barca nine years ago. The goalkeeping coach since then has been Jose de la Fuente, who was appointed under Tito Vilanova in 2012. He is still asked to use his distribution skills and reading of the game to play a key part in the team’s build-up.But one difference to previous coaches is that the intensity of training sessions, and what is expected of a Barca player on and off the pitch, have increased under Xavi.Long before he officially became the team’s third vice-captain following Gerard Pique’s retirement in November, Ter Stegen was one of the few characters in the dressing room who publicly and privately voiced concerns about standards dropping within the team. “Marc will always say what he thinks, with the benefit and objective of improving the group to achieve a certain target,” says a source.

Ter Stegen is back to his best this season (Photo: Eric Alonso/Getty Images).

On occasion, this even meant words crossed with Messi during the star’s final seasons at the club, which led to tension between the pair. Such friction between two natural leaders could be positive in a dressing room which included — and still includes — a lot of quiet characters.Ter Stegen is one of the few present Barca players comfortable in a public leadership role, and assuming that authority also helps him with his own personal performances. He was included in the club’s group of captains in December without having to undergo the usual vote for that privilege. Everyone agreed that it was right he would replace Pique because he is the longest-serving player behind Busquets, Jordi Alba and Sergi Roberto, the team’s other three captains.The German’s increasingly influential role has also helped get the best out of De Jong and Christensen, who are both close to him in the dressing room. Coupled with the arrival of striker Robert Lewandowski from Bayern Munich last summer, this has been one of the biggest changes in the group dynamic under Xavi.

Ter Stegen’s leadership was especially important in the final stretch of the season when Barca had control of the title race but struggled to get over the line until Sunday’s 4-2 win against Espanyol.Their attacking threat was hurt by injuries to Pedri and Ousmane Dembele and a poor run of form from top scorer Lewandowski. Yet their remarkable defensive record continued. They wrapped up the title with four games remaining and just 13 goals conceded from 34 games in La Liga this season — the best record in Europe’s big five leagues.If Xavi’s side can keep a clean sheet in each of their remaining four games, they will beat Cagliari’s long-standing record for the fewest goals conceded per game in Europe’s top leagues (11 goals conceded in a 30-game season in 1969-70, at a rate of 0.37 per game).

Ironically, in the match that finally crowned Xavi’s Barca as champions, Ter Stegen was beaten twice. The goalkeeper was visibly angered by the second — scored with practically the last kick of the game. It bumped up his average goals conceded to 0.38 goals per match — Atletico’s Jan Oblak has the next-best average across Europe’s top five leagues this season, at almost double that figure (0.72; joint with Napoli’s Alex Meret).

https://flo.uri.sh/visualisation/13779173/embed?auto=1

Ter Stegen has kept 25 clean sheets this campaign — again unrivalled across Europe’s major leagues this campaign. No goalkeeper in any of Europe’s top five leagues has kept so many in a single season in the 21st century. The La Liga season record is 26, set by Deportivo La Coruna’s Francisco Liano back in 1993–94.

Barca’s keeper is also set to win his first-ever Zamora Trophy for the goalkeeper playing in La Liga with the lowest goals-to-games ratio in a season. The club’s last undisputed number one, Victor Valdes, won five Zamoras over his career, while during Ter Stegen’s first season at Barca he watched his rival for the No 1 jersey, Claudio Bravo, win it. His peers Oblak (five times) and Thibaut Courtois (three times) are also multiple winners.

Those who know Ter Stegen say he cares little for such personal accolades and add that he will not see this season as a complete success given Barca’s early exits in Europe. Still, winning a fifth La Liga trophy will be a big deal for Ter Stegen — even more so considering it is the first he can celebrate with his son Ben, who was born in December 2019.

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A lot has happened at Barca since then, and Ter Stegen’s most valued recognition will be from his team-mates. As much as the players value the defensive improvements made under Xavi, there is a wide appreciation among the group for their near-unbeatable goalkeeper’s huge contribution this season.

“Ter Stegen has been phenomenal,” says a source close to one long-serving colleague.

Another first-team player adds: “He has been insane. Our defensive record is basically because of him.”

Additional contributors: Mark Carey and Thom Harris

(Top photo: Jose Breton/Pics Action/NurPhoto via Getty Images; design: Eamonn Dalton)

Liverpool’s Jurgen Klopp handed two-match ban for outburst about referee Paul Tierney

Reuters ay 18, 2023, 03:00 AM ET

Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp has been suspended from the touchline for two matches and fined £75,000 ($95,000) following his comments to the media after the match against Tottenham Hotspur on April 30, the English Football Association (FA) said on Thursday.After Liverpool’s 4-3 home win, Klopp accused referee Paul Tierney of having something “against” Liverpool. The referee’s body reviewed the audio of Tierney’s exchange with the Liverpool manager and said he acted in a professional manner throughout.

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The FA said the first match of Klopp’s touchline ban was effective immediately and the second suspended until the end of the 2023-24 season, on the condition that he did not commit any further breaches of FA Rule E3 in the meantime.

The decision means that the German will not take charge of his side when they host Aston Villa on Saturday.

Liverpool are fifth in the league standings with 65 points, seven points ahead of sixth-placed Brighton & Hove Albion but having played two matches more.

Eleven to Host Colorado Springs Saturday

#INDvCOS Preview 
Indy Eleven vs Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC
Saturday, May 12, 2023 – 10:00 p.m. ET
Michael A Carroll Stadium – Indianapolis, Ind.

Follow Live:
Local TV: WISH-TV   
Streaming Video: ESPN+ (click to subscribe) 
Spanish Radio: Exitos Radio 94.3 FM & exitos943.com
In-game updates: @IndyElevenLive Twitter feed
Stats: #INDvCOS MatchCenter at USLChampionship.com

2023 USL Championship Records:
Indy Eleven: 2W-4L-3D (-5 GD), 9 pts; 9th in Eastern Conference 
Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC: 5W-4L-1D (-2 GD), 16 pts; 5th in Western Conference 

Community Health Network Sports Medicine Indy Eleven Injury Report:
OUT: DF Robby Dambrot (L knee)
QUESTIONABLE: None

Discipline Report:
IND: none
COS: none

SETTING THE SCENE
The Boys in Blue host back-to-back home matches at The Mike starting with USL Championship Western Conference opponent Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC this Saturday.

Indy is coming off a 3-1 setback at Sacramento Republic FC and is 2-4-3 on the season, while Colorado Springs sits at 5-4-1 having dropped its last outing 2-1vs. Memphis 9-1 FC.

SERIES VS. COLORADO SPRINGS SWITCHBACKS FC
0W-1L-0D (3 GF/4 GA)

Recent Meetings
6/18/22                  Away                  L, 3-4

ELEVEN ADDS TO ATTACK WITH ROBERTO MOLINA SIGNING
MAY 18, 2023
Indy Eleven announced the signing of forward Roberto Molina. Per club policy, details of the contract will not be released.

Molina spent the 2021 and 2022 seasons with USL Championship side Las Vegas Lights. In 45 appearances, including 30 during his rookie campaign, Molina tallied three goals and seven assists.

The Salvadoran was selected as the 45th overall pick in the 2022 MLS SuperDraft by the Colorado Rapids and has registered five caps with El Salvador’s National Team in International Friendlies and CONCACAF Nations League action. In one season at UC Irvine (2019), Molina appeared in all 19 matches, making 17 starts, and was named to the Big West All-Freshman Team. He was third on the team with nine points, netting three goals and adding three assists.

Indy has also announced the addition of Academy signing Grayson Elmquist. As part of this season’s U19 USL Academy Championship team, Elmquist earned Golden Boot and Golden Ball honors. He will join the Eleven until he reports to Xavier for the 2023 season.

LAST TIME OUT
MAY 13, 2023
SAC 3:1 IND

A hat trick for Sacramento Republic FC’s Russell Cicerone led the home team to a 3-1 victory over Indy Eleven. The loss dropped Indy to 2W-4L-3D on the season, while Sacramento improved to 6W-0L-3D to stay atop the USL Championship’s Western Conference standings.

Cicerone scored his first two within the first 10 minutes of the match, and his final tally came in the 86th-minute to secure the victory.

Following the early goals, it took until the 51st minute for the next strike as Robby Dambrot got on the end of a Cam Lindley corner to cut the lead in half. It was the first goal of the season for the defender and first assist for Lindley. The corner was one of three earned for the Eleven in the match. Indy secured the 52%-49% advantage in possession throughout the match, but was outshot by Sacramento 19-4, including 11-1 on frame. Dambrot led the Eleven with three shots, while Yannik Oettl had seven saves in the net.

Dambrot Nets First of the Season for Indy in 3-1 Loss at Sacramento

#SACvIND Match Stats

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Saturday, May 13, 2023) – A hat trick for Sacramento Republic FC’s Russell Cicerone led the home team to a 3-1 victory over Indy Eleven Saturday night at Heart Health Park in Sacramento, California. The loss dropped Indy to 2W-4L-3D on the season, while Sacramento improved to 6W-0L-3D to stay atop the USL Championship’s Western Conference standings.

Cicerone scored his first two within the first 10 minutes of the match, and his final tally came in the 86th-minute to secure the victory.

Following the early goals, it took until the 51st minute for the next strike as Robby Dambrot got on the end of a Cam Lindley corner to cut the lead in half. It was the first goal of the season for the defender and first assist for Lindley. The corner was one of three earned for the Eleven in the match.

Indy secured the 52%-49% advantage in possession throughout the match, but was outshot by Sacramento 19-4, including 11-1 on frame. Dambrot led the Eleven with three shots, while Yannik Oettl had seven saves in the net.

Next up, the Boys in Blue host Colorado Springs Switchbacks FC at 7:00 p.m. ET Saturday for Military Appreciation Night. A portion of each ticket purchased via this link will directly support HVAF of Indiana. Indy Eleven will match each ticket purchased via the Military Giveback Link, ensuring that a veteran/military member will have the opportunity to attend and be recognized.

Single-game tickets for all home games at IUPUI Carroll Stadium along with prorated Season Ticket Memberships, specially-priced group tickets and an increased portfolio of hospitality options are available for purchase now via indyeleven.com/tickets or by calling 317-685-1100 during regular business hours (Mon.-Fri., 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.).

USL Championship Regular Season
Sacramento Republic FC 3:1 Indy Eleven
Saturday, May 13, 2023
Heart Health Park – Sacramento, Calif.

Indy Eleven: 2W-4L-3D, 9 pts
Sacramento Republic FC : 6W-0L-3D, 21 pts

Scoring Summary:
SAC – Russell Cicerone 3’
SAC – Russell Cicerone 8’
IND – Robby Dambrot (Cam Lindley) 51’
SAC – Russel Cicerone (Lewis) 86’

Discipline Summary:
SAC – Luis Rodrigues (caution) 7’
SAC – Jack Gurr (caution) 35’
IND – Juan Tejada (caution) 52’
SAC – Aldair Sanchez (caution) 62’
IND – Harrison Robledo (caution) 90’
IND – Younes Boudadi (caution) 90+3’

Indy Eleven line-up (4-4-2): 
Yannik Oettl; Robby Dambrot (Macauley King 76’), Mechack Jerome, Adrian Diz Pe, Younes Boudadi; Solomon Asante, Aodhan Quinn, Jack Blake, Cam Lindley (Jesus Vazquez 87’); Juan Tejada (Harrison Robledo 70’), Sebastian Guenzatti (Captain)

Indy subs: Tim Trilk (GK), Gustavo Rissi

Sacramento Republic FC line-up (3-4-3): Danny Vitiello, Shane Wiedt, Conor Donovan (Lee Desmond 80’), Jared Timmer, Aldair Sanchez (Damia Viader 80’), Rodrigo Lopez, Luis Felipe (Matt LaGrassa 96’), Jack Gurr, Russell Cicerone, Juan Herrera (Luther Archimede 62’), Keko Gontan (Zeiko Lewis 62’)Sacramento subs: Carlos Saldana, Nick Ross

Join Indy Eleven & WFMS Saturday in the tailgate lot from 5-7 p.m. & chat with Jimmy Denny before the game!

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5/15/23 Champions League Semi’s Milans Tues, Man City/Real Madrid Wed 3 pm CBS, Europa Thurs, US GKs in Promotion Battles Tues/Wed

Champions & Europa League Tues/Wed/Thurs

Champions League Semi-Final 2nd round action on Tues/Wed leads the list of huge games this week.  Its Real Madrid traveling to Man City on Weds 3 pm on CBS tied at 1, on Tues Inter will have a 2-0 lead over AC Milan at 3 pm on CBS. (Coverage starts at 2 pm).  I am rooting for AC Milan and my boy Giroud to make it close today in the San Siro. (tons of stories below).  Europa League play has Juventus traveling to Sevilla tied at 1 after the dramatic game tying goal in ET, and Roma took a 2-1 lead at home over Leverkusen with former Carmel FC Coach Baco Benton and his daughter Caroline (CFC 2002 now in college) on hand here’s some cool videoBoth will play Thur at 3 pm on Paramount plus along with West Ham hosting AZ.

2023 Alumni Summer Soccer

Location: Shelborne Fields – CCCSC – 3451 W. 126th St., Carmel  (Ages: 18 – 35)  $105  Sign Up

Grab your friends and make your own team or sign up and we’ll place you on a team, you don’t have to live in Carmel.
Games will take place on Wednesday and Sunday evenings. Dates: June 18, 21, 25, 28 & July 9, 12, 16, 19, 23, 26 Sign Up

GAMES ON TV

(American’s names in Parenthesis)

Tues, May 16     Champions League Quarterfinals

3 pm CBS                             Man City  1 vs Real Madrid 1

Weds, May 17

3 pm CBS                             AC Milan 0 vs Inter Milan 2

Thur, May 18       Europa League

2:30 pm USA                      New Castle vs Brighton

3 pm Paramount+            Roma 2 vs Leverkusen 1

3 pm Para+                         Juventus 1 vs Sevilla 1

3 pm Para+                         West Ham 2  vs AZ 1

Sat, May 20

7:30 am USA                       Tottenham vs Brentford  

9:30 am ESPN+                  Union Berlin (Pfok) vs Hoffenhiem

9:30 am ESPN+                  Bayern Munich vs Schalke

10 am USA                          Bournemouth vs Man United

10 am ?                                 Liverpool vs Aston Villa

10 am Peacock                  Fulham (Robinson) vs Crystal Palace  

10 am Peacock                  Wolves vs Everton

12:30 pm NBC or USA     Nottingham Forest vs Arsenal

12:30 pm ESPN+               Bayern Munich vs RB Leipzig  

2 pm FS2?/Tele                 US U20s vs Ecudor  U20 WC 

2:45 pm  Para+                  Milan vs Sampdoria

7 pm ESPN+                Indy 11 vs Colorado Springs  

7:30 pm Apple TV        

7:30 pm Apple TV        

7 pm Para+                 NC Courage vs  Angel City (Ertz)  NWSL

8:30 pm Para+                   KC Current (Franch) vs San Diego (Morgan, Girma)

10:30 pm Apple+       

Sun, May 21                      

8:30 am USA               West Ham vs Leeds United (McKinney, Aaronson)

11:30 am USA             Man City vs Chelsea  

12 noon CBSSN          Napoli vs Inter Milan

12:30 ESPN+                Valencia vs Real Madrid

2:30 pm beIN Sport     Auxerre vs PSG (Messi, Mbappe)

5 pm FS2                     Italy vs Brazil U20 World Cup

5:30 pm Para+, Sirius  Portland Thorns (Rapino) vs Chicago Red Stars NWSL

6 pm  Para+                OL Seattle Reign vs NY Gotham FC (Williams) NWSL

Mon, May 22

2 pm FS2                              England vs Tunisia U20 WC

2:45 pm Para+                   Juventus vs Empoli

3 pm USA                            New castle vs Leicester City

5 pm FS2                              Gambia vs Honduras U20 WC

Tues, May 23    

2 pm FS2/Tele                   USA U20s vs Fiji  U20 WC

4 pm ESPN+                        Real Valladiod vs Barcelona

5 pm FS2                              Argentina vs Guatamala  U20WC

7:30 pm                                NY Red Bulls vs Cincy US Open Cup

7:30 pm                                Inter Miami vs Nashville US Open Cup?

Weds, May 24    

3 pm USA                            Brighton vs Man City

4 pm ESPN+                        Espanol vs Atletico Madrid

5 pm FS2                              Brazil vs Domincan Republic U20 WC

7 pm                                      Pittsburgh Riverhounds vs Columbus Crew US Open

7:30 pm ESPN+                  Louisville vs FC Tulsa USL

8 pm                                      Birmingham Legion vs Charlotte USOC

9 pm                                      Austin vs Chicago  USOC

10 pm                                    Colorado vs Real Salt Lake USOC

Thur, May 24    

2 pm FS2                              Uraguay vs England U20 WC

3 pm USA                            Man United vs Chelsea

4 pm ESPN+                        Real Madrid vs Rayo Vallencano  

Fri, May 26    

2 pm FS2/Tele                   USA U20s vs Slovakia U20 WC

Sat, June 10                       

2 pm CBS                             Champions League Final

Thurs, June 15

10 pm                                    USMNT vs Mexico  Nations League Semi’s

Sat, June 24

9:30 pm                                USMNT vs Jamaica (Soldier Field) Gold Cup

Fri, July 21                           USWNT vs Vietnam Women’s World Cup

Indy 11 Schedule

NWSL Schedule

Soccer Saturday’s are every Sat 9-10 am on 93.5 and 107.5 FM with Greg Rakestraw

USA

Balogun given green light to play for USMNT  ESPN

Champions League

Lukaku back as Inter Eye Champ Finals
Camavinga’s growing impact clear as Madrid visit Man City

De Bruyne seeks Champions League vindication to sparkling Man City career

Indy 11

RECAP – LDN 1:2 IND

Boudadi Named to USL Championship Team of the Week

Recap – IND 1:1 PIT

Diz Pe Named to USL Championship Team of the Week

Indy Falls 1-0 to Columbus in US Open Cup Play

Season tickets

Full Schedule   Promotions 

new stadium

GK

Champions League Great Saves Semi Finals

Europa League Great Saves

Folarin Balogun set to represent USMNT over England after FIFA approves switch

Folarin Balogun, England

By Ali Rampling


Folarin Balogun’s switch from England to the United States has been approved by FIFA.The 21-year-old forward, who played for the U.S. at under-18 level before switching his allegiance to England, can represent either country as he was born in Brooklyn, New York but moved to London when he was two years old. He is also eligible to represent Nigeria.FIFA rules enable players to switch national eligibility before making a competitive senior appearance at international level.Balogun has spent the 2022-23 campaign on loan at Reims from Arsenal, scoring 19 times in 34 league appearances.He was called up to England’s Under-21 squad for March’s fixtures against France and Germany but withdrew due to a hamstring injury.Balogun travelled to Orlando, where the U.S. were training, during the international window. U.S. interim coach Anthony Hudson admitted “discussions” had taken place with the forward during March’s international break, adding that it was “an opportunity to share about our program”.

Speaking after announcing his squad for March’s international fixtures, England manager Gareth Southgate said Balogun would have to be patient regarding a call up to the senior side.“It is up to the player to weigh up where his heart feels,” Southgate said. “Is he prepared to wait a little bit for an opportunity if he backs himself and feels he can push his way into our squad? Because anybody who has followed us will know that we will give young players a chance.“So, we cannot go and give first-team call-ups to someone just because we don’t want them to go somewhere else.”Balogun made four appearances for the U.S. Under-18s in 2018, before going on to represent England at various youth levels.The U.S. are next in action on June 16 when they face Mexico in the CONCACAF Nations League. The CONCACAF Gold Cup, which is being hosted in the U.S., takes place between June 24 and July 16.

Pep Guardiola on Real Madrid decider: ‘Don’t worry, I’m not overthinking’

LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - MAY 14: Pep Guardiola, Manager of Manchester City, looks on during the Premier League match between Everton FC and Manchester City at Goodison Park on May 14, 2023 in Liverpool, England. (Photo by Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)

By The Athletic Staff


Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola has quipped that he will not “overthink” Wednesday’s Champions League semi-final showdown against Real Madrid.

Guardiola, who is seeking a first Champions League trophy with City and a first in his career since 2011, has seen some tactics and team selections in big games scrutinised amid a perception he is prone to unnecessary complication.

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A decision to play without a specialist holding midfielder in the 2021 Champions League final defeat to Chelsea was criticised, while a switch to a three-man defence in a quarter-final defeat to Lyon the previous year proved another call that backfired.

The Spaniard, whose side drew 1-1 in the first leg, has previously responded to questions about his big-game tactics in inimitable style, saying last year: “I have to adapt. That’s why I love to overthink with stupid tactics … we’ll play with 12 tomorrow.”

Asked about his plans ahead of Wednesday’s crucial second leg against Carlo Ancelotti’s side at the Etihad, he told reporters: “I’m not overthinking tomorrow, don’t worry guys.

“It’s nothing special. Nothing different to what we have done in the past.

“We know how important it is tomorrow — maybe one of the most important ones. We can’t deny that, but I said to the players, enjoy the moment; how fortunate we are, how incredibly lucky we are to be here. We’ll do everything, give everything.”

City are close to becoming only the second English team to win the treble of Premier League, Champions League and FA Cup after Manchester United in 1998-99, but Guardiola has played down the prospect that the coming weeks could establish his legacy.

“My legacy is exceptional already,” he said.

“I have been here many times. We have to live this like a huge opportunity, enjoy the moment. We are lucky to be here. We are going to give everything to win one game to reach the final.”

City will be without Nathan Ake against Real, but Guardiola has otherwise confirmed a clean bill of health for his squad.

The winner of Wednesday’s game will face Inter Milan or AC Milan in the Champions League final on June 10.

Do Real Madrid have any galacticos – and does it matter?

SEVILLE, SPAIN - MAY 06: Daniel Carvajal of Real Madrid celebrates with the trophy after winning the Copa del Rey Final match between Real Madrid and CA Osasuna at Estadio de La Cartuja on May 06, 2023 in Seville, Spain. (Photo by Fran Santiago/Getty Images)

By Michael CoxMay 15, 202368


Once upon a time, it was difficult for neutrals to warm to Real Madrid. For all the glamour associated with the bright lights of the Bernabeu and the magnificent all-white kit, something about their approach to team-building somewhat cheapened everything.

In the first period of this century, Real Madrid broke the world record transfer fee five times in a row. In 2000 they signed Luis Figo, in 2001 Zinedine Zidane, in 2009 Kaka and Cristiano Ronaldo, and in 2013 Gareth Bale. That doesn’t even include their signings of Ronaldo in 2002 or David Beckham in 2003, when “galactico” culture started to feel like a serious issue and Real started underachieving.

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It’s now striking to look at the list of the most expensive transfers of all time and realise that Real Madrid aren’t anywhere to be seen in the top 10. Barcelona feature three times, PSG and Chelsea twice, while Manchester UnitedManchester City and Atletico Madrid once apiece. Which prompts the question — do Real actually have any galacticos?

Real Madrid in November 2004: peak Galacticos era (Photo by Richard Heathcote/Getty Images)


Defining precisely what makes a “galactico” is open to interpretation, but it’s not the same as simply being a good player. Claude Makelele, for example, was very much not a galactico because of his relatively modest status, and his functional role in the side. Raul Gonzalez probably was, despite the fact he was an academy product rather than a glitzy signing.

But Real Madrid probably don’t have any true galacticos now, not in the true sense. Their squad can be broken down into various sections, all of which point to logic, intelligence and patience, rather than simply splashing the cash on big names.

The first section features the academy products. None of these players are amongst Real Madrid’s best footballers, but if Real’s policy was once about “Zidanes y Pavones” (superstars and academy products), it is the latter who feature more prominently. Thirty-three-year-old Nacho and 31-year-old Lucas Vazquez both came through the club’s youth system and have remained ever since. They’re not always in the starting XI, but they offer a sense of permanence.

Dani Carvajal also fits into this category — although he had a period away with Bayer Leverkusen, he was a cantera player, and one who had a buy-back clause during his time in Germany. Mariano Diaz, similarly, had a season with Lyon, but had worked his way through Real’s C and B teams before becoming a first-teamer.

The second section contains the signings from South America. Other top European clubs have had less success when signing players directly from Latin American countries in recent years, with Premier League clubs often preferring to sign those with European experience. But Real Madrid have made astute purchases of youngsters Vinicius JuniorFederico Valverde and Rodrygo.

Fede Valverde(Photo: Mateo Villalba/Quality Sport Images/Getty Images)

None of them could be considered unknowns — there’s hype about any promising player these days — but all adapted quickly and played a crucial role in Real’s European Cup victory last year. Centre-back Eder Militao is a slightly different case, having spent a season at Porto and been signed for a sizeable fee. Again, it’s not quite galactico territory.

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The third section is comprised of those signed for big sums of money, but at a young age, so they should offer longevity and resale value. Eduardo Camavinga and Aurelien Tchouameni didn’t come cheap, at an estimated £30million and £80million respectively. But they were considered future greats, and young enough to be nurtured into precisely the type of midfielders Real want. Dani Ceballos and Marco Asensio, who arrived for more modest fees, are also in this mould.

The fourth section is the two free transfers. Signing quality centre-backs was once Real Madrid’s blind spot, but now they don’t simply sign good defenders, they sign them for nothing. David Alaba and Antonio Rudiger were both approaching 30 when they arrived from Bayern Munich and Chelsea respectively, and Real have learned not to pay big money for players of that age. On a Bosman, though, both made sense.

Alaba and Rudiger joined Real on free transfers (Photo: Rubén de la Fuente Pérez/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

The fifth section is the world-class players who have been around for ages. Karim Benzema won the most recent Ballon d’Or, but is coming up to 14 years at Real Madrid, an extraordinarily lengthy spell considering Real’s previous determination to sign superstars. Always a talented player, Benzema has truly shone in recent seasons, notably after the departure of Cristiano Ronaldo — in other words, the absence of a galactico unlocked his true potential.

Another Ballon d’Or winner, Luka Modric, and Toni Kroos are broadly similar cases. Modric was an outstanding Premier League midfielder when he joined in 2012, while Kroos was excellent for Germany’s World Cup-winning side upon his transfer in 2014. But as with Benzema, their longevity and familiarity with Real’s methods is the defining feature of their status in this side, not their reputation upon arrival or transfer fee. They all feel like quiet, hard-working professionals rather than individualistic superstars.

That leaves very few players who have actually started a league game for Real Madrid this season. We can safely say that back-up goalkeeper Andriy Lunin is not a galactico, nor is left-back Ferland Mendy.

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Maybe the biggest contender for true galactico status is goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois. He wasn’t an academy product, nor signed as a youngster or from a lesser league. He was an established world-class operator, 26 years old, signed for a large sum of money, and he’s gone on to produce excellent individual performances to help Real to win trophies, most notably in last year’s 1-0 Champions League final win over Liverpool. But can a goalkeeper really be a galactico?

And that leaves just one other player who has started in La Liga for Real Madrid this season — a player who is unquestionably a galactico. The 11th-most expensive player of all time, signed at the age of 28 from one of Europe’s major clubs, where he was a borderline legend.

That man is Eden Hazard, an attacker who has sadly managed just four league goals in nearly four years for Real Madrid. Nothing symbolises the anti-galactico nature of this side like the most obvious galactico becoming the club’s forgotten man.

Is Hazard Real’s only current galactico? (Photo: David S. Bustamante/Soccrates/Getty Images)

It’s worth considering, too, the nature of Real’s manager. On one hand, Carlo Ancelotti is the ultimate superstar coach, a European Cup specialist who has worked at an elite club in every major European league. But it’s also worth remembering his managerial spells before Real: he was sacked from Bayern because the players thought his methods were dated, he underachieved at Napoli and he’d most recently finished 10th with Everton. It wasn’t like Real had recruited Pep Guardiola.

It remains to be seen how long Real Madrid remain like this. Rumours continue about the potential arrival of Mohamed SalahKylian Mbappe and Erling Haaland, all of whom would obviously be galacticos.

But building a winning side isn’t about signing good players. It’s also about having a defined culture, about familiarity between players and about developing them into precisely what you want. That often beats galactico culture on the pitch — and brings more plaudits from neutrals too. (Photo: Fran Santiago/Getty Images)

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Manchester City's Norwegian striker Erling Haaland (L) celebrates scoring the team's third goal, his hat-trick, during the UEFA Champions League round of 16 second-leg football match between Manchester City and RB Leipzig at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester, north west England, on March 14, 2023. (Photo by Paul ELLIS / AFP) (Photo by PAUL ELLIS/AFP via Getty Images)

Manchester City feel unstoppable at Etihad thanks to ‘small’ mentality (and big noise)

Sam Lee May 16, 2023

There was a tweet going around last week praising Manchester City’s home record in the Champions League which did not quite tell the full story.It said, “Man City haven’t lost at home in the Champions League since 2018, in a 2-1 loss to Liverpool. 🤯”, which is not quite right because they lost to Lyon in September 2018.But by digging a little deeper it is clear to see how impressive City’s run actually is. Since that Lyon game, they have played 25 games and won 23 of them, with just two draws — a win percentage of 92.They have scored 81 goals and conceded just 18, which is an average of over three goals scored per game and fewer than one conceded=1

A simple case of ‘good team wins at home’, like you would get anywhere else? Not really. In the same period, Real Madrid have lost six home games and drawn four. Liverpool have lost five and drawn four. Bayern Munich have lost two and drawn two. Chelsea, winners in 2021, have lost five and drawn four.

Barcelona have lost four, Juventus six, Paris Saint-Germain five. Atletico Madrid have lost three and only won once in their last 11 European home games.

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So what City are doing really is quite special. Especially given the draws did not come against Europe’s top sides but in dead rubbers against Shakhtar Donetsk and Sporting Lisbon when progression to the next round was already assured.

The primary reason is that City are a very special team, better than most (if not all) others, with an unusual ability to stay consistent over a number of years. In the Premier League in that period at home, for comparison, they have won 74 of their 91 games, a win percentage of 81.

Ahead of the semi-final first leg against Real Madrid last weekRodri gave an insight into the reasons why his side has been able to fight for the title and Champions League at this stage of the season for the past three years.

“We have staff behind us who push us every year to be better and better,” he said. “We have new players coming in and we try to teach them this level of ambition, of hunger, because when you win, win, win, of course… you need something inside to go again.

“You have to have the proper mentality to feel like a small team and fight like a small team — because if you feel something bigger you will be confused. That’s why we do it: we feel small, we fight like a small team, run like a small team and then we have top-quality players who deserve everything.”

Part of that, especially when it comes to the Champions League, is Pep Guardiola’s insistence on playing strong teams packed with senior players even in those supposed dead rubbers — a phrase he does not like.

Another part, which becomes more relevant ahead of the clash against Madrid on Wednesday, is that the Etihad Stadium comes to life in the bigger games.

(Photo: Catherine Ivill/Getty Images)

Whether against Liverpool in the league in recent years or PSG, Bayern or Madrid in Europe, there is a buzz around the Etihad that belies the usually lazy stereotypes about City’s home support.

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In reality, most of the big cathedrals of European football are not quite so rowdy for routine matches but suddenly come to life for the biggest spectacles. The Etihad is no different.

There is a degree of fear among the fanbase this time that the club have undermined their own chances of creating a fierce atmosphere by altering their ticketing criteria for the Madrid game.

For the first time this season, City fans did not have to have attended any other games this season to buy a ticket for Wednesday night. The complaint is that those who have been to loads of games this season joined the same queue as everybody else and have been overtaken by ‘tourists’. There is an assumption — which, it must be said, is not especially watertight — that those newcomers will not know how to make an atmosphere.

It is easy to imagine that the football on display will sort that out, if it is an issue at all. City — well, Kevin De Bruyne — have a knack for scoring early goals in these big games that tend to drag everything else along with them.

Last season against Real Madrid, he scored within two minutes; three weeks before that game he had scored inside five against Liverpool. A few weeks ago, he scored after seven minutes against Arsenal which, yet again, set the tone.

De Bruyne scores against Real Madrid in 2022 (Photo: David Ramos/Getty Images)

It may be a coincidence that City score early goals in their biggest games at this stage of the season but it does mark out a difference compared to their away games in Europe in particular.

Since the home defeat against Lyon four and a half years ago, City have played 27 games away from home and won 14, with nine draws and four defeats. They have scored 49 and conceded 22, an average of 1.81 for and 0.81 against.

City have actually drawn their last five Champions League away games, for a variety of reasons: in Copenhagen, they had a man sent off in the first half and were happy to settle for a draw; in Dortmund, a draw suited both them and the home side.

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At Bayern, they hardly needed to exert themselves given they were 3-0 up from the first leg but against RB Leipzig and Real Madrid, with the first legs away from home, a more cautious approach has been obvious.

In both of those games, Guardiola did not use any substitutes and the explanations were basically identical.

“With the transitions and the way they play, you have to have a lot of control,” he said in Leipzig. “That’s why the players that we had, like (Ilkay) Gundogan, like Riyad (Mahrez), we have the extra passes and that’s what we need, especially in the first leg. Maybe in the second leg, I will be crazy and play with nine strikers and make up-and-downs. But in this game, I felt I need this type of control because, when it’s open, German teams are better than us.”

A few days after the draw in Madrid he offered this: “I thought a lot in the last minutes about making a substitution in the Bernabeu or not. The players on the bench are so, so dynamic in their movements, especially Phil (Foden), Julian (Alvarez), a little bit Riyad. But in that moment, we didn’t need that.”

https://theathletic.com/report/podcast-clip/?clip_id=7387

Aside from arguing that Mahrez gives them ‘extra passes’ in one example but is, to some extent, more dynamic in another, Guardiola’s comments show perfectly how City are happy to keep games tight away from home — which is something they tried did at Tottenham in 2019, too.

We are used to seeing English teams go away from home in Europe and play for a draw, or even a narrow defeat, by putting men behind the ball and digging in. City effectively do the same thing but they do it with the ball — more passes, fewer risks.

There will be an element of that at home: they will not rush things on Wednesday, especially if Madrid sit back and wait for counters, but there will not be the same level of caution.

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“We will try to adjust something maybe in the second leg to be more fluid and play with a bit more rhythm because we play at home and at home we feel comfortable with our people,” Guardiola said in Madrid last week.

And, as Jack Grealish put it: “At the Etihad, we feel unstoppable.”

AC Milan get Rafael Leao injury boost ahead of Champions League second leg vs Inter Milan

AC Milan's Portuguese forward Rafael Leao celebrates scoring his team's first goal during the Italian Serie A football match between AC Milan and Lecce at San Siro stadium in Milan on April 23, 2023. (Photo by GABRIEL BOUYS / AFP) (Photo by GABRIEL BOUYS/AFP via Getty Images)

By James Horncastle May 15, 2023


AC Milan forward Rafael Leao could return for Tuesday’s Champions League semi-final decider against Inter Milan.

Leao, 23, missed Milan’s 2-0 defeat in last week’s first leg after suffering a muscle injury in a recent Serie A win against Lazio.

He had trained — separately from his team-mates — on the morning of Milan’s defeat by their city rivals, only to be deemed not fit enough to feature.

But Milan coach Stefano Pioli has delivered a positive update ahead of the second-leg showdown.

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“He’s better,” Pioli said when asked about Leao on Monday. “(Rade) Krunic and (Junior) Messias are too. If everything goes as it should, they’ll be available for training later and for tomorrow.”

While Leao’s return would be a major boost for Milan, Inter are out to hold onto their lead at San Siro and reach the final for the first time since they were crowned European champions in 2010.

“It will take a cool head and a warm heart,” said Inter boss Simone Inzaghi. “I will be repetitive, but it’s the only way for matches like this.

“Tomorrow, we know it’s one of the most important games in Inter’s history. We know we have an advantage, deservedly so, but we won’t just have to manage it. We’ll have to play as Inter, knowing that we have a strong team in front of us.

“We know we are 90 minutes away from a dream, which I and these wonderful guys had.”

Forward Joaquin Correa was taken off at half-time during Inter’s 4-2 win over Sassuolo on Saturday but could still feature against Milan.

“Correa asked for a change,” Inzaghi said. “Hopefully, it’s nothing serious, but we’ll evaluate in today’s training. He should make it but I have no certainties.”

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Milan haven’t learned from derby defeats — Inter were far superior with and without the ball

How Arsenal loanee Folarin Balogun would fit with USMNT after breakout season

SHEFFIELD, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 27: Folarin Balogun of England during the International Friendly between England U21 and Germany U21 at Bramall Lane on September 27, 2022 in Sheffield, England. (Photo by Gareth Copley/Getty Images)

By Jeff Rueter

Jan 6, 2023

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For 13 years, Arsenal’s Folarin Balogun was the public eye. The New York City-born striker’s family emigrated to England when he was two years old, ultimately joining the Gunners’ academy at the age of 8. For over a decade, he developed while studying Arsenal forwards like Robin van Persie, Olivier Giroud and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang. 

This season has been his breakthrough, having scored 10 goals while on loan to French Ligue 1 side Reims through the first half of the season. That’s good enough to be the club’s top scorer and open more discussion as to where his international future may lie, as Balogun is eligible to represent England, the United States and Nigeria. 

And while Arsenal has yet to recall him as a replacement for the injured Gabriel Jesus, his torrid form has opened a lucrative potential transfer market for teams in need of a goalscorer.

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What has made Balogun so successful in France, and how might he fit in to a U.S. national team program in desperate need of a striker (should he choose the U.S.)? Let’s dive in. 


Player profile

At the end of the 2019-20 season, the then-19-year-old Balogun had yet to log a single senior club appearance for Arsenal, though he had represented both England and the United States in their youth national teams, most notably (respectively) at the 2018 UEFA European Under-17 Championship and the Václav Ježek Youth (U-18) Tournament. 

The 2020-21 campaign provided his career with a breakthrough of sorts: Balogun opened his Arsenal scoring account during the Europa League group stage before securing a winter loan to Middlesbrough for more regular match action. Playing under Chris Wilder at Boro, Balogun bagged three goals while adding three assists in 18 Championship matches. 

Upon his return, Arsenal thought that a year with Stade de Reims could speed up his developmental curve in Ligue 1 as it had for William Saliba on the other end of the pitch.

As it turns out, it’s been a dream move for all parties. Speaking with The Athletic last month, Balogun said that onetime Arsenal teammates Alexander Lacazette and Nicolas Pépé each suggested he try his hand at the French first division for more frequent involvement in a physical league. 

“(Pepé) just said to stay positive, keep working hard and then he said to maybe think about a loan to the French league, ‘I’m sure you can do well in this league if you apply yourself’,” Balogun said in December, “He set me a challenge of getting 10 goals in the league and said, ‘If you do that, you’ve made progress.’”

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?creatorScreenName=TheAthletic&dnt=true&embedId=twitter-widget-0&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1608532342611791873&lang=en&origin=https%3A%2F%2Ftheathletic.com%2F4062630%2F2023%2F01%2F06%2Ffolarin-balogun-arsenal-usmnt%2F&sessionId=9cda86fc684f9738e456ee549294e0b55dd5c64e&siteScreenName=TheAthletic&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px

As it turns out, Pépé’s “challenge” has hardly seemed a steep one. The striker notched his 10th goal of the Ligue 1 campaign with a brace against Rennes in Reims’ return to action following the World Cup. He did so despite managing just 19 touches, his fewest in a league start since late August. He missed the team’s ensuing match on January 2 with a reported hamstring issue, with Reims finishing 1-1 in an away day at Lille.

ADVERTISEMENT

So, what changed? 

In all likelihood, Balogun may not have been set up for success at his previous loan. Being asked to lead the line for a team in a promotion battle is no small assignment for a player’s first extended senior involvement. At an established Ligue 1 side, Balogun has been able to express himself more.

STAT2021-22*2022-23**
Shots/90 (% on target)2.2 (54.2%)3.11 (46.5%)
xG/90 (npxG/90)0.320.64
Goals/900.270.72
Touches in pen area/903.854.34
Offsides/900.370.87
Progressive runs/900.461.37

* With Middlesbrough (EFL Championship)
** With Reims (Ligue 1)
Data via Wyscout

While shots were hard to come by with Boro, he was consistent in placing them on frame. He also finished his chances at close to his expected rate, albeit with fairly meager service. It all pales in comparison to what he’s managed through the first half of the Ligue 1 campaign. Even removing his 3-for-3 record from the penalty spot, Balogun has managed 0.48 non-penalty expected goals per 90 when factoring for extra time. 

He’s also been given more license to play a progressive role, logging an additional touch in the box per two games, being caught offside at a similar clip — showing a greater license to break behind the line, which isn’t a bad thing — and adding nearly a full additional progressive run per game. Those aren’t just significant improvements on his Championship output, either. It’s the type of profile which turns a striker from a rank-and-file loan army mainstay into a coveted young striker.

Here are Balogun’s percentile figures in the following table compared to positional peers in Men’s “Big 5” leagues, Champions League and Europa League over the last 365 days. Balogun has played 1160 qualified minutes in that timeframe.

STAT# PER 90 MINUTESPERCENTILE
Non-penalty goals0.5486
npxG0.5287
Shots total3.178
npxG+expected assists0.6378
Shot-creating actions2.2539
Progressive passes1.6370
Progressive passes received8.5395
Dribbles completed1.0971

Data via fbref dot com

If there’s an area for improvement, it would be in his aerial game. Listed at 5-foot-10 (1,55 meters), Balogun hasn’t been adept at getting on the end of headers with Reims whether the balls floats in from set pieces or the run of play. Smarterscout data rates players from zero to 99 depending on how often they perform a certain action. It also tells us how effective they are at it compared to others in their position.

Nevertheless, he’s fared well when he takes opponents on with the ball at his feet while also factoring into Reims’ front-line press. While we like to see an all-rounder up top, the number of true target forwards is dwindling with each passing year. 

Balogun seems to project nicely to a more modern archetype — even when factoring for the difference in quality between Ligue 1 and the Premier League, as smarterscout’s data reflects on his pizza chart.


International future

Having represented England and the U.S. at youth ranks and holding Nigerian eligibility, Balogun told Ligue 1’s website in November that he would make a decision about who he’ll represent soon. While recent years have seen high-pressure decisions made by the likes of Sergiño Dest, Yunus Musah, Gaga Slonina and Malik Tillman among others, Balogun is unfazed by the speculation.

ADVERTISEMENT

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“I don’t have a problem with it,” Balogun said. “It’s the role of the media to ask these kinds of questions and I accept it. I’m going to make a decision soon and that decision will not depend on what the media or people think but on what is best for me. We will talk about it quietly with my family.”

He spoke favorably about his U.S. experience in the same interview.

“Yes, when I was 17, the U.S. federation offered me a friendly tournament in the Czech Republic in the summer,” Balogun said. “I had played for England in the Euro U-17 a few months before, but after talking to my family I decided to go. And we won the tournament! It was a good experience because I got to see a different way of playing and other methods. I’m still in contact with several people I met there.”

While his family deliberates his options in private, the rest of us in the public arena can bear the brunt of analyzing his options. England’s striker stable ahead of the 2026 World Cup is headlined well, as Harry Kane will be 32 and Marcus Rashford just 28. There isn’t a clear next-in-line among the younger options beyond Balogun (who’s currently 21), as Aston Villa’s Cameron Archer, Leeds’ Joe Gelhardt, and Tottenham’s Dane Scarlett have yet to establish themselves at club level. 

Nigeria arguably has the deepest pool of the three nations, with Napoli ace Victor Osimhen leading a group which includes Ademola Lookman, Samuel Chukwueze, Kelechi Iheanacho and Terem Moffi, who also has 10 goals in the ongoing Ligue 1 season with Lorient. 

But for the U.S., no position has been a weaker spot over the past five years than striker. Throughout the Gregg Berhalter era, the team has opted to play its strikers in a more withdrawn role, asking them to play in build-up phases and create chances for their wingers as well as themselves.

While Jesús Ferreira was top option throughout the summer in a deep-lying role, he struggled in his only World Cup involvement, a start against the Netherlands in the round of 16. Josh Sargent looked much better alongside Christian Pulisic and Tim Weah but failed to factor for scoring chances of his own before missing the knockout defeat due to injury. Haji Wright came as more of a target option and pure scorer, but struggled to impress in the tournament after a fine debut against Wales.

ADVERTISEMENT

All three represented a different approach to the position; all three struggled. In Balogun, the program would find its white whale: someone who could be a well-round striker and an upgrade over the current options.

Balogun vs. U.S.’s 2022 World Cup strikers, 2022-23*

Balogun vs. U.S.’s 2022 World Cup strike

BALOGUNFERREIRASARGENTWRIGHT
Shots/90 (% on target)3.11 (46.5%)2.58 (49.4%)2.08 (56.3%)2.37 (35.9%)
xG/900.640.40.310.42
Touches in pen area/904.343.484.153.65
Forward passes/90 (% accurate)3.4 (57.4%)6.27 (53.7%)3.37 (61.5%)1.76 (69%)
Dribbles/90 (% success)2.96 (53.7%)1.48 (49%)3.16 (52.1%)4.56 (52%)
Aerial duels (% won)2.53 (20%)1.04 (19.4%)5.58 (38.8%)5.6 (41.3%)
Recoveries in opp ½2.462.874.111.89

Data via Wyscout* All data for 2022-23 league action save for Ferreira, which uses the full 2022 MLS season

Balogun has not only fired off more shots per 90, but he’s done so at a respectable level of putting shots on frame. Even his non-penalty xG of 0.52 would be tops in this class, to say nothing of his 0.64 clip factoring for three converted penalty kicks.

The rest of the data helps show how he’s played for Reims, even if you don’t watch Ligue 1. The forward passing figures help illustrate the difference between Ferreira — a deep-lying forward if ever there was one — and Wright, more of a classic line-leading target forward. On that spectrum, Balogun is nearly identical to Sargent, as is reinforced by the number of dribbles he attempts. Unlike the Norwich forward, however, Balogun has yet to showcase much ability in the air while factoring less in frontline defending. 

Nevertheless, based on numbers alone Balogun would represent a better goalscoring threat than the current stable of U.S. men’s strikers without sacrificing many of the factors which helped Sargent (and, in qualifying, Ricardo Pepi) become ideal options between Pulisic, Weah and the rest of the wing options. 

While January may not see Balogun change clubs, his loan spell in France has indeed brought his game to another level. Whether he joins Musah and Tillman in leading the U.S. into the 2026 World Cup or becomes one of the program’s great near-misses like Neven Subotić or Giuseppe Rossi remains to be seen. 

However he leans, it’s clear that he’s finally gotten his senior career on track — whether he’s in Mikel Arteta’s plans for Arsenal moving forward or not.

How Arsenal loanee Folarin Balogun would fit with USMNT after breakout season

SHEFFIELD, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 27: Folarin Balogun of England during the International Friendly between England U21 and Germany U21 at Bramall Lane on September 27, 2022 in Sheffield, England. (Photo by Gareth Copley/Getty Images)

By Jeff Rueter

Jan 6, 2023

111


For 13 years, Arsenal’s Folarin Balogun was the public eye. The New York City-born striker’s family emigrated to England when he was two years old, ultimately joining the Gunners’ academy at the age of 8. For over a decade, he developed while studying Arsenal forwards like Robin van Persie, Olivier Giroud and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang. 

This season has been his breakthrough, having scored 10 goals while on loan to French Ligue 1 side Reims through the first half of the season. That’s good enough to be the club’s top scorer and open more discussion as to where his international future may lie, as Balogun is eligible to represent England, the United States and Nigeria. 

And while Arsenal has yet to recall him as a replacement for the injured Gabriel Jesus, his torrid form has opened a lucrative potential transfer market for teams in need of a goalscorer.

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What has made Balogun so successful in France, and how might he fit in to a U.S. national team program in desperate need of a striker (should he choose the U.S.)? Let’s dive in. 


Player profile

At the end of the 2019-20 season, the then-19-year-old Balogun had yet to log a single senior club appearance for Arsenal, though he had represented both England and the United States in their youth national teams, most notably (respectively) at the 2018 UEFA European Under-17 Championship and the Václav Ježek Youth (U-18) Tournament. 

The 2020-21 campaign provided his career with a breakthrough of sorts: Balogun opened his Arsenal scoring account during the Europa League group stage before securing a winter loan to Middlesbrough for more regular match action. Playing under Chris Wilder at Boro, Balogun bagged three goals while adding three assists in 18 Championship matches. 

Upon his return, Arsenal thought that a year with Stade de Reims could speed up his developmental curve in Ligue 1 as it had for William Saliba on the other end of the pitch.

As it turns out, it’s been a dream move for all parties. Speaking with The Athletic last month, Balogun said that onetime Arsenal teammates Alexander Lacazette and Nicolas Pépé each suggested he try his hand at the French first division for more frequent involvement in a physical league. 

“(Pepé) just said to stay positive, keep working hard and then he said to maybe think about a loan to the French league, ‘I’m sure you can do well in this league if you apply yourself’,” Balogun said in December, “He set me a challenge of getting 10 goals in the league and said, ‘If you do that, you’ve made progress.’”

https://platform.twitter.com/embed/Tweet.html?creatorScreenName=TheAthletic&dnt=true&embedId=twitter-widget-0&features=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%3D%3D&frame=false&hideCard=false&hideThread=false&id=1608532342611791873&lang=en&origin=https%3A%2F%2Ftheathletic.com%2F4062630%2F2023%2F01%2F06%2Ffolarin-balogun-arsenal-usmnt%2F&sessionId=9cda86fc684f9738e456ee549294e0b55dd5c64e&siteScreenName=TheAthletic&theme=light&widgetsVersion=aaf4084522e3a%3A1674595607486&width=550px

As it turns out, Pépé’s “challenge” has hardly seemed a steep one. The striker notched his 10th goal of the Ligue 1 campaign with a brace against Rennes in Reims’ return to action following the World Cup. He did so despite managing just 19 touches, his fewest in a league start since late August. He missed the team’s ensuing match on January 2 with a reported hamstring issue, with Reims finishing 1-1 in an away day at Lille.

ADVERTISEMENT

So, what changed? 

In all likelihood, Balogun may not have been set up for success at his previous loan. Being asked to lead the line for a team in a promotion battle is no small assignment for a player’s first extended senior involvement. At an established Ligue 1 side, Balogun has been able to express himself more.

STAT2021-22*2022-23**
Shots/90 (% on target)2.2 (54.2%)3.11 (46.5%)
xG/90 (npxG/90)0.320.64
Goals/900.270.72
Touches in pen area/903.854.34
Offsides/900.370.87
Progressive runs/900.461.37

* With Middlesbrough (EFL Championship)
** With Reims (Ligue 1)
Data via Wyscout

While shots were hard to come by with Boro, he was consistent in placing them on frame. He also finished his chances at close to his expected rate, albeit with fairly meager service. It all pales in comparison to what he’s managed through the first half of the Ligue 1 campaign. Even removing his 3-for-3 record from the penalty spot, Balogun has managed 0.48 non-penalty expected goals per 90 when factoring for extra time. 

He’s also been given more license to play a progressive role, logging an additional touch in the box per two games, being caught offside at a similar clip — showing a greater license to break behind the line, which isn’t a bad thing — and adding nearly a full additional progressive run per game. Those aren’t just significant improvements on his Championship output, either. It’s the type of profile which turns a striker from a rank-and-file loan army mainstay into a coveted young striker.

Here are Balogun’s percentile figures in the following table compared to positional peers in Men’s “Big 5” leagues, Champions League and Europa League over the last 365 days. Balogun has played 1160 qualified minutes in that timeframe.

STAT# PER 90 MINUTESPERCENTILE
Non-penalty goals0.5486
npxG0.5287
Shots total3.178
npxG+expected assists0.6378
Shot-creating actions2.2539
Progressive passes1.6370
Progressive passes received8.5395
Dribbles completed1.0971

Data via fbref dot com

If there’s an area for improvement, it would be in his aerial game. Listed at 5-foot-10 (1,55 meters), Balogun hasn’t been adept at getting on the end of headers with Reims whether the balls floats in from set pieces or the run of play. Smarterscout data rates players from zero to 99 depending on how often they perform a certain action. It also tells us how effective they are at it compared to others in their position.

Nevertheless, he’s fared well when he takes opponents on with the ball at his feet while also factoring into Reims’ front-line press. While we like to see an all-rounder up top, the number of true target forwards is dwindling with each passing year. 

Balogun seems to project nicely to a more modern archetype — even when factoring for the difference in quality between Ligue 1 and the Premier League, as smarterscout’s data reflects on his pizza chart.


International future

Having represented England and the U.S. at youth ranks and holding Nigerian eligibility, Balogun told Ligue 1’s website in November that he would make a decision about who he’ll represent soon. While recent years have seen high-pressure decisions made by the likes of Sergiño Dest, Yunus Musah, Gaga Slonina and Malik Tillman among others, Balogun is unfazed by the speculation.

ADVERTISEMENT

https://d50ab62b44facc86553ec1df693e37e6.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“I don’t have a problem with it,” Balogun said. “It’s the role of the media to ask these kinds of questions and I accept it. I’m going to make a decision soon and that decision will not depend on what the media or people think but on what is best for me. We will talk about it quietly with my family.”

He spoke favorably about his U.S. experience in the same interview.

“Yes, when I was 17, the U.S. federation offered me a friendly tournament in the Czech Republic in the summer,” Balogun said. “I had played for England in the Euro U-17 a few months before, but after talking to my family I decided to go. And we won the tournament! It was a good experience because I got to see a different way of playing and other methods. I’m still in contact with several people I met there.”

While his family deliberates his options in private, the rest of us in the public arena can bear the brunt of analyzing his options. England’s striker stable ahead of the 2026 World Cup is headlined well, as Harry Kane will be 32 and Marcus Rashford just 28. There isn’t a clear next-in-line among the younger options beyond Balogun (who’s currently 21), as Aston Villa’s Cameron Archer, Leeds’ Joe Gelhardt, and Tottenham’s Dane Scarlett have yet to establish themselves at club level. 

Nigeria arguably has the deepest pool of the three nations, with Napoli ace Victor Osimhen leading a group which includes Ademola Lookman, Samuel Chukwueze, Kelechi Iheanacho and Terem Moffi, who also has 10 goals in the ongoing Ligue 1 season with Lorient. 

But for the U.S., no position has been a weaker spot over the past five years than striker. Throughout the Gregg Berhalter era, the team has opted to play its strikers in a more withdrawn role, asking them to play in build-up phases and create chances for their wingers as well as themselves.

While Jesús Ferreira was top option throughout the summer in a deep-lying role, he struggled in his only World Cup involvement, a start against the Netherlands in the round of 16. Josh Sargent looked much better alongside Christian Pulisic and Tim Weah but failed to factor for scoring chances of his own before missing the knockout defeat due to injury. Haji Wright came as more of a target option and pure scorer, but struggled to impress in the tournament after a fine debut against Wales.

ADVERTISEMENT

All three represented a different approach to the position; all three struggled. In Balogun, the program would find its white whale: someone who could be a well-round striker and an upgrade over the current options.

Balogun vs. U.S.’s 2022 World Cup strikers, 2022-23*

Balogun vs. U.S.’s 2022 World Cup strike

BALOGUNFERREIRASARGENTWRIGHT
Shots/90 (% on target)3.11 (46.5%)2.58 (49.4%)2.08 (56.3%)2.37 (35.9%)
xG/900.640.40.310.42
Touches in pen area/904.343.484.153.65
Forward passes/90 (% accurate)3.4 (57.4%)6.27 (53.7%)3.37 (61.5%)1.76 (69%)
Dribbles/90 (% success)2.96 (53.7%)1.48 (49%)3.16 (52.1%)4.56 (52%)
Aerial duels (% won)2.53 (20%)1.04 (19.4%)5.58 (38.8%)5.6 (41.3%)
Recoveries in opp ½2.462.874.111.89

Data via Wyscout* All data for 2022-23 league action save for Ferreira, which uses the full 2022 MLS season

Balogun has not only fired off more shots per 90, but he’s done so at a respectable level of putting shots on frame. Even his non-penalty xG of 0.52 would be tops in this class, to say nothing of his 0.64 clip factoring for three converted penalty kicks.

The rest of the data helps show how he’s played for Reims, even if you don’t watch Ligue 1. The forward passing figures help illustrate the difference between Ferreira — a deep-lying forward if ever there was one — and Wright, more of a classic line-leading target forward. On that spectrum, Balogun is nearly identical to Sargent, as is reinforced by the number of dribbles he attempts. Unlike the Norwich forward, however, Balogun has yet to showcase much ability in the air while factoring less in frontline defending. 

Nevertheless, based on numbers alone Balogun would represent a better goalscoring threat than the current stable of U.S. men’s strikers without sacrificing many of the factors which helped Sargent (and, in qualifying, Ricardo Pepi) become ideal options between Pulisic, Weah and the rest of the wing options. 

While January may not see Balogun change clubs, his loan spell in France has indeed brought his game to another level. Whether he joins Musah and Tillman in leading the U.S. into the 2026 World Cup or becomes one of the program’s great near-misses like Neven Subotić or Giuseppe Rossi remains to be seen. 

However he leans, it’s clear that he’s finally gotten his senior career on track — whether he’s in Mikel Arteta’s plans for Arsenal moving forward or not.

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5/12/23 Champions League Semi’s Man City/Real Madrid Tues/Wed 3 pm CBS, U20 US Boys team announced, Onyweu named VP of US Sporting

Games to Watch

Of course Champions League Semi-Final 2nd round action on Tues/Wed leads the list of huge games this week.  Its Real Madrid traveling to Man City on Weds 3 pm on CBS tied at 1, on Tues Inter will have a 2-0 lead over AC Milan at 3 pm on CBS. (Coverage starts at 2 pm).  (tons of stories below).  Europa League play has Juventus traveling to Sevilla tied at 1 after the dramatic game tying goal in ET, and Roma took a 2-1 lead at home over Leverkusen with Carmel FC Coach Baco Benton and his daughter Caroline (CFC 2002 now in college) on hand here’s some cool videoBoth will play Thur at 3 pm on Paramount plus.    Weekend games have Leeds United with American’s McKinney and Arronson playing for their EPL lives against a New Castle team at 9 am on Sat on USA, followed by Dortmund hosting MGladbach as Reyna could see time vs US teammate Joe Scally in a must win for Dortmund if they want to win the league title over Bayern Munich with a just a few games left. Finally American backup GK’s Ethan Horvath of Luton Town and Zach Steffan of Middlesborough are both in English Championship Playoff games this weekend and again Tues/Wed (leg 2) as they battle to see who else will advance with Burnley to the EPL next year.    

Notes

Cool HBO Series Coming up on LA’s NWSL team Angel City FC starts Tues on HBO MaxCute from this weekend.  Bacelona great Sergio Busquets  has announced he is leaving Barcelona.  Indy 11 has a brother/sister combo playing this year as former Carmel Dad’s club players Cam and Cassidy Lindley play for the Women’s Indy 11 and the Boys in Blue – here’s a cool interview with them. Cool story about the Real We Are Wrexham and how they aren’t Ted Lasso as the very bottom of the stories.                                                  

U-20 USMNT World Cup Team Named & Oguchi Onyweu named US VP

The FIFA U-20 World Cup begins this month in Argentina, and the United States finally has their roster. Today, U.S. Soccer and U-20 head coach Mikey Varas named the 21-man roster who will compete for the USMNT U-20s in the tournament. The U-20s will compete in the group stage beginning on May 20th with a match against Ecuador. They continue by facing off against Fiji on May 23rd and then complete the group stage against Slovakia on May 26th. The matches will be shown on Fox Sports and Telemundo platforms, with each match slated for a 2:00pm ET kickoff. The U-20s have advanced to the quarterfinals in the past 3 U-20 World Cups and are looking to go even further this year. 11 players on the roster were on the roster that dominated at the 2022 Concacaf U-20 Championship, and 6 players have senior USMNT experience. In other news just weeks after naming a Sporting Director Matt Coker – US soccer has announced the hiring of former US international Oguchi Onyweu – I love it!

The 21-man U-20 roster:

GOALKEEPERS (3): 21-Alex Borto (Fulham FC), 12-Antonio Carrera (FC Dallas), 1-Gaga Slonina (Chelsea FC)

DEFENDERS (7): 17-Justin Che (Hoffenheim), 5-Brandan Craig (Philadelphia Union), 2-Mauricio Cuevas (LA Galaxy), 14-Marcus Ferkranus (LA Galaxy), 13-Jonathan Gomez (Real Sociedad), 3-Caleb Wiley (Atlanta United), 4-Joshua Wynder (Louisville City)

MIDFIELDERS (7): 6-Daniel Edelman (New York Red Bulls), 10-Diego Luna (Real Salt Lake), 8-Jack McGlynn (Philadelphia Union), 20-Rokas Pukstas (Hajduk Split), 15-Niko Tsakiris (San Jose Earthquakes), 18-Obed Vargas (Seattle Sounders FC), 16-Owen Wolff (Austin FC)

FORWARDS (4): 9-Cade Cowell (San Jose Earthquakes), 11-Kevin Paredes (Wolfsburg), 7-Quinn Sullivan (Philadelphia Union), 19-Darren Yapi (Colorado Rapids)

ALTERNATES (3): Moses Nyeman (Midfield – Real Salt Lake), Korede Osundina (Forward – Orange County SC), Thomas Williams (Defender – Orlando City SC)

Congrats to the Carmel FC 2009 Gold Girls who won the Great Lakes Region Premier League 2 Division. Coaches (L) Paul Cullington and (R) Doug Latham.

Sports allow us the opportunity to be part of something bigger than ourselves, of something special, of something meaningful. On Sunday, we (Carmel FC 09 Girls Gold) used that platform, together with the team we were about to play, to honor Westfield’s #12, Tucker Swain with green pre-wrap and 12 on the legs at our Challenge Cup Match. While we didn’t know him and no words can comprehend or heal the loss his family and friends are experiencing, if our thoughts and support can provide comfort, we will keep them coming.  Thanks Coach Abigail Donofrio (far left).  
💚 Carmel FC 2008 Girls Gold
💚 Indiana Fire Juniors 2008 Girls Navy
#CarmelFC #CarmelFCLove

2023 Alumni Co-Ed Summer Soccer

Location: Shelborne Fields – CCCSC – 3451 W. 126th St., Carmel  (Ages: 18 – 35)  $105  Sign Up

Grab your friends and make your own team or sign up and we’ll place you on a team, you don’t have to live in Carmel.
Games will take place on Wednesday and Sunday evenings. Dates: June 18, 21, 25, 28 & July 9, 12, 16, 19, 23, 26 Sign Up

GAMES ON TV

Sat, May 13

7:30 am USA                       Leeds United (Mckinney, Aaronson) vs New Castle

9:30 am ESPN+                  Union Berlin (Pfok) vs Frieberg

9:30 am ESPN+                  Bayern Munich vs Schalke

9:30 AM ESPN+ Sunderland vs Luton Town (Ethan Horvath GK) EFL Playoff

10 am USA                          Chelsea vs Nottingham Forest 

10 am Peacock                  Aston Villa vs  Tottenham

12:30 pm ESPN+               Dortmund (Reyna) vs MGladbach (Scally)

1 pm Apple TV Chicago vs St Louis

3 pm ESPN+                        Real Madrid vs Getafe

7:30 pm Apple TV       Atlanta vs Charlotte 

9:30 pm Apple TV       Real Salt Lake vs LAFC

10 pm ESPN+              Sacramento vs Indy 11

10 pm Para+               Angel City (Ertz)  vs Washington Spirit (Rodman, Hatch, Sanchez) NWSL

10:30 pm Apple+        Portland Timbers vs Vancouver

Sun, May 14                      

9 am USA                    Everton vs Man City 

9 am Peacock              West Ham vs Brentford

10 am Para+              Lady Chelsea vs  Man United  Women’s FA Cup Final

11:30 am USA             Arsenal vs Brighton

4 pm ESPN+ Middlesborough (Zack Stefan) vs Coventry City EFL Playoff

5:30 pm  Para+           NY Gotham FC (Williams) vs Orlando (Marta) NWSL

6 pm  Para+                KC Current (Franch) vsHouston Dash (Campbell) NWSL

9:30 pm FS1                 LA Galaxy vs SJ Earthquakes  

Tues, May 16     Champions League Quarterfinals

12 noon ESPN+ Luton Town 1 (Ethan Horvath)vs Sunderland 2 EFL Playoff

3 pm CBS                   AC Milan 0 vs Inter Milan 2

Weds, May 17

12noon ESPN+ Middlesborough 0 (Zack Stefan) vs Coventry City 0 EFL Playoff

3 pm CBS                     Man City  1 vs Real Madrid 1

Thur, May 18       Europa League

3 pm Paramount+            Roma 2 vs Leverkusen 1

3 pm Para+                         Juventus 1 vs Sevilla 1

3 pm Para+                        AZ 1 vs West Ham 2

Sat, June 10                       

2 pm CBS                             Champions League Final

Thurs, June 15

10 pm                                    USMNT vs Mexico  Nations League Semi’s

Sat, June 24

9:30 pm                                USMNT vs Jamaica (Soldier Field) Gold Cup

July 21                                  USWNT vs Vietnam Women’s World Cup

Indy 11 Schedule

NWSL Schedule

Soccer Saturday’s are every Sat 9-10 am on 93.5 and 107.5 FM with Greg Rakestraw

Carmel Dad’s Indy 11 Soccer Camp 6/12-6/15 Registration

USA

Slonina, Cowell lead U.S. U20 World Cup roster  ESPN FC Jeff Carlisle
Christian Pulisic linked with Napoli swap deal, Juventus – Reports

US Soccer hires Onyewu as VP of sporting
US captain Tyler Adams set to miss rest of season for Leeds

Will Christen Press Make the USWNT Roster?

The case for the most essential USWNT player: Naomi Girma

Champions League

Inter Milan in great position to make Champions League final
‘One small step’ left for Inzaghi’s Champions League final dream

Inter Milan ease past AC Milan in Champions League semifinal first leg

Premier League old boys put Inter Milan in commanding position

Antonio Rudiger silenced Erling Haaland… without even making a tackle

Who are the favorites to win the Champions League?

Man City stare down era-defining second leg against Europe’s dizzying shapeshifters

Superstar Vinicius shows range in UCL performance and will Man United fold in top-four race? 

Europa League


Gatti snatches Juve late draw against Sevilla in Europa League semi

Bove hands Roma small lead in Europa League semi with Leverkusen

West Ham, FC Basel take control of Europa Conference League semis

Michail Antonio puts West Ham on course to end 47-year wait for European final

EPL


Arsenal title hopes hit as Oleksandr Zinchenko ruled out of run-in

Which club will sign Declan Rice? Arsenal fearful of being priced out as Premier League giants join transfer race

Allardyce hopes ‘fear factor’ powers Leeds survival bid

MLS & NWSL

Unlawful gambling’ scandal hits MLS
Colorado Rapids suspend Max Alves after match-fixing allegations; MLS investigating

MLS player Alves suspended as part of Brazil gambling probe

New York Red Bulls up next for FC Cincinnati in U.S. Open Cup: What to know

New kings of Queens: NYCFC unveils spectacular images of planned stadium
Chris Wright

NWSL plans to expand to 16 teams in 2026

Angel City has upcycled an old tifo into a one-of-a-kind line of merch NWSL Standings

WORLD


‘It has been an honour’ — Barcelona legend Busquets to leave club

How Napoli Finally Won Serie A

Dortmund turn to bitter rivals Schalke to keep title dream alive

As Bayern Munich fights Borussia Dortmund, Schalke aims to play the spoiler

Messi set for return as PSG farewell looms

‘Modric, Benzema and Messi’: The Saudi Pro League are dreaming beyond Cristiano Ronaldo

Indy 11

W LEAGUE RECAP STC 0:8 IND

RECAP – LDN 1:2 IND

Boudadi Named to USL Championship Team of the Week

Recap – IND 1:1 PIT

Diz Pe Named to USL Championship Team of the Week

Indy Falls 1-0 to Columbus in US Open Cup Play

Season tickets

Full Schedule   Promotions 

new stadium

Indy 11 Ladies Win their first road game 8-0. They return home on Friday night, June 2nd at the Grand Park Events Center.
W LEAGUE RECAP STC 0:8 IND

Goalkeeping

Champions League Great Saves Semi Finals

Europa League Great Saves

Great PK Save MLS Game
De Gea blunder against West Ham costs Man Utd dear

It’s time for Man United to move on from De Gea after yet another error
Mark Ogden
Sources: De Gea’s No. 1 spot at Utd up for grabs
Rob Dawson

Reffing


Premier League to play VAR audio for first time
 
Dale Johnson

Man in the Middle – Champions League Reffing Documentary on Paramount +   

Become a Referee Must be 13

Shane (right) reffing Challenge Cup last weekend with
 
Order with this Link Fri/Saturdays May 19 – June 10th

U.S. Soccer hires Oguchi Onyewu as Vice President of Sporting

He will report to newly hired sporting director Matt Crocker. By Donald Wine II@blazindw  May 10, 2023, 8:32am PDT  

U.S. Soccer has added to its sporting department, and another World Cup veteran is stepping up. Today, U.S. Soccer announced that Oguchi Onyweu will be the federation’s vice president of sporting.

The 2-time World Cup veteran will work under U.S. Soccer sporting director Matt Crocker, who was hired a couple weeks ago, in supporting all sporting initiatives. That would include the USMNT and USWNT. He will also be responsible for maintaining relationships with clubs and leagues around the world. Onyewu will also help with fundraising for youth and extended national teams.

It’s a newly created role for the 40-year-old Onyewu, who will assist Crocker with the hiring of the next USMNT coach. A member of the 2006 and 2010 World Cup teams, Gooch became the Orlando City B sporting director in 2018 after his playing days ended. He then became the secretary general of Belgian club Royal Excelsior Virton in 2020. He current is an analyst for CBS Sports and represented the Athletes’ Council on the U.S. Soccer Board of Directors. He stepped down from that role last week to take the VP of Sport position.

“We are thrilled to welcome Oguchi Onyewu to our team at U.S. Soccer,” said Matt Crocker in a statement. “His experience as a player and sports executive, coupled with his deep understanding of U.S. Soccer, Oguchi will be invaluable as we continue to strengthen our sporting initiatives. We all look forward to working closely with him.”

“I am incredibly excited to take on this new challenge and work with Matt and the rest of the U.S. Soccer team to help shape the future of soccer in this country,” added Onyewu. “As a former player, I understand firsthand the importance of investing in our youth and building a strong foundation for the future. I look forward to working with the Men’s and Women’s Senior Teams, Youth National Teams and Extended National Teams to help support and grow our talented pool of players and identify and develop the next generation.”

JJ Watt exclusive: Learning from Ryan Reynolds – and how he’ll make Burnley big in the U.S.

Andy JonesMay 11, 202337

Wearing a Burnley FC-branded hat and jacket, JJ Watt strides into the boardroom at Burnley’s training ground.It is only his second visit to the town and his first as an official investor in its football club, but as he leans back in his chair, he already feels like part of the furniture.English football is not short of transatlantic influences at the moment — from the fictional (AFC Richmond and Ted Lasso) to the multitude of American owners already ensconced in the Premier League (seven clubs in the top flight are majority-owned by US companies or individuals).

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However, it is in another small town — 87 miles to the south west — where obvious comparisons can be drawn. Wrexham, like Burnley, is a community which has seen hard times economically; it, too, bonds around its local football club and, of course, there is a high-profile American influence now bringing that club to the world’s attention in the form of Hollywood actors Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney.

There is a difference both in playing level and investment stake, but Watt freely admits that Reynolds and McElhenney’s achievements were inspirational. A chat with Reynolds also provided some invaluable insights into how to tackle his new project, which he is undertaking alongside his wife Kealia, a former USWNT player.

“The number one thing Ryan said was recognising the tribalism in football,” says Watt, in an exclusive interview with The Athletic. “It’s different from American sports. It is a tribal loyalty that is rarely found in other sports or supporter bases. He told me I had to respect and honour that history and tradition and do right by that group otherwise you will lose them before you start.

“It’s been fun to watch him and Rob do it so well and that’s what we’re trying to do here. I’m trying to get so deep into the community so they know I understand this club. It has been here long before I was here and will be long after I’m gone; all I’m trying to do is respect and elevate what you have.”

Rob McElhenney and Ryan Reynolds (Photo: Jan Kruger/Getty Images)

Like the Wrexham project, this is no passing fancy or a celebrity spying an easy PR win. Watt, one of the biggest stars of the NFL from his time with the Houston Texans and Arizona Cardinals, is all-in on his new project having become a minority investor in Burnley at the start of May.The 34-year-old is in town for the club’s final Championship game of a triumphant title-winning season and the trophy parade around Burnley. “People keep telling me not everyday is like this, but we’re trying to make every day like this,” he says with a smile.

Watt could not have timed his investment better. Not only were he and Kealia able to be part of the party as Vincent Kompany and his squad celebrated their return to the Premier League, he had the honour of walking out with the Championship trophy onto the Turf Moor pitch.“I kind of feel like the kid in class who didn’t do any of the work in the group project but got an A anyway,” Watt says. “I don’t feel worthy of being part of all the celebrations. When Alan (Pace) asked me to walk the trophy out onto the pitch I said no, I didn’t feel I had earned it; everybody else earned it, I shouldn’t be the first person to touch it. They insisted, so I did it.”

JJ Watt with Burnley chairman Alan Pace (Photo: Alex Dodd – CameraSport via Getty Images)

The fans and the town have immediately taken the family to their hearts and Watt has been eager to spend as much time as possible with the community. He has visited the Royal Dyche pub — a local landmark, renamed in honour of former manager Sean Dyche — multiple times; the second time, it was part of a pub crawl. All for research purposes, you understand.

“Everyone has been so welcoming and gracious,” he says. “The reason I’m going about it the way I am is because I know how sceptical they must be because if I was in their shoes, I would be. What I’m trying to do is alleviate their concerns and let them know I am trying as hard as I can to learn about their history and culture and gain their trust.”

He will not be moving to East Lancashire like Burnley’s majority American owners, ALK Capital, but visits will be fairly frequent and he has been engaging with supporters on social media. His GIF game is particularly strong, courtesy of his affection for The U.S. version of The Office, although he admits he is “on the verge of doing it too much”.


So, why Burnley?

The process of investing in the club has taken months, but Watt’s ambition to invest in football ignited three years ago. He considered plenty of clubs across the globe, but none felt the perfect fit. “We knew that whenever we did find the right fit we would be going all in,” Watt says.

Deep down, Watt wanted to be involved in English football. After he became aware of a potential investment opportunity in Burnley in January, the following month he and Kealia had a meeting with deal-maker Damien O’Donohoe of IKON Capital at his home during Super Bowl week. O’Donohoe is a friend of chairman Alan Pace and has been advising him and Burnley FC.

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It piqued Watt’s interest further and he began to research the club, watching every match since and researching the history through the official website and YouTube videos. Prior to this interview, Watt had been watching a documentary about the 1987 game against Leyton Orient, a significant day in the club’s history as Burnley came perilously close to being relegated from the Football League and financial oblivion.He spent time looking at fan accounts to see the team through their eyes and he spoke to people he knew within the game to gain as much insight as possible.“I started to look at the boxes and every single one was checked. Unbelievable history, great town. I’m from a small town in Wisconsin. It’s all about hard-working people. There is a Premier League pedigree, a manager who has a pedigree of his own and a vision of the future and a style of football that’s beautiful and the ownership is incredible,” says Watt.The ability to be involved and make a difference was key. Watt acknowledges that he was a Chelsea fan — although he insists he is now Burnley through and through — but investing in that type of “$6billion club” would not allow him to make a significant impact.“I can come into a club and a town like Burnley and do that. That was a really big thing for us and I can go on a journey with this club and try to do my little part in elevating us,” he says.ALK Capital have been open to outside investment since they arrived at the club in December 2020. Another former NFL player, Malcolm Jenkins, became a minority investor in 2021 and the hope is the Watt family will not be the last.Questions have been raised surrounding their ownership since they purchased Burnley with the help of a £65million ($81.8m) loan. Following relegation last summer, doomsday predictions were made with a “significant portion” of the debt required to be repaid.

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But promotion back to the Premier League and the money that comes with it, alongside Watt’s investment and the club’s latest accounts, point to a healthy future.

Burnley’s title winners (Photo: Gareth Copley/Getty Images)

“I’m well versed on those questions because I had to ask a lot of them myself before putting my money in. I better know what he’s (Pace) thinking about debt-wise before I put a bunch of money into the club,” says Watt, smiling again.

Following initial Zoom conversations with Pace — who was unaware of who Watt was — and after taking a closer look at the finances, Watt had no doubts about coming on board.

Kompany penning a new five-year deal to allay any concerns about his future has only added to the feel-good factor surrounding the club. He and Watt had met in 2017 during Manchester City’s pre-season tour of America. Watt struck up a friendship with Kompany’s former team-mate Sergio Aguero and contacted the striker to learn more about the four-time Premier League winner.

“We all know Vince had multiple opportunities to go to massive clubs. There is a reason he chose to stay and build something special because he believes in what we are doing and that it can be done,” says Watt.

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Kompany and Watt have shared ideas and compared experiences of coaches, team-mates and methods from playing sport at an elite level. The Belgian is keen to spend a week with an NFL team, which Watt hopes to facilitate, and Kompany has extended the same invitation to the American.

“I love it when me and Vince just talk ball, those are my favourite conversations. He asks about what our meetings are like, what kind of film study we do, the recovery process. He wants to know everything and that’s what is so great about him, he is always trying to find an edge.”

As an athlete, the training ground is Watt’s favourite place; watching the players, meeting and spending time with staff and observing Kompany go about his work.

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“One of the best things we have going here is the camaraderie between the players. They are so tight-knit. I was speaking to a few of the guys on Monday night who carpool, a 50-minute drive every day. That type of bond doesn’t happen in every team. Talking about ball and life, you’re going to work and try harder for your team-mates.”

Watt chatting to Vincent Kompany (Photo: Gareth Copley/Getty Images)

The big question has been what his role will involve and discussions are continuing over specifics. Being a minority owner means he does not have the final say, but Watt is keen to ingrain himself in the club, provide ideas and use his strengths to help influence the direction of the club.

“I’m never going to come into a meeting and say we need to sign this player because Vince knows a hell of a lot more about that than me. Equally, I’m not going to come in and talk to Alan about refinancing debt,” he says.

“What I am going to do is help with marketing, with brand recognition, commercial aspects, the entire American audience, both fans and investors to try to do my part to grow the Burnley brand and bring global eyes to help tell their story because this place is incredible. I’ve only been here twice but the people, the town, the tradition, the history; the world should know about Burnley.”

Watt was part of a meeting last weekend where transfers and summer plans were discussed. Burnley have wasted no time, activating the option-to-buy clause inserted into Jordan Beyer’s loan deal from Borussia Monchengladbach already.

He smiles when The Athletic brings up Nathan Tella, who Watt named as his favourite Burnley player. He is on loan from Southampton and will return to his parent club — although Burnley are keen to sign their top scorer permanently. Will he be making a trip to Southampton before he returns home?

“I might have to go and be an enforcer to help them make some decisions,” Watt says, chuckling. “I love Nathan, it’s his smile, his infectious attitude and he’s a great player. I’m hopeful we can get something done but it’s kind of up in the air at the moment.”

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Rebuilt, refreshed and rampant – how Vincent Kompany’s Burnley have stormed to promotion


The last week has been another part of an emotional nine months for Watt and his family, which began when he revealed his heart had gone into atrial fibrillation – an irregular heart rhythm – in September.

He underwent a procedure to have his heart shocked and reset and three days later, he was playing for the Arizona Cardinals.

“It’s been crazy,” Watt says. “It changes the way you look at everything. Looking back it was more routine than I thought but at the time you consider that there is life and death. Once you see your life in such finite terms, you come to grips with your mortality and it changes everything. I do have a much bigger appreciation for every day I have.”

That appreciation only grew a month later with the birth of his son, Koa. The plan had been for him to be part of the trip to Lancashire but the new arrival had other plans.

“We took a five-day vacation to Cabo a month ago and he didn’t handle it well and wasn’t sleeping so he lost his privileges,” Watt laughs. “He will be over here at some point.”

The future Hall of Famer announced the end of his playing career in December 2022, competing in his final game the following month. Retirement, which led to a lot of time spent on the golf course, did not last long. “I need a break,” Watt jokes. “Kealia said: ‘I thought you retired’ because it has been non-stop. Luckily we’ve got a holiday planned at the end of May.

“Retirement means I don’t have to get hit all the time and it has opened new doors and new opportunities. It’s exciting, a new world I’m navigating.”

Watt at the Annexus Pro-Am (Photo: Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

Watt describes two categories of American fans of European football. Those who have been following it for a long time and the larger group whose interest is growing off the back of Wrexham and Ted Lasso.

“That’s the group we are speaking to primarily because there’s a lot of people trying to figure out who to support and why they should. We want to tie a story to our club and help those people understand and care deeply about Burnley,” says Watt.

During his first visit, Watt spent time at Burnley College and Burnley FC in the Community’s food bank as well as the club’s charitable foundation. Watt is experienced in the field, raising millions for Houston following the devastation left by Hurricane Harvey in 2017, which earned him the co-Sports Illustrated Sportsperson of the Year and Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year awards. He also donated $350,000 to the Houston FoodBank during COVID-19 and has his own foundation focused on providing funding for athletic opportunities for middle-school-aged children.

“I’m very impressed with how integrated into the community the club is,” he says. “Working with them to advance that even further is a big aim. There’s no denying it is a poverty-stricken area, so we want to help these people who give so much to the club.”


Watt accepts the growth and interest he has seen is easier to generate initially but will only get harder with time. Winning is his automatic response to how he plans to tackle that, as naturally that makes you more attractive, but he is full of ideas. One example is working out how to get merchandise into the hands of Americans more easily than having to ship it over from the UK.

The excitement of seeing Burnley back in the Premier League is clear and games being shown on NBC and Peacock means Watt will no longer have to struggle to find a stream on his laptop.

Watt and Kealia watch Burnley play Cardiff (Photo: Martin Rickett/PA Images via Getty Images)

“It’s so cool the way NBC does it with Premier League mornings; they have fan zones and fan fests. You see LiverpoolManchester United, Chelsea kits; I want to see more Burnley. It’s not an easy task but neither was getting 100 points in the Championship. We’re all here to do our jobs and that’s mine so bring it on.”

All eyes are on the future, both short and long-term. Asked where Watt hopes Burnley will be in five years, the answer is simple – further along the path of Pace and Kompany’s vision. He believes the club has the potential to achieve “great things” and a good plan is in place. That has already been demonstrated by the foundations built on and off the pitch in this new era.

“We’re also extremely realistic about how difficult it is to win in the Premier League, but we’re not scared by having big goals and ambitions,“ Watt says.

“I love what Vince said after the final game. Nobody believed in us before this year and we’re the best. Nobody believes in us going into the Premier League and all we can do is go at it again. I believe in Alan, I believe in Vincent and I believe in Burnley.”

Vinicius Jr, De Bruyne and the visceral thrill of kicking a football really hard

Vinicius Jr, De Bruyne and the visceral thrill of kicking a football really hard

By Nick Miller May 10, 2023


“Football is so complicated at the highest level.”Pep Guardiola was trying to make a point. It was after Manchester City had just lost to Manchester United in 2018 and had thus blown the chance to secure the Premier League title against their biggest rivals. Fabian Delph launched into his speech about “the basics of football” and was promptly shushed by his manager, who went on to explain that actually it was about more than the basics of football and that football was incredibly un-basic.Guardiola is usually right and has a stuffed trophy cabinet to prove it. But sometimes he’s wrong. Sometimes football is not complicated. It can be incredibly uncomplicated, basic, completely stripped back, but still extremely enjoyable.Take the first leg of the Champions League semi-final on Tuesday, when Guardiola’s side drew 1-1 with Real Madrid. Here we have probably the best team in the world against the most decorated team in the world. Two gleaming football clubs, two astonishing sets of players, two of this generation’s great managers.

Guardiola’s football, as it so often is, was intricate and carefully structured, designed to probe at the weak spots of the opposition and methodically take them apart. And Real’s tactical plan was finely tuned, too, staying deep to prevent Erling Haaland from getting too much space and attacking with pace and purpose when they did get up the field. It was fascinating to watch two completely different approaches to the same game, two schools of tactical thought coming up against each other.And yet, the two goals came from two players just kicking the ball really, really hard.Firstly, Vinicius Junior, collecting the ball in the inside left channel and thinking “fuck it” before launching a tracer bullet that had flown past Ederson before he really had the chance to react. Bang. Have that.Then, in the second half, Kevin De Bruyne receives the ball just to the right of centre.

There are two defenders in his immediate path, but he can see that Thibaut Courtois is maybe positioned a little bit too far to his left and there is a bigger space near the bottom corner than there should be.

He puts his foot through it, Thor’s hammer striking the ball and sending it goalwards. Courtois still hasn’t reacted as the ball goes past those defenders. He knows it’s too late even before he’s been able to move.

He eventually does move because you’ve got to do something, haven’t you? But he never stood a chance, even if his positioning had been better and he had reacted a little quicker. The ferocity of the shot, combined with a hint of swerve from the slight angle of De Bruyne’s strike, meant he would’ve had to brick up the goalmouth to stop it. And even then…

There’s something viscerally thrilling about goals like that, when a player just pulls their foot back and lets one fly. It’s the same animal part of your brain that would enjoy watching a Formula 1 car flying past at 190mph or a cheetah chase down its prey. It’s satisfying to the senses, giving you a physical thrill before your brain has had chance to process it.Maybe it’s because it reduces the game to its most elemental form. We all like to analyse and over-analyse and look at the new tactical innovations and talk about hybrid positions and fluid systems. Then Vinicius Jr and De Bruyne show up with their traction-engine feet and just batter the thing and, for a moment, you realise that’s all that’s important really.But there’s also the tiniest, most remote and most delusional part of your brain that very briefly thinks… I could do that. It’s just kicking the football. Kicking it, like… hard. Surely it wouldn’t be that difficult? I’ve kicked balls hard before. Really hard. I broke a (flimsy, rusting) goalpost that time at five-a-side. Yeah, I could do that.You snap out of it because you’re not an idiot and you realise kicking a ball that hard isn’t just about taking a big run up and swinging your leg, but down to years of practice and hours of physical fine-tuning and mountains upon mountains of natural ability.But it’s sort of relatable. You watch Lionel Messi dribble or De Bruyne hit a 50-yard pass or Cristiano Ronaldo jump 10 feet in the air for a header and you know these are the actions of freaks, untouchable geniuses that exist on a different plane of reality. But when someone just leathers the ball… it’s closer, in its most basic elements, to something you or I might be able to do.This is football at its most primal, animalistic, simple. We can enjoy the complicated, the intricate and the involved, but when football is stripped back to its raw elements, you feel it in your body rather than your mind. Neither is necessarily better than the other, but it’s great to feel them both.Guardiola was right. But maybe so was Delph. The basics of football. Bang. Have that.

Real Madrid 1-1 Manchester City: Vinicius and De Bruyne strike but Haaland was kept quiet

MADRID, SPAIN - MAY 09: Kevin De Bruyne of Manchester City celebrates after scoring the team's first goal during the UEFA Champions League semi-final first leg match between Real Madrid and Manchester City FC at Estadio Santiago Bernabeu on May 09, 2023 in Madrid, Spain. (Photo by Tom Flathers/Manchester City FC via Getty Images)

By Dermot CorriganDan Sheldon and more May 9, 2023


A stunning strike from Kevin De Bruyne earned Manchester City a 1-1 draw against Real Madrid in the Champions League semi-final first leg, after Vinicius Junior had scored from nearly the exact same spot on the Bernabeu pitch before the break.City dominated possession in the first half but it was Real who went in ahead after Vinicius linked well with Eduardo Camavinga and Luka Modric.Pep Guardiola’s side stayed patient though, and got their reward when De Bruyne struck a rasping shot past Thibaut Courtois to make it 1-1 in the 67th minute.Dermot Corrigan, Dan Sheldon and Thom Harris analyse the key talking points at the Bernabeu, ahead of the second leg at the Etihad next week…


De Bruyne strikes in the Champions League — again

Four minutes before De Bruyne’s brilliant equaliser against Real Madrid, the Belgium international crossed the ball towards Bernardo Silva and it went straight out of play.Instead of throwing his arms away in anger or looking frustrated, Guardiola enthusiastically applauded his talismanic midfielder for attempting to make something happen.And moments later, the encouragement paid off as De Bruyne struck his 10th goal of the season. Ilkay Gundogan rolled the ball towards him on the edge of the box, in an almost identical spot to where Vinicius Jr scored from in the first half.

While the Brazilian opted to strike his effort into the top right-hand corner, De Bruyne directed his shot towards the bottom right-hand corner instead.All the talk ahead of the semi-final centred on Erling Haaland and Karim Benzema, but City were again bailed out by De Bruyne’s brilliance.In the Champions League alone, De Bruyne’s last nine goals have come in the knockout stages and his finish against Real Madrid was the third-straight year he has scored in the first leg of a European semi-final.

Dan Sheldon and Thom Harris


But did the ball go out in the build-up to De Bruyne goal?

The Real Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti was furious with the fourth official after De Bruyne made it 1-1 at the Bernabeu, gesturing that the ball had gone out of play before Bernardo Silva hooked it back into a central area in the build-up to the goal.

Not long after that intervention City were level — and Ancelotti was shown a yellow card for his complaints.

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Speaking on beIN Sports, the former Arsenal manager and now FIFA’s chief of global football development Arsene Wenger suggested that, if it were possible, UEFA should have checked if the ball crossed the line.

“The VAR should normally check if a goal is regular or not. In a situation like that they have to intervene. They did not go far enough back to check if the ball was out or not, or they had not the potential to check if the ball was out or not. I think I would go for the second because normally the VAR cannot check on the sideline, only on the baseline, the goal-line.”

The Athletic has contacted UEFA for comment.


City had a plan for Vinicius, but big-game players find a way

For Guardiola, keeping Kyle Walker close to an explosive opposition winger usually does the trick.

For 36 minutes at the Santiago Bernabeu, it largely worked.

Dropping into a 4-4-2 when Real looked to build up, City made sure to block the diagonal switch – a ball that consistently isolated Vinicius against Osasuna in the Spanish Cup final at the weekend.

Shifting over quickly as a team, with Walker and Bernardo Silva both keeping watch, the crossfield ball was rarely on. Receiving just 11 passes and taking seven touches in the opposition half, Vinicius hadn’t been so quiet in an opening half all season.

Ultimately, that didn’t matter.

As Real gained momentum in the second half, more sustained possession allowed the Brazilian to face up to his full-back more often, but there was still considerable rotation with both Karim Benzema and Rodrygo as the half went on.

Twenty of his 34 carries were in the second half, twisting and turning inside challenges, and even drawing a yellow card from Silva, left snapping at his heels.

City had a plan for Vinicius, but big-game players find a way.

Thom Harris


Real did a good job of keeping Haaland quiet

Madrid were without their top centre-back Eder Militao through suspension, so the pairing of Rudiger and Alaba were given the task of dealing with Haaland. Rudiger showed he was up for a battle in the opening minutes, snapping intensely at Haaland’s heels the first time the ball was played up to the Norway striker’s feet.

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Ancelotti had said pre-game that dealing with Haaland was about the whole team defending compactly, and Madrid did drop deeper than they usually do, not giving any room to run in behind them. He still had plenty of early touches around the Madrid box though as City dominated possession, but two early half-chances were hit straight at Courtois.

As the game wore on, Haaland became more and more a spectator at the stadium where many believe he will one day play. Near the hour-mark, when did get the ball into his stride where he loves it most in the penalty area, David Alaba was across to block. Madrid reached 400 minutes without conceding in the competition before De Bruyne slammed in the equaliser on the night.

Dermot Corrigan


How Camavinga, Modric and Vinicius combined to break the deadlock

Ancelotti’s side saw far less of the ball than City in the first half but made the possession they did have count with a blistering goal from Vinicius — his seventh in Champions League knockout games against English sides.

Real’s impressive makeshift left-back Eduardo Camavinga started the move with a pass into Luka Modric, who was under pressure from Rodri

The Croatian produced a perfect flick round the corner that span the ball into the path of Camavinga, who had continued his run and got the wrong side of Bernardo Silva…

And the Frenchman drove into the City half, with support from Vinicius and Benzema inside him…

Camavinga slid the ball to his right to Vinicius, who allowed the ball to run across him, into a central area…

And just when Ruben Dias was blocking his goalkeeper’s sight, Vinicius curled a fine finish past a flat-footed Ederson to make it advantage Real…


Carvajal stepping out of the shadow of Ramos and Casemiro

Dani Carvajal’s first half included an early subtle nudge to make sure Erling Haaland did not meet Bernardo Silva’s cross in the Madrid box, then a trip near halfway to stop Jack Grealish countering dangerously.

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At 1-0 up, there was a more obvious shove on Grealish into the hoardings, then an overreaction to the Englishman’s angry response. He even got away with another tap on Grealish’s ankles, somehow reaching half-time without a yellow card.

It was a virtuoso performance of the defensive dark arts from Carvajal, stepping up now that former team-mates Sergio Ramos and Casemiro are no longer around. The homegrown defender is often seen by some as a weak link in the Madrid squad, and has had some very ropey performances in other games over the last few years.

But the Madrid hierarchy like having him around, as someone who brings the competitive edge that all champion teams need. City and Grealish did not enjoy his performance, but nobody at the Bernabeu cared.

Dermot Corrigan


Guardiola goes for tried and tested with oldest XI since 2019

We are used to Guardiola tinkering in the Champions League and devising a game plan that often works to the detriment of his team.

Against Real Madrid, however, he did the opposite.

According to Opta, Guardiola named the club’s oldest starting XI in a Champions League tie since their 1-0 defeat to Tottenham in April 2019 (28 years and 360 days).

The average age of City’s starting team at the Bernabeu was 28 years and 262 days, with only Haaland (22) and Dias (25) aged 25 or under.

Guardiola’s decision to go with an experienced team paid off as they remained composed after falling behind in the game and worked their way back into the tie.

Despite the inevitability that embodies Real Madrid in the Champions League, the draw should leave City in the driving seat ahead of next week’s second leg at the Etihad Stadium.

Dan Sheldon


Who will be happier: Pep or Carlo?

Harris: City saw the threat of Vinicius, but taking a 1-1 draw back to the Etihad, where they are unbeaten in 25 Champions League games – scoring 79 along the way – means that Guardiola will surely fancy his chances. 

Sheldon: Guardiola should be happier because his side were able to leave the Bernabeu with the game finely poised. And if you would back a team to win at home, it would be Manchester City.

Corrigan: Pep will be happier having come back from behind, but he’ll be wrong as Madrid have City right where they want them.

Sam Lee: Guardiola will be the happier with that because City have survived the Bernabeu experience and can be buoyed by their own raucous fans at the Etihad next week.

Ed Mackey: The answer should be Guardiola but Ancelotti seems to do his best work in Europe when the odds are stacked against him. Real Madrid will go into the second legs as underdogs, and that will suit them perfectly.

Sam Allardyce: Leeds have to get something against Newcastle, we can’t lose

By Phil Hay May 11, 2023


Sam Allardyce has told his Leeds United players they cannot afford to lose against Newcastle United on Saturday.

Leeds are 19th in the Premier League on 30 points, two points from safety with three matches left to play and Allardyce, who lost his first match as head coach against Manchester City last weekend, sees the game against Newcastle as crucial to their survival chances.

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“I have said to the players and I’ll say it now, when we come off the field on Saturday, we can’t afford to lose. We must get something,” the 68-year-old said in his pre-match press conference on Friday.“We won’t stay up with 30 points. Nobody’s ever going to do that. We’ve got nine points to go for, we know if we get nine points, which is a massive ask, we’ll stay up. If we get six we might do. I have to say this at this moment in time – I want to be still in it when we play Tottenham (on the last day of the season). That’s what I want. I’ll be very satisfied if when we play Tottenham we’re still in it.”

Allardyce has also made clear the importance of taking the lead against Newcastle and to avoid defensive collapses — Leeds conceded 23 goals during the month of April before Javi Gracia was dismissed.“I’d like to score the first goal if possible. That’s very important for us on Saturday. Getting the first goal would be a big lift.“It would help us win the game, I’m not saying we would win the game, but going a goal down would be a very difficult job I think mentally for the players to come back from. If that’s the case, they’ll have to try and do it — but not go daft like they have done before, leave the back door open and concede two, three or four again.”Allardyce also said gave an injury update on midfielder Tyler Adams. When asked his the USMNT midfielder would play again this season, Allardyce said: “Not that I believe, sadly.”Adams was forced to undergo surgery on a hamstring injury in March. The 24-year-old damaged a muscle during a training session ahead of Leeds’ 4-2 win over Wolverhampton Wanderers on March 18 and was forced to pull out of international duty with the USMNT, remaining in England where he went under the knife.Leeds face Newcastle on Saturday before their final two games of the season against West Ham United (away) on May 21 and at home to Tottenham on May 28.

Premier League permutations: Title, Champions League, Europe and relegation battles for the run-in

Ed Mackey May 9, 2023 137

The 2022-23 Premier League season is into its business end.During this week’s round of fixtures, there were changes in the battle for Europe and the fight for survival, while Manchester City and Arsenal kept pace with one another at the Premier League summit.The Athletic breaks down all three of those, exploring what each side needs in the final weeks of the campaign.This article will be updated after each round of matches.


The title race

It’s as it was at the Premier League summit after the latest round of fixtures. Leaders Manchester City made it 10 league wins in succession against Leeds United before Arsenal ensured the gap at the top remained one point with a 2-0 victory over Newcastle United.City still have have a game in hand to install a more significant buffer.City’s dominant victory at the Etihad Stadium against Arsenal in April helped put them in such a strong position and they are now overwhelming favourites to retain their crown for the third consecutive season.

Backing that up with less glamorous, but equally effective, wins against FulhamWest Ham and Leeds has only helped their pursuit of a treble.Regardless of Arsenal’s success in what remains of the season, City need three wins from their remaining four games to confirm a fifth title in six years.Although, title races are seldom as straightforward as they seem and, as long as Arsenal are within touching distance, they will be a key player.

Martin Odegaard’s brace led Arsenal past Chelsea (Photo: Alex Pantling/Getty Images)

For them, the possibility of ending a 19-year title drought relies on them capitalising on any slip ups which, despite the relentless schedule, look increasingly unlikely every week.

That said, City’s hopes of becoming the first English team since 1999 to complete the treble could benefit Arsenal. Guardiola’s calendar has four more games on it than Arteta’s between now and the end of the season — that will become five more games if City make it past Real Madrid in the Champions League semi-final.

Remaining fixtures

Arsenal
PL: Brighton (H) – May 14
PL: Nottingham Forest (A) – May 20
PL: Wolves (H) – May 28

Manchester City
UCL SF: Real Madrid (A) – May 9
PL: Everton (A) – May 14
UCL SF: Real Madrid (H) – May 17
PL: Chelsea (H) – May 21
PL: Brighton (A) – May 24
PL: Brentford (A) – May 28
FA Cup Final: Manchester United (N) – June 3

The title race

POSTEAMGPPTSGD
1Manchester City348258
2Arsenal358144

The Champions League & Europa League battle

Champions League hopefuls Newcastle and Manchester United both slipped up over the weekend, with Eddie Howe’s side beaten by Arsenal and Erik ten Hag’s side losing to West Ham United. The pair remain in pole position to finish in the top four but have in-form Liverpool hot on their heels.

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From their four remaining games, Newcastle need seven points to guarantee a place at European football’s top table.

Despite Manchester United’s back-to-back defeats to Brighton and West Ham, they are favourites to join Eddie Howe’s side in the Champions League next season. They need nine points from their last four games to make absolute sure of a top-four place.

Liverpool sit just a point behind fourth-place Manchester United after recording their sixth successive win with a 1-0 victory over Brentford. Jurgen Klopp’s side have played a game more than Manchester United and Newcastle but have put themselves into a position to take advantage of any further slip ups.

Then comes the intriguing battle for the Europa League places — likely to be fifth and sixth — where Liverpool, Brighton, Tottenham Hotspur and Aston Villa are scrapping it out.

Liverpool celebrate

Liverpool have pulled away from the chasing pack after their recent run of good form and now have a five-point buffer between themselves and Tottenham. Spurs secured their first victory since the re-appointment of interim manager Ryan Mason with a 1-0 win over Crystal Palace to leave them ahead of Brighton and Aston Villa, who both lost.

Aston Villa’s defeat to Wolverhampton Wanderers — their second defeat in a row — leaves them perhaps hoping for a place in the Europa Conference League, although Unai Emery and his players will still harbour ambitions of a place in the Spaniard’s favourite competition.

That largely relies on the performances of Brighton, who suffered a 5-1 loss to relegation-threatened Everton in their last outing. Brighton sit seventh but have more games left than any other Premier League side. Roberto De Zerbi’s side have played two fewer games than those around them but still have to play Arsenal, Manchester City and Newcastle before the season is out.

Four wins from their five remaining games would guarantee Brighton a sixth-placed finish and Europa League football.

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Liverpool, meanwhile, need five points from their last three games to secure Europa League football for next season.

Tottenham sit two points ahead of Brighton and are in prime position to capitalise if De Zerbi’s side do not win their games in hand.

For Tottenham and Aston Villa, it is now all about maximising their own points return while hoping Brighton slip up.

Battle for Europe

POSTEAMGPPTSGD
3Newcastle346532
4Manchester United34638
5Liverpool356225
6Tottenham355722
7Brighton335518
8Aston Villa35543

How does European qualification work in the Premier League?

Champions League

The top four teams in the Premier League qualify for the group stage of the Champions League. The top four currently includes Arsenal, Manchester City, Newcastle United and Manchester United.

Europa League

The team that finishes fifth in the Premier League — Liverpool currently occupy that spot — will earn one of the two Europa League places, with the other given to the FA Cup winners.

Because Manchester City and Manchester United are contesting the FA Cup final and are both expected to finish inside the top five, then the team that finishes in sixth will likely get the second Europa League place — that is Tottenham at present.

The winners of the Europa Conference League earn a place in the Europa League. West Ham are the only English team left in this season’s competition, with David Moyes’ side through to a semi-final against AZ Alkmaar following their 5-2 aggregate win over Gent.

Europa Conference League

The only Europa Conference League place is given to the winners of the Carabao Cup. If the Carabao Cup winners finish inside either the Premier League’s Champions League or Europa League places, the place is deferred to the next highest-finishing team.

As Manchester United won this season’s Carabao Cup and look set to finish in the top five, the next-highest team in the Premier League that has not qualified for Europe will play in the Europa Conference League play-offs.

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The Europa League place for the FA Cup winners looks set to be deferred to the league table, which would mean the seventh-place team will qualify for the Europa Conference League.

Currently, that is Brighton.


The battle for survival

Arguably the most intriguing of all the Premier League battles is the one to avoid relegation.

The teams in the drop zone rotated again on Monday following a trio of high-scoring fixtures.

For a long time, Southampton have been widely considered as too far back to survive. A 4-3 loss to relegation rivals Nottingham Forest left them eight points from safety with three games remaining and needing a minor miracle to survive. If Southampton fail to beat Fulham on Saturday, their relegation to the Championship will be confirmed.

Southampton’s survival hopes hang by a thread (Photo: Matt McNulty/Getty Images)

The win lifted Nottingham Forest out of the drop zone and into 16th, with Steve Cooper’s side in a relegation mini-league alongside Leicester City, Leeds United and Everton. The teams from 16th to 19th are separated by three points.

Seven points from Forest’s final three games will guarantee their top flight status for next season — the likelihood is fewer points will be required.

Everton were also big winners on Monday as they recorded an emphatic 5-1 victory over Brighton to move two points clear of the relegation places.

Leicester and Leeds occupy the final two relegation spots and both sit on 30 points. Leeds’ fixtures are the toughest of all the relegation-threatened sides — newly-appointed Sam Allardyce will have to do a stellar job to keep their heads above water.

The relegation run in

WEST HAM UNITEDNOTTINGHAM FORESTEVERTONLEICESTER CITYLEEDS UNITEDSOUTHAMPTON
Brentford (A)Chelsea (A)Manchester City (H)Liverpool (H)Newcastle (H)Fulham (H)
Leeds (H)Arsenal (H)Wolves (A)Newcastle (A)West Ham (A)Brighton (A)
Leicester (A)Crystal Palace (A)Bournemouth (H)West Ham (H)Tottenham (H)Liverpool (H)

To stay in the Premier League, in their final three games Leeds and Leicester must better the returns of Everton by at least two points or the returns of Forest by at least three points. Leicester have a superior goal difference than those around them, while Leeds’ is better than Forest’s and marginally worse than Everton’s.

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West Ham, meanwhile, are all but mathematically safe after their victory over Manchester United. David Moyes’ side sit seven points clear of the drop zone and have a superior goal difference. Three points from their remaining three games will mathematically guarantee survival, but the likelihood is fewer points, if any, will be required. Equal the results of Leeds and Leicester during the next round of fixtures and West Ham are mathematically safe.

The survival battle

POSTEAMGPPTSGD
15West Ham3537-12
16Nottingham Forest3533-31
17Everton3532-21
18Leicester City3530-15
19Leeds United3530-25
20Southampton3524-33

Forty points is often touted as the target for managers in charge of sides fighting towards the bottom but, based on the points-per-game so far, 34 points looks like the all-important target.


What do the stats predict?

Between now and the end of the season, there will be plenty of changes to the Premier League table, especially at the bottom where every point matters.

FiveThirtyEight has crunched the numbers: here is its prediction for how the table will look once the final ball of the season has been kicked.

PREDICTED POSTEAMCURRENT POSPREDICTED PTS
1Manchester City291
2Arsenal187
3Newcastle372
4Manchester United471
5Liverpool568
6Brighton762
7Tottenham661
8Aston Villa858
9Brentford953
10Fulham1052
11Chelsea1147
12Crystal Palace1245
13Wolves1343
14Bournemouth1442
15West Ham1541
16Everton1735
17Nottingham Forest1635
18Leicester1933
19Leeds1733
20Southampton2027

(Top photo: Craig Mercer/MB Media/Getty Images)

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Jesse Marsch declines comment on open USMNT coaching position, next job is about ‘best fit possible’

ACCRINGTON, ENGLAND - JANUARY 28: Jesse Marsch, manager of Leeds United, during the Emirates FA Cup Fourth Round match between Accrington Stanley and Leeds United at Wham Stadium on January 28, 2023 in Accrington, England. (Photo by James Gill - Danehouse/Getty Images)

By Paul Tenorio May 10, 2023


Former Leeds manager Jesse Marsch declined to comment on the open U.S. men’s national team job this week and said his next job, “will be all about finding the best fit possible.”Marsch was in Chicago on Tuesday to be honored on the 20th anniversary of the Chicago Fire’s 2003 U.S. Open Cup team on which he played. The 49-year-old declined to comment on his exit at Leeds or the team’s current situation. He also declined to comment on the USMT job and said his visit to Chicago was strictly for the Fire’s ceremony.

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Marsch, who was fired by Leeds in February, is a top candidate to take over as USMNT coach ahead of the 2026 World Cup, which will be co-hosted by the U.S., Mexico and Canada. The job has been vacant since Gregg Berhalter’s contract expired at the end of 2022.

Marsch was non-committal when asked about what his next job could be and whether there are other opportunities in Europe.

“There have been a lot of little discussions about potential opportunities, which I always love those discussions because it’s important to get to the bottom of understanding what the vision is, from my perspective and from different clubs’ perspective,” Marsch said. “I’m fortunate that there’s still people that are interested in what I do. I still love coaching and my next job will be all about finding the best fit possible.”

Marsch was fired in February after nearly a year in charge at Leeds. The team was in 17th place in the Premier League table at the time, but had failed to win in seven consecutive league games despite advancing in the FA Cup. Leeds sits in 19th place in the Premier League table with three games remaining. The club parted ways with director of football Victor Orta on May 2 and hired Sam Allardyce as manager last week in an attempt to avoid relegation.

Marsch said he looked at his time in the Premier League as a valuable lesson in managing pressures that are “different than anywhere else” and that he was “proud” of the way the staff worked during his time there.“Learning different languages, learning different cultures, learning different styles of football has been really valuable in terms of my education and development and in terms of the coach that I want to be,” Marsch said. “What you realize is that the attention from every perspective, the magnifying glass on what happens in the Premier League is different than anywhere else. And how to manage that internally often will dictate your ability to create success.ADVERTISEMENThttps://6f6769af05dbed466742fb629dfc2fa5.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

“So, I think at our best moments, we did a really good job of that and we had internally a really good feeling of what we were trying to achieve and togetherness and belief at Leeds United, and that part I miss, And I was really proud of the way that we all worked together.”Marsch had discussions to take over as coach with two teams in the Premier League, Southampton and Leicester, after being fired at Leeds, but ultimately did not land with either team.

“I would say that both clubs were amazing and the people were fantastic, but the timing wasn’t right,” Marsch said.

U.S. Soccer recently hired Southampton director of football operations Matt Crocker as its sporting director. The connection between Southampton wooing Marsch and Crocker’s hire has many drawing a line to Marsch as the next U.S. men’s manager.

Marsch was an assistant on Bob Bradley’s USMNT staff at the World Cup in 2010 and has familiarity with several USMNT players, including Tyler Adams, Weston McKennie and Brenden Aaronson, all of whom he coached at Leeds and elsewhere.

U.S. Soccer leaders have said they hope to have a coach in place by the end of the summer.

Afternoon kickaround: Onyewu takes big U.S. Soccer role, Open Cup talk, betting scandal its MLS

ASN’s Brian Sciaretta offers up thoughts on Oguchi Onyewu’s new job within U.S. Soccer, the Open Cup, the big Brazil betting scandal hits MLS, and more

BY BRIAN SCIARETTAPOSTED MAY 11, 2023 4:05 PM

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WEDNESDAY BROUGHT a lot of news into the American soccer world. Separately, we covered the release of the U.S. U-20 World Cup roster, but there is a lot of other news to break down and offer up some thoughts.Some of it was big, some of it was ugly, but let’s start with U.S. Soccer.

ONYEWU HIRED AS VP OF SPORTING

 

Former U.S. national team defender Oguchi Onyewu was hired to be the Vice President of Sporting for U.S. Soccer. It’s a newly created position that does not replace the USMNT GM position that is vacant and most recently held by Brian McBride, but it does have some overlap.For example, Onyewu will have a prominent role in managing relationships with clubs/leagues in both the USA & across the world.He will also assist new Sporting Director Matt Crocker in the hiring of the next U.S. national team coach. According to the press release, Onyewu will play a big part of that hire.

“With a wealth of international experience and a deep understanding of U.S. Soccer, Onyewu will be an instrumental part of the hiring process.”Finally, Onyewu will have responsibilities in the funding of youth and extended national teams.“Onyewu will also work closely with U.S. Soccer’s Development Department to help drive increased funding for Youth and Extended National Teams. A 501(c)(3) nonprofit, U.S. Soccer receives no federal government funding to manage its National Teams programs, support hundreds of thousands of coaches and referees, and impact millions of players.”While U.S. Soccer made it clear that this does not replace the GM position and whether that position will continue to exist is still being reviewed.In his introductory interviews, Crocker did not come across as a revolutionary. The two previous Sporting Directors – Jurgen Klinsmann and Earnie Stewart – both came in to the job looking to make a lot of changes. Crocker seemed to express satisfaction with the status quo and was looking to build off that as opposed to knock down and rebuild from scratch.But Crocker also came across that he saw the value in American talent and the federation’s recent direction. But he is not American and perhaps the next USMNT coach won’t be either. But having a popular former U.S. national team player who has been gaining front office experience is a way to keep an American presence on the program in an important role. The image of a new sporting director coming into a foreign federation and making foreign hires could be a tough sell to those inside the program, outside the program, and to many fans. If the program continues to have success in the coming cycle, Onyewu would then have a very strong resume to be the next Sporting Director. He was reportedly in contention this time but U.S. Soccer instead went with Crocker. If Crocker returns to England after his contract runs out and the federation is in a good spot, Onyewu would be a very strong candidate.

U.S. OPEN CUP

The 2023 U.S. Open Cup concluded its Round of 32 on Wednesday night.MLS teams have had a very good tournament against lower-level opponents. Fans of “cupsets” have not been as thrilled with this year’s edition, so far, as MLS teams have a 22-3 record against teams from other domestic leagues.The only teams that remain from outside MLS are the Pittsburgh Riverhounds, who defeated the New England Revolution on Tuesday night, and the Birmingham Legion who posted a 3-0 win over fellow USL Championship team Memphis 905 on Wednesday night. The remaining 14 teams come from MLS.The highlight on Wedesday was the Columbus Crew convincing 5-1 road win over Loudoun United behind a goal and two assists from American forward Christian Ramirez.U.S. national team forward Brandon Vazquez scored the only goal for Cincinnati’s 1-0 over NYCFC. He is looking more and more dangerous as we enter the summer months.As for the upcoming Round of 16, we get El Traffico which is always exciting. The Pittsburgh Riverhounds host Columbus while Biringham Legion host Charlotte in what is probably the most likely matchup for a USL team to make the quarterfinal.

ROUND OF 16: MAY 23-24
  • Austin FC vs. Chicago Fire FC
  • Birmingham Legion FC vs. Charlotte FC
  • Colorado Rapids vs. Real Salt Lake
  • Inter Miami CF vs. Nashville SC
  • Houston Dynamo FC vs. Minnesota United FC
  • Los Angeles FC vs. LA Galaxy
  • New York Red Bulls vs. FC Cincinnati
  • Pittsburgh Riverhounds SC vs. Columbus Crew SC

GAMBLING SCANDAL HITS MLS

The big story on Wednesday was a how the investigation of an unlawful betting scandal that originated in Brazil has spread to MLS.Brazil’s publication O Globo said one of the culprits was Colorado’s Max Alves who was signed by the Rapids as part of an U-22 initiative. The investigation is largely based in Brazil and Alaves is currently the only player outside of Brazil who is implicated. But Globo also indicated that Alaves referred former Houston Dynamo player Zeca to those who controlled the ring.

Alaves was shown to have been rewarded for picking up a yellow card minutes after being subbed into Colorado’s game against September 17, 2022.  Alaves has been removed by Colorado for all activities pending the investigation by the league.
It’s impossible to offer up any thoughts until the investigation is complete. But the league is taking immediate action and if it is shown that they acted swiftly and never tried to cover anything up, they should be fine. Hopefully, for all parties, it was limited strictly to Alaves and no other results or moments were compromised.

U-20 World Cup: Gaga Slonina, Cade Cowell highlight U.S. roster; Paxten Aaronson not released

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 25: Veljko Simic #10 of Serbia scores a goal against Gaga Slonina #24 of the United States during the second half in the International Friendly match at BMO Stadium on January 25, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

By Tom Bogert May 10, 2023


Gaga Slonina, Cade Cowell and Kevin Paredes highlight the U.S. roster for this month’s U-20 World Cup, kicking off on May 20 in Argentina. Here’s what you need to know:

  • The roster, released Wednesday by U.S. Soccer, includes 11 players from the U-20 CONCACAF Championship-winning squad.
  • Paxten Aaronson, who won the Golden Boot and Golden Ball at the U-20 CONCACAF Championships, and Ricardo Pepi are among age-eligible players not on the roster.
  • The U.S. faces Ecuador (May 20), Fiji (May 23) and Slovakia (May 26) in Group B play.

U.S. U-20 World Cup roster

GK: Alexander Borto (Fulham/ENG), Antonio Carrera (FC Dallas), Gaga Slonina (Chelsea)

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DEF: Justin Che (Hoffenheim/GER), Brandan Craig (Philadelphia Union), Mauricio Cuevas (LA Galaxy), Marcus Ferkranus (LA Galaxy), Jonathan Gómez (Real Sociedad/ESP), Caleb Wiley (Atlanta United), Joshua Wynder (Louisville City)

MID: Daniel Edelman (New York Red Bulls), Diego Luna (Real Salt Lake), Jack McGlynn (Philadelphia Union), Rokas Pukštas (Hajduk Split/CRO), Niko Tsakiris (San Jose Earthquakes), Obed Vargas (Seattle Sounders), Owen Wolff (Austin FC)

FWD: Cade Cowell (San Jose Earthquakes), Kevin Paredes (Wolfsburg/GER), Quinn Sullivan (Philadelphia Union), Darren Yapi (Colorado Rapids)

The Athletic’s instant analysis:

Key players selected

Gaga Slonina: Perhaps the best-known player in the squad, Slonina will be the No. 1 goalkeeper. He made a huge winter transfer from the Chicago Fire to Chelsea for an up-front fee of $10 million with another $5 million in add-ons, potentially making him one of the most expensive teenage goalkeepers of all time.

Slonina, turning 19 next week, chose to represent the United States over Poland. He has already made his senior USMNT debut.

Kevin Paredes: Wolfsburg winger Paredes is among the most high-profile players in the group and was on the most recent U-20 roster in March. It was up in the air whether or not he would be released for the tournament. Paredes, 19, has made 20 Bundesliga appearances this season, 19 of which from the bench. He joined Wolfsburg from D.C. United for a $7 million fee in 2022.

Cade Cowell: Cowell, though suspended for the first group stage game for his role in a dustup at the U-20 CONCACAF Championships, will be relied upon in attack. The dynamic winger was released by the San Jose Earthquakes despite having started all 11 of their MLS matches so far. He already has made 92 MLS appearances (44 starts) in his teenage years.

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Caleb Wiley: Atlanta United rising star Wiley broke into the club’s starting XI, but the club released him for the tournament even though he started 10 of its 11 games thus far. Wiley has played both left wing and left back for Atlanta but is expected to be at left back for this group, which is his long-term position. European clubs have already contacted Atlanta about him, and he’ll likely be among the next big-money transfers to come from MLS.

Who wasn’t released?

The United States will have to make do without Aaronson, as Eintracht Frankfurt declined to release the young attacker.

Aaronson led the group to a title at the U-20 CONCACAF Championships, winning the Golden Boot with seven goals as well as the Golden Ball, an award given to the tournament’s best player. The 19-year-old has already made his senior national team debut.

Aaronson transferred to Eintracht Frankfurt from the Philadelphia Union this winter, and the idea was he would be released for the World Cup. Well, those plans changed as he integrated into the first team quicker than expected — he appeared off the bench in each of the club’s last four matches — while Frankfurt made an unexpected run to the German Cup final.

Center back Jalen Neal wasn’t released by the L.A. Galaxy. Neal, 19, has become an integral starter for the struggling Galaxy, who are dealing with a couple of injuries to fellow center backs Séga Coulibaly and Chris Mavinga, further complicating a potential release for Neal.

Forward Ricardo Pepi isn’t on the squad, though his possible inclusion seemed more hopeful than anything. He is excelling on loan at Groningen from FC Augsburg and is a crucial cog in their fight against relegation, which would have ruled him out of contention for the U-20 World Cup. The Dutch club has now been mathematically relegated, which offered slight hope that Pepi may have been released. Alas, he was not.

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The Chicago Fire had previously announced goalkeeper Chris Brady and midfielder Brian Gutiérrez wouldn’t be released due to their roles in the first team.

Hajduk Split had announced midfielder Rokas Pukštas wasn’t going to be released, but he was named to the squad.

U.S.’s outlook, history at the U-20 World Cup

The United States was placed in pot one for the group stage draw and headline group B, followed by Ecuador, Fiji and Slovakia. They kick off the group stage on May 20, and the tournament ends with the final (and third-place match) on June 11.

They earned their pot one status thanks in part to winning the U-20 CONCACAF Championship as well as results in previous U-20 World Cups.

The United States has consistently qualified for this tournament — failing to qualify for just one of the last 13 editions — and has started to have consistent results as well, for better and worse, being eliminated in the quarterfinal in each of the last three tournaments. Their best-ever finish was in the 1989 tournament, finishing fourth.

The most recent tournament was in 2019 after the planned 2021 edition was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The United States got out of the group stage with two wins (over Nigeria and Qatar after losing to Ukraine) then upset high-powered France in the round of 16. The Americans were eliminated by Ecuador in the quarterfinals, with numerous players graduating from that group to lead Ecuador to qualify for the senior World Cup last winter.

What they’re saying

“We’re really excited for this group to compete against the world’s best in Argentina,” coach Mikey Varas said in a news release. “To represent your country at a World Cup is a tremendous honor. We embrace the responsibility that comes with this opportunity.”

-and-white answer,” Vanney said, “but there’s a gray answer in there somewhere that makes sense for everybody.”

Analysis: Varas names U-20 World Cup roster, taking risks with eyes towards knockouts

U.S. U-20 head coach Mikey Varas announced his World Cup roster and, in addition to the troubles of securing releases for top players, the big story is that he is taking a risk for the group stages that he hopes will payoff in the knockouts. ASN’s Brian Sciaretta breaks it down.

BY BRIAN SCIARETTAPOSTED MAY 10, 2023 12:25 PM

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UNITED STATES U-20 head coach Mikey Varas unveiled his roster for the 2023 U-20 World Cup. This will be the first World Cup tournament for the U-20 team under Varas and putting together the team was difficult given that most clubs are still in season and player releases are non-mandatory.

In the end, Varas struggled for player releases, but he still got most of what he wanted. The biggest absence was Paxten Aaronson who was the Golden Boot winner last year at the CONCACAF Championships. Then Aaronson’s top backup in Brian Gutierrez was also not released by Chicago and the team’s top central defender all cycle, Jalen Neal, was also not released by the Galaxy.

The U.S. team was drawn into Group B and will begin play on Saturday, May 20 against Ecuador. Then the team will play Fiji on May 23, and finally will conclude group play against Slovakia on Friday, May 26. All games will be at 2pm EST.

Here is the roster along with some thoughts.

THE ROSTER

 

GOALKEEPERS (3): 21-Alexander Borto (Fulham/ENG; South Plainfield, N.J.; 2/0), 12-Antonio Carrera (FC Dallas; Frisco, Texas; 4/0), 1-Gaga Slonina (Chelsea/ENG; Addison, Ill.; 5/0)

DEFENDERS (7): 17-Justin Che (Hoffenheim/GER; Dallas, Texas; 6/0), 5-Brandan Craig (Philadelphia Union; Philadelphia, Pa.; 10/1), 2-Mauricio Cuevas (LA Galaxy; Los Angeles, Calif.; 13/1), 14-Marcus Ferkranus (LA Galaxy; Santa Clarita, Calif.; 11/0), 13-Jonathan Gomez (Real Sociedad/ESP; Keller, Texas; 6/0), 3-Caleb Wiley (Atlanta United FC; Atlanta, Ga.; 5/0), 4-Joshua Wynder (Louisville City FC; Louisville, Ky.; 2/0)

MIDFIELDERS (7): 6-Daniel Edelman (New York Red Bulls; Warren, N.J.; 10/0), 10-Diego Luna (Real Salt Lake; Sunnyvale, Calif.; 16/4), 8-Jack McGlynn (Philadelphia Union; Middle Village, N.Y.; 16/2), 20-Rokas Pukstas (Hajduk Split/CRO; Stillwater, Okla.; 12/1), 15-Niko Tsakiris (San Jose Earthquakes; Saratoga, Calif.; 5/3), 18-Obed Vargas (Seattle Sounders FC; Anchorage, Alaska; 4/0), 16-Owen Wolff (Austin FC; Austin, Texas; 3/1)

FORWARDS (4): 9-Cade Cowell (San Jose Earthquakes; Ceres, Calif.; 7/2), 11-Kevin Paredes (Wolfsburg/GER; South Riding, Va.; 6/2), 7-Quinn Sullivan (Philadelphia Union; Philadelphia, Pa.; 15/7), 19-Darren Yapi (Colorado Rapids; Denver, Colo.; 3/0)

VARAS’ BIG GAMBLE

 

The big takeaway from this roster announcement is that Mikey Varas is taking calculated gamble with the roster. His initial requests for players to be released the entire tournament saw a lot of denials. In fact, Hajduk Split even went so far as to announce on their official twitter feed that they denied the release of Rokas Pukstas on May 4. Pukstas has become a regular starter for Hajduk Split and that club as the Croatian Cup final on May 24.

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Then the Chicago Fire announced that Brian Gutierrez was not released. There were also reports about Noel Buck being denied. On top of that, it was always dicey that star winger Kevin Paredes would be released as he had been a regular with Wolfsburg this season as an offensive substitute. Then there was the Paxten Aaronson news on Tuesday that he was not being released.

As opposed to simply taking the next best player available, Varas decided to take some risks and keep spots on the roster open for the group stages and allow some players just to join for the knockouts. There are only so many spots a manager can afford to keep open for a group stage, but Varas has opted to hold open spots for Paredes and Pukstas.  

Combined with the fact that the team was already shorthanded in the opening game against Ecuador before the late arrivals given Cade Cowell’s suspension (due to the postgame brawl with Costa Rica last year in qualifying) and that Niko Tsakiris has been injured since February and hasn’t played a game since then, this is a gamble.

Against Ecuador in the opening game, the U.S. team will have just 15 field players – including the only recently recovered Tsakiris.

What Varas wants is the best possible team he could get for the knockouts. He could have just taken the best available team right now, but he decided to go for it. Iinstead, he is opting to go shorthanded in the group stage to have the best team possible in the knockouts.

Of course, he must get to the knockouts to get these players and going shorthanded in the group stage puts the team at a disadvantage. But with four of the six third place teams advancing and the U.S. team drawing a minnow in Fiji into its group, it doesn’t seem like a reckless gamble. Three points with a decent goal differential could potentially be enough to advance. If the U.S. pounds Fiji and takes close losses to Ecuador and Slovakia, there is a good chance it goes through.

It’s a gamble early with the hopes that the team will get a big boost in the knockouts.

DEFENSIVE SPINE THE KEY

 

The key to the U.S. team advancing is likely on the defensive side. Team captain and defensive midfielder Daniel Edelman is very important to the team’s success. A big reason for this is that there is a big drop-off between him and the next No. 6 in the lineup, the young Obed Vargas who is playing up a cycle and missed the second half of 2022 and the first quarter of 2023 due to injuries.

Edelman is important to the leadership of this team and in protecting the team’s defensive spine. Part of the reason why the team struggled in March in Spain (losses to France and England) is because Edelman was not there.

Edelman will sit in front of a central defense pairing that is likely Brandan Craig and Josh Wynder, who is also playing up a cycle. With Jalen Neal not released and Wynder having his stock take off over the past year, it will be a huge opportunity for Wyndner – who is signing for Benfica after developing with Louisville City.

In front of those three, Gaga Slonina will be in goal and he brings more experience with him to the U-20 World Cup than any other teenage American goalkeeper in recent history.

The front five (the No. 8, No. 10, two wingers, and the forward) are going to be rotated and it doesn’t seem clear what the top options are yet there – given the releases. But if Slonina, the central defenders, and Edelman can play well, the U.S. team should be in good shape.

HOW WILL THE U.S. TEAM PLAY?

 

The U.S. team has played almost exclusively with a 4-3-3 this entire cycle. But could the roster limitations force a different formation? It’s possible and Varas declined to answer if there was another formation that he’d be willing to use.

The 4-3-3 formation remains the most likely and the starting lineup for the Ecuador game almost picks itself.

  •        GK: Slonina
  •        RB: Mauricio Cuevas
  •        CB: Brandan Craig
  •        CB: Josh Wynder
  •        LB: Jonathan Gomez
  •        CM: Dan Edelman
  •        CM: Jack McGlynn
  •        CM: Owen Wolff
  •        LW: Caleb Wiley
  •        RW: Quinn Sullivan
  •        CF: Darren Yapi

That would leave Diego Luna, Niko Tsakiris, Markus Fekranus, Obed Vargas, Justin Che, and the two backup goalkeepers on the bench.

Moving forward in the group stage, Cowell’s return offers up some more flexibility. Plus, it will be important to see the progress of Tsakiris and how Justin Che is performing after a long injury layoff as well.

Varas also indicated on Wednesday that he like’s Wiley’s ability to play the wing, and that makes sense against Ecuador with Paredes and Cowell out.

One of the differences between this U-20 roster now and the one that played in qualifying is that Yapi gives the team a different look. Varas often went without a No. 9 for most of the cycle since he didn’t like his options. But Yapi’s emergence in 2023 with Colorado and then with the U-20 team in March gave the team a true No. 9. Now it comes down to providing him service. If the team is able to utilize the a true No. 9, it should help fill the void left by Aaronson’s absence.

NOTABLE ABSENCES

There is a lot of talk about releases. We know that Neal, Aaronson and Chris Brady weren’t release while Buck may night have been released. We also know Ricardo Pepi is age eligible but has moved onto the first team. But who else is not here that could have been a coach’s decision?

Benja Cremaschi: versatile Inter Miami midfielder was not on the roster despite playing with Argentina’s U-20 team in December and the U.S. U-20 team in October. He is eligible for next cycle and that was always going to be his main cycle. Inter Miami would have released him, but he either was not selected by Varas or he declined due to hope with Argentina next cycle.

Caden Clark: The RB Leipzig midfielder had had injuries but has also not yet played for Leipzig in the Bundesliga. He has been an unused substitute at times. But next week will be the eight-month anniversary of his last game. He’s talented but his lack of playing put him in a bad position, especially on a roster where Varas will be shorthanded in group play.

Alejandro Alvarado: The Vizela midfielder had a good CONCACAF U-20 tournament last year but has struggled in subsequent U-20 camps and has not made an impact at Vizela (only 65 first team minutes all season).

Michael Halliday: The Orland City right back was a bit of a surprise to not make the roster given that he has had a strong start to 2023 with Orlando, he has played with the U.S. U-20 team a lot this cycle (including at qualifying), and the other right backs in Mauricio Cuevas and Justin Che have both struggled for minutes.

Nine U.S. U-20 World Cup players who could graduate to the senior USMNT

LOS ANGELES, UNITED STATES - JANUARY 27:  Cade Cowell #20 controls a loose ball during a game between Serbia and USMNT at BMO Stadium on January 25, 2023 in Los Angeles, United States during a game between Serbia and USMNT at BMO Stadium on January 27, 2023 in Los Angeles, United States. (Photo by Robert Mora/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

By Tom Bogert May 11, 2023


At his press conference to discuss the United States’ roster for the U-20 World Cup, head coach Mikey Varas repeatedly came back to his ultimate goal: To develop players from this group to graduate into the senior national team.

Of course, Varas would like to win the tournament, but success isn’t measured exclusively by results. It’s results and development. History shows around half the team should be expected to make at least one senior USMNT cap, with a handful graduating to a World Cup squad.Among recent U.S. U-20 World Cup squads:

• 10 players from 2017 squad made at least one USMNT appearance.

• Four players from 2017 (Tyler Adams, Josh Sargent, Cameron Carter-Vickers and Luca de la Torre) made the 2022 senior World Cup squad.

• 11 players from 2019 U-20 World Cup squad made at least one USMNT appearance.

• Two players (Sergiño Dest, Tim Weah) from 2019 made the senior World Cup squad, and a third (Chris Richards) very likely would have if not for injury.

The USMNT’s annual January camp may help inflate those cap numbers. With most of the first choice team unavailable for the annual camp during non-FIFA-mandated windows, the squad list is more experimental in nature and digs deeper down the pool to fill. Four of those 10 players capped from the 2017 squad have made only one senior appearance. Five of the 11 capped players from the 2019 team are nowhere near the senior squad at the moment.

With the second-youngest squad at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, the USMNT won’t be naturally losing players from the pool at a high rate in the near future. That could mean less opportunity for this year’s U-20 players to break through. It’s also worth remembering that, with Ricardo Pepi and Paxten Aaronson among age-eligible players not on the squad by their clubs, this isn’t the strongest possible U-20 group.

Despite all of that cold, hard nuance, the roster features plenty of talented players, a number of whom stand a good chance of breaking into the senior pool.

These are the best bets to do so.


Gaga Slonina

Goalkeeper, Chelsea FC, 18 years old

After a year as a first choice goalkeeper in MLS followed by a huge transfer to Chelsea this winter, Slonina is perhaps the best-known player in the squad. He’ll be the top choice between the sticks for Varas.

Slonina, turning 19 next week, is one of the most expensive teenage goalkeepers of all time after his transfer from the Chicago Fire for an up-front fee of $10 million with another $5 million in add-ons. He made 43 appearances with the Fire before heading to Chelsea in January.

He’s a potential No. 1 goalkeeper for the USMNT one day. Matt Turner (28 years old) is the current first choice, with Zack Steffen (also 28) among the top challengers for the spot.

Caleb Wiley 

Defender, Atlanta United, 18 years old

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It’s been a dream start to 2023 for Caleb Wiley.

The Atlanta United homegrown has become an indispensable starter in MLS, delivering three goals and two assists while splitting time between left wing and left back. Long-term, he projects as a left back — that’s how clubs in Europe see him and where he’ll play mostly for the U-20s.

“We anticipate Caleb will have a big tournament,” Varas told media on a virtual press conference Wednesday.

Behind presumed starter Antonee Robinson, the USMNT left back depth chart is wide open. The current backups are right-footed players capable of playing on the left (Joe Scally, Sergino Dest), Wiley offers something more similar to Robinson: an attacking overlapping outlet down the left, allowing the winger (presumably Christian Pulisic, in the USMNT’s case) to cut in.

Wiley, 18, will be in Europe before long. Atlanta already rejected a transfer offer for him last year. A lot of scouts will be paying close attention to him in Argentina.

Josh Wynder 

Defender, Louisville City, 18 years old

Center back Josh Wynder is playing up a group, as he’s age-eligible for the 2025 U-20 World Cup as well.

Currently with Louisville City, Wynder will soon join Benfica in a USL league-record transfer this summer, with the Portuguese club winning his signature ahead of a number of MLS and European clubs this spring. Wynder just turned 18 this month but has already made 45 first team appearances.

“Josh is clearly a very technical center back with a great physical profile,” Varas said. “What really put the exclamation mark for me, in the last camp, he showed me he has ‘savage’ inside him as a defender. Your job is to be a physical player who wants to protect the goal. That takes a certain type of personality.”

Kevin Paredes

Defender/midfielder, Wolfsburg, 19 years old

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Kevin Paredes had been thought of as a future USMNT left back, but most of his minutes at Wolfsburg have been at left midfield after he broke through at D.C. United as a wingback. He’s versatile, so still could end up at left back, but will play as a winger for the U.S. U-20s.

Paredes has made 20 Bundesliga appearances this season, 19 of which came from the bench. His importance as a squad player for his club means he won’t join up with the United States until after the group stage. He joined Wolfsburg from D.C. United for a $7 million fee in 2022.

With Paredes and Wiley as young options behind Robinson at left back, the national team should be covered there for the foreseeable future. 

Cade Cowell

Winger, San Jose Earthquakes, 19 years old

Cade Cowell’s athleticism is already at an elite level. If he can polish his final third actions, he’ll be in the senior national team on a regular basis. Even if he doesn’t, he’ll still get chances because of his dynamism. He had the fastest recorded sustained sprint in MLS last season, as per Second Spectrum.

Cowell, 19, already has three senior USMNT caps. He put in a man of the match performance against Serbia in January, albeit with both groups severely undermanned due to the friendly falling outside of a FIFA-mandated window.

The San Jose Earthquakes winger has 92 MLS appearances under his belt, starting all 11 of the club’s games this season before heading to Argentina with the U.S. U-20s. The Quakes rejected a bid from French Ligue 1 side Reims last summer for him.

Jack McGlynn

Midfielder, Philadelphia Union, 19 years old

Philadelphia Union midfielder Jack McGlynn has an elite skill that can translate to the senior international level: Distribution. Specifically, with his preferred left foot.

“McGlynn has a left foot that you can’t teach,” Jim Curtin told me in 2022. “It’s really special. His passing ability I equate to Haris [Medunjanin]. That’s the best passer I’ve worked with. And Jack is right there. His IQ is up there with [Alejandro] Bedoya, who has played in World Cups and in Europe. He’s worked really hard defensively, but he’s special. He’s still growing, he’s getting stronger.”

McGlynn, 19, is already the Union’s best midfield passer and is among their top options on set pieces. He’ll be a crucial part of the U-20s midfield. He has grown into his body and improved athleticism over the last year or two, and if that continues, he’ll be in the senior national team pool.

Obed Vargas

Midfielder, Seattle Sounders, 17 years old

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The youngest player on the United States roster, Seattle Sounders midfielder Obed Vargas broke onto the scene last year playing a key role to the Sounders winning the CONCACAF Champions League as a 16-year-old.

Vargas, now 17, missed the second half of 2022 with a back injury, forcing him to miss the 2022 U-20 CONCACAF Championships with this group.

Owen Wolff

Midfielder, Austin FC, 18 years old

Austin FC midfielder Owen Wolff has displaced key veteran Alex Ring to establish himself in his club side’s first choice XI. He broke into the U-20 group this cycle and could be in line for a big role at the World Cup.  

“What we love about Owen, he’s got a fighting spirit,” Varas said. “He’s not afraid of confrontation and, on top of that, he’s very skillful and very smart. You see this in MLS, how he fought into the starting lineup this year.”

Wolff was been linked with PSV earlier this year. He projects to make a big move to Europe within the next few years.

Daniel Edelman 

Midfielder, New York Red Bulls, 20 years old

While the defensive midfielder isn’t thought to have as high a ceiling as others on this list, Daniel Edelman is already a steady professional and could find himself on the outskirts of the senior pool with his consistency if he keeps developing.

It would be a stretch to say he projects to be a first choice starter for the national team, particularly given Tyler Adams occupies his position, but depth behind Adams is unproven. Edelman is the U.S. U-20 captain and won a starting spot in the New York Red Bulls competitive midfield last season. He fits very well in a pressing/transition system, which could be the direction the senior team goes in the future. If so, it’s not hard to see a scenario in which he gets some caps.

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Why U.S.’s U-20 men’s World Cup squad won’t include some of its best young players

Apr 8, 2023; Chicago, Illinois, USA;  Chicago Fire FC goalkeeper Chris Brady (34) controls the ball against Minnesota United at Soldier Field. Mandatory Credit: Jamie Sabau-USA TODAY Sports

By Tom Bogert May 8, 2023


When the U.S. men’s U-20 team lines up for its opening U-20 World Cup match against Ecuador on May 20, it won’t be the strongest possible XI.

The problem isn’t unique to the United States. Roster construction is a complicated maze for all federations, as the youth tournament does not fall in a FIFA-mandated international window and clubs can decline to release players. Federations lobby for the players’ release and clubs grapple with the decision. Do they keep first-team players with the squad or send them to represent their country in Argentina at the world’s premier youth tournament?

layers generally want to go. Representing their country at a World Cup, albeit an age-specific precursor to the iconic senior event, is an unforgettable achievement. It can also be another major stepping stone in their careers.

“It’s kind of shocking that I see some of the guys I know not being released, and it sucks,” Atlanta United’s Caleb Wiley said. “I’m super thankful the club released me to represent my country. This is something that doesn’t happen often. For me to be able to go to Argentina, it’s special.”

When the tournament kicks off, European clubs are wrapping up their seasons, with titles, continental tournament qualification, relegation and cup finals still on the line. MLS clubs have games that Wiley, a key starter, will be missing.

“Think about the kids — and I’m getting fired up — this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that they may never get back again,” Philadelphia Union head coach Jim Curtin said. “To prevent them from playing in a U-20 World Cup? I’m sorry, I don’t agree with it.”

Curtin said the Union will “excitedly release any player” called up. It’s expected the Union’s Jack McGlynn, Quinn Sullivan and Brandan Craig will get the call for the U.S. Rosters have to be submitted to FIFA by May 10. McGlynn has won a starting spot with Philly, Sullivan is an important rotation attacker and Craig is currently one of only four first-team center backs Curtin could call on amidst a jam-packed May schedule.

It’s not that simple at other clubs, though.

“Sometimes there are moments in life where you have a choice between a bad solution and a bad solution,” Chicago Fire sporting director Georg Heitz told The Athletic. “This is one of those moments.”

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For Heitz and the rest of the Chicago Fire, the decision was to decline to release midfielder Brian Gutierrez and goalkeeper Chris Brady. Both were expected to be on the roster if released by the club

Brady is the club’s first-choice goalkeeper. Gutierrez is the starting No. 10, even after Swiss international, and the league’s second-highest paid player, Xherdan Shaqiri returned from injury. The Fire have missed the playoffs in nine of the last 10 years, and fired head coach Ezra Hendrickson on Monday.

“My job is to defend the interests of the Chicago Fire, to defend the interests of our coaching staff and, of course, the players,” Heitz said. “There you see the problem — It’s a conflict of interest. The strongest argument not to let them go is the schedule. We have so many games in May, and we need these players. They are pillars in this team, we’re speaking about our No. 1 goalkeeper and our playmaker.”

Brady and Gutierrez won’t be the only ones held back by their clubs. Croatian side Hajduk Split already announced American midfielder Rokas Pukstas will not be released either. Pukstas has started each of the last 11 Hajduk matches he was available for, playing all but one minute over that timeframe. The club has four league games left, as well as the Croatian Cup final coming on May 24.

The statuses of Eintracht Frankfurt midfielder Paxten Aaronson and Wolfsburg winger Kevin Paredes aren’t defined, either. Aaronson broke into the Frankfurt matchday roster quicker than anticipated after a winter transfer from the Philadelphia Union, appearing in each of their last three games off the bench. Frankfurt is in the German Cup final on June 3.

“If the player is playing a huge role in the team in a professional league — against adult men in first divisions where there’s pressure on the standings — are you willing to release a player playing a significant role inside your team?” LA Galaxy head coach and sporting director Greg Vanney said. “There are different beliefs on that. In most places around the world, if a young player is playing, a lot would say no. There’s a reason why FIFA doesn’t make this mandatory (to release players). A club has to reflect on that.”

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For the Galaxy, the player to reflect on is center back Jalen Neal, who has been a crucial figure over the U-20 cycle and even made his senior national team debut in January. But he’s become an indispensable starter and a bright spot for the Galaxy, which has just one win in 10 games and saw center back Sega Coulibaly go down with an injury in the first half of Saturday’s 3-1 loss to Colorado.

“If I feel like I can cover the team and I can afford Jalen some level of experience in this, I’d love to do that,” Vanney said. “I need to talk to him to see where his head is at but I also need to look after the other players who are here and trying to win games, win championships.”

The Galaxy could have had as many as four players at the tournament.

In addition to Neal, fellow Americans Mauricio Cuevas and Markus Ferkanus were also on the U.S.’s qualifying squad. Unlike Neal, they haven’t broken into the first team rotation, with Cuevas arriving from Club Brugge in April. Vanney said Cuevas and Ferkanus will be released if called.

They also have Argentina youth international Julián Aude, who was acquired from Lanus in March. Aude was a starter for Argentina at the U-20 South American championships, but was not called into their squad for the U-20 World Cup.

Vanney indicated there was a collective agreement between the player, his camp, the Galaxy and the Argentine federation that it would be more beneficial for Aude to remain with the Galaxy, where he quickly became a starter.

“Some of it is a little bit cultural in terms of where in the pecking order of the priority list we put the U-20 World Cup relative to first division soccer,” Vanney said.

MLS clubs are caught in the crossfire more than European clubs.

For one, clubs in the United States’ domestic league are expected to be more cooperative than those abroad. The league calendar also means it’s the early part of the season and in a league that has a playoff system in which more than half of the teams qualify.

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“Sometimes you’ll hear from sporting directors or coaches who say ‘development, development, development,’ but then when it comes time, it’s ‘well I can’t sacrifice points here,’” Curtin said. “We all have to be in it together and really be about it, not just talk about it.”

Another key starter in MLS who is eligible for selection is San Jose Earthquakes homegrown winger Cade Cowell, who has started all 10 of the club’s MLS games. Like Neal, Cowell has been a crucial figure in this U-20 cycle and has made his debut with the senior national team.

“There’s more that goes into it than what people probably realize,” San Jose Earthquakes sporting director Chris Leitch said. “How does it impact our club? In the case of Cade, he’s a week-in, week-out starter. That’s a consideration, but it’s also about what’s best for the player. … He’s played in a lot of MLS games but he hasn’t played in a U-20 World Cup. We’re collaborative with the player.”

Cowell and other standouts from the U-20 World Cup could be called into the senior national team this summer, as well. The Nations League and Gold Cup tournaments run at the same time as the MLS season. How long can clubs be without key starters?

“It’s not just like ‘oh okay, he’s invited, let him go.’ There’s a lot that goes into this,” Leitch said. “But if you’re going to pride yourself on developing players, you have to give them opportunities in a different competition, even if it’s not best for your club. Also you’ve got to be willing to say ‘let’s see what the next guy is able to do with this opportunity, as well.’”

There’s also an obvious monetary value to this proposition.

FIFA U-20 World Cup Winner’s Trophy. Photo: Harold Cunningham/FIFA

Competing at a U-20 World Cup is another pedigree marker for any player, and it’s a tournament all clubs across the world are watching.Players from the United States’ squad at the 2019 U-20 World Cup like Mark McKenzie, Chris Durkin and Julian Araujo have since moved abroad. Tyler AdamsErik Palmer-Brown and Auston Trusty were at the 2017 U-20 World Cup.

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“It is the premier youth tournament, it’s heavily scouted and the hope is there’s a value-add in putting more eyeballs on watching a player live,” Leitch said. “You watch Cade Cowell on video, you see he’s fast. You see Cade Cowell live and you’re like, holy cow, he’s world-class fast. … You can see it on the video, but seeing it live? You see how electric that really is.”

Catching the eye of clubs higher up the global food chain is important for players, as well as testing themselves against the best players in the world in their age group.

“You want to play in World Cups as a player, right?” Atlanta head coach Gonzalo Pineda said. “U-20 (World Cup) is a tournament that is very important for getting attention from European clubs, for understanding where you are in the world with your performance. You see where you’re at in your age group.”It’s not exactly the same discovery for players in the United States as it previously may have been, though. Through advancements in scouting technology, globalization in the soccer world and more clubs figuring out elite talent can be produced in any corner of the world, the starlets who will represent the United States are already well-known to scouts across the world.“I’m not sure a player goes there and does a whole lot for their value,” Vanney said. “Scouting is so sophisticated. Jalen is an example, when he played 200 minutes as a teenager, it’s already hitting flags in every scouting department in Europe that there’s a 19-year-old center back playing in MLS.”The Fire have already rejected a transfer offer from Club Brugge for Brady almost a full year before he made his first team debut (as first reported by ESPN in 2022). Gutierrez has already turned heads in Europe with two goals and five assists across 1,693 minutes in his age-18 season last year.“I would bet both players will make their way to Europe, with or without the U-20 World Cup,” Heitz said. “We’ve proven it with Gaga (Slonina) and (Jhon) Duran: You can make big, big transfers out of MLS directly.”Some clubs will release players, some won’t. The equation is different for each situation.“It may not be a black

My Game in My Words: Deeper insight from players preparing for the 2023 Women’s World Cup

Jeff Rueter May 1, 2023

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Realistically, we only ever see about half of what makes an elite athlete so great. We see the goals, the well-timed runs off the ball, the other-wordly recovery runs and the jaw-dropping distribution. All of that is informed by repetitions in training and strong connections forged with teammates outside of the public eye. But, even before sequences are rehearsed on the training ground, they have to originate within a player’s mind.Ahead of the 2023 Women’s World Cup, we’re excited to bring you a series of interviews with top players where they talk us through some of their best moments on the pitch. It’s called “My Game In My Words” and it’s something that has become a staple of The Athletic’s coverage. While the churn of any given season can cause athletes to face the same questions over and over in some form, their eyes often light up when they get to break down the nuances of how they approach their craft.For those who are unfamiliar, one of The Athletic’s writers will sit with a player, one-on-one, and dissect a series of selected highlights. Some will be obvious: a monumental goal, a remarkable save. Others will force the player to break down lesser heralded parts of the game: positional play, reading an opponent, or when exactly to launch the ball instead of looking for a shorter pass.For example, take this from Beth Mead in our first installment of the 2023 series on how her time as a No. 9 helps her thrive at a wider position, reviewing a goal she scored against Sweden in last summer’s Euro semifinal.“I ran in and that was like a No. 9 should be, because I have that instilled in me still,” Mead told Katie Whyatt. “A full-back such as Lucy (Bronze) — she’s basically a winger anyway, because she gets that high up the pitch and gets past you. She can physically do it because she’s so athletic. Her strengths bring out my strengths, helping me get into that area. I remember Ian Wright — in the commentary analysis — saying that sometimes you just know when they leave your foot. And I really did when it left my foot; I knew I’d hit it well enough that it should be going in.”Through this series, both our writers and you, the reader, will hopefully gain a new understanding of the inner-workings of some of the best players in the world as they prepare for a major tournament. Once the World Cup begins, the world will see their moments of brilliance amidst the drama that comes with the highest stakes the sport has to offer — but thanks to this series, you’ll know why and how they thought to pull it off in the first place. 

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Beth Mead: My game in my words

The My Game in My Words series is part of a partnership with Google Pixel. The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication.

With World Cup roster spot on the line, Lynn Williams focuses on being her best self for Gotham

With World Cup roster spot on the line, Lynn Williams focuses on being her best self for Gotham

Courtney Stith Apr 30, 2023

In The Journey to the Cup, The Athletic tells the stories of players and teams as they work towards a place in the 2023 Women’s World Cup. Follow along as we track their progress as they prepare both mentally and physically for a chance to shine on the game’s biggest stage.Lynn Williams calls her trade away from the Kansas City Current a blessing in disguise.

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The NJ/NY Gotham FC forward started the 2023 season in red-hot form, notching four goals in five appearances across all competitions. Her game-winning goal against the North Carolina Courage made her the third player to score 60 regular season goals and tied her with Portland Thorns’ Christine Sinclair on the NWSL’s all-time leading goalscorers list.

With a trip to her first World Cup on the line, Williams could focus on the pressure to compete for a spot on the roster. Instead, Lynn Williams is focused on being Lynn Williams.“My focus is just doing what I need to do to help this team and that means being the best Lynn Williams I can possibly be. And being the best Lynn Williams I could possibly be will hopefully help me get on the [U.S. national] team,” Williams told reporters following Gotham’s 1-0 win over the Washington Spirit in the UKG Challenge Cup where she notched another game-winning goal.

Williams working to be her best self means paying attention to the journey, instead of the finish line.

“I’m not really somebody who sets goals,” she toldThe Athletic. “I’m more of somebody who just looks at the process and the steps it takes you to get there. I think that sometimes when we look too far ahead, we can miss steps in getting us to that ultimate goal for lack of better words.

“I’m more somebody who says, ‘You know what? I’m going to show up every single day, and I’m going to play my best or I’m going to try my hardest.’ And hopefully, that allows me to reach, and have, success. But I think sometimes when we’re too goal-oriented, if we don’t reach that goal, then what? We’re so disappointed when sometimes it’s just about the journey.”

Focusing on the process has also allowed Williams to play with more joy after coming back from a hamstring injury that kept her out for 10 months.

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“At the end of day, soccer is supposed to be fun,” she explained. “It’s a kid’s sport that we are just so lucky to be able to play as adults. I think that when I’m having my most fun, I’m relaxed and free and playing my best soccer. When you’re around a great coaching staff and a great bunch of teammates of women who are uplifting each other, it’s easy to find the joy in the game.”When Williams is playing her best soccer, everyone should be afraid — or excited if she plays for your team. In her seven seasons in the NWSL, she’s finished outside the top 10 of the golden boot race only twice (during her rookie year and when she was injured in 2022). In every season she’s played, she’s notched the most goals on her team.In 2016, with the Western New York Flash, she had 11 goals and five assists in 19 games, winning the 2016 golden boot and league MVP. She also became the first player to win MVP and score in an NWSL championship in the same season.

That championship game was special to Williams for several reasons. It was her first NWSL championship game (and win), and she scored her favorite goal of all time. In the dying seconds of extra time, Jess McDonald sent a floating ball to Williams who was waiting to pounce on the back shoulder of Washington Spirit defender Alyssa Kleiner. Williams beats two defenders and the on-rushing Kelsey Wys before heading the ball into the back of the net. The goal sent the game into penalty kicks and WNY won 3-2. Surprisingly, it was Williams’ first time scoring with her head.

A last-minute trade to a team more than 1,000 miles away could unsettle a player, but Williams is starting to feel at home. Living outside of New York City, she appreciates the ability to “pop into the city” when she wants and have a life outside of soccer — though she openly admits she’s more of a homebody. She hasn’t done anything memorable yet, but she and her teammates want to go to the famous Comedy Cellar to see a show.

Williams also appreciates the unique New Jersey perk of not having to pump your own gas, but it limits her opportunity to play the lottery as much as she used to.

“I love playing the lottery because you can’t win if you don’t play,” she said. “I feel like in the past, every time I got gas I was like ‘Oh I’ll just buy a lottery ticket.’ And now that I don’t have to get out of my car, I never buy lottery tickets. So I need to figure out a new system.”

So far, Williams has enjoyed playing with her new club and teammates. Originally, she left North Carolina to find a new challenge and Gotham ultimately became the place she needed to step out of her comfort zone.

For Gotham, its offseason transactions and new coaching staff have already translated into results. They have their best regular season start in club history with nine points. The team has kept three consecutive clean sheets across all competitions for the first time since April 2015. Williams has already equaled the most goals any player scored for the club in 2022. She also became the first player to be assisted in a game by both Mewis sisters, her new favorite stat.

“This is exactly the challenge I needed with a new group of people in a new environment with a new coaching staff. What I love so much is that (coach) Juan Carlos (Amorós) and the staff have held me accountable to everything and know where I want to be,” she said. “Everybody across the board is going to help us reach those goals and those dreams and I think that’s all you could ask for out of a coaching staff.”

Beth Mead: My game in my word

Beth Mead: My game in my words

By Katie Whyatt May 1, 2023


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In this My Game In My Words seriesThe Athletic builds towards the Women’s World Cup by talking to leading players around the world to find out how they think about football, why they play the way they do and to reflect — through looking back at their key career moments — on their achievements so far. All in-person photography is photographed on Google Pixel.


Through the Keyhole with Beth Mead and Vivianne Miedema might be a little too easy. There are too many giveaways. Mead’s BBC Sports Personality of the Year trophy lives next to the TV. Then there is the shelf behind her, where she keeps her Player of the Tournament trophy from Euro 2022 and her winners’ medal. The tallest — Miedema’s PFA Women’s Players’ Player of the Year trophy from 2019 — stands at the side.

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The clothes horse peeking into the bottom right of the Zoom call feels apt for the house where Miedema lives, the juxtaposition of the mundane and the extraordinary calling to mind that easy, languid gait with which she so often does the outrageous.

Of all Mead has won in the past year, SPOTY, she says, is the one that will never feel real. “I sit there and look at the trophy and the names on it,” she says, “and I still don’t believe it’s something I have my name on. Jill Scott said to me a couple of weeks ago: ‘I don’t think you understand what you did. A 70-year-old trophy, every sport going in Britain, and your name is on that with Princess Anne, Andy Murray and Lewis Hamilton.”

Those four dreamy weeks last summer set up Mead for the busiest year of her life. When she was runner-up for the Ballon d’Or Feminin, Mead attended the ceremony in a dress designed by Victoria Beckham — Beckham’s daughter Harper is a fan of Mead — and she joined two members of the Spice Girls in a box to watch England win the 2022 Finalissima.

Among her post-Euros awards — she also won the Golden Boot — there has been an MBE, and the Freedom of London and Scarborough. She was also England Player of the Year, BBC Women’s Footballer of the Year, UEFA Player of the Year runner-up and named in the FIFA FIFPRO Women’s World XI. More meaningful, she says, are the interactions with fans, the greatest surprise when families quietly pay for her meals and cocktails on holiday to say thank you for the role she had played in their summer.

We are meeting to discuss Mead’s game in her words, for her to take us into her eyes and mind on the pitch. She has picked a handful of her favourite matches for club and country, but we cannot do so without asking, first, how she is.

The past year has been the most successful of her career but the most trying of her personal life. In her SPOTY acceptance speech, she cried when speaking of her family, overwhelmed by the private pain of her mother’s battle with ovarian cancer. June Mead passed away in January this year. Throughout this early part of her grief, she has been without football. Mead had been in the best form of her career that afternoon in November when she ruptured her anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) in a game for Arsenal against Manchester United, her planted right leg folding in on itself at the knee with the telltale twanging motion.

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When we speak, Mead is, in ACL terms, doing “very, very well”. She is ahead of schedule, about to start running, “pushing for what could be another amazing summer” but aware that it might come just a few weeks too soon. She tries to be as pragmatic as she can, but the rehabilitation is arduous work, inevitably, comprised of “small stepping stones and wins”.

One of the toughest parts has been the switch — “it’s very much a full 360” — from the career-defining highs of last summer, and all the accolades that followed, to these smaller, private victories, not even won on the football pitch. She has not thought far enough ahead to worry about whether she will return the same player. “I’m hoping it’s like riding a bike, and my football comes back naturally,” she says.

With startling symmetry, Mead’s partner Miedema picked up the same injury three weeks after Mead. In the weeks where both were on crutches, their Arsenal team-mates visited to help them around the house, a rotating cast of Lia Walti, Steph Catley, Jen Beattie and Leah Williamson calling in until Mead, at least, was mobile. One night, Kim Little came over and cooked fajitas.

Mead has been far from idle in the meantime. In the next few weeks, she will finish her UEFA B coaching badge, having begun studying for coaching courses in lockdown. She enjoys the puzzle-solving aspect of it all — just days before our interview she sat down with Arseblog’s Tim Stillman as part of UEFA’s ‘Recognise Game’ series, which showcases elite performances in the Women’s Champions League. She analysed Arsenal’s 5-1 win over Lyon from this season’s group stage, a game in which she scored twice — and when she and Miedema watch Arsenal from the sidelines, they cannot help but break into analysis.

The Euros matches are the ones she views with more sentimental eyes. Analysis staff have distributed clips to the players but Mead prefers the BBC highlights. “I like to listen to it with the commentary. It just makes it feel more ‘real-time’. I know what happens and I’m still like: ‘What were we doing?’. Sometimes I just lie in bed at night and watch it, and it puts me in a happy mood before I go to bed. I enjoy watching those memories back. It’s a nice time to remember on the football pitch.”

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Today is another chance to do so, although her first choice is Arsenal’s 2-1 win over Brighton in January 2022. Having gone behind after 15 minutes — Brighton’s first goal in 10 and a half hours of football at that point — Mead found Miedema to tap in at the far post with one free kick to pull Arsenal level. She then won the game with another free kick five minutes later.

Mead chose this for Arsenal’s mentality, as well as her own: their determination, after half-time, to “grab the game by the scruff of the neck” and the “domino effect” as she saw her team-mates feeding off her energy. “You can either shift it and be whiny and get annoyed, or you can do something about it,” she says. “I put my anger and my energy into taking people on, running with the ball and getting at people. I felt my free-flowing football: I was gliding past people with ease. You have games where, in instances, you feel untouchable. You feel like you can play so positively and help your team. Things come off that you might not normally try. You feel like the conductor. You’re setting things on their way.”

Mead won the second free kick herself, moving to chase a through ball from Tobin Heath. “The defender’s not really sure where I am and catches me on the wrong side,” Mead says of Brighton’s Victoria Williams. The free kick boomerangs slightly into the top corner, curving a foot wide of the wall.

“It’s just the way you wrap your foot around the ball or the follow-through right at the end,” Mead says. “You’ve got to follow right through to get that perfect bit of curl on it. It starts outside the frame of the goal and curls in. Where the keeper was stood in relation to where the wall is — for me, it was a no-brainer to put it where I put it. I’d just assisted her (Miedema) and put a great ball in. I had my eye in. That position was perfect for how I would like to strike a ball.” This is the distance at which she practises free-kicks, studying the technique of James Ward-Prowse.

“Viv said to me, ‘You’ve got this — back yourself’,” Mead says. Mead enjoyed the celebrations afterwards; Miedema, she says, “was just tootling behind me, with no emotion. It depends on what mood or how Viv’s game’s going as to what you get with her sometimes,” she says, laughing.

She and Miedema are, in Mead’s words, clever footballers — “we see things quite early on the pitch” — and have played together for six seasons now. Mead had previously been Arsenal’s number nine and had scored 14 goals from that position in the season before Arsenal signed Miedema. “Apparently, that wasn’t enough,” Mead jokes. “When you’ve got Viv coming in, you can understand why.

“The runs, the way she makes her movement — she makes it very obvious so I know where I want to put the ball and where she wants the ball to be. She’s very clever in losing the defender and making that sharp space to either get in behind, pull away from them and finish, or get in front of them.”

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In her early days as a winger, she watched clips of Liverpool’s Mohamed Salah; as a child, she had admired David Beckham. “I love the way he put a ball into a box,” she explains. “That’s what I pride myself on — not needing too much space to put a ball in that someone can finish.”

But the process of crafting Mead: Mk. Winger began with working on her existing strengths as much as it did emulating others’. “I’m not slow as a winger, but I’m not the fastest out there,” Mead explains. “I would say my first five, 10 metres are my quickest. I can get away from someone, then be effective. A Lauren Hemp needs the space to run into to get up to speed. I could work all day and never have the pace Lauren has.

“With experience, I’ve figured out other ways to be effective. I like to move my body and the ball quite well. So I like defenders who are not so agile when you’re turning them and chopping them. They’re going one way and you’re going the other. That’s ideal.”

Her full-back with England, Lucy Bronze, has been a source of intel on how to beat defenders. The worst thing, Bronze said, is having to get back and make some sort of intervention after being out of position. Her advice to Mead is to manoeuvre the ball — but Bronze also proves a difficult opponent. “I think I can manipulate the ball really well against Lucy but physically she is always going to be there,” Mead says.

“Everybody has their strengths on a football pitch defensively. As a winger, you’ve got to be clever in how you work with that. I still can be so much better at it, but I’ve done a lot of individual development of watching how defenders move and how I can move in relation to them.”

Her second game of choice is England’s 8-0 win over Norway from last summer’s Euros. England, Mead says, had earmarked this as the toughest of their three group games; being 6-0 up at half-time was never part of their plan. This was one of those games where Mead felt she could do no wrong. “Some of the balls I put into the box — Ellen (White) couldn’t even get on the end of them because they were so good she didn’t expect them,” Mead smiles. “Another day, I’d have hit them straight off the pitch. But it was as if everything I did — and what we did as a team — just turned to gold.”

She has had “a handful, if that” of matches like that in her career. “But this one has to be number one. We were just relentless. They didn’t know what to do. They didn’t know how to adapt to it. They were in a huddle after each goal. When we were scoring, you could see in our faces that we couldn’t believe what was going on.”

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We let the highlights package play through. I joke that I cannot imagine how they will fit eight goals into two minutes. “They’ve just got to throw them all in there, right?” Mead says. She waits a beat as the first goal begins to build. “I think a lot of us have watched this game a lot.”

We watch Mead’s involvement for England’s second. She scurries into space deep on the right and, from the goal line, cuts past Julie Blakstad and crosses for Hemp to turn the ball in at the far post. Then the flag flies up for offside.

“I knew instantly this wasn’t offside,” Mead says, “because the girl I’d just chopped was laid on the touchline. Not a chance is Hempo offside.” The initial pass from Lucy Bronze dragged Blakstad out of position. “So she’s running like mad to get back,” Mead explains. “In my head, she was either going to take me out, because she was running so quickly, or I’d chop her and she can’t stop in time. And she didn’t stop in time. I chopped and the other players were going that way as well. Then it leaves a big, big gap.”

These are the moments where Mead seems to operate on a different temporal plane to the rest of us: where time seems to slow for her only and the space around her bends to her will. “Some things can be so quick and so slow in your head,” she says. Goals three and four slip by — “I think, ‘This is a good day’,” Mead says of her header for England’s fourth goal — “because that never happens” — and then we arrive at Mead’s favourite of her three that day.

Fran Kirby plays Mead into space on the edge of the 18-yard box and she pushes forward to go one-on-one against Blackstad. In a flurry of touches, Mead pulls left; with another snake-hipped shimmy, she carves open the space to shoot low into the right-hand corner.

“This is what I really like: manipulating the ball well and making defenders move,” Mead says. “Again, they were all out of position. I was one vs one. I could have gone on the outside, which I actually think the defender (Blakstad) wanted me to do. I chopped inside. The other one is still recovering. She can’t slow down, so I’m able to go past her. The girl on the edge of the box (Ingrid Engen) is the wrong side of me. If she touches me, she’s going to bring me down. She tries to, but didn’t get a chance. The keeper was in an awkward position and I just tapped it the opposite way to where she’s moving. She’s still going right, so I go the other way.”

We watch until the end and the scenes that precede Alex Greenwood handing Mead the match ball. “That was me, playing with so much happiness and energy,” Mead says.

Watching the clips take her back to those moments when England felt — maybe even were — invincible. Her final match is England’s 4-0 semi-final win over Sweden from the same tournament, a game in which Mead scored the opener that let her and her team-mates off the leash.

“This is where mine and Lucy’s relationship was so great,” Mead says, as she watches Lucy Bronze direct a first-time cross into Mead’s vicinity having met the loose ball from Hemp’s first delivery. “Lucy, I knew, was going to be there. I was already reacting and turning as if Lucy was going across the next ball in. Readjust your position, take a good first touch.”

Such thinking is the legacy of those years as a No 9. Mead has spent more of her career in that position than she has on the wing. The old urges are there — you can’t erase those instincts, as her steadying first touch and the strike on the bounce demonstrate.

“I ran in and that was like a No 9 should be; I have that instilled in me still. A full-back such as Lucy — she’s basically a winger, anyway — gets that high up the pitch and gets past you. She can physically do it because she’s so athletic. Her strengths bring out my strengths, helping me get into that area. I remember Ian Wright — in the commentary analysis — saying that sometimes you just know when they leave your foot. And I really did when it left my foot: I knew I’d hit it well enough that it should be going in.”

Goal three, Mead says, “never gets old”. One YouTube clip of Alessia Russo’s backheel has been viewed close to 400,000 times. It never gets less impressive. It made an overnight star of her. The ironic thing is that Russo, Mead says, was initially critical of herself for not burying the chance at the first attempt — she hit the backheel on the rebound.

“But would this have happened if she didn’t?” Mead asks. “We were all just like, ‘Nah — you did not just do that in the semi-finals of the Euros! That was just filthy. What were you thinking?’. She was like, ‘I wasn’t — I just flicked it back and hoped it went towards goal or to one of you’.”

Did Mead know, in the moment, that it would go viral? “I mean, I knew it was going to do OK. But we never at that point knew how big we were getting throughout the Euros.”

The caveat to all this, of course, is that it is not always easy for Mead and Miedema to watch football when the pair of them cannot do the one thing they love most. This is the longest Mead has gone without kicking a ball. “Sometimes, it’s nice to watch it and talk about it, but then you miss it, and you put yourself in a bad mood because of it,” Mead says, of her daily life with Miedema. “It’s a tough balance, and it goes day-to-day with how we’re feeling, how we’re both doing. It depends on our moods, and if it’s one of those days when we just don’t want to talk football.”

The struggle is also set against the backdrop of her grief for her mum. “I’ve still got a different outlook on life: I’m here and I am still living and breathing and doing what I love to do,” Mead says quietly. “My mum had an illness and couldn’t fight it anymore. And now she’s not here. I have an injury that lasts nine months. Then I can go and do what I love again.”

Mead says she is “doing OK”. There are good and bad days. Songs that remind her of times they spent together. Mother’s Day was difficult. “The first one without her,” Mead says. Her dad, Richard, had made a teddy bear from June’s clothes. “So she’s with us every day,” Mead explains. “But it’s difficult. My mum was my best friend and the one person I would talk to throughout these hard days of rehab. But I want to make her proud and get back on a pitch again.”

She had been at home with her mother for the first few months of her rehabilitation. After the most mentally and physically draining period of Mead’s career, the club gave her leave to go to Miami so “I could try to get my head into some sort of shape”, paying for a physiotherapist to fly with her. She rested with Miedema, Little and Lisa Aitken, a professional squash player also recovering from an ACL injury, and got two tattoos in tribute to June.

“My mum said to me before she passed, ‘So, what tattoo are you getting for me, then?’ I was like, ‘I’ll have to get one now, won’t I?’.” Mead recalls. They booked a session while they were in Miami: the first, on Mead’s arm, says Love you loads, a phrase she and her mother always said to each other. On the back of her arm is a palm tree. “While we were away, Lisa was like, ‘Palm trees are one of the only trees that when its roots are pulled up during a storm, it becomes stronger again’. My roots have been pulled up because of the loss of my mum, but I’m hoping that I become stronger and she’ll be with me.”

She has become an ambassador for Ovarian Cancer Action: her involvement in this year’s Walk in Her Name campaign, which saw Mead ask her followers to sign up to walk 100km in March, helped to raise more than £140,000. She should be incredibly proud, I tell her, of her strength in going public with her loss so immediately, knowing how much money it would raise. “I’m doing my best,” she says. “I want to help people. I try to keep myself productive and busy.”

It is time for Mead to go. She has another interview, this time with UEFA. There was a time when Mead was known as ‘the angry Beth Mead’. The received wisdom — and Mead’s own view of herself — was that she played best when she had something to prove, a chip on her shoulder. Has that still changed, after everything — last summer, the staggering scale of her loss, a slow, methodical rehabilitation?

She smiles simply. “I’ll let you know when I come back.”

The My Game In My Words series is part of a partnership with Google Pixel. The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication.

Humphrey Ker

Humphrey Ker on the true story behind Wrexham’s fairytale: ‘We are not Ted Lasso’

Richard Sutcliffe May 11, 2023

Humphrey Ker, Wrexham’s executive director and the man who ultimately set Rob McElhenney and Ryan Reynolds on the path towards buying the Welsh club, doesn’t cry as a rule. But come the open-top bus parade earlier this month to celebrate Wrexham’s promotion to the EFL, that rule was broken.“It was extraordinary,” he says. “We were coming up the street past McDonald’s and Primark, looking out at the crowd as we sang, ‘Can’t Help Falling In Love’ by Elvis Presley. And I just burst into tears.

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“I hadn’t cried for 10 years. Not because I’m a tough guy — not in the slightest. More I’m emotionally damaged, like a lot of posh English people who experienced strange repression in their childhood!

“But everything just got to me. Partly being on that street, which I remember cycling up every day in my first five months in Wrexham and everything being shut due to Covid — things felt bleak back then. And partly all the happy faces looking up at the bus.”

Wrexham fansWrexham fans celebrate (Photo: Christopher Furlong via Getty Images)

Such emotion was understandable. The Vanarama National League title race was relentless, as Wrexham and runners-up Notts County smashed the previous record points tally with 111 and 107 respectively. Great television for the Welcome to Wrexham documentary crew, but draining for everyone else, especially after the pain of the previous year, when Wrexham were pipped to the title by Stockport County on the final day, then lost 5-4 in the play-offs to Grimsby Town.

“I did say to Rob and Ryan at the end of last season, ‘Look, we will win the league by 30 points next year’,” says Ker, sitting in the north Wales sunshine with The Athletic. “And how that was going to be boring for the documentary crew.

“Little did I know Notts County would be brilliant. Thankfully, we got over the line and the celebrations were fantastic. Obviously, we’d had the opposite emotion 12 months earlier.

“But, in a way, the documentary was probably 10 times better for the audience because we lost in season one. I got loads of texts from friends of mine, saying how the show blew their minds only to then be shocked at the end because we lost. They hadn’t expected that.

“But we are not Ted Lasso. This is real life. You can’t choose your ending.”


A little over three years ago, the chances of Wrexham finishing top of any table seemed remote. The club was at a low ebb even before the pandemic struck, bobbing along in the lower echelons of the fifth tier despite the best efforts of the Supporters Trust, who had ultimately saved the club in 2011.

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Crucially, though, there was one pole position that Wrexham were destined to claim in 2020 — a list of prospective football clubs for two would-be investors from Canada and America.

“Lots of people have been very complimentary about us picking Wrexham,” says Ker, who compiled that who’s who of lower league football on behalf of McElhenney and Reynolds.

“In hindsight, it makes sense. And Wrexham was genuinely an early front-runner. But we did sit down and look at a host of clubs, assessing whether they were a good fit for what we hoped to do.”

Ker inadvertently prompted that search after recommending McElhenney watch the Netflix documentary Sunderland ‘Til I Die after the two friends were sent home from the set of Apple TV show Mythic Quest at the start of the pandemic. The verdict from the co-creator of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia followed on the Wednesday night. “I watched the first one with (wife) Kaitlin and the show was all right.”

Humphrey Ker’s day job, pictured here top right, promoting his acting work (Photo: JC Olivera via Getty Images)

Ker thought nothing more about it until his phone rang two days later. By now, McElhenney had watched both series and was hooked. “Rob’s telling me how the show had him in tears one minute, then jumping out of his seat the next,” he adds. “I was glad, thinking I’d earned myself a brownie point. But then he says, ‘We should do this. Buy a football team. But do it in reverse, by buying a club already struggling and try turn it around’.”

Hence, not long afterwards, Ker was given the job of compiling the list of clubs as contact was made with Inner Circle Sports, the investment bank that brokered the deals that saw Fenway Sports Group buy Liverpool and Michael Eisner purchase Portsmouth.

“At the very start, there was a brief suggestion from within Inner Circle Sports as to whether we’d be interested in Bolton Wanderers,” says Ker, the club having been relegated to League Two in May 2020.

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“They were available for what was a massively reduced price for a club of that size, history and infrastructure. But we felt it was just too big a fish, in a way. This is a place where there had been Premier League football not long before.

“So many factors went into choosing a club, including the narrative. Here (in Wrexham) was a historic, storied club that had seen these great, great days. Beating Porto, playing in Europe, having 35,000 on the terraces was a big thing.”

The selection process was thorough. “We had five criteria,” says Ker. “These were fanbase — genuinely 10 out of 10 for Wrexham on that, as they got 4,500 every week in the National League — geography, the narrative — as in the history of the town, the challenges a club has faced, such as (previous owner) Alex Hamilton here, that meant it deserved a break — socio-economic status and facilities.

“Facilities-wise, Wrexham did not score particularly highly. It didn’t own the Racecourse Ground and didn’t have a training ground. Where Wrexham did do well, though, was geography and catchment area.

“Take another example of a club we discussed: Hartlepool United. They didn’t score very well on geography because they were so close to Middlesbrough, so close to Sunderland and so close to Newcastle, competing with a lot of big, big clubs.

“There also wasn’t that huge amount of population there. Whereas in north Wales, there are about 750,000 people. A decent catchment area and a big, dormant fanbase that we felt wouldn’t take much to activate.

“We felt this might avoid some of the challenges other clubs who had been financially charged in the past have run into. Such as going up, getting to a certain level but not being able to attract crowds.

“Here, there was a sense this could really take off.”

Eventually, the field was whittled down to just two clubs, with Wrexham finishing top of Ker’s list of possibles with 38 points out of 50 and their nearest rival, Hartlepool, on 36. Only then was contact made with both clubs.

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“Ultimately, Wrexham had been a front-runner from very early on and remained the first choice. Hartlepool had been opened up as a second front if this had all gone wrong.”

The takeover went through in February 2021. It has been far from plain-sailing all the way since then, not least that play-off defeat at the end of the first full season under Reynolds and McElhenney, but Wrexham replacing relegated Hartlepool in the EFL next season suggests the right choice was made.

King at WrexhamReynolds and McElhenney meet King Charles and Queen Camilla  (Photo: Christopher Furlong via Getty Images)

“I have had a few people ask me, ‘Do you think this could be done elsewhere?’,” says Ker. “Some earnestly, almost as if to say, ‘How do I do what you guys have done?’. But it will be a challenge for someone to find anywhere with quite as strong a sense of self.

“Rob and Ryan are integral to the success of the documentary, of course. They have drawn people in who wouldn’t normally watch a football documentary. But then they have fallen in love with Wayne at The Turf, ‘Scoot’ (The Declan Swans singer Michael Hett), Chally (groundsman Paul Chaloner) and Jordan Davies.”

Davies and his partner, Kelsey Edwards, featured in a heartbreaking episode of the documentary following the death of their baby son, Arthur. Happily, the couple were able to announce on May 2, the day of the team’s bus parade to celebrate promotion, the birth of their daughter, Harlow Navy Davies.

“Jordan hadn’t been able to join us due to the baby arriving early in the morning,” adds Ker. “But as we came down the Mold Road, by the Maesgwyn (Hall), Jordan was there with his brother, two dogs and the baby in the pram, waving at everyone. To see him was so special. He got such a big roar from our bus.”


Ker, now 40, was a relatively late convert to football, instead preferring to spend school breaktimes “pretending to be dinosaurs with my friend Richard”. Then came his road to Damascus-style epiphany at the age of 11.

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“We were playing in this inter-school competition when the ball came to me,” he says. “I thumped it so well that the ball flew into the top corner. The whole school was watching and, in that moment, I realised what football can make you feel like.

“After that goal, Richard would ask if wanted to go be a velociraptor and I’d be like, ‘No, fuck off, I’m a football legend now!’.”

This newfound devotion led to every spare minute being spent kicking a ball around. Liverpool also became a big passion that has endured, with any return visit from the United States before getting involved at Wrexham invariably featuring at least one trip to Anfield.

Philadelphia Eagles were McElhenney’s sporting love growing up, while Reynolds also had a deep connection to sport. In Welcome to Wrexham, the Deadpool star speaks openly about how sporting success made him feel “validated” in the eyes of his late father. What also became evident during the first series of the documentary was how both co-owners fell in love with football, particularly Reynolds.

Ker says: “When we started this, Ryan’s interest was in using the club as a philanthropic engine. The thing he gets a real kick out of — and always has done — is using his power to give joy to people.

“I’ll give you an example. We were on the bus parade and he’d pick out someone in the crowd below, shouting how he liked their poster or whatever. Such a little gesture but something that will have made their week or month, never mind day. That’s him as a person.

“He sees this as a way of doing that on a grand scale, almost supercharging what he has always done. That’s what got him into this at the start. Rob loved that but saw the sporting side as an attraction as well.”

Ryan Reynolds(Photo: Jan Kruger/Getty Images)

Asked if there was a specific moment when Reynolds’ emotional involvement in the football club’s fortunes came to the fore, Ker says: “The FA Trophy semi-final against Stockport last season and how Paul (Mullin) scored that incredible chip over the ‘keeper in the last minute from over there.” He points towards the goal at the University End of the Racecourse.

“Don’t forget, Ryan’s experience up to then had been watching (matches) via the (TV) stream, seeing us lose his first live game 3-2 at Maidenhead after having the wrong man sent off (Bryce Hosannah) in a case of mistaken identity and then drawing 1-1 at home to Torquay.

“A great occasion to be at, with the crowd buzzing at Rob and Ryan being there. But we conceded in the 89th minute and things went a bit flat. The next game Ryan came to was (in April) against Stockport in the Trophy. They were the team we had been chasing in the league for months and there was a sense we could haul them in.

“It lit a spark in Ryan. Ever since then, he has been all over it. Our group chat is where you can see a marked difference. We’d hear from Ryan all the time but it was often Rob asking questions like, ‘How’s so and so? Is he fit?’. Ryan would add ‘That’s great’ if it was good news but then there came a shift.

“Now, he is always the first one back in, asking how Jacob Mendy’s thigh is and who will switch to his position if not fit. Ryan lives on the east coast so gets the messages earlier in the day than Rob (in LA).

“Even so, it shows how he’s totally invested in the football side.”

This will no doubt come as a disappointment to the doom-mongers — invariably fans of Wrexham’s rivals — who say Reynolds and McElhenney will soon grow tired of the project and walk away.

“I do think the Premier League is doable one day,” says Ker when asked how far the club can go. “I go right back to why we chose this place at the start, the geography and catchment area with the history and enthusiasm.

“Look at the bus parade. There was everyone from 90-year-old ladies in wheelchairs with threadbare old Wrexham scarves through to three little boys standing on an electric conductor box with a sign they’d painted themselves.

“I’ve had a very privileged life and had some really fun jobs as an actor and writer. But I was saying to Rob on the bus, I love our day jobs but you just don’t get this in TV, with 40,000 people taking to the streets to shout, ‘Great show’ at you. That’s why this has honestly been the best three years of my life.”

Eleven Comes from Behind to Down Loudoun, 2-1

#LDNvIND MATCH STATS

LEESBURG, Va. (Saturday, May 6, 2023) – A pair of late goals for the Eleven, including a 90th-minute match winner from Juan Tejada, lifted Indy Eleven over Loudoun United FC, 2-1, on Saturday night in Leesburg, Va.

The victory snapped a four-match winless streak in USL Championship play for Indy, with its last win coming against Detroit City on March 25. The Eleven is now 2-3-3 on the season, while Loudoun falls to 3-4-1. Indy now leads the series with Loudoun 4-2-0 winning two of the last three.Tejada came on in the 82nd minute to provide the spark for the Boys in Blue with his first goal of the season, off a headed assist from Douglas Martinez. It was the second consecutive game the Eleven scored late, with Jack Blake registering an 81st-minute goal to earn a 1-1 decision against Pittsburgh on April 29.The Eleven’s equalizer came in the 73rd minute off a Martinez to Younes Boudadi combination that eventually found Sebastian Guenzatti on the near post for his second goal of the 2023 season and 61st-career USL strike. The pair in 2023 are a team best.Loudoun took the early lead in the sixth minute when Kalil ElMedkhar got on the end of a cross from Laukoa Santos and hit the one-time volley into the back of the net for his second goal of the season. The Eleven countered with an early chance and nearly equalized just three minutes later with Jack Blake finding himself inside the 18 off a pass from Solomon Asante. Loudoun keeper Hugo Fauroux cut the angel on Blake, whose shot was one of two for Indy in the first frame.

Loudoun held the 13-5 advantage in shots in the match, with a 5-3 lead in shots on target, and out possessed Indy 53%-47%. Aodhan Quinn led Indy with three shots, while Yannik Oettl notched four saves for the Boys in Blue.Next up, Indy travels to Sacramento Republic FC Saturday, May 13 for a 10 p.m. ET match-up. Indy returns home May 20 against Colorado Springs.Single-game tickets for all home games at IUPUI Carroll Stadium along with prorated Season Ticket Memberships, specially-priced group tickets and an increased portfolio of hospitality options are available for purchase now via indyeleven.com/tickets or by calling 317-685-1100 during regular business hours (Mon.-Fri., 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.).

USL Championship Regular Season
Loudoun United FC 1:2 Indy Eleven
Saturday, May 6, 2023
Segra Field – Leesburg, Va.

Indy Eleven: 2W-3L-3D, 9 pts
Loudoun United FC: 3W-4L-1D, 10 pts

Scoring Summary:
LDN – Kalil ElMedkhar (Santos) 6’
IND – Sebastian Guenzatti (Boudadi) 73’
IND – Juan Tejada (Martinez) 90’

Discipline Summary:
IND – Jesus Vazquez (caution) 30’
LDN – Abdoul Zanne (caution) 37’
IND – Robby Dambrot (caution) 45’
LDN – Jeremy Garay (caution) 45+2’
IND – Cam Lindley (caution) 56’
IND – Adrian Diz Pe (caution) 65’
LDN – Kalil ElMedkhar (caution) 70’
IND – Aodhan Quinn (caution) 89’

Indy Eleven line-up (4-3-3): Yannik Oettl; Younes Boudadi, Jesus Vazquez (Mechack Jerome 45’), Adrian Diz Pe, Robby Dambrot; Cam Lindley (Harrison Robledo 71’), Jake Black, Aodhan Quinn; Douglas Martinez, Solomon Asante (Gustavo Rissi 90+5′), Sebastian Guenzatti (Captain) (Juan Tejada 82’)

Indy subs: Tim Trilk (GK)

Loudoun United line-up (4-4-2): Hugo Fauroux; Laukoa Santos, Daniel (Chica Houssou Landry 88’), Bryce Washington, Gaoussou Samake; Abdoul Zanne (Panos Armenakas 76’), Aidan Rocha, Jeremy Garay, Kalil ElMedkhar; Tommy Williamson (Wesley Leggett 69’), Zach Ryan  

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5/9/23 Champions League Semi’s Man City/Real Madrid today 3 pm CBS, Inter/AC Milan, Indy 11 win, US Open Cup tonight, Europa Thur

Games to Watch

Of course Champions League Semi-Finals on Tues/Wed leads the list of huge games this week.  Its Real Madrid hosting Man City Tues 3 pm on CBS in the REAL Final, then Wed has the battle for Milan – Inter vs AC at 3 pm on CBS. (Coverage starts at 2 pm).  (tons of stories below). Also tonight US Open Cup play returns tonight on CBS.com and youtube Europa League play has Juventus vs 3 time winner Sevilla and Roma vs Leverkusen both at 3 pm on Paramount plus.    

Indy 11 Win 2-1, home Sat May 20

 A pair of late goals for the Eleven, including a 90th-minute match winner from Juan Tejada, lifted Indy Eleven over Loudoun United FC, 2-1, on Saturday night in Leesburg, Va. The victory snapped a four-match winless streak in USL Championship play for Indy, with its last win coming against Detroit City on March 25. The Eleven is now 2-3-3 on the season, while Loudoun falls to 3-4-1. Indy now leads the series with Loudoun 4-2-0 winning two of the last three. Next up, Indy travels to Sacramento Republic FC Saturday, May 13 for a 10 p.m. ET match-up on ESPN+. Next up, the Indy 11 Men hit the road for a pair of matches, first stopping at Loudoun United FC Saturday at 7:00 p.m. ET (live on ESPN+). The Eleven returns home Saturday, May 20, against Colorado Springs for Military Appreciation Night. A portion of each ticket purchased via this link will directly support HVAF of Indiana. Indy Eleven will match each ticket purchased via the Military Giveback Link, ensuring that a veteran/military member will have the opportunity to attend and be recognized. Buy Tix now via indyeleven.com/tickets or by calling 317-685-1100   Full Schedule   Promotions 

GAMES ON TV

(American’s names in Parenthesis)

Tues, May 9        Champions League Quarterfinals

3 pm CBS                             Real Madrid vs Man City                               

Weds, May 10

3 pm CBS                             AC Milan vs Inter Milan                                 

Thur, May 11       Europa League

3 pm Paramount+            Roma vs Leverkusen

3 pm Para+                         Juventus vs Sevilla          

Sun, May 14 

10 am Para+                       Lady Chelsea vs  Man United  Women’s FA Cup Final

Sat, June 10                       

2 pm CBS                             Champions League Final

Thurs, June 15

10 pm                                    USMNT vs Mexico  Nations League Semi’s

Sat, June 24

9:30 pm                                USMNT vs Jamaica (Soldier Field) Gold Cup

July 21                                  USWNT vs Vietnam Women’s World Cup

Indy 11 Schedule

NWSL Schedule

Soccer Saturday’s are every Sat 9-10 am on 93.5 and 107.5 FM with Greg Rakestraw

Champions League  


Madrid must halt ‘unstoppable’ City, not only Haaland – Ancelotti

Madrid’s cup king Rodrygo aiming to punish Man City again

Man City turn to Haaland as difference maker on Madrid revenge mission


Real Madrid must win Copa and Champions League to forget LaLiga letdown
Sid Lowe

Man City can win a historic treble after a roller-coaster season. Here’s how they got there
Milan clubs both win in Serie A ahead of Champions League showdown

The Champions League and King Charles III’s coronation share a common theme. Literally. Chris Wright

EPL


10 things we learned in the Premier League – Matchweek 35

Arsenal pass Newcastle test to keep pressure on Man City

Mikel Arteta used Amazon documentary to motivate Arsenal for ‘revenge’ vs Newcastle

Arsenal’s statement win at Newcastle illustrates strides Mikel Arteta has made

Man Utd face nervy end to season as problems mount

Pep Guardiola set to lose TWO star playmakers to rivals as rebuild 

African players in Europe: Milestones for goal king Salah

Mohamed Salah is an all-time great, says Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp

Manchester United campaign on brink of disaster – and they only have themselves to blame

Sean Dyche lays bare Everton’s relegation pressure: ‘People’s livelihoods are at stake’

Manchester United let Liverpool back into top four race with defeat at West Ham

Vincent Kompany signs new five-year deal with promoted Burnley

The picture that shows why Sam Allardyce may be only man who can save Leeds United

‘Haaland is the taker’ – Guardiola explains anger after Gundogan penalty miss for City

What was the Premier League expecting at Anfield – a cheery singalong?

Kane passes Rooney mark in Spurs win

 

WORLD


Rodrygo and Vinicius inspire Madrid Copa del Rey triumph over Osasuna

Scudetto! Napoli is partying like it’s 1990
Bellingham brace helps six-goal Dortmund keep pace with Bayern

Celtic beat Hearts to retain Scottish Premiership title

Celtic’s success under Postecoglou attracts Premier League interest

MLS


Luciano Acosta, Alvaro Barreal score as FC Cincinnati downs D.C. United | Replay

Will Bruin’s stoppage time header brings Austin FC draw vs. Timbers

Espinoza double as Earthquakes end Los Angeles unbeaten run

For a good Nashville SC squad, there’s just one thing still missing | Estes

GK


De Gea blunder against West Ham costs Man Utd dear

It’s time for Man United to move on from De Gea after yet another error
Mark Ogden
Sources: De Gea’s No. 1 spot at Utd up for grabs
Rob Dawson

UEFA Champions League: How to watch, predictions, updates, scores, schedule, fixtures

Joe Prince-Wright Tue, May 9, 2023, 8:20 AM EDT·8 min read

The 2022-23 UEFA Champions League semifinals are here, with just four sides remaining in the hunt for club football’s most prestigious prize.

Real MadridManchester CityAC Milan, and Inter Milan remain and a mouthwatering pair of semifinals have been set up with two juggernauts squaring off and a Milan derby.

All four teams are desperate for European glory, with Man City the only team out of three to not have won this competition in their history. Pep Guardiola’s boys are the heavy favorites to win it all but reigning champs Real will have plenty to say about that and knocked City out at this stage late season.As for the Milan derby, well, nobody expected these sides to make it this far as Milan and Inter sit in fifth and sixth respectively in the Serie A table.Below is everything you need for the UEFA Champions League quarterfinals.

UEFA Champions League schedule, dates, how to watch

Dates: Semifinal games to be played on May 9/10 and May 16/17, 2023
Online: Live updates via NBCSports.com
How to watch: TUDN, Paramount+

Champions League semifinal schedule

May 9 – First leg

3pm ET: Real Madrid vs Manchester City

May 10 – First leg

3pm ET: AC Milan vs Inter Milan

May 16 – Second leg

3pm ET: Inter Milan vs AC Milan

May 17 – Second leg

3pm ET: Manchester City vs Real Madrid

Champions League semifinal score predictions – By Joe Prince-Wright

May 9 – First leg

Real Madrid 1-1 Manchester City

May 10 – First leg

AC Milan 1-2 Inter Milan

Champions League quarterfinal results

Quarterfinals – 2nd legs

Tuesday, April 18

Chelsea 0-2 (0-4 agg.) Real Madrid – Recap/highlights/analysis
Napoli 1-1 (1-2 agg.) AC Milan

Wednesday, April 19

Bayern Munich 1-1 (1-4 agg.) Manchester City – Recap/highlights/analysis
Inter Milan 3-3 (5-3 agg.) Benfica

Quarterfinals – 1st legs

Tuesday, April 11

Manchester City 3-0 Bayern Munich – Recap/highlights/analysis
Benfica 0-2 Inter Milan

Wednesday, April 12

Real Madrid 2-0 Chelsea – Recap/highlights/analysis
AC Milan 1-0 Napoli

Our experts choose their composite Real Madrid vs Man City XIs

Our experts choose their composite Real Madrid vs Man City XIs

By Oliver KayCarl Anka and more

3h ago

39


It is a game that would have been a fitting finale to this season’s Champions League.

Instead, Manchester City take on Real Madrid in the semi-finals, with the winner certain to be anointed as the overwhelming favourite to go on and win the final in Istanbul on June 10.

They are, by common consensus, Europe’s strongest teams. But who would make a composite XI, assuming every player from both clubs was fit and available? We asked our experts…


Oliver Kay

Let’s start with my five non-negotiables: Thibaut CourtoisRodriKevin De BruyneErling Haaland and Vinicius Junior. All five would be very strong contenders for a World XI.

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In recent years, you could have said similar of David AlabaToni KroosLuka Modric and Karim Benzema, the latter trio being three of the outstanding players of the past decade and more — and you could certainly make a case for Eduardo CamavingaAurelien TchouameniPhil Foden and Rodrygo, who will be among the stand-out players for the next decade.

But we’re talking about the here and now, aren’t we? As much as I’ve marvelled at Benzema’s enduring greatness, I would take Haaland over him in 2023. As much as I love Kroos and Modric, I don’t think they’re at the level they were four or five years ago. Their strengths lie in controlling periods of matches rather than entire matches. I hope none of that sounds blasphemous.

Real have been the Champions League team of the past decade and, with so many outstanding young players, they are set up to be the team of the next 10 years, too.

But right here, right now? My selection is rather City-heavy. They were much the more convincing team until stoppage time in the second leg of last season’s semi-final and I still find it extraordinary they lost it. I fancy them to make amends this time.


Carl Anka

The impish answer would be to name City’s starting XI from their 4-1 victory over Arsenal and let everyone yell at each other in the comments section. Pep Guardiola’s side are the form team in Europe. While any Real players we insert here would make the team more conventional/understandable, they might remove the intangibles that make City so formidable at the moment — in the Premier League at least.

But let’s go for it. A back four of Kyle WalkerJohn StonesRuben Dias and Manuel Akanji means you can defend against counters, large open spaces and man-to-man challenges. Luka Modric joins a midfield of Rodri and Kevin De Bruyne in a trio that can hurt you in myriad ways and use possession as a defensive tool if the opponent gets ideas above their station.

Haaland as the striker. Vinicius to be our Super Jack Grealish on the left, drawing in double teams and frying any full-back you put against it. On the right, I’m going for Rodrygo over Bernando Silva or Riyad Mahrez. The Brazilian has something of Thomas Muller about him in his ability to find space at the back post and chip in with valuable goals on the biggest occasions.


Mark Critchley

The calibre of player you have to leave out of this side is frankly ridiculous, starting with Ederson, though it has not been a vintage year for the Manchester City goalkeeper. Thibaut Courtois offers a greater sense of security, and edges in.

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Nathan Ake is in form, though injury may keep him out of the first leg. Eder Militao is suspended, too, but makes for an aggressive partnership with Ruben Dias. John Stones is inverting from right-back to join the best holding player in Europe at the base of midfield.

That security in the middle allows a more adventurous selection ahead of them and — with apologies to Luka Modric, Ilkay Gundogan and Bernardo Silva — I’d be interested to see Federico Valverde as a box-to-box, roaming No 8 alongside the no-brainer pick of Kevin De Bruyne.

Erling Haaland is in ahead of the current Ballon d’Or holder and, incredibly, it isn’t really a contest. Jack Grealish is unfortunate to be up against perhaps one of the few players in Europe that is just as good at taking the ball and moving it up the pitch. Vinicius Jr is joined by Rodrygo, whose improvement over the past year deserves more recognition.


Pol Ballús

Thibaut Courtois is my goalkeeper. Possibly Ederson’s footwork is more valuable for Pep Guardiola’s playing style, but if we assess pure goalkeeping quality, hardly anyone compares with Courtois.

John Stones is at right-back — he’s evolved into a complete defender who reads the game as a No 10, defends the box like an old-school 1980s centre-half and slots into midfield with frightening ease. Right now, he’s the best right-back too.

Eder Militao (for his physicality) and David Alaba (for his pedigree) are my centre-backs, while Nathan Ake comes in at left-back; he has been among City’s top five players this season. Ahead of them, Rodri is the best holding midfielder in the Champions League, so he is a given.

Ilkay Gundogan plays on the left (Luka Modric could very well be here, but Gundogan has been more influential overall this season), while no manager would leave out Kevin De Bruyne. On the right, Bernardo Silva will always be in my team. He is a tempo-reading, space-detecting, superior-quality attacking midfielder.

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Erling Haaland is the centre-forward. While Karim Benzema is one of the greatest strikers of the past decade, I don’t think I need to make a big case here to justify picking a 50-goal-a-season player ahead of him.

And on the left, it has to be Vinicius Jr. Jack Grealish has been great, but Vinicius Jr is the best left-winger in the world right now.


Sebastian Stafford-Bloor

Thibaut Courtois gets the gloves on account of his medal collection; he knows what it is to win the Champions League. He understands these ties are decided by little moments and I can depend on him to make a crucial intervention — or five. He makes me feel safe.

There’s a back four in front of him. We’re losing some footballing ability by leaving Ederson out, so John Stones and David Alaba are compensatory picks who also provide some positional flexibility should it be required.

It’s an all-City midfield three. Ilkay Gundogan’s record of scoring timely goals is hard to ignore. Luka Modric and Toni Kroos are more stylish and Aurelien Tchouameni and Eduardo Camavinga are individually more intriguing, but Gundogan has that habit of being a defining factor. He’s also the perfect mid-point between Rodri and Kevin De Bruyne, neither of whom can really be left out.

Up front, Erling Haaland will bring me goals and Vinicius Jr will surely triumph in any one-on-one contest he faces. That makes this team’s attacking punch heavy enough, so Federico Valverde can offer a combination of providing more horsepower under the bonnet and an extra man in midfield without the ball.


Nick Miller

I must apologise to Manchester City for choosing Ederson over Thibaut Courtois. Given that the Belgian stopper used a media snub to motivate him in last season’s Champions League final, we can only assume he’ll be similarly pinning this piece on the dressing room wall as he hypes himself up to face City.

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My defence has a nice balance to it — right foot/left foot, pace/nous, steel/style — and it’s similar in midfield. Rodri is probably the best in the world in his position and I’m convinced Luka Modric is actually getting younger, while Kevin De Bruyne complements those two nicely.

Finally, up top: Vinicius Jr is a shoo-in, I like the balance and industry Federico Valverde would provide down the right, and… well… the 51 goals scored by Erling Haaland mean he has to be the No 9. But it’s an absolute scandal that Karim Benzema is left on the bench.

I’m already composing a strongly-worded letter to whoever picked this team.


Guillermo Rai

Thibaut Courtois, despite his mistake at Anfield, continues to perform at the level that helped Real Madrid win the Champions League last season. Likewise, at right-back, Dani Carvajal edges ahead of Kyle Walker for his special performances in Europe.

At centre-back, Eder Militao is a step above John Stones, but Ruben Dias — one of the best defenders in the world — is in. At left-back, Eduardo Camavinga has passed big tests in Barcelona and at Chelsea, although his future is in central midfield.

Luka Modric continues to be Madrid’s great reference point, along with his fellow five-time Champions League winner Toni Kroos. Few fans in white would argue that Kevin De Bruyne deserves to join them in this combined XI.

And in attack, we have to start with Vinicius Jr, Madrid’s most dangerous player of the season. Rodrygo is now an undisputed starter for Carlo Ancelotti, too, and has already scored decisive goals at this stage of the competition. In between them, there is Erling Haaland, who will surely be a contender for Karim Benzema’s Ballon d’Or.


Stuart James

Well, someone had to do it. We’re 4-4-2, with Erling Haaland and Karim Benzema up top together. In fact, this is about as cavalier as it gets and that means Rodri is doing some seriously heavy lifting in the centre of the pitch to hold it all together. Equally, let’s not overlook the fact that it’s the opposition who will spend the game defending.

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The outstanding Vinicius Jr has to play wide on the left and I considered picking Jack Grealish on the right for — and I wouldn’t have imagined typing this a few years ago — his defensive work. But that doesn’t fit with the theme here, so Rodrygo gets the nod instead.

At the back – yes, we do have a defence – it’s essentially City plus Thibaut Courtois. Nathan Ake’s inclusion might surprise a few but I figured what this team could really do with is a left-back who pops up with the odd goal. In all seriousness, Ake is underrated.

Oh, finally, Ancelotti is in charge –you’d need a cool head on the touchline with this XI.


John Muller

This ought to be a combined XI with no wrong answers, but it sort of feels like there are no right ones.

Erling Haaland has found an unlimited goal hack but Benzema’s rambling creativity is still more interesting to watch. For chemistry’s sake, we’ll give him Vinicius Jr — who’s grown up to be the best winger in the world this side of Kylian Mbappe — and Rodrygo, who might be the most underrated. The fact that all three like to play different versions of left wing at the same time is part of the fun.

With no disrespect to Madrid’s world-conquering midfield, Rodri and De Bruyne are pretty clearly a cut above right now, and Bernardo Silva’s versatility gives him the edge over Toni Kroos and Ilkay Gundogan.

Out of City’s stable of centre-backs, Dias gets the nod as an anchor, Stones to pop into midfield and Walker to run the flank. Since nobody seems to have a left-back anymore, Camavinga is free to get weird in his new hybrid role.

And yeah, I know Courtois pretty much single-handedly won last year’s Champions League, but Ederson’s passing from the back is too good to pass up. No right answers, remember?

How to beat Manchester City: a blueprint

John Muller

May 9, 2023

42

There’s no good way to beat Manchester City. That’s just an unfortunate fact. The last time anyone managed it was three months ago, and that was before they moved John Stones into midfield, unleashed Kevin De Bruyne on the counter, and evolved into an unstoppable juggernaut for the zillionth different time in Pep Guardiola’s never-ending quest for perfection.

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But City have looked unbeatable before, only to come unravelled late in the Champions League knockout rounds. If anyone’s going to keep up tradition and pull off the impossible this year, here’s a little brainstorming session for where to start.


Turn them inside-out

As scary as De Bruyne and Erling Haaland can be on fast breaks, Guardiola would always rather keep things under control. City tend to be extra cautious in the early stages of big games, trying to break opponents’ pressing schemes — and their spirits — with a slow, deliberate show of force.

If you’re brave enough, that can mean chances to try to catch them on the ball in their own half.

When City scored against Arsenal a couple weeks ago off a long ball to Haaland, Guardiola acted weirdly upset about it. The apparent crime was that his goalkeeper had shovelled the ball sideways to a centre-back instead of building through the middle.

You could sort of see what he was mad about — even though the play came off, the situation right before the long ball wasn’t pretty. Martin Odegaard had pressed the sideways pass to split City from the inside out, trapping Stones in a tight spot in the corner. His last-second heave into midfield could just as easily have fallen to Arsenal for a break the other way.

Maybe Guardiola was feeling touchy because Bayern Munich caused them problems with similar inside-out pressing patterns in the Champions League just a couple of weeks earlier.

By splitting City’s centre-backs with their striker and getting tight in midfield, Bayern repeatedly squeezed play out wide and forced the type of passes straight up the sideline to a winger that Guardiola has always hated.

Their saving grace was Jack Grealish, whose magnetic feet enabled him to corral the ball with a defender at his back and curl into midfield to get free. It’s difficult to dribble out of that situation, though, and pretty easy for the winger to take a loose touch in a dangerous part of the pitch. If that’s how City want to play out of pressure, it would be smart to let them.

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Sooner or later, City’s build-up will grind down even the best pressing scheme, but if you were drawing up risks you’d like to make them take, lobs and blind turns into midfield would be pretty high on the list. Both start with getting an opposing forward between the centre-backs and forcing them inside out.


Deny them their favourite zone

There are a lot of ways an attack built around Haaland can hurt you. But lately, City have leaned on two particular patterns in the left half-space.

Nearly all of their most dangerous passes from the top of the box are aimed to the left of the penalty spot. That’s partly because it’s Haaland’s favourite area to shoot from, but a lot of those passes actually come from Haaland himself. He’s gotten good at receiving with his back to goal between the centre-backs, drawing all the attention to himself, and then slipping a left-footed through ball to Grealish or Ilkay Gundogan.

The second kind of killer ball starts on the left side of the box and hits Haaland at the far post. You might think it would make more sense for City to find their left-footed finisher with De Bruyne’s whipped crosses from the right or cutbacks from Riyad Mahrez or Bernardo Silva — and don’t worry, they can do all that too — but in the past few months, those sneaky runs onto passes from left to right have been Haaland’s bread and butter.

Knowing that City love running their attack through the left side of the box and being able to stop them from getting there are two different things, but it might be a good idea to stay alert for Haaland’s lay-off passes at the top of the box and his back-post runs on the right.


Bring chips

Everyone knows City can ruin you with the ball, but some of their most soul-crushing domination lately has come from what they do without it.

In the Champions League round of 16, they surprised RB Leipzig with curved pressing runs that caught the Germans’ build-up in a military-grade pincer movement. The secret to the trap, Guardiola explained after the game, was Bernardo’s ability to “press three players in two movements”: first he slid sideways to cut off the outlet to the full-back; then, when the centre-back turned inside, Bernardo chased the ball back to a panicked goalkeeper as Grealish closed in from the other side.

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The two-pronged press has been a winner for City, who usually sit off in a tight 4-4-2 until they sense a chance to pounce. But when the wingers spring forward into 4-2-4 attack mode, it opens two tiny areas of opportunity on the flanks. Teams that can find their full-backs behind City’s front line have a real chance to break the press.

There are two basic ways to pull this off. Option one is to zip a pass to the feet of a dropping midfielder to bounce it out wide. With two City forwards patrolling those passing lanes at the edge of the box and Rodri and Stones closing in from behind, that’s a high-risk proposition. Any loose pass or stray touch will put Haaland in on goal before you can take a sip of milk.

The safer play is to chip the ball over the pinched wingers into the pocket behind them. Sure, the goalkeeper might not place it perfectly every time, but giving up a throw-in from an overhit attempt isn’t the end of the world. If the chip does find a full-back’s feet, you’re between City’s lines while their wingers are running the wrong way. That’s when things get fun.


Play through, not over

The latest version of City have gone supersized at the back: three centre-backs spread from sideline to sideline plus Stones and Rodri in midfield. The beefed-up aerial presence makes them tough to beat on long balls and crosses, but if you can slip a ball between the lines — like with the full-back chips described above — you’ve got a chance to test the back five for pace.

The mistake most teams make is trying to airmail the ball straight to their wingers on the counter. That’s exactly what Guardiola’s tall, wide back three are in place to prevent. What Bayern did instead was target the space on either side of City’s midfield line, where a free man could spin around and zip a more precise through ball to a winger racing behind the retreating back line. That’s a good idea. Do that.

Will any of this stuff actually work? Listen, this is Manchester City we’re talking about — not much does. But if you have to try your luck against the best team in the world, it’s best to have some ideas about where to start.

(Top photo by Alex Livesey – Danehouse/Getty Images)

Manchester City vs the treble: Could they finally equal United’s side of 1999?

Manchester City vs the treble: Could they finally equal United’s side of 1999?

Oliver Kay

May 9, 2023

131

As the years passed, it always felt like Sir Alex Ferguson became less nostalgic about his greatest triumph, rather than more so.

Every year we would ask him whether Manchester United — or occasionally a rival — might have a chance of emulating their remarkable treble success. Every year he seemed to demystify the momentous events of 1999.

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“No, we won’t get that,” he said in early 2001 with his team 11 points clear at the top of the Premier League. “A lot of things went in our favour last time. Henning Berg was the only player to miss the (Champions League) final through injury. We got a terrific trouble-free run right the way through. That’s what you need to get with cup ties in particular.”

“No chance,” he said in 2005 when asked whether Chelsea might do it. “They’ve had a great season, they’ve got great momentum and their consistency is good. Yes, people will talk about the breaks they’ve had, but everyone needs breaks when they win something. In 1999 we only had one player, Henning Berg, injured for the run-in. It’s very difficult to think it will be done again.”

By 2008, he had changed his mind. He felt he had a stronger team and a deeper squad than nine years earlier — Rio Ferdinand and Nemanja Vidic at the back, Wayne Rooney, Carlos Tevez and Cristiano Ronaldo in attack — and that it was not beyond the realms of possibility. “But you hope you don’t get any injuries. In 1999, only Henning Berg…”

You get the picture. Ferguson always insisted luck was the biggest factor that distinguished the 1999 team, winners of the Premier League, FA Cup and Champions League over the course of 10 unforgettable days in May.

Not that he was saying they got lucky in 1999, of course; even when they snatched victory from the jaws of defeat against Bayern Munich, he insisted they deserved it for the spirit they showed to turn that Champions League final on its head.

But Ferguson would swear to this day that only misfortune denied United another two or three Champions League titles and at least one more treble: a pile-up of defensive injuries before the Champions League semi-final against AC Milan in 2007; a controversial refereeing decision or two in an FA Cup quarter-final loss to Portsmouth in 2008 as they closed in on the Premier League title and Champions League. “He (Ferguson) knew that was the chance of doing the treble again,” Wayne Rooney said of the Portsmouth defeat.

Tomasz Kuszczak was sent off against Portsmouth (Photo: Getty)

The point is that the stars have to align. They certainly did for United in the final weeks of that historic 1998-99 campaign — Peter Schmeichel saving Dennis Bergkamp’s penalty in stoppage time in the FA Cup semi-final against Arsenal, a succession of dramatic late comebacks, culminating in that incredible drama at the Camp Nou, only Henning Berg on the treatment table… but plenty of us would share Ferguson’s belief that the 2008 team was stronger.

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And yet, 1998-99 is the campaign that truly stands the test of time. It defines Ferguson’s legacy and United’s modern history. The league title, the FA Cup and the European Cup in one season: no English team had done it before and none has done it since.

Liverpool won the league championship, League Cup and European Cup in 1984; Manchester City won the Premier League, FA Cup and League Cup in 2019; while Arsenal and Chelsea have both completed domestic trebles in the women’s game. But when it comes to English football, the treble means United in 1999.

Until this season, potentially. Because City are closing in on glory on three fronts: a point clear of Arsenal at the top of the Premier League with a game in hand and gearing up for an FA Cup final against Manchester United and, next up, a Champions League semi-final first leg away to Real Madrid, with AC Milan or Inter Milan lying in wait in the final.

This is not new territory for City, who, under Pep Guardiola, have become accustomed to winning the Premier League (four of the past five seasons) and going deep in Europe. Winning that elusive first Champions League title is their biggest priority, but thoughts of matching United’s treble success are not far from the surface.

Guardiola, however, has demanded perspective. “Look how far away to start to talk about that,” he said two weeks ago when asked about the prospect in a news conference.

“It’s just 11 games,” the City manager was told.

“Oh, ‘just’, yeah. ‘Just 11 games’, yeah, yeah. ‘Just 11 games’,” he said, embracing his love of withering sarcasm. (It is now potentially ‘just’ eight: four in the Premier League, one in the FA Cup and, if all goes to plan, three in the Champions League.)

“We are far away. I said how many times, how many times in this amazing country have trebles been done? How many years? How many times?

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“How many times is one. Our neighbours they did it — in how many centuries?”

In terms of United’s history, it is once in 145 years. Which is once more than any other club in English football history. But here’s the thing. As the game’s wealth has been concentrated among a smaller group of super-rich clubs, doubles and trebles have become far more common than they used to be.

United’s treble in 1999 was only the fourth in European football history, following Celtic in 1967, Ajax in 1972 and PSV Eindhoven in 1988. But as competitive balance has been eroded across European football, it has become more common. Barcelona did it in 2009 and 2015, Inter Milan in 2010, and Bayern Munich in 2013 and 2020. That’s five trebles in the past 14 seasons, an era in which Bayern and Paris Saint-Germain (and for a time Juventus) have been so dominant on their domestic fronts that falling short in the Champions League, completing only two legs of the treble, has sometimes felt like failure.

It has never really been like that in English football, where City’s domination over recent seasons, like Liverpool’s in the 1970s and 1980s, and United’s in the 1990s and 2000s, has at times been tested to the limit. The competition is so intense that no trophy can be taken for granted.

Last season underlined just how difficult it was and is. City seemed to be well placed to win the three leading competitions, but then they lost to Liverpool in an FA Cup semi-final and then, even more painfully, lost 6-5 on aggregate in their semi-final against Real Madrid, having been 5-3 up going into the 90th minute of the second leg. It took a dramatic comeback of their own on the final day of the campaign, coming from 2-0 down to beat Aston Villa 3-2, to hold off Liverpool in another exhausting Premier League title race.

Liverpool, for their part, raised hopes of a quadruple by winning the League Cup and FA Cup — both of them on penalties against Chelsea after 120 minutes of nerve-shredding football — but fell just short of City in the Premier League and then succumbed to Real in the Champions League final. All those dreams of winning four trophies and they ended up missing out on the two they craved above all.

The Champions League is brutal. For a team to have been as near-perfect as City have been over the past six seasons and not win it is remarkable. Yes, it invites criticism of their record — of eccentric team selections, most notably in the 2021 final against Chelsea, and of certain frailties that have been exposed in pressurised moments in knockout ties — but it also underlines an obvious truth: being the best team in Europe does not necessarily mean you win the Champions League.

City won a record-breaking 100 points in the Premier League in 2017-18 and then 98 points a year later; for context, Arsenal’s “Invincibles” won 90 and United’s treble winners won 79. But City paid a heavy price for a couple of bad nights in all-English ties in the Champions League, conceding three goals in 20 minutes at Liverpool in 2018 and two goals in three minutes at home to Tottenham in a crazy second leg in 2019. Even then, a couple of big refereeing decisions went against them on both occasions. The margin between success and failure is so small.

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To conquer Europe, you don’t necessarily have to perform consistently through the entire season. Liverpool in 2005 and Chelsea in 2012 are two obvious examples of that, but so are the Real Madrid of 2018, who finished a distant third in La Liga and relied on muscle memory during some tight, nervy second legs against Juventus and Bayern Munich in the Champions League knockout stages. Even last season, some of Real’s performances in the knockout stage, against PSG, Chelsea and City, were far from convincing.

It isn’t just about performing serenely, as City have done during the Guardiola years. The teams that win the Champions League tend to be those who have shown the ability to survive the type of barrage that invariably happens in the knockout stage.

Fernando Llorente scores in 2019 (Photo: Getty)

Think not only of the blitzes that did for City at Liverpool in 2018 or in Madrid last season, but of the way United spent long periods pinned against the ropes in their 1999 campaign (in both legs of the semi-final against Juventus and certainly the final against Bayern) and how Real just about survived spells of intense pressure against PSG, Chelsea, City and Liverpool in last season’s knockout stage before emerging victorious.

Or, as Guardiola put it five years ago, before leading his team into a storm at Anfield: “In the bad moments, you have to remain calm. Madrid, Barcelona, they are taking a cup of coffee (in those difficult moments) because they know their chance is coming. That’s the big difference.”

Even his fabled Barcelona team had to weather a storm or two, particularly when it came to a chaotic semi-final second leg away to Chelsea in 2009 (when they were grateful for some eccentric decisions from referee Tom Henning Ovrebo and then a stoppage-time goal from Andres Iniesta which, on the brink of elimination, took them through on the away goals rule) and, in a different way, a bitterly attritional semi-final against Real Madrid two years later.

Above all, it is about staying in contention for the biggest prizes all season and then hitting a peak of performance at precisely the right time. In 2017-18, there were just a few signs of fatigue by the time they reached the Champions League quarter-finals. In 2018-19 and 2021-22, there was a slight sense of nervousness and tiredness, which they did well to overcome in the Premier League (coming from behind on the final day to win the title on both occasions) but couldn’t quite get over the line against high-class opposition in the Champions League.

This City team looks sturdier, more resolute. A little less free-flowing, maybe, than the 2017-18 and 2018-19 sides, but more physically imposing following the addition of Manuel Akanji, the improvement of Nathan Ake and the reinvention of John Stones — less susceptible, perhaps, to the type of meltdown that occurred at Anfield in 2018 and at the Bernabeu in 2022, when some of us were quite insistent they were, nonetheless, the best team in Europe.

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That ability to roll with the punches is the one area United’s treble winners of 1999 are unsurpassed. That entire campaign felt like an exercise in buccaneering brinksmanship. They came from behind to win on no fewer than nine occasions (most famously in the final against Bayern but also in the semi-final second leg against Juventus and in an FA Cup fourth-round tie against Liverpool when the treble was the last thing on their minds). On another eight occasions, they came from behind to salvage a draw.

They were a very different kind of team to Guardiola’s City: far less dominant, less controlled, far less prolific at one end of the pitch, more porous at the other. But football was different back then: still dominated by the richest and most powerful clubs but not to the degree it is now. The three lowest winning points totals of the Premier League era came in 1996-97, 1997-98 and 1998-99 (75, 78 and 79 points). The four highest points totals of the Premier League era have all been in the past five seasons. Similar patterns have been seen in La Liga, the BundesligaSerie A and Ligue 1 over the past decade.

Manchester City(Photo: Getty)

Almost every tweak of the laws of the game, as well as its financial distribution model, has served to widen the gulf between the best and the rest — and that is before we come to the influence of Guardiola, whose Barcelona, Bayern and City teams have taken dominant, free-scoring football to a new level.

It seems incongruous, given the excellence of his sides, that Guardiola has not won the Champions League since 2011. It also seems strange that his City team, synonymous with composure and control, have so often found themselves embroiled in chaos — and ultimately overwhelmed by it — when the stakes have been highest in the Champions League knockout stage.

They are a truly great team nonetheless. Only the degree of greatness is open to question. As far as back as 2019, after the second of their league titles under Guardiola, none other than former United defender Gary Neville said they had a strong claim to be the greatest champions of the Premier League era.

Winning the Champions League would not eliminate the many questions about City’s ownership or about the means by which their empire was built. On the contrary, it might intensify the focus on those 115 alleged breaches of the Premier League’s financial regulations, which naturally the club denies. But purely in terms of how Guardiola’s team is recognised more widely, it is essential. It would remove the one argument against their claims to greatness.

And if they were to win the Premier League and FA Cup in the same season, beating United at Wembley along the way, it would match the crowning achievement of the Ferguson era — at which point the riposte from Old Trafford would surely be that no team could ever do the treble as dramatically as they did in 1999, all those dramatic late twists, all those heart-stopping late comebacks. “Football, bloody hell,” as Ferguson famously, breathlessly said.

The treble — not just the achievement, but the manner of it — is at the heart of United’s identity. They won another seven Premier League titles under Ferguson after that, as well as another European Cup nine years later, but the treble, secured by that instinctive flick of Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s right boot, trumped everything. For a long time, as Ferguson said, it seemed unthinkable that any team would match it.

No team did jeopardy quite like United’s treble winners did. But no English club has done clinical perfection like City under Abu Dhabi’s ownership and Guardiola’s brilliant, relentless leadership. And so the treble, the mystical, elusive, unparalleled treble has begun to be seen as something within reach of a club which was gearing up to an excruciating play-off final against Gillingham in the third tier when United, in the words of ITV commentator Clive Tyldesley, reached the promised land in 1999.

(Photo: Matthew Ashton – PA Images via Getty Images)

As Matt Dickinson wrote in ‘1999: Manchester United, The Treble And All That’: “Another English team will win the treble one day. But they cannot possibly win it like this.”

That is probably right. After all, it was almost unthinkable that United won it the way they did in 1999. Great teams really shouldn’t find themselves in that position anything like as often as they did.

And they were a great team. The greatest? Some of us (Ferguson included) are not entirely convinced they were United’s greatest, but that unparalleled triumph put them on top of the pantheon of great English club sides — destined, Ferguson felt, to remain there, unequalled, untouchable.

For that reason, United’s supporters will be willing on Real Madrid in the Champions League semi-final, willing on Arsenal in the Premier League title race and, most of all, willing on their own team in the FA Cup final on June 3.

So much that has happened over the past 12 years has felt like an inversion of the old order. A City treble, meaning victory over their neighbours in the first all-Manchester FA Cup final followed a week later by the club’s first European Cup triumph, might be too much to bear.

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Milan vs Inter: A tactical preview of the Champions League semi-final

Milan vs Inter: A tactical preview of the Champions League semi-final

By Liam Tharme and Mark Carey

2h ago

5


AC Milan and Inter Milan are in unfamiliar territory.

Neither has reached the Champions League semi-final since they won the competition in 2007 and 2010 respectively, but that is now where they will face each other in a Derby della Madonnina. Meanwhile in Serie A just two points separate Inter (63) in fourth and Milan (61) in fifth as they fight for a top-four spot.

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Wednesday night’s European clash comes 20 years after they faced each other in the semi-final of the 2002-03 Champions League — the Rossoneri came out on top via the away goals rule — and it will be the fourth and fifth meetings between the sides this season, the most times they have faced each other in a single campaign.

Mark Carey and Liam Tharme pick out the key statistics and tactical trends ahead of the tie…


AC Milan

While this season’s progress in Europe is better than their previous 15 campaigns, Milan’s season has been mixed. Stefano Pioli’s side arrive at the semi-final with a weaker team than last season’s Scudetto-winning campaign.

This is reflected by FiveThirtyEight’s Soccer Power Index (SPI), which estimates a team’s overall strength between zero and 100 using difficulty-adjusted match results and underlying performance metrics to model a team’s offensive and defensive strength.

Milan’s peak under Pioli was at the start of the 2020-21 season, when the Rossoneri lost just once in their first 24 games in all competitions, but the post-World Cup slide this season was sharp, as they went seven games in all competitions at the turn of the year without a win.

Milan have experienced a second wind in recent weeks though — the result of a tactical tweak. Pioli had almost exclusively played a 4-2-3-1 until the end of January, when Milan’s form had dropped off a cliff, including a 3-0 Supercoppa final loss against Inter, when they were continuously overloaded by their rival’s advancing wing-backs.

“The things that worked up until a few weeks ago are not working, so it’s clear there will be some changes,” said Piolo after the 5-2 loss at home to Sassuolo on January 29. “It would be foolish on my part to carry on down a path that isn’t getting results.”

Milan adapted to a 3-4-2-1, and while they had injuries to contend with (first-choice goalkeeper Mike Maignan, Fikayo Tomori, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Alessandro Florenzi), Milan stemmed a flow of 18 goals conceded in their first seven restart games, during which they had failed to keep a clean sheet.

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Milan won four and drew twice in their next eight, though that included a 1-0 defeat against Inter, one of just four goals they conceded in that time, with five clean sheets, including in both round of 16 Champions League legs against Tottenham.

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That said, when in possession, Milan rotated to attack as a 4-3-3 with right wing-back Alexis Saelemaekers pushing on (out of shot) into a winger role, right centre-back Pierre Kalulu providing the width on the right, and Rafael Leao playing inside close to Olivier Giroud.

When faced with three fixtures against Serie A champions Napoli, Piolo tweaked back to the 4-2-3-1 to balance Napoli’s 4-3-3. Though with Brahim Diaz and Leao as the ‘wingers’, they attack lopsidedly and are reliant on the excellent, complementary Leao and Theo Hernandez (left-back) pairing to penetrate opponents.

Two wins — including 4-0 at the Stadio Diego Armando Maradona — and a draw was an excellent return, highlighting the strength of the system and adaptability. Milan conceded once in two Champions League quarter-final legs against Napoli — in second-half injury time of the return leg, which they won 2-1 on aggregate.


Transition, Leao, and Milan’s left side

One of Milan’s key strengths is their transitional, counter-attacking threat.

None of the quarter-finalists had registered more than Milan’s 42 direct attacks — a possession that starts in a team’s defensive half and ends in a shot or touch inside the opposition box within 15 seconds — in the UCL this season, which highlights how much they look to spring forward upon regaining the ball.

No player encapsulates Milan’s direct style of play better than their Portuguese speedster, Leao, who at the time of writing was still an injury doubt for the semi-final, even though the player downplayed concerns.

His sensational assist for Giroud in Milan’s quarter-final clash with Napoli was exactly what he is about: driving forward with the ball at his feet, drawing players towards him and instilling panic in the opponent’s back line.

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Leao’s 3.7 carries into the final third per 90 places him in the top five per cent of wide players in Serie A this season, with his progressive carry distance of 140 yards per 90 also one of the highest among his peers in Italy.

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In the Champions League, only Real Madrid’s Vinicius Junior (99) has attempted more take-ons than Leao’s 76, with the 23-year-old’s 19 attacking runs — which are chance-creating and shot-creating carries — being the fourth highest in the competition this season.

When Leao turns up the heat, very few players can handle him.

However, his next task is to maintain a level of consistency that matches his talent. While Leao is Milan’s top goalscorer in Serie A, his own dip in form saw him go 11 games without scoring before bagging two goals in Milan’s 4-0 battering of Napoli in April.

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Leao is the man that Milan turn to for creativity. His 14 open-play chances created — and 2.7 expected assists — are comfortably higher than anyone else in the Rossoneri squad in Europe, with his direct running into the lucrative half-space providing the most potent element of Pioli’s attack in this year’s competition.

Of course, to solely attribute Milan’s left-side threat to Leao would be wrongly overlooking Hernandez’s contribution — he plays a similar supporting role internationally for France, behind Kylian Mbappe.

At times, Leao and Hernandez will switch positions but frequently play one-twos to get around opponents and into situations where they can switch play and attempt line-breaks, or get Leao driving at defences.

This was evident within five minutes of the quarter-final first leg at home to Napoli. Milan’s central midfielders (yellow dots) move fluidly, but Diaz’s narrowness off the right requires right-back Davide Calabria to advance to maintain balance, hence why most of Milan’s best attacks are down the Leao/Hernandez side.

With a simple one-two, Hernandez has bypassed the Napoli midfield and, through Diaz, the ball can be switched to Calabria, who has a cross cleared.

Leao (823) and Hernandez (768) are second and third for Milan in European minutes played behind Sandro Tonali (873) and are, unsurprisingly, also the top two for final third touches (Leao, 213; Hernandez, 127).

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Having been dropped to the bench for Milan’s last meeting with Inter in February, you can be certain that Leao will be hoping to make up for lost time in the biggest Derby della Madonnina of his career — if he’s fit.


Will they go back three/five or back four?

How inclined Milan are to match up with their rivals depends on their desire to control the game. Possession was equally balanced (47/53 per cent) in the 3-2 Milan win in August, but they ended up with 66 per cent of the ball in Riyadh when Inter flew out of the traps and won 3-0 to clinch the Supercoppa.

They had just 36 per cent possession and tried a 3-5-2 in early February, losing 1-0 against Inter courtesy of a Lautaro Martinez header from a corner — their best of the three meetings this season in terms of a defensive performance.

“We decided to defend a little bit deeper,” he said, feeling that Milan “clearly improved (…) in terms of solidity, attention and compactness.”

Against Napoli, they defended in a 4-1-4-1 with man-marking.

“We’ve tried both formations (back three and back four), we’ll choose the best one,” Pioli said before the 4-0 league win away to Napoli last month.

It is a real string to Milan’s bow, particularly in knockout competitions, that they can be so tactically adaptable. Piolo’s side have won 16 of the 18 league games and five of the six Champions League games when taking the lead this season, drawing the others. They are capable of sitting deep and hitting teams on the break.


Inter Milan

Psychologically, Inter might have the upper hand in this Derby della Madonnina, having beaten Milan in two of their three meetings this season and are currently sitting two points ahead of them in the Serie A table.

They also won the Supercoppa last season, as well as the Italian Cup, beating Milan in the semi-finals and keeping clean sheets in both legs. It is a tournament they are in the final of this season.

Inter’s style is clear and contrasts with Milan’s. Inzaghi religiously plays a 3-5-2 — defending as a 5-3-2 — with his side having registered the most open-play crosses of any of this season’s quarter-finalists (143), logging just nine through balls across the competition. It’s comfortably the fewest among the cohort.

Milan’s back four could not handle Inter’s wing-backs in the Supercoppa, evidenced by the opening goal.

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Matteo Darmian finds the feet of Edin Dzeko, who slides through on-running central midfielder Nicolo Barella.

Barella squares it to left wing-back Federico Dimarco for the simplest of finishes.

Inter’s left flank has typically been more potent in Europe this season, channelling 38 per cent of their attacking touches down that third of the pitch, compared with 33 per cent down the right.

Creatively, left wing-back Dimarco (four) and, interestingly, left centre-back Alessandro Bastoni (three) lead Inter’s assist count in this season’s Champions League.

Bastoni, an outside centre-back, showed his adventurousness and crossing quality in the last round against Benfica, driving forward after receiving a pass and delivering from deep.

Inter typically push both wing-backs forward, often making a front five when central midfielder Barella makes a trademark forward run, with Bastoni picking him out to open the scoring in the tie, with the pair combining similarly against Barcelona in the group stages.

While Dimarco has shared his minutes at left wing-back with Robin Gosens, the Italian’s 33 open-play crosses in the Champions League is the highest among his team-mates this season, with no Inter player logging a higher expected assists total than the 25-year-old — highlighting how much threat has come from Inter’s left flank.

Dimarco’s remit as left wing-back is different from Denzel Dumfries on the right side, with the Italian far more likely to be involved in Inter’s attacking phase with neat interplay and crosses from wide.

In the second leg against Benfica, Dumfries starts the move for the second goal with a throw-in switch to Bastoni, who plays wide to Dimarco.

Dimarco and Henrikh Mkhitaryan combine, with the wing-back underlapping.

And he finds Lautaro with a cutback to extend Inter’s lead, but again note the four Inter players attacking the ball, including Barella and wing-back Dumfries.

By contrast, Dumfries’ qualities lend themselves more to off-ball runs and providing an aerial threat in advanced areas to pin the opposition full-backs into their defensive third. Each flank brings its own strengths, and width is likely to be crucial to Inter’s approach across both legs.

Inzaghi’s selection dilemma at right wing-back will perhaps be more focused on defence than anything else, with Hernandez and Leao attacking that flank. The Inter manager opted for Darmian in two of the three meetings this season, with Dumfries’ only start against Milan being the 3-2 Serie A loss.


Lautaro and Dzeko or Lukaku?

Romelu Lukaku will possibly play a decisive one in this tie, having made just five appearances in all competitions pre-World Cup. He has four goals and four assists in Serie A since the restart and scored in each of the last two Champions League rounds.

“Romelu likes to play more between the opposition defenders to turn them, while I like to seek the space between the lines,” said Inter captain Lautaro when asked about the difference between Lukaku and Dzeko’s styles.

“With Edin, we keep a close eye on each other and adjust depending on the situation. I am learning a lot from both of them.”

Lautaro and Dzeko have been the starting pair in the Champions League this season, lining up together in seven of the 10 games.

Regardless of the partnership, the idea that Lautaro is solely the ‘little man’ in an old-fashioned front two is far from the truth — Inter rely on his back-to-goal play, particularly as an outlet in transition, and Dzeko is a strong runner of the channels too, as Inter’s second and third goals against Milan in the Supercoppa showed in January.


Onana’s brilliance

At the other end of the field, Inter’s shot-stopper Andre Onana has been particularly impressive across his 10 games played in Europe.

To succeed in any cup competition, you need a degree of overperformance along the way, and Onana’s “goals prevented” rate is the most of any goalkeeper in the Champions League, saving 6.7 goals above expectation based on the quality of shots he has faced.

As shown by the graphic above, Onana has been particularly strong with reaching low to his right side — most memorably making a crucial double save during Inter’s last-16 clash with Porto, keeping a clean sheet to help his side progress when the margins were tight.


This will be a poignant Champions League semi-final, played out at a San Siro about to be redeveloped in a city with 10 European Cups/Champions League trophies between them — seven for Milan and three for Inter.

Only one of them can reach the final, and it is worth reminding ourselves that Inter navigated a “group of death” containing Bayern Munich and Barcelona to reach the knockout stage, before dispatching Porto and Benfica, the strongest two teams in Portugal.

But any side that reaches the semi-final of the Champions League is there on merit.

What is Erling Haaland really like?

What is Erling Haaland really like?

Sam Lee May 8, 2023

“Coming regularly we’ve got Ruben DiasMaximo PerroneRodriJack Grealish, some former players,” says Beppe Francesco, owner of Vero Moderno. “Obviously somebody quite big and famous too, but he would rather remain anonymous because it’s the only chance he gets to have a bit of time off and unwind.”There is no confirmation from Francesco that the “big and famous” guy is Erling Haaland, but it is possible to join the dots. In September, a video was shared online showing the striker casually walking the streets of his new home — and if you look closely enough, you can see the ‘Vero’ signage of the small Italian restaurant in Salford, a short walk from Manchester city centre.In October, The Athletic’s Pol Ballus revealed that Haaland had hosted Francesco and a colleague in his box at the Etihad Stadium — the largest of all the players’ hospitality arrangements.

Francesco has no problem disclosing Grealish and Rodri’s regular visits because they are open about it on social media, and he tells a story of how Oleksandr Zinchenko was almost turned away on his first visit because he was wrapped up warm and hard to recognise. But regarding Haaland, if indeed it is Haaland, he is much more discreet.“I’ve got a story about one of the main guys who prefers to remain private,” Francesco says. “He put a story on his Instagram profile about our pasta. He didn’t put our name because I think he did not want people to hassle him and bother him because everywhere he goes he gets stopped.“We said that what makes him perform so well is the pasta we make for him, and we said, ‘Do you like the pasta so much that you keep coming back for the last seven months or is it because you are superstitious?’”All of the players’ favourite dishes are kept under wraps but there is an added layer of secrecy regarding Haaland.

The 22-year-old rarely goes out drinking around Manchester, as many of his team-mates like to do (as they are usually within their rights to). But he will go out late for pasta; restaurants, including one of Manchester’s San Carlo outlets, keep their doors open after hours so he can eat in peace“One day my father made me some lasagne to eat,” Haaland told the media earlier this season. “I ate it and the next day I scored a hat-trick. What can you do then but keep eating it? Next home game, he made lasagne, hat-trick. OK, I have to eat lasagne the day before a home game for the rest of my life.”

​​Perhaps superstition does come into it, because it has indeed become a regular fixture of the striker’s pre-match routine ever since — and that is on top of the regular visits to restaurants each week.

The lasagne is one of the few things that is known about Haaland’s life away from football. That video of him walking down the street in broad daylight stands out for two reasons: it shows the Premier League’s newest superstar, as noticeable as he is, casually walking without a care in the world. It is also the only such video.

In the days after his arrival in Manchester he was also photographed in a Sainsbury’s supermarket, shopping for items to fill his new flat near Victoria train station. Things like that have dried up now, too, and sources close to him, talking anonymously to protect relationships, talk of just how difficult it is to be out in public these days since things really took off on the pitch.

After he reached 50 goals for the season against Fulham at the end of April, Nike beamed a giant Haaland hologram onto the side of the National Football Museum in the middle of Manchester.

Back home, Visit Norway, the country’s tourist board, is planning to use him in a commercial and his hometown club, Bryne, have sold over 500 Haaland City shirts from their own club shop since last summer.

During his Borussia Dortmund days, he could walk the streets of Bryne normally, but he has, as far as is known, not been back since his move to England and the expectation is he will have to approach life there much the same as he now does in Manchester.

Sightings of him out and about are rare now. Even the autograph hunters who hang around City’s training ground daily, and regularly get signatures from the club’s other superstars, have hardly ever seen his car, a blue Rolls Royce – let alone him.

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He gifts signed shirts to those he is close to – Bryne FK have several from him, as do many of his favourite restaurants in the town and now in Manchester — but it is apparently much harder to grab a casual signature without a pre-existing relationship.

After scoring twice in City’s 3-1 victory over Leicester City in April, he walked through the post-match interview area with Aymeric Laporte and Bernardo Silva. The latter, knowing exactly what the reaction would be from all parties, tried to push the much bigger man towards the reporters, joking, ‘Would you guys like an interview with Erling?’. He breezed straight past, and also past a small group of fans invited by sponsors to get signatures and selfies.

A signed Haaland shirt hangs in the window of a sporting memorabilia store in Manchester’s Arndale centre, an exception that proves the rule: they are supposed to be hard to come by.

Musician Noel Gallagher was one of the few lucky ones to have a post-match audience with Haaland, even if he was stripped down to his underwear, after the recent game against Arsenal.

Those who spend a lot of time around Haaland, including his team-mates, say he is quiet in the company of those he does not know. He can come across as aloof but that is often put down to being a little shy, sometimes awkward. “Remarkably normal”, as one person who met him recently puts it. “There was no ego.”

Haaland was never going to give that non-obligatory interview to the written press because, among various reasons, he has plenty of other mandatory requirements, both after matches and during the week.

Before joining City, he used to do one-on-one interviews with Norwegian press during every international break, but those have dried up now. When he attends sponsor events, or City’s in-house filming days, though, he is described as polite, friendly and engaging. He knows the names of the staff involved in City’s shoots and interacts with those present — which sounds routine but is not always the case.

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As highlighted on camera for a recent Etihad Airways sponsorship, he is often funny, too. When John Stones pronounced “The Louvre” in his Yorkshire accent, Haaland hilariously impersonated him.

He has a very good relationship with Stones — and Grealish — and when the defender scored against Arsenal recently and the Etihad Stadium sang his name, Haaland joined in.

“See how he celebrates the goals of his mates,” Pep Guardiola highlighted the day beforehand. “What impressed me the most is that normally the strikers just think about ‘my goals, my goals’, and he wants to score goals, but you see his joy and his happiness when other players score.”

When he was ruled out of City’s victory against Liverpool a month ago, he could be seen jumping around in celebration just like any of the other fans in the stadium.

“If you ask me about how he is as a boy, it’s this example,” Guardiola says. “It’s difficult to find a striker with these numbers and normally you think, ‘Oh, it’s just me, me, me and me’, and he’s a guy who’s completely the opposite. That’s what surprised me the most about Erling since he arrived.”

The point about Haaland’s relative lack of selfishness was underlined again on Saturday when he gave Ilkay Gundogan the chance to complete a hat-trick against Leeds from the penalty spot. Haaland, as the club’s designated taker, would have been within his rights to take it; moments after Gundogan had missed, Guardiola left the striker in no doubt that he should have done.

Considering the amount of attention on him, Haaland manages to fly under the radar most of the time. There is talk that he has a girlfriend, but the fact there is no proof of that demonstrates how he and his team — his dad, Alfie, and the man dubbed his ‘uncle’, Ivar Eggja — protect him.

Several times this season, when the City players have been given a couple of days off, he has flown to his villa in Marbella. That is part of the joint commitment, by player and club, to keep him in tip-top condition.

“We take care of him 24 hours — we have incredible doctors and physios,” Guardiola says. “They are behind him every second of the day.”

One of City’s sports therapists, Mario Pafundi, joined Norway’s medical staff to ensure he is getting joined-up treatment and Haaland reserves particularly large pitchside hugs for Pafundi after matches.

Haaland was taught the benefits of good sleep — particularly the importance of limiting screen time before bed — when he was coming through the ranks as a teenager at Bryne and he has taken it seriously ever since. He wears orange-tinted goggles to help with that, too.

He is determined to look after his body and extend his career for as long as possible, which is part of the reason he was actually leaning towards a move to Real Madrid over a year ago — he felt Spanish football would be more forgiving than the rough-and-tumble Premier League.

Erling Haaland with Jack Grealish (Photo: LINDSEY PARNABY/AFP via Getty Images)

During attempts to persuade him to choose City instead, club officials suggested that were he to move to the Bernabeu he would have to play every game, lest the manager and therefore president, Florentino Perez, come under pressure. That would, therefore, lead to overexertion and more injuries.

City promised they would do all they could to take care of him, including not playing him if he felt he needed a rest, and it is one of the reasons he is taken off so quickly if he has scored goals and the game is deemed to be over.

He is delighted with how these promises have been kept and it is one of the reasons a contract extension is on the cards.

“We know we have to keep a watch because he’s so big,” Guardiola adds. “Physios, massage, backs, shoulders, tendons, everything.

“He works so much inside the training centre, much more than on the pitch. Today in modern football, players train more behind the scenes than on the pitch.”

Those in the building cannot emphasise enough how often Haaland receives a massage: in his early days at the club it became a running joke among the players that he would be on the massage table for some kind of rub-down.

They also joked, ‘How many will you score today?’ during those blistering first couple of months, to which he simply smiled. Perhaps unbelievably, though, in the very early days his finishing was not something that stood out in training, especially compared to his physical attributes. That soon changed, of course.

He is not especially impressive in City’s rondos, though, and his frustration at being passed around has been caught on camera a few times in the rare 15-minute glimpses the media are granted before European games.

Normally his stronger emotions are reserved for opponents who cross his team-mates, like when Ben White confronted Phil Foden after the Arsenal game recently, or when Newcastle’s Dan Burn picked a fight with Grealish. Both times Haaland had been joking before noticing the trouble and darting in as if a loose ball had broken inside the penalty area.

Claims attributed to Bayern Munich’s Leon Goretzka that Haaland “farted every time we approached him” have been debunked as false — although there is a video which suggests something along those lines may have happened. Brentford defender Ben Mee, though, has revealed Haaland kept pinching him during a game earlier this season.

Those guys have paid the price for getting too close to him, which is not something that is easy to do.

What it’s like to play at Real Madrid’s Bernabeu fortress on a Champions League night

What it’s like to play at Real Madrid’s Bernabeu fortress on a Champions League night

Dermot CorriganMay 8, 2023

I remember the emotion was amazing with our fans in the stadium, very high up in the third tier of the stadium,” former Italy defender Giorgio Chiellini tells The Athletic, of the night at the Estadio Santiago Bernabeu when his Juventus team eliminated Real Madrid in the 2014-15 Champions League semi-finals.

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“My brother was there too, lots of people from my family, and I celebrated with them in the stand,” continues the now Los Angeles FC centre-back. “Also in the locker room afterwards with the team, we were very excited about the win. Because it does not happen every time. Usually you go back crying from the Bernabeu. But fortunately that time was different.”

That 2015 success makes Chiellini and Juventus one of the few teams to have been celebrating after a Champions League meeting with Real Madrid over the last decade.

Since Madrid ended their long wait for the ‘Decima’ European Cup in 2013-14, they have played 25 Champions League knock-out ties and gone through 21 times, often after stirring and dramatic ‘remontada’ comebacks at a noisy and heaving Bernabeu.

Within the last 16 months, Paris Saint-Germain, Chelsea (twice), Manchester CityLiverpool have all been eliminated by Madrid, and City are back there on Tuesday evening for a semi-final first leg.

Another with personal experience of visiting the Bernabeu on a big Champions League night is former Atletico Madrid goalkeeper Miguel Angel Moya.

“Everyone in Europe knows the worst team to draw in a Champions League tie, or especially in a final, is Real Madrid,” Moya tells The Athletic. “But, faced with this challenge, players will say, look lads, last year at the Bernabeu they knocked out PSG, City and Chelsea. And they are doing it again this year. But we have to respond, make sure that does not happen to us. City’s players know that playing Madrid will be their most difficult game possible.”


Back in 2015, Chiellini and Juve came to the Bernabeu to defend a 2-1 semi-final first-leg lead, against the Madrid side who had won the Decima the year before.

Before the game, coach Max Allegri predicted “95 long and interminable minutes”, and so it turned out. Cristiano Ronaldo scored an early penalty, but Juve rolled with the punches and Alvaro Morata’s strike kept them in control of the tie.

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“I remember with pleasure the semi-final in 2015,” recalls Chiellini. “It was a beautiful game. It was tough, we suffered a lot because it is always very difficult to play against Real Madrid. I also conceded a penalty which they scored. But in the second half, Morata equalised. Over the two legs, in the end, we deserved to win. But also, when there is a game like that, you need to be lucky. Near the end, they might have scored a couple of times, it was the same for us also.”

Chiellini’s next visit was in April 2018. This time Juve had lost the first leg 3-0 in Turin, a game which featured Ronaldo’s memorable bicycle kick. In the days before the return, Allegri gave his players belief by predicting that, if they got one goal back, nerves from the crowd could help them.

(Photo: Massimiliano Ferraro/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Mario Mandzukic headed into the net after just 76 seconds, and by the hour mark it was 3-3 on aggregate. The game seemed set for extra time until Madrid were awarded a penalty in added time, which Ronaldo converted.

“A few days before, Allegri started to tell us to believe,” Chiellini says. “Maybe it could happen, and don’t worry. If we score, they will struggle. And everything he said happened during the game. We scored early, and managed the game. Our mistake was to think it was finished. Then a small mistake, positional mistake, doubts, and unfortunately we lose. But it was one of the greatest games I played with Juventus.”

English referee Michael Oliver whistling the debatable penalty enraged Juve on the night, with Juve goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon red-carded before the kick was converted by Ronaldo. Asked if match officials can be influenced by the Bernabeu atmosphere, Chiellini remains diplomatic.

“I think it was a 50-50 call,” says Chiellini. “But you have to think of the importance of the game. It could be a penalty in the first game of the regular season after 10 minutes, but maybe not in injury time in a Champions League quarter-final. But in the end, it’s done. (Oliver) is a very good referee. He was an assistant in the Euros (Euro 2020) and I told him I apologise for our attitude after the game. He could understand, especially with our disappointment, our sadness.”

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Another team to thrive in unlikely circumstances at the Bernabeu were Bundesliga side Schalke. A member of the team who came to the Bernabeu for a 2014-15 last-16 second leg was Christian Fuchs, who would later win a Premier League title with Leicester in 2016, and is now a coach at MLS team Charlotte FC.

“After losing the first leg 2-0 at home, we were the clear underdogs,” Fuchs says. “The expectations were minimal, which gave us freedom in how we approached the game. We started on the front foot, and confidence grew over the game. We began to believe we could make something special happen.”

Fuchs himself increased that belief by cracking a shot past Madrid keeper Iker Casillas to open the scoring on the night. The former Austria international says that for many opponents the chance to play at the Bernabeu and do something special can be an extra motivation.

“The moment when the ball hit the net was very emotional,” Fuchs says. “A youth coach told my team back then that one day he wishes one of his players would play in the Bernabeu and score a goal. I called him right after the game.”

The early goal set in motion a helter-skelter game. Schalke led on the night three times, but Madrid scored when they had to through Ronaldo and Benzema to progress 5-4 on aggregate. At times the 4,000 visiting German fans were making more noise than the Madrid supporters.

“It was extraordinary,” Fuchs says. “The atmosphere was electrifying. We were able to turn the crowd on their own team. And even though we didn’t progress into the next round, we celebrated the win with our travelling fans. It’s a night I will always remember.”

Moya’s debut for Atletico was at the Bernabeu, in a Supercopa de Espana game that finished 1-1. He was also part of Los Rojiblancos squads who won there in both La Liga and the Copa del Rey, but Real always had the upper hand in the Champions League.

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Diego Simeone’s side were edged out by their neighbours in the 2014 final in Lisbon and 2016 decider in Milan, while in the other two seasons the Bernabeu legs were decisive.

“I don’t believe in coincidences,” Moya says. “We always tried to make it tactically a difficult, tough game for Real Madrid, with a very organised defence, trying to take advantage of set-pieces and counter-attacks. But the personality, character and quality of Madrid’s players comes through in the Champions League. Even in Milan, Madrid had sufficient personality to know how to manage the shoot-out better than us.”

In the 2015 quarter-finals, Madrid’s Javier ‘Chicharito’ Hernandez scored the only goal of the tie with just minutes remaining in the second leg.

“I remember those games as lots of tension, lots of emotion,” says Moya, who was on the Bernabeu bench that night. “Watching you have a lot more nerves. On the pitch, you can control the situation more, so your heartbeat is more relaxed. It is your city rival, a Champions League tie. Arda Turan’s sending off made it even more difficult, but derbies are like that.”

The 2017 ‘derbi’ first leg was not so tense, as Ronaldo headed Real in front early, then completed a hat-trick late in the second half.

“Maybe we did feel deja vu,” Moya admits. “In the end, we players are not machines. We are people, with emotions, and feelings. So when Cristiano scored, it is impossible for these things not to pass through your head. It’s happened again, it’s just not going to happen for us. But you have to fight against that feeling, and the team did not drop off.”


The story has been repeated again and again over the last 15 months, but there has been less drama this season as Ancelotti’s experienced side have comfortably managed to progress against Liverpool and Chelsea to return to the last four for the 11th time in the last 13 years.

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Chiellini says that rival players are well aware of Madrid’s record in the competition, even when (as this year) they are not having a good season domestically in La Liga.

“It is special to play in the Bernabeu because Real Madrid has a particular legacy with the Champions League,” he says. “They are very able to turn a not-beautiful moment in the Spanish league into an amazing performance in the Champions League. We all remember what happened last year, they conceded in all three knockout games, were almost out, but at the end, they reached the final, and they won another trophy.

Real Madrid celebrate winning the Champions League in 2022 (Photo: Mustafa Yalcin/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

“Real Madrid have a good fanbase, but it is not always 80,000 fans with their team to the death. The atmosphere for the Champions League is different. But more than the Bernabeu fans, or the narrative, or the history, it is the players who are decisive. The very best players, like those at Real Madrid, are formed in games like these. How many of these types of games has (Toni) Kroos played, or (Luka) Modric, (Karim) Benzema, (Thibaut) Courtois, (Dani) Carvajal? Or Casemiro, Cristiano, (Sergio) Ramos when they were there? These are players who have played Champions League finals, World Cups, European Championships. Madrid have an advantage due to their players’ experience.”

It can help Madrid when rival teams decide they want to show their quality and class and look to open up and attack at the Bernabeu, Moya says.

“Chelsea this year did not have the responsibility of other seasons, they have been having a difficult season in the Premier League,” Moya says. “But if Man City or Bayern come to the Bernabeu, like PSG last year, they want to take them on as equals. (City) will have moments when they are even dominating the game and the possession. But Madrid are among the best teams in the world in knowing how to come through difficult moments. That is when their players like Modric, Kroos and Benzema do not feel any pressure. They are able to show their very best version of themselves, which is what makes Real Madrid special, in my opinion.”

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Chiellini’s Juventus were one of the very few teams to deal with that pressure and turn it back on Madrid. He also says the key to coming through a big night at the Bernabeu is to be ready for those key moments in games when it seems all is going against your side.

“Teams have to defend, but it is not just defending,” says Chiellini. “You have to be prepared that everything could change in a few moments. Remember last year Paris Saint-Germain won 1-0 at home and were winning 1-0 in Madrid. They were dominating Madrid, creating a lot of chances, (Kylian) Mbappe seemed unstoppable. Then in 15 minutes it all changes. A small mistake, in this stadium, and they punish you. They have the players, they have the history, they have everything. So Manchester City, in order to win in Madrid, have to be perfect. But they can do it.”


Few opponents know as much or talk as much about Madrid’s relationship with the Champions League as City manager Pep Guardiola. As a coach, Guardiola has taken teams to the Bernabeu four times – he won 2-0 with Barcelona in the 2010-11 semi-final first leg, but lost 1-0 in the 2013-14 semi-final first leg when at Bayern Munich.

With City, his team won 2-1 at the Bernabeu in the 2019-20 last-16 first leg on the way to eliminating Madrid, and last season they brought a 4-3 advantage to Spain but were knocked out 6-5 on aggregate.

The Catalan has talked up Madrid as ‘kings of the European Cup’ before previous visits. Moya is not sure that is the best message to send to his own players ahead of a visit to the Bernabeu.

“Guardiola has a difficult job, to choose his approach, and Plan B if needed,” Moya says. “The message from Guardiola, and how his players take it on, will be crucial. City’s players are used to playing these games, but have not yet reached the record of those at Madrid. Now we will see how City handle it, whether they have learned their lesson, whether they are able to eliminate Madrid.”

Chiellini laughs when The Athletic asks if, as one of the few rival players to have success at the Bernabeu in the past, he has any advice for Pep or City.

“I cannot give advice to the best coach in the world, and also they are a very amazing team,“ he says. ”They are doing very well this season, it was not easy to overcome Arsenal and lead the Premier League. I really will enjoy this game as a football fan. Anything could happen in this game.”

Why U.S.’s U-20 men’s World Cup squad won’t include some of its best young players

Apr 8, 2023; Chicago, Illinois, USA;  Chicago Fire FC goalkeeper Chris Brady (34) controls the ball against Minnesota United at Soldier Field. Mandatory Credit: Jamie Sabau-USA TODAY Sports

By Tom Bogert May 8, 2023


When the U.S. men’s U-20 team lines up for its opening U-20 World Cup match against Ecuador on May 20, it won’t be the strongest possible XI.The problem isn’t unique to the United States. Roster construction is a complicated maze for all federations, as the youth tournament does not fall in a FIFA-mandated international window and clubs can decline to release players. Federations lobby for the players’ release and clubs grapple with the decision. Do they keep first-team players with the squad or send them to represent their country in Argentina at the world’s premier youth tournament?Players generally want to go. Representing their country at a World Cup, albeit an age-specific precursor to the iconic senior event, is an unforgettable achievement. It can also be another major stepping stone in their careers.“It’s kind of shocking that I see some of the guys I know not being released, and it sucks,” Atlanta United’s Caleb Wiley said. “I’m super thankful the club released me to represent my country. This is something that doesn’t happen often. For me to be able to go to Argentina, it’s special.”When the tournament kicks off, European clubs are wrapping up their seasons, with titles, continental tournament qualification, relegation and cup finals still on the line. MLS clubs have games that Wiley, a key starter, will be missing.“Think about the kids — and I’m getting fired up — this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that they may never get back again,” Philadelphia Union head coach Jim Curtin said. “To prevent them from playing in a U-20 World Cup? I’m sorry, I don’t agree with it.”Curtin said the Union will “excitedly release any player” called up. It’s expected the Union’s Jack McGlynn, Quinn Sullivan and Brandan Craig will get the call for the U.S. Rosters have to be submitted to FIFA by May 10. McGlynn has won a starting spot with Philly, Sullivan is an important rotation attacker and Craig is currently one of only four first-team center backs Curtin could call on amidst a jam-packed May schedule.It’s not that simple at other clubs, though.“Sometimes there are moments in life where you have a choice between a bad solution and a bad solution,” Chicago Fire sporting director Georg Heitz told The Athletic. “This is one of those moments.”

For Heitz and the rest of the Chicago Fire, the decision was to decline to release midfielder Brian Gutierrez and goalkeeper Chris Brady. Both were expected to be on the roster if released by the clubBrady is the club’s first-choice goalkeeper. Gutierrez is the starting No. 10, even after Swiss international, and the league’s second-highest paid player, Xherdan Shaqiri returned from injury. The Fire have missed the playoffs in nine of the last 10 years, and fired head coach Ezra Hendrickson on Monday.“My job is to defend the interests of the Chicago Fire, to defend the interests of our coaching staff and, of course, the players,” Heitz said. “There you see the problem — It’s a conflict of interest. The strongest argument not to let them go is the schedule. We have so many games in May, and we need these players. They are pillars in this team, we’re speaking about our No. 1 goalkeeper and our playmaker.”Brady and Gutierrez won’t be the only ones held back by their clubs. Croatian side Hajduk Split already announced American midfielder Rokas Pukstas will not be released either. Pukstas has started each of the last 11 Hajduk matches he was available for, playing all but one minute over that timeframe. The club has four league games left, as well as the Croatian Cup final coming on May 24.The statuses of Eintracht Frankfurt midfielder Paxten Aaronson and Wolfsburg winger Kevin Paredes aren’t defined, either. Aaronson broke into the Frankfurt matchday roster quicker than anticipated after a winter transfer from the Philadelphia Union, appearing in each of their last three games off the bench. Frankfurt is in the German Cup final on June 3.

“If the player is playing a huge role in the team in a professional league — against adult men in first divisions where there’s pressure on the standings — are you willing to release a player playing a significant role inside your team?” LA Galaxy head coach and sporting director Greg Vanney said. “There are different beliefs on that. In most places around the world, if a young player is playing, a lot would say no. There’s a reason why FIFA doesn’t make this mandatory (to release players). A club has to reflect on that.”

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For the Galaxy, the player to reflect on is center back Jalen Neal, who has been a crucial figure over the U-20 cycle and even made his senior national team debut in January. But he’s become an indispensable starter and a bright spot for the Galaxy, which has just one win in 10 games and saw center back Sega Coulibaly go down with an injury in the first half of Saturday’s 3-1 loss to Colorado.“If I feel like I can cover the team and I can afford Jalen some level of experience in this, I’d love to do that,” Vanney said. “I need to talk to him to see where his head is at but I also need to look after the other players who are here and trying to win games, win championships.”The Galaxy could have had as many as four players at the tournament.In addition to Neal, fellow Americans Mauricio Cuevas and Markus Ferkanus were also on the U.S.’s qualifying squad. Unlike Neal, they haven’t broken into the first team rotation, with Cuevas arriving from Club Brugge in April. Vanney said Cuevas and Ferkanus will be released if called.They also have Argentina youth international Julián Aude, who was acquired from Lanus in March. Aude was a starter for Argentina at the U-20 South American championships, but was not called into their squad for the U-20 World Cup.

Vanney indicated there was a collective agreement between the player, his camp, the Galaxy and the Argentine federation that it would be more beneficial for Aude to remain with the Galaxy, where he quickly became a starter.“Some of it is a little bit cultural in terms of where in the pecking order of the priority list we put the U-20 World Cup relative to first division soccer,” Vanney said.

MLS clubs are caught in the crossfire more than European clubs.For one, clubs in the United States’ domestic league are expected to be more cooperative than those abroad. The league calendar also means it’s the early part of the season and in a league that has a playoff system in which more than half of the teams qualify.ADVERTISEMENT

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“Sometimes you’ll hear from sporting directors or coaches who say ‘development, development, development,’ but then when it comes time, it’s ‘well I can’t sacrifice points here,’” Curtin said. “We all have to be in it together and really be about it, not just talk about it.”

Another key starter in MLS who is eligible for selection is San Jose Earthquakes homegrown winger Cade Cowell, who has started all 10 of the club’s MLS games. Like Neal, Cowell has been a crucial figure in this U-20 cycle and has made his debut with the senior national team.

“There’s more that goes into it than what people probably realize,” San Jose Earthquakes sporting director Chris Leitch said. “How does it impact our club? In the case of Cade, he’s a week-in, week-out starter. That’s a consideration, but it’s also about what’s best for the player. … He’s played in a lot of MLS games but he hasn’t played in a U-20 World Cup. We’re collaborative with the player.”

Cowell and other standouts from the U-20 World Cup could be called into the senior national team this summer, as well. The Nations League and Gold Cup tournaments run at the same time as the MLS season. How long can clubs be without key starters?

“It’s not just like ‘oh okay, he’s invited, let him go.’ There’s a lot that goes into this,” Leitch said. “But if you’re going to pride yourself on developing players, you have to give them opportunities in a different competition, even if it’s not best for your club. Also you’ve got to be willing to say ‘let’s see what the next guy is able to do with this opportunity, as well.’”

There’s also an obvious monetary value to this proposition.

FIFA U-20 World Cup Winner’s Trophy. Photo: Harold Cunningham/FIFA

Competing at a U-20 World Cup is another pedigree marker for any player, and it’s a tournament all clubs across the world are watching.

Players from the United States’ squad at the 2019 U-20 World Cup like Mark McKenzie, Chris Durkin and Julian Araujo have since moved abroad. Tyler AdamsErik Palmer-Brown and Auston Trusty were at the 2017 U-20 World Cup.

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“It is the premier youth tournament, it’s heavily scouted and the hope is there’s a value-add in putting more eyeballs on watching a player live,” Leitch said. “You watch Cade Cowell on video, you see he’s fast. You see Cade Cowell live and you’re like, holy cow, he’s world-class fast. … You can see it on the video, but seeing it live? You see how electric that really is.”

Catching the eye of clubs higher up the global food chain is important for players, as well as testing themselves against the best players in the world in their age group.

“You want to play in World Cups as a player, right?” Atlanta head coach Gonzalo Pineda said. “U-20 (World Cup) is a tournament that is very important for getting attention from European clubs, for understanding where you are in the world with your performance. You see where you’re at in your age group.”

It’s not exactly the same discovery for players in the United States as it previously may have been, though. Through advancements in scouting technology, globalization in the soccer world and more clubs figuring out elite talent can be produced in any corner of the world, the starlets who will represent the United States are already well-known to scouts across the world.

“I’m not sure a player goes there and does a whole lot for their value,” Vanney said. “Scouting is so sophisticated. Jalen is an example, when he played 200 minutes as a teenager, it’s already hitting flags in every scouting department in Europe that there’s a 19-year-old center back playing in MLS.”

The Fire have already rejected a transfer offer from Club Brugge for Brady almost a full year before he made his first team debut (as first reported by ESPN in 2022). Gutierrez has already turned heads in Europe with two goals and five assists across 1,693 minutes in his age-18 season last year.

“I would bet both players will make their way to Europe, with or without the U-20 World Cup,” Heitz said. “We’ve proven it with Gaga (Slonina) and (Jhon) Duran: You can make big, big transfers out of MLS directly.”

Some clubs will release players, some won’t. The equation is different for each situation.

“It may not be a black-and-white answer,” Vanney said, “but there’s a gray answer in there somewhere that makes sense for everybody.”

Whitecaps, Crew and Dynamo look very different from their 2022 MLS season finishes

Mar 18, 2023; Houston, Texas, USA; Houston Dynamo FC midfielder Hector Herrera (16) celebrates after scoring a goal during the second half against the Austin FC at Shell Energy Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Troy Taormina-USA TODAY Sports

By Jeff Rueter and Joseph LoweryMay 4, 2023


At times, MLS preseason prognosticating may seem like a frivolous pursuit due to the league’s intentional parity and lack of visible preseason friendlies. But make no mistake, teams and their fanbases take the speculative process very seriously. We’ve seen predictions become the lifeblood of a year’s worth of “nobody believes in us” or “prove the haters wrong” from the league’s head coaches. Last year, Austin FC even turned this concept into a tangible object by running the league website’s preseason picks through a laminator.

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Acknowledging where we would like more insight into how a team is preparing for a new year, we dug into the numbers of three teams that made seemingly small changes (mostly overlooked in preseason) to turn their bottom-half finishes in 2022 into promising starts to 2023.

This trio of teams, which missed the playoffs last year, has looked significantly improved through the first third of 2023. Two of them, unsurprisingly, made a coaching change and the third signed a designated player at striker (albeit one who was far from a record signing). No matter the scale of the modifications, it appears that brighter days have arrived for the Vancouver WhitecapsColumbus Crew and the Houston Dynamo.

Vancouver Whitecaps

2022: 9th in West
First third of 2023: 9th in West

On the surface, not much has changed for the Vancouver Whitecaps. Sure, MLS has decided that a mid-to-lower-table standing is worthy of a playoff berth, but it’s hardly progress.

Don’t let the table fool you, though. The 2023 version of the Whitecaps is better than any we’ve seen in nearly a decade — including the Vancouver team that went on a red-hot run under then-interim manager Vanni Sartini to make the playoffs at the end of the 2021 season. Sartini, who is now in his second year as the club’s permanent manager, is coaching a sleeping giant. Despite the club’s unassuming place in the table, they have the third-best expected goal differential per 90 minutes (+0.62) in all of MLS, according to FBref, which puts them behind only two teams: LAFC and the Seattle Sounders.

A huge part of Vancouver’s promising play has been its sharp attack, even if it hasn’t quite translated to high-level results just yet. They move the ball quickly, have a clear structure and deliberate final-third patterns that have led to clear chances.

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So far this year, the ‘Caps are second in MLS in non-penalty xG per 90 (1.69). Vancouver uses a 4-3-2-1 shape with a pair of attacking midfielders or one attacking midfielder and a striker in that band of two. We’ve seen that Christmas tree shape from other MLS teams in the past – you wouldn’t even have to leave the Cascadia region to revisit the Portland Timbers with Diego Valeri and Sebastian Blanco playing underneath a central striker. What makes Sartini’s version unique (and truly goal-dangerous) is how Vancouver creates width and overloads in the attacking half.

Instead of asking the attacking midfielders or even the fullbacks to provide consistent width, Sartini gives his central midfielders the freedom to make overlapping runs from deep areas to destabilize the opposing defense. This is especially clear with Julian Gressel on the right side of the field.

Playing as the rightmost center midfielder, rather than in his more standard outside back role, Gressel has been an absolute monster through this first chunk of the season. Per FBref, he’s in the 99th percentile in expected assisted goals per 90 and the 96th percentile in expected goals per 90 among MLS midfielders so far this year. While he starts sequences in central positions, Gressel uses his speed and understanding of space to get forward and add an extra number on Vancouver’s right side. He then uses his elite right foot to deliver pinpoint passes into the box.

That’s good news for Ryan Gauld, who has been Vancouver’s chief (and often only) creator since joining in 2021. Even with Gressel’s involvement, Gauld sits ninth in MLS with 4.58 open play chances created per 100 touches of the ball. With a worthy distributive deputy, Sartini’s team has become very difficult to contain.

Down below, you can see how the Whitecaps’ chance creation has changed from last year to this year. In 2022, 34% of their open-play chances were created from the right wing and the right halfspace. This year, that number is up to 45%. That’s the Gressel Effect, folks.

Here’s what Gressel’s attacking involvement looks like in practice, via a clip from Vancouver’s most recent game against the Colorado Rapids. Gressel starts inside as a No. 8 before rotating out wide, breaking forward and playing a teasing ball into the box for Gauld.

Below is another example of Gressel’s attacking impact, this time letting right back Javain Brown do the hard running. The newly minted U.S. international, Gressel, stays in the halfspace, waits for a return pass from Brown and then whips a ball right onto Brian White’s head.

With the new attacking rotations – and some other margin-exploiting moves like Brown’s masterful long throw-ins – Vancouver has created chances and controlled games for long stretches of the year. According to Opta, they’re fourth in MLS in passes per sequence (3.84). They’ve also registered more touches in the opponent’s box per 90 (28.9) than any team in the league.

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So why aren’t they higher up the table?

While the ‘Caps do a lot of fun things, they’ve been wasteful in the attack. They’re 20th in shot accuracy (32.2%) and are under-performing their non-penalty xG by more than five goals, according to TruMedia, the fifth-most wasteful return from their chances in the league. Those numbers are far from ideal, but getting DP striker Sergio Córdova back from his hamstring injury should help if their tactical and personnel advantages sustain.

Deemed expendable by FC Augsburg after they signed Ricardo Pepi, Córdova was loaned to the RSL in 2022 before being sold to the Whitecaps last winter. His 0.19 xG per shot clip in 2022 was tied for fourth-best among all players who averaged at least one shot per match. Once fully recovered, he should bring exactly what his team is begging for: someone who’s prolific at finishing inside the box.

Columbus Crew

2022: 8th in East
First third of 2023: 6th in East

The Columbus Crew won an MLS Cup under Caleb Porter in 2020, but the club struggled to find the best version of itself under its former manager.

Wilfried Nancy, who came to Columbus during the offseason fresh off of finishing second in the Eastern Conference with CF Montreal, certainly appears to elevate the Crew. How is he doing it? Well, at least part of Columbus’ success stems from its newfound ball-heavy approach. Under Nancy, the Crew has become the single most possession-dominant team in the league with an average of 58.6% possession per game, which is up from 52.5% last year.

Everything that Columbus does — from its positioning to its passing tendencies, to its pressing — is designed to help the team control the ball. They play in a 3-4-2-1 shape, usually with three center backs and two deep central midfielders forming a very narrow pentagon shape.

The midfielders and center backs are extremely patient on the ball, almost treating buildup like a training rondo. Pass, pass, pass, break lines. Repeat. Pass, pass, pass, break lines. Repeat. Nancy instructs his players to stay calm in possession because he wants to force the Crew’s opponents to make the first move. Eventually, opposing defenders get tired of waiting and step forward out of their shape, which then opens up space for Columbus to play forward.

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In the below clip from its most recent game, the Columbus Crew is in possession in its own half. After they move the ball from the left side of the backline to the middle, center back Philip Quinton puts his foot on the ball, daring Inter Miami striker Leo Campana to step forward. He wants Miami to press. Campana and Miami oblige, which prompts the Crew to start moving with purpose. Center back Steven Moreira then finds a progressive pass to attacker Alexandru Matan between the lines, and after just a few more seconds, Columbus has the ball in the final third.

Here’s what the cat-and-mouse game looks like in practice.

For all of the Crew’s pretty passing, its attacking play still needs work. They’re really good at getting the ball into the final third, but once it gets there things break down. According to FBref, they’re 13th in MLS in non-penalty xG per 90, which is decidedly average.

There are a few possible issues behind Columbus’ struggles. First, it takes time for players to adjust to a new system. Moving from a mostly simple 4-2-3-1, like the one Porter used, to Nancy’s hyper-controlled 3-4-2-1 isn’t easy. Second, star striker Cucho Hernandez has played just four games this year due to a knee injury. A fit Hernandez could make a difference in Columbus. Third, outside of Hernandez and No. 10 Lucas Zelarayan, the Crew doesn’t have a lot of top-end attacking talent. None of their wingbacks or other attacking role players are proven game-changers in MLS.

But even with work to do in the final third, the beauty of Nancy’s style, and Columbus’ adaptation of it, is that ball control isn’t just an attacking mechanism. It’s a defensive one, too.

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Crew manager Wilfried Nancy on his philosophy and the changes across MLS

Through 10 games, the Crew is allowing just 0.96 non-penalty xG per 90, according to FBref. That puts them fourth in MLS, behind only LAFC, Nashville SC and the New York Red Bulls. If the opposing team doesn’t have the ball, it’s impossible for them to create a chance or score a goal. Columbus knows that — which is why they try to win the ball back as quickly as possible. According to Opta, they have the third-lowest passes per defensive action in MLS, which means they engage the ball more often outside of their defensive third than all but two teams. With a commitment to ball dominance, which is shown through counter-pressing and defensive activity, Columbus has been one of the best defensive teams in the league.

It’s that defensive work and overall control of games that makes the Crew such a difficult team to play against in the Eastern Conference.

Houston Dynamo

2022: 13th in West
First third of 2023: 6th in West

Last year was rough for the Houston Dynamo. In its first full season under new ownership, Houston finished second-to-last in the West, fired its coach in the middle of the season and didn’t see much improvement once star Mexican international Hector Herrera joined in the summer. But with Herrera available from the start of the season and Ben Olsen on the touchline, we’re seeing signs of progress in Houston.

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Looking at the technical area first, Olsen is a more experienced manager than former Swope Park Rangers/SKC II head coach Paulo Nagamura was ahead of his brief stint with the Dynamo last year. In 2022, a fluctuating roster and coaching changes made it difficult for Houston to establish on-field rhythm, patterns, and chemistry. Sure, the Dynamo used both a 4-2-3-1 and a 4-3-3 shape in possession, but they lacked any real consistent style. Olsen, who arrived in Texas in the offseason, was a stabilizing force after a decade in charge of DC United. He has opted for a straightforward approach: a 4-3-3 possession shape that shifts into a 4-4-2 mid-block.

Within that rough attacking shape, players have the freedom to interchange and move into different lanes depending on the moment. Unsurprisingly, no player has more freedom to roam than Herrera, who plays as a nominal left central midfielder but often drops deep, moves wide or steps forward to dictate the game as he sees fit.

It’s clear that Olsen is making a concerted effort to help Herrera get on the ball more in 2023 by asking the entire team to hold the ball for longer stretches.

It’s a novel concept that Nagamura and interim successor Kenny Bundy struggled to implement. Entering the weekend, Herrera is just over 50 minutes shy of matching his ledger from last season. Similar sample sizes help show just how Olsen’s midfield is playing compared to his predecessors’ — starting with putting greater trust in the club’s most important player.

Plucked straight from Diego Simeone’s team sheet at Atlético de Madrid, signing Herrera last summer was seen as a major coup for the Dynamo. The Mexico captain was still in his prime (albeit, perhaps, its tail-end) playing consistent minutes for one of Europe’s great clubs. By the time he arrived in Houston, he found himself trading Champions League starts for a headlining role on a historically bad Dynamo.

With greater clarity under Olsen, Herrera and co. look increasingly organized. A class above nearly all MLS midfielders, Herrera has enjoyed more freedom to get on the ball, making nearly 18 more touches per 90 minutes played than he had last fall. Rather than forcing long balls up the pitch in desperation, Herrera is opting for carries whether he’s collecting the ball from a teammate or an opponent. Letting Herrera keep the ball at his own feet rather than launching it forward jives well with his game.

The star midfielder’s altered deployment has helped keep the Dynamo from getting stretched in the transition while also allowing them to retain a slightly greater rate of possession (50.3%, up from 48.5% last year). They’ve also flipped their field tilt — a stat that tells you what rate of aggregate final third touches were made by the Dynamo — from a meek 44.4% last year to a more competitive 50.6% clip through the first eight games of 2023. That may have as much to do with keeping opponents off the ball as any other factor. While the Dynamo’s average time of possession has risen from 24.4 seconds last year to 25.2 thus far, their opponents have seen that rate drop far steeper, from 24.8 seconds to 20.3.

All of this helps drive home what’s needed to take Olsen’s turnaround project to its next stage: a dependable goalscorer.

Moroccan newcomer Amine Bassi made MLS history, becoming the first player to score a penalty kick in four consecutive games, but the team won’t likely be so lucky the rest of the season. Among players with at least 350 minutes logged (and three shots on target, to weed out opportunistic defenders), Herrera is the only player among the league’s top 77 players in non-penalty goals per 90 minutes. Most MLS teams can expect to have two or three attackers who are more prolific than Houston’s best, with Bassi ranking 78th on 0.18. Paraguayan winger Iván Franco ranks 44th league-wide with 1.9 non-blocked shots per 90 — just behind Herrera (2.0) and well behind former Dynamo striker Christian Ramirez (now with Columbus) on 2.96.

Still, the Dynamo is tactically sound, not over-exerting themselves to make a strong first impression, but rather establishing a metronomic tempo to sustain over the duration of the season. Perhaps the goals will come from Sebástian Ferreira, who was the club’s record signing last winter but has largely been frozen out this season. Perhaps Franco will be moved on to open a DP slot this summer, or they’ll get real production from new U-22 Initiative attacker Ibrahim Aliyu or a summer signing.

Whatever the case, the start of this season has brought one thing which has been in short supply among Dynamo fans in recent years: hope.

It’s time for Manchester United to move on from David de Gea after yet another costly error

  • Mark Ogden, Senior Writer, ESPN FCMay 8, 2023, 11:00 AM ET
  • Erik ten Hag has earned a reputation for making tough decisions as Manchester United manager this season, such as sanctioning the departure of Cristiano Ronaldo in November and dropping out-of-form captain Harry Maguire. But his ongoing faith in goalkeeper David de Gea could cost the club a place in next season’s Champions League.

United have other areas of concern, such as scoring just three goals in their past six games. But, by failing to drop De Gea, Ten Hag risks allowing the club to fall back into the rut of rewarding mediocrity rather than displaying the ruthless streak that provides the backbone of every successful team.

Sunday’s error from De Gea during United’s 1-0 defeat at West Ham United, when he was beaten by a weak Said Benrahma shot from 20 yards, was the latest costly mistake that he has made in recent weeks. What was once a rarity is becoming the norm for the 32-year-old. Yet, despite his declining form, sources have told ESPN that United remain committed to extending De Gea’s stay at Old Trafford into a 13th season — although not necessarily as the club’s No. 1.

EDITOR’S PICKS

Only two goalkeepers — Gavin Bazunu and Alex McCarthy, who both play for bottom club Southampton — have a worse save percentage in the Premier League this season than De Gea’s 68%. And yet the United No. 1 is also leading the race to win the Golden Glove award for most clean sheets with 15 shutouts — two more than AlissonNick Pope and Aaron Ramsdale. Nothing quite sums up the enigma of De Gea than those two starkly contrasting statistics.

On the one hand he has become a liability in Ten Hag’s United team. The West Ham error came less than a month after the Europa League exit against Sevilla when three De Gea mistakes led to a 3-0 quarterfinal second-leg defeat. But De Gea can also produce moments of incredible agility and reflexes, making match-winning saves to support those who believe he is still one of the best goalkeepers in the world. Yet De Gea’s inconsistency is now the only consistent element of his game and United’s outfield players are performing without the reassurance that comes with having a goalkeeper at the top of his game.

Premier League Table

GPGDPTS
1 – Man City34+5882
2 – Arsenal35+4481
3 – Newcastle34+3265
4 – Man United34+963
5 – Liverpool35+2562
6 – Tottenham35+757
7 – Brighton32+2255
8 – Aston Villa35+354
9 – Brentford34+750

There is no escaping the reality that De Gea’s poor distribution with the ball at his feet is a recurring problem for United. That was identified by former manager Louis van Gaal as far back as 2015, when Sergio Romero was signed to provide competition for De Gea, who almost completed a move to Real Madrid during the summer transfer window. It is also why De Gea has not played for Spain since October 2020, with former coach Luis Enrique not even taking him to Qatar as part of his 2022 World Cup squad due to reservations over his footwork and reliability.

At United, De Gea’s poor communication skills have led to misunderstandings with his defenders, while opponents now regularly target him at corners by crowding him out and exposing his reluctance to be assertive when the ball is in the air. It’s a throwback to how he struggled when he first arrived from Atletico Madrid in 2011, before toughening himself up against the more physical demands for a goalkeeper in the Premier League.

Ten Hag said that De Gea “has my full belief, no concerns,” following the West Ham defeat, but statistical evidence is mounting to suggest that the United manager is either in denial or protecting his goalkeeper in public while harbouring concerns over his reliability. During the past three Premier League seasons, 27 goalkeepers have played 30 games or more, and De Gea’s numbers within that group place him at the wrong end of most of the key categories.

He ranks 13th in terms of goals prevented, while only five keepers have conceded more goals than De Gea since the start of the 2020-21 season. He is seventh when it comes to Expected Goals Against, and only Leeds United‘s Illan Meslier has a worse save percentage (65.5%) over the last three seasons than De Gea (68%).One positive for De Gea during that time frame is that he is a respectable sixth when it comes to clean sheets with 32 — Manchester City‘s Ederson is top with 49. He also broke Peter Schmeichel’s club-record 180 clean sheets in February, albeit having played 137 more games at the time than the Treble-winning keeper.With De Gea’s contract due to expire at the end of this season, the club has assessed alternative options; Switzerland No. 1 Yann Sommer was considered in January before he left Borussia Monchengladbach for Bayern Munich following Manuel Neuer‘s season-ending leg injury.A source close to De Gea told ESPN following the Sevilla defeat last month that, after 12 years at United, he was keen to return to Spain this summer. However, he accepted that he had no realistic option due to Real, Atletico and Barcelona all having settled goalkeepers and no other club in LaLiga able to come close to matching his £375,000-a-week salary.

De Gea also accepts that he will have to take a substantial pay cut to stay at Old Trafford, but sources have said an agreement between player and club is close to being concluded. It is not the most positive situation, though, for a contract to be signed due to the player having no alternative options and the club realising that it would be cheaper to keep him on reduced wages — even is he has been given no guarantees he will be first-choice next season.– than sign a new, more reliable goalkeeper.

Ten Hag’s squad is burdened with a number of players who signed new contracts despite a failure to justify them with their performances. It seems that history is about to repeat itself with De Gea. Unless, of course, Ten Hag displays the ruthless streak that accounted for Ronaldo and Maguire by drawing a line under the De Gea era.

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5/2/23 Man City sit top, US/Fulham’s Ream breaks arm, Big TV Games, American Stars Buy Soccer Teams, Good Luck State/Pres/Challenge Cup Teams with weekend at Grand Park

Notes

Huge news that Messi has been suspended by PSG for 2 weeks following an unauthorized trip to Saudi Arabia for Promotional obligations – perhaps opening the door to Messi to MLS Miami rumors again, of course Rumors have him to Saudi Arabia for $300 millon a year – oof.  Man City’s Wonderkid Viking Striker Erling Haaland breaks single season EPL goal record at 35 goals with 5 games to go.   Juergan Klopp pulled a muscle celebrating the game winning goal this week – his continued battle with the refs has got to stop. (read all about it in the Ref section below).  Cool news that NFL Star JJ Watt is joining the list of athlete/celeb owners in soccer see em all here.  Portland’s Bella Bixby scored this game tying GK goal at the buzzer vs my daugher’s Angel City.  Naples celebrated their Scudetto (first Italian League title in 33 years), this after Wrexham had their parade with Hollywood Owner’s Ryan Reynolds + Rob McEelhenney after winning promotion.  

Games to Watch

Of course Champions League Semi-Finals on Tues/Wed leads the list of huge games this week.  Its Real Madrid hosting Man City Tues 3 pm on CBS in the REAL Final, then Wed has the battle for Milan – Inter vs AC at 3 pm on CBS. (Coverage starts at 2 pm).  Sat at 1 pm the NWSL takes center stage on CBS as the Washington Spirit with US players Rodman, Hatc, Sanchez and Sullivan host the San Diego Wave with Alex Morgan, Girma and Kornieck.  The EPL is coming down to the last couple of weeks with Top 4 – Champs League, Top 6/7 – Europe, and of course a relegation battle royale.   The biggie is Sunday as #3 New Castle hosts #2 Arsenal at 11:30 am on USA Network.  Sat Leeds United and American’s McKinney and Aaronson will have new coach Sam Allardcye trying to help save them from relegation vs league leaders Man City on USA at 10 am, Liverpool / Brentford follows at 12:30 pm on NBC. 

Indy 11 @ Loundon United Sat 7 pm after 1-1 tie

An 81st minute goal from Jack Blake pulled Indy Eleven even to earn a 1-1 draw with Pittsburgh Riverhounds SC Saturday night at IUPUI Michael A. Carroll Stadium in Indianapolis. With the draw, Indy snaps a three-game losing streak in regular season play and moves to 1W-3L-3D on the young USL Championship season, The Lady Eleven kick off their season Wed Kay 10 at 6 pm vs St. Charles – 3 away games in May mean they won’t be home until Fri, June 2 vs Racing Louisville.  Next up, the Indy 11 Men hit the road for a pair of matches, first stopping at Loudoun United FC Saturday at 7:00 p.m. ET (live on ESPN+). The Eleven returns home Saturday, May 20, against Colorado Springs for Military Appreciation Night. A portion of each ticket purchased via this link will directly support HVAF of Indiana. Indy Eleven will match each ticket purchased via the Military Giveback Link, ensuring that a veteran/military member will have the opportunity to attend and be recognized. Buy Tix now via indyeleven.com/tickets or by calling 317-685-1100   Full Schedule   Promotions 

Good Luck to all the Team’s Playing in Challenge Cup  & other State Cup games at Grand Park this weekend.

Hopefully everyone will remember this — this big tourney weekend.

GAMES ON TV

(American’s names in Parenthesis)

Sat, May 6

9:30 am ESPN+                  Ausberg vs Union Berlin (Pfok)

10 am USA                          Man City vs  Leeds United (Mckinney, Aaronson)

10 am Peacoclk                 Tottenham vs Crystal Palace (Richards)

12 noon ESPN+                 Roma vs Inter Milan

12:30 pm NBC                    Liverpool vs Brentford

1 pm CBS                     Washington (Rodman, Hatch, Sanchez, Sullivan) vs San Diego Wave (Morgan, Girma, Kornieck)

4 pm ESPN+                        Real Madrid vs Osona  

7 pm ESPN+                Loudon United vs Indy 11

7:30 pm Apple TV       Cincy vs DC United  

7:30 pm Apple TV       NY vs Philly  

7 pm  Para+                Houston Dash (Campbell) vs OL Reign (Rapinoe) NWSL

10:30 pm Apple+        Portland Timbers vs Austin

Sun, May 7                         

6:30 am Para+                    Atalanta vs Juventus  

11:30 USA                   New Castle vs Arsenal

2 pm Peacock              West Ham vs Man United

4:30 pm FOX                       Seattle Sounders vs Sporting KC  

6 pm ESPN+                        Las Vegas Lights vs San Antonio (Jordan Farr)

8 pm Para+, SiriusXM     Angel City (Thompson, Ertz) vs KC Current (Franch) NWSL

Tues, May 9        Champions League Quarterfinals

3 pm CBS                             Real Madrid vs Man City                               

Weds, May 10

3 pm CBS                             AC Milan vs Inter Milan                                 

Thur, May 11       Europa League

3 pm Paramount+            Roma vs Leverkusen

3 pm Para+                         Juventus vs Sevilla                            

Sat, June 10                       

2 pm CBS                             Champions League Final

Thurs, June 15

10 pm                                    USMNT vs Mexico  Nations League Semi’s

Sat, June 24

9:30 pm                                USMNT vs Jamaica (Soldier Field) Gold Cup

July 21                                  USWNT vs Vietnam Women’s World Cup

Indy 11 Schedule

NWSL Schedule

Soccer Saturday’s are every Sat 9-10 am on 93.5 and 107.5 FM with Greg Rakestraw

Wow what a Great Idea — I for one have changed the way I coach and Spectate now that I am a referee!

USA

US Players Take a Beating Literally this past weekend

Women’s World Cup + NWSL


Why FIFA’s threat of Women’s World Cup TV blackout in Europe is ‘outrageous’

Former Wisconsin star JJ Watt and wife, Kealia, buy stake in Premier League soccer team

The Top 10 US Women heading to the World Cup The 18 

Predicting the US Women’s Team – The 18
Lionesses reeling after Fran Kirby becomes latest name ruled out of World Cup

England draw Scotland in Women’s Nations League

Path to Paris Olympics set for European women’s soccer teams

MLS


LAFC makes recent history by advancing to CONCACAF Champions League final

MLS Power Rankings: DPs win games, Mukhtar has Nashville rising
World’s 50 Most Valuable Soccer Clubs: Man United Leads, MLS Lands 18 Spots

EPL


Struggling Leeds appoint Allardyce after axing Gracia

Leeds United sack Javi Gracia and director of football Victor Orta ahead of crucial match against Manchester City

Sam Allardyce to land £2.5m if Leeds survive – and is willing to stay as manager

Premier League: The Big Six era is OVER, with a new era now taking its place

Unstoppable Haaland equals Prem goal record
Haaland goalscoring heroics a ‘surprise’, says Guardiola

Mauricio Pochettino is no magician – Chelsea will take years to rebuild

Frank Lampard has made Chelsea worse than they were under Graham Potter

Tracking English Premier League managers sacked in 2022-23

 

World


Ryan Reynolds shares his ‘mission’ for Wrexham

Messi’s PSG future in doubt after suspension over Saudi trip

Champions Napoli return home as city revels in victory hangover

Outstanding Olmo steers ten-man Leipzig to German Cup final

Griezmann is at home at Atletico again, looking like LaLiga’s player of the year
   Graham Hunter

Indy 11

Recap – IND 1:1 PIT

Diz Pe Named to USL Championship Team of the Week

Indy Falls 1-0 to Columbus in US Open Cup Play

Season tickets

Full Schedule   Promotions 

new stadium

Goalkeeping

Goalkeeper Goal – Thorns Bixby Scores on Corner to Tie game at Buzzer
Message on a bottle: How Pickford made vital penalty save to boost Everton’s survival hopes
  2hChris Wright
‘Maddison needs to learn his lesson’: Jordan Pickford taunts Leicester City midfielder after penalty save

Spurs keeper Lloris ruled out for rest of season

Reffing

Man in the Middle – Champions League Reffing Documentary on Paramount +   
The VAR Review: Red cards for Jota, Skipp; Richarlison penalty claim
  ESPN Dale Johnson

Liverpool’s Jurgen Klopp Risks Ban Over Feud With Referee  SI 

PGMOL Review Recording Of What Paul Tierney Said To Jurgen Klopp And Find Referee “Acted In A Professional Manner”

 Jurgen Klopp reveals exactly what referee Paul Tierney said to him during Liverpool’s 4-3 win against Tottenham
‘The referee said it wasn’t a penalty’: Fulham left fuming after official admits to costly mistake in Liverpool game

Become a Referee Must be 13

I got to ref Girls College Showcase games at Grand Park with a guy from West Virginia and Ft. Wayne on Sunday. Good times !
Man Ref Assignor Nate Sinders outdid himself on Sunday as this Bar BQ Beef was to die for – 9 Piggies Nate !! Good eatin in the Ref rooms at Grand Park this past weekend. Thanks again Nate!

Fulham’s Tim Ream breaks arm in City loss, done for season

Apr 30, 2023 James OlleySenior Writer, ESPN FC

United States international Tim Ream will miss the rest of the season with a broken arm, Fulham boss Marco Silva has confirmed.The 35-year-old left the field during the first half of Sunday’s 2-1 home defeat against Manchester City with his arm in a makeshift sling after falling awkwardly following a tussle with Julian Alvarez.Ream went to the hospital along with Andreas Periera, who was stretchered off in the second half after a challenge with Manuel Akanji.”A tough afternoon for us because we lost another two players in Tim Ream and Andreas Periera,” Silva said. “Both look like really serious injuries so it is a tough moment but we have to keep going, more games to play.”Asked whether both players would be out for the season, Silva told BeIn Sports: “Tim Ream for sure, unfortunately for us. He has broken his arm. Let’s see on Andreas, I hope it is not so serious, but I have to wait for more [information].”Erling Haaland and Alvarez scored City’s goals either side of Carlos Vinicius‘ 15th-minute equaliser as Pep Guardiola’s side returned to the top of the Premier League for the first time since Feb. 15. Fulham sit in 10th place with 45 points from 33 games.

Ream’s involvement with the USMNT’s busy upcoming summer is now unclear, but the veteran played a key role during their run to the round of 16 at the World Cup last December. The Americans will compete in the CONCACAF Nations League final in June and then take part in the Gold Cup beginning in July.

Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos join Mahomes, LeBron, Durant, Reynolds, Ferrell as celebrity soccer club owners

5:00 AM ET ESPN FC ==Gustav Elvin & Chris Wright

Mark Consuelos (left) and Kelly Ripa (right) see Italian club A.S.D. Campobasso 1919 as ‘the quintessential underdog story.’ 

U.S. television personalities Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos have joined the ever-expanding group of celebrity football club owners after purchasing a stake in a small, lower-league Italian team.Taking a leaf out of Wrexham owners Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney’s book, married couple Ripa, co-host of ABC’s morning talk show “Live With Kelly and Ryan,” and Consuelos, former star of soap opera “All My Children,” are now proud part-ownrs of A.S.D. Campobasso 1919, a club playing in the regionalised fifth tier of Italian football, one rung below Serie D.Nicknamed “Lupi” (“Wolves”), Campobasso played in Serie B during the 1980s but have never since managed to rescale those lofty heights, going through several collapses and reformations in the meantime.

The Lupi did achieve promotion to Serie C at the end of the 2020-21 season but “administrative irregularities” saw the Italian Football Federation step in and ban them from participating. In turmoil, the club were forced to merge with another local side and re-enter the football system in the fifth tier. Still unsure as to whether they would be able to compete in 2022-23, Campobasso were saved from the brink when they were purchased by North Sixth Group.

Ripa and Consuelos have now come on board as minority investors whose combined 5.4 million Instagram followers have all now been told of an obscure European club’s existence.

“The Campobasso project is the quintessential underdog story,” Consuelos said. “When I heard the story about these fans being at risk of losing the sport they love, Kelly and I wanted to get involved and be part of the solution.”https://www.instagram.com/p/CkyU-GtrAcR/embed/captioned/?

Campobasso are part of an increasing number of soccer clubs who have famous faces as part of their ownership. Whether it is ex-footballers such as David Beckham (Inter Miami CF), dominant athletes in other sports such as Patrick Mahomes (Sporting KC), Kevin Durant (Philadelphia Union) and LeBron James (Liverpool), music icons from Elton John (formerly the chairman of Watford) to Christina Aguilera (Angel City FC) or Hollywood stars including Ryan Reynolds (Wrexham), Will Ferrell (LAFC) and Natalie Portman (Angel City FC), club ownership is becoming an increasingly appealing proposition to celebrities.

It might be a passion for the sport, a personal connection, strictly business or, frankly, just because they can, but we are seeing more and celebs dipping their toes into football ownership for all sorts of reasons. In that vein, we looked at other celebrities who have ownership stakes in football clubs around the world.

This article has been updated since it was first published June 16, 2020


Kealia and J.J. Watt (Burnley)

NFL legend J.J. Watt and former United States midfielder Kealia Watt announced that they had become minority investors in Burnley in May 2023, shortly after the English club had won the second-tier Championship and with it secured promotion back to the Premier League. The pair attended some matches at Turf Moor as Vincent Kompany’s side returned to the top flight just a year after being relegated, but it’s not just the men’s team that they have their eye on. Kealia Watt said: “In the US, I’ve seen the NWSL grow into something really incredible, and we’d love to be a part of growing the women’s team here and be a part of their journey.”

Christina Aguilera (Angel City FC)

In February 2022, Christina Aguilera became one of the most recent high-profile additions to the star-studded ownership group at NWSL franchise Angel City FC alongside Natalie Portman, Jessica Chastain, Jennifer Garner, Eva Longoria, Serena Williams and many prominent former members of the USWNT such as Abby Wambach, Mia Hamm, Shannon Boxx and Julie Foudy.

Patrick Mahomes (Sporting KC and KC Current)

Not content with merely being the Kansas City Chiefs’ star quarterback, Mahomes is also part of the ownership groups of his adopted city’s MLS and NWSL teams. Mahomes joined the ownership group of the Kansas City Royals baseball team in 2020, purchased a stake in SKC in 2021 and in January 2023 it was announced that he had become the first active NFL player to have equity in an NWSL club. “I am thankful for the chance to join my wife as part of the Kansas City Current’s ownership team,” the Super Bowl LIV winner said. “Brittany and the Longs have done an incredible job building a world-class organization. I am excited to join another championship-caliber club as it continues to make history.”

Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney (Wrexham FC)

Actors Reynolds and McElhenney joined forces to spearhead a surprise Hollywood takeover of Wrexham in November 2020, with the club sitting 14th in the fifth-tier National League. The 157-year-old Welsh club have been playing non-league football since 2008 when they last dropped out of the Football League, but that didn’t dissuade Reynolds and McElhenney from vowing to awake the “sleeping giant” and transform the Red Dragons into a “global force.” Wrexham went on to finish eighth in 2020-21, missing out on the playoffs by a single point, some way short of their highest-ever league finish: 15th in the old Second Division (now the Championship) back in 1978-79. The duo have been having lots of fun in their new role as sports owners, and a Disney+ show about their adventures at The Racecourse Ground called “Welcome to Wrexham” premiered in August has proved to be a huge success among fans.

Kevin Durant, Philadelphia Union (5%)

NBA superstar Kevin Durant announced in June 2020 that he had purchased an ownership stake in Major League Soccer’s Philadelphia Union. The Brooklyn Nets forward and former NBA MVP bought an initial 5% stake in the club with an option to purchase an additional 5% in the future. The move “just made sense” according to Durant, who twice previously made attempts to join the ownership group of D.C. United. “I’ve been a fan of the sport, and then seeing how fast the popularity of the league was growing, seeing more fans pop up in different cities around the country, and then seeing how these franchises impact the city’s businesses and people individually was very intriguing,” Durant told ESPN in an exclusive interview at the time. Just a few months after Durant came on board, the Union claimed the Supporters’ Shield as the first-place team in Major League Soccer’s regular season.

– Captain America to the rescue! Union celebrate with fake Supporters’ Shield

LeBron James, Liverpool (2%)

The Los Angeles Lakers superstar has won four NBA titles, four league and finals MVP awards and has been an All-Star 17 times, and also owns a minority stake in Premier League club Liverpool. The future Hall of Famer bought 2% of the Merseyside club in 2011, and has that investment paid off! In 2018, Business Insider reported that James’ $6.5m investment was worth $32m. Since then, Liverpool have won the Champions League and been crowned Premier League champions for the first time in 30 years, so suffice to say, James has over 32 million reasons to belt out “You’ll Never Walk Alone.”

Will Ferrell, Magic Johnson, Mia Hamm, Nomar Garciaparra, LAFC (undisclosed)

LAFC is preparing for its fifth season in MLS, but the Los Angeles new boys already have a real Hollywood feel to them. While the majority of the club is owned by local investors Brandon Beck, Larry Berg and Bennett Rosenthal, comedian Will Ferrell, NBA Hall of Famer Magic Johnson, ex-USWNT legend Mia Hamm and Hamm’s husband and former MLB All-Star Nomar Garciaparra all also own a stake in The Black and Gold. On the field, LAFC has been one of the league’s best and most exciting clubs since its inception, winning the Supporters’ Shield in 2019, while off it there have been plenty of laughs thanks to Ferrell. The former “Saturday Night Live” star — also a Chelsea supporter — marked the side’s first-ever contest by conducting an interview with ESPN as “Anchorman” character Ron Burgundy.

James Harden, Houston Dynamo (5%)

Durant’s former Oklahoma City Thunder teammate James Harden purchased a 5% stake in the Houston Dynamo in July 2019. The Dynamo, who also count former world champion boxer Oscar de la Hoya among their owners, missed the playoffs in Harden’s first season aboard but are valued at a lofty $475m. The club even made him feel at home by giving their entire roster “The Beard” treatment on the club’s official site.

Elton John, Watford (owned up to 93%)

An ever-present at Vicarage Road, the British pop icon has owned Watford on two separate occasions, first from 1976 to 1987 and later from 1997 to 2002. Still an honorary life president of the club, John regularly attends Watford home matches and even had a stand named after him in 2014. John’s first spell as chairman coincided with Watford rising from the fourth tier to the top flight, highlighted by a second-place finish in 1983 and an FA Cup final run in 1984. The artist’s hit “I’m Still Standing” was named the Hornets’ official club anthem in 2019, while John’s son Zachary joined Watford’s Academy in 2018.

Drew Carey, Seattle Sounders (initially bought 7.5%)

The actor, comedian and game show host became one of the first American celebrities to get into soccer ownership when he bought a 7.5% stake in MLS expansion side Seattle Sounders in 2007. An avid Cleveland sports fan, Carey first became interested in soccer after visiting Spain and his love for the game has only blossomed from there. The “Whose Line Is It Anyway” and “The Price Is Right” host’s involvement with the Sounders has been fruitful as Seattle has won two MLS Cups (2016, 2019) and emerged as one of MLS’ most valuable clubs. Carey is not an absentee owner, either, as he regularly attends home games and serves as the president of Sounders FC Alliance, the club’s official membership group.

Matthew McConaughey, Austin FC (undisclosed)

“All right, all right, all right.” The “Dazed and Confused,” “The Lincoln Lawyer” and “The Wolf of Wall Street” star bought into his beloved college city’s foray into soccer in 2019. Austin FC then joined MLS in 2021, making their league debut with a fairly underwhelming run of six straight defeats. Arguably, the franchise had already scored their first major victory by managing to get McConaughey — the unofficial mayor of Austin — on board in the first place. Their first league points came courtesy of a resounding 4-1 drubbing of Portland Timbers in early July. This was after McConaughey had delivered a motivational drum performance before the previous home game against San Jose Earthquakes in scenes eerily similar to his chest-thumping, rhythmic-humming, trance-like cameo in “The Wolf of Wall Street.”

Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Hammarby (25%)

Everything Zlatan does seems to make headlines, so it was no surprise that the brash striker’s announcement that he was buying 25% of Swedish club Hammarby in 2019 ruffled some feathers. A product of the Malmo youth system, Ibrahimovic’s decision to invest in a rival club like Hammarby was labeled a “betrayal” in Malmo and even provoked Malmo supporters to vandalise and then topple a statue of the striker outside of the club’s home ground. Zlatan wasn’t too fazed by the backlash, calling the group “kindergarten level.” Remember, this is a man who has compared himself to lions, Ferraris and even God!

Russell Wilson and Ciara, Seattle Sounders (undisclosed)

They love their sports and stars in Seattle, so it is fitting that Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson and wife and Grammy award-winning singer Ciara joined the Seattle Sounders ownership group in 2019. At their unveiling as owners, the Pro Bowl QB called soccer a “transformational sport” and added that the unifying power and inclusiveness of the sport played a huge part in the couple’s decision to get involved.

Ronaldo, Real Valladolid (82%)

Real Valladolid are a rather inconspicuous club, having flip-flopped between Spain‘s Primera and Segunda Divisions for much of their history. That didn’t deter Ronaldo. The Brazil legend, who won two World Cups and two Ballon d’Ors during his illustrious playing career, bought a 51% share in the Spanish club in 2018 for €30m and now holds an 82% stake in the Blanquivioletas. Valladolid lasted three seasons in LaLiga before they were relegated last season.

Diplo, Phoenix Rising (undisclosed)

One of the world’s most popular and successful DJs, Diplo is another celebrity who has a real affection for “The Beautiful Game.” The three-time Grammy award winner bought a stake in USL side Phoenix Rising in 2016 and makes up a star-studded ownership group that includes Chelsea legend Didier Drogba, Fall Out Boy bassist Pete Wentz and ex-MLB pitcher Brandon McCarthy. The club still has designs on joining MLS, and previously featured Diplo’s record label Mad Decent as a jersey sponsor.

Steve Nash, Mallorca and Vancouver Whitecaps (undisclosed)

Ex-NBA star Steve Nash’s love for football is well-documented, with the former point guard a die-hard Tottenham Hotspur supporter and an occasional Champions League analyst. Born in South Africa, Nash comes from a soccer family. His brother Martin earned 38 caps for Canada, while his sister Joann captained her college soccer team for three years. The former Phoenix Suns star and two-time NBA MVP first bought into his hometown Whitecaps back in 2008 and then Spanish side Mallorca in 2016. Nash’s investment in Mallorca (he was part of a group that purchased a $21m stake) has proved a masterstroke as Mallorca has earned back-to-back promotions and this season are back in La Liga for the first time since 2013.

Class of ’92: David Beckham, Gary Neville, Phil Neville, Ryan Giggs, Paul Scholes, Nicky Butt, Salford City (10% each)

The “Class of ’92” consisting of David Beckham, Gary Neville, Phil Neville, Ryan Giggs, Paul Scholes and Nicky Butt rose to prominence in Manchester almost 30 years ago, winning a combined 120 trophies at Old Trafford under legendary boss Sir Alex Ferguson. In 2014, five of the six returned to the Manchester area to purchase eighth-tier Salford City, whose ground resides just 5 miles away from the bright lights of “The Theatre of Dreams.” Beckham joined his former teammates by also buying a 10% stake in 2019, and the club has flourished since. Salford, thanks largely to the financial backing from the Class of ’92, has earned four promotions in five seasons to reach the fourth tier (League Two) and the Football League for the first time ever. The club unveiled a new stadium in 2017 and are the subject of the docuseries”Class of ’92: Out of Their League,” which is available on Netflix. Beckham has also struck out on his own, and he is the president and co-owner of MLS club Inter Miami.

Man City take top spot in Premier League as Erling Haaland scores 50th goal in win at Fulham

11:30 AM ET James OlleySenior Writer, ESPN F

LONDON — Manchester City went top of the Premier League for the first time since February with a hard-fought 2-1 win at Fulham on Sunday.

Erling Haaland scored his 50th goal of the season in converting a third-minute penalty as the visitors established control early, only for Carlos Vinicius to equalise against the run of play with a quarter of an hour played. Julian Alvarez reestablished City’s lead on 34 minutes when firing a superb dipping drive over goalkeeper Bernd Leno from 25 yards but Fulham kept fighting in a competitive second half.

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The home side thought they should have had a penalty midway through the second period when Kyle Walker challenged Bobby De Cordova-Reid in the box, but referee Simon Hooper was unmoved.

City hung on for a precious victory that takes them to 76 points, one ahead of Arsenal and still with a game in hand.


Rapid reaction

1. City finally move above Arsenal

The momentum has been with Pep Guardiola’s side for some time and now the Premier League table proves it. City are top of the league for the first time since beating Arsenal at Emirates Stadium on Feb. 15. The psychological impact of that could be profound, especially coming in the same week when the Gunners were well beaten in the reverse fixture.

Premier League Table

GPGDPTS
1 – Man City32+5476
2 – Arsenal33+4075
3 – Newcastle33+3465
4 – Man United32+1063
5 – Liverpool33+2356
6 – Tottenham34+654
7 – Aston Villa34+454
8 – Brighton31+2152
9 – Brentford34+850
10 – Fulham33045

The defending champions weren’t at their best at Craven Cottage. In fact, Fulham may feel they should have earned a point in a battling second-half display as Guardiola’s side struggled to control the game in their customary style.

Yet Ederson was not forced into any meaningful saves and their defence held firm to earn a victory that extends their recent record to 13 wins from their past 14 matches across all competitions — the only blemish was a 1-1 draw at Bayern Munich in a Champions League quarterfinal they were already winning 3-0 from the first leg.

They have clicked into gear at precisely the right time and look extremely difficult to catch in the home stretch.

2. Haaland’s half-century

As City go through the gears in the title race, Haaland continues to surpass individual milestones in what is rapidly becoming one of the most remarkable debut seasons in English football history. There are plenty of stats to choose from, but everyone will have a favourite.

Haaland’s third-minute penalty was his 50th goal of the season, making him the first player to reach that mark in a single season at an English club since 1931. The half-century is composed of one EFL Cup goal, three FA Cup goals, 12 Champions League goals and 34 in the Premier League — the most in a 38-game season. Haaland is now tied with Andy Cole (1993-94) and Alan Shearer (1994-95) for the most goals in any Premier League season and it is simply a matter of time before he breaks that record.

It seems almost perverse to suggest this, but Haaland hasn’t even been that efficient of late. He missed a series of glorious chances against Arsenal and could have scored more on Sunday, admittedly in part denied by some fine goalkeeping by Leno. But that is a minor criticism.

Haaland is the most feared forward in the land for a reason; the banner held up in the away end, “Feed the Yorkshire Viking and he will score” is hard to argue with. Dixie Dean’s all-time 63-goal haul is not an impossibility with a maximum of 10 more games to play this season.

3. City adapt without De Bruyne

Kevin De Bruyne was instrumental in Wednesday’s 4-1 win over Arsenal and his absence from the matchday squad through injury here could have been a significant blow for City.

But whereas De Bruyne and Haaland carved Arsenal open down the middle of the pitch in midweek, they switched up their approach with Riyad Mahrez and Jack Grealish causing Fulham problems on the flanks.

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The switch of play to Grealish in particular was always an outlet ball for City in possession, although this wasn’t an afternoon when the England international made the most of those opportunities.

Instead, Alvarez came to the fore in an all-action display which featured a sublime 25-yard strike. The Argentina forward popped up all over the attacking areas of the pitch to help City overload Fulham and his useful contributions continue to exist largely in the shadow of Haaland’s headline act. That said, Guardiola will obviously want De Bruyne back as soon as possible — especially with a Champions League semifinal against Real Madrid to come.


Best and worst performers

BEST

Julian Alvarez, Manchester City: Won City’s penalty and scored a superb long-range effort that proved to be the matchwinner.

Erling Haaland, Manchester City: Continues to show real signs of developing his link-up play — he is more than just a finishing machine.

Bernd Leno, Fulham: Made several good saves, perhaps the best from Grealish in the first half and Haaland early in the second, to keep Fulham in the contest.

WORST

Tosin Adarabioyo, Fulham: The former Man City youth player lost both tackles he attempted, won one of four aerial duels and struggled to cope with Haaland.

Bobby De Cordova-Reid, Fulham: Struggled to make an impact against City’s defence, although had a penalty shout turned down.

Antonee Robinson, Fulham: Unable to cope with Mahrez in the first half and gave the ball away too often, much to the frustration of Fulham fans.


Highlights and notable moments

Haaland’s record-breaking season is rightly taking the attention, but Julian Alvarez reminded everyone of his own quality with a stunning goal that proved to be the winner.


After the match: What the managers, players said

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola: “It’s important to go top but on Tuesday, Arsenal will play. The important [thing] is the West Ham game, it’s a game in hand. After that we’ll be top of the table and it will be more real.

“The game was so tight until the end, we could not expect anything differently. This amount of games is a lot but we knew that after we beat Arsenal at home that winning these types of games is really important. The players behaved amazingly.”

Fulham manager Marco Silva: “A tough afternoon for us because we lost another two players in Tim Ream and Andreas Pereira. Both look really serious injuries so it is a tough moment but we have to keep going, more games to play.

“Tim Ream for sure [is out for the rest of the season], unfortunately for us. He has broken his arm. Let’s see on Andreas, I hope it is not so serious but I have to wait for more [information].”


Key stats (provided by ESPN Stats & Information)

Erling Haaland has scored all seven of the penalty kicks he has taken in the Premier League this season.

The player with the record for taking the most penalties in the Premier League without missing is former Manchester City midfielder Yaya Toure, who scored all 11 of the spot kicks he took in the competition.

Haaland equalled the record for most goals in a single Premier League season. His 34th of the campaign drew him level with Alan Shearer and Andy Cole, who both reached the total in 42-game campaigns, when there were 22 teams in the division.


Up next

Fulham: Fulham may be on course to finish the season firmly in mid-table, but they will still have a say in the race for Europe and the battle against relegation as they travel to Liverpool on Wednesday before hosting Leicester City on May 8.

Manchester City: Next up for City is Wednesday’s visit of West Ham United to the Etihad Stadium, before they travel to Elland Road next Saturday to play Leeds United — a team they have scored 14 goals against over their past three meetings.

Man United in pole position for Champions League spot, but can’t take their eyes off Liverpool

10:00 AM ET

Mark OgdenSenior Writer, ESPN FC

Diogo Jota not only kept Liverpool‘s season alive with a 94th-minute winner in Sunday’s dramatic 4-3 victory in the Premier League against Tottenham Hotspur, his goal also put more pressure on fourth-placed Manchester United as they attempt to secure a return to the Champions League.Even though they are seven points clear with a game in hand, United can’t take their eyes off Liverpool; if they do, they could surrender the top-four spot they’ve held for more than half the season.

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In that sense, Jota’s goal against Tottenham could prove to be one of the most significant of the 2022-23 campaign. Without it, Liverpool would have lost their momentum and left United needing only two wins and a draw from their final six games to clinch a top-four finish. But the picture for both clubs has changed now.If you look at the Premier League table today, with the season into its final month, the race for the top four seems to be all but over. Newcastle United, in third, claimed an eighth win in nine league games by fighting back from a goal down to beat bottom-club Southampton at St James’ Park — a win that put them nine points clear of fifth-placed Liverpool with five games to play.United, meanwhile, overcame in-form Aston Villa 1-0 and steady themselves following a recent wobble that had seen them win just one of their previous five games in all competitions. (The FA Cup semifinal win over Brighton came via a penalty shootout following a 0-0 stalemate at Wembley.)Erik ten Hag’s team are in pole position to qualify for the Champions League and if they win their game in hand on Newcastle, they will climb to third. But the final month of the season is never quite as straightforward as casting an eye over the league table and assuming that a healthy lead or a run of comfortable fixtures makes the finishing positions a formality.

Premier League Table

GPGDPTS
1 – Man City32+5476
2 – Arsenal33+4075
3 – Newcastle33+3465
4 – Man United32+1063
5 – Liverpool33+2356
6 – Tottenham34+654
7 – Aston Villa34+454
8 – Brighton31+2152
9 – Brentford34+850
10 – Fulham33045

United, who have been hit hard by injuries to key players in recent weeks, such as centre-backs Lisandro Martinez and Rafael Varane, must summon the energy and performances to pick up nine points from their final six games if Liverpool continue to win.

Jurgen Klopp’s side are the ones in form, with four straight league wins and 15 goals. By contrast, United have struggled to score in their recent games and have managed fewer goals (14) in their last 12 outings.The number of goals scored at the end of the season could yet come into play as a decisive factor. If United win two, draw two and lose two of their remaining six fixtures, they will end the season on 71 points. That has been enough to qualify for the Champions League in each of the past three seasons, but Liverpool can also finish on 71 points by winning their five remaining fixtures and their goal difference is vastly superior to United’s: +23 to +10 in their favour. That advantage was built up in one game … the 7-0 win against United at Anfield in March.

Will Liverpool’s dramatic win vs. Spurs inspire a late top four push?

Janusz Michallik believes Liverpool could make the top four race “interesting” after their 4-3 win over Tottenham.

Looking at the remaining fixtures, it’s clear that United have a much tougher run of games, but they should still have enough to get the nine points they need. United’s next game is a trip to eighth-placed Brighton, a team looking to secure European football for the first time and one that beat United at Old Trafford on the opening day of the season. After that, the fixture list reads: West Ham (a), Wolves (h), Bournemouth (a), Chelsea (h) and Fulham (h).

Ordinarily, United would expect to collect a healthy total of points from games against sides much lower in the table, but they will need to find the physical and mental energy to get over the line. Those three home games could be the key, especially with United losing just once at Old Trafford this season and having the best defensive home record in the league.Liverpool will push them hard. Had Jota not scored his late goal on Sunday, that final run of games would have looked much less stressful for United. But with Liverpool finishing the season with games against Fulham (h), Brentford (h), Leicester (a), Villa (h) and Southampton (a), Klopp’s players could amass all 15 points from their remaining games if they maintain their recent form.A place in next season’s Champions League is in United’s hands, though, and they could make life so much easier for themselves by getting a result at Brighton on Thursday. Win that one and it would deliver a hammer blow to Liverpool’s hopes. But it’s never that straightforward.

A Long Road Prepared Anthony Hudson for His Moment As USMNT’s Interim Coach

The former Gregg Berhalter assistant is looking to leave his mark on the U.S. after a career that took him from England’s lower tiers to MLS and from Bahrain to New Zealand.

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Anthony Hudson really wanted to coach, and he was willing to do it for free.The future could wait. Certainty and stability mattered less in the moment than simply being on the field that day. So during the 2011–12 English soccer season, shortly after being fired by fifth-tier Newport County, the 30-year-old was spending time as a volunteer coach at Dagenham & Redbridge, a club in east London that would finish its campaign just six points above the League Two relegation zone.

“It was just an amazing opportunity,” says Hudson, who lasted six months at Newport. “I used to drive in every day, do some work with the first team, finishing, help out where I could.”Dagenham’s veteran manager John Still had told Hudson the smartest thing to do after getting sacked was “to get back to work straight away.” And it was shortly before a home game against Gillingham that Hudson’s eagerness to do just that paid off.Still introduced Hudson to Peter Taylor, a friend and well-traveled coach who’d recently left Bradford City to coach Bahrain’s national team. Still departed for a pregame meeting with Dagenham’s players, and left Hudson and Taylor to hang out in his office.“We chatted and got on really well. He’s telling me they were playing Sweden soon, and I was like, ‘That must be amazing,’” Hudson recalls.“Then like two weeks later, he called me up and he said, ‘Look, do you want to come and be our Olympic coach?’ I was like, ‘Yeah, absolutely.’ I remember flying out there a few weeks later, and I went straight to Japan because the under-23s had a [qualifier] against Japan,” he continues. “It was my first camp. And I just remember landing, dropping my stuff at the hotel, and then I’m on the training field in Tokyo putting cones down, and like a week before I was at Dagenham & Redbridge. Life’s crazy.”

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A passion for the game that’s flourished despite disappointment, a readiness to embrace unconventional or modest opportunities, and a warmth and eagerness that transforms acquaintances into advocates have taken Hudson on a one-of-a-kind ride through coaching. He’s worked with rising stars like Harry Kane and once opposed Cristiano Ronaldo. He toiled on the muddy fields used by lower-level teams in England and the U.S., where he managed a USL side that played at a Maryland high school. He’s been in charge at continental championships and World Cup qualifiers, and was a couple of goals away from taking New Zealand to Russia in 2018. Hudson worked with reserves and loanees under Harry Redknapp at Tottenham. He was a player-coach in Wilmington, N.C. And he’ll be leading the U.S. men’s national team when it hosts rival Mexico on Wednesday night in Arizona.

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There’s never been a long-term plan. Hudson, 42, was rarely plotting two or three steps ahead. The Seattle-born son of Alan Hudson, a renowned former midfielder who enjoyed lengthy spells at Chelsea and Stoke City before joining the Sounders in 1979, Anthony was enchanted by the excitement and glamor of the game but also determined to blaze his own trail. His ties to both the U.S. and England helped pave the way to Wilmington in 2006. The Hammerheads’ manager at that time was Englishman David Irving, who’d played on both sides of the Atlantic. They connected through a mutual friend.

“One of the big reasons for me moving to America was to build a career for myself, because I was always the son of—even growing up I had to consciously really look at myself because all my beliefs and all my ideas, and everything that came out my mouth wasn’t me. It was my dad,” Hudson explains. “He was my hero growing up—what he did in the game. So I used to copy, and he had such a big opinion about the game and players. So I had to go and sort of really get to know who I was and build a career for myself. And that was probably another motivation for going to the States.”

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If making his own name was the motivation to come, then rebuilding it was a reason to stay. Hudson was a rising star when he resigned from New Zealand, and it looked like a bit of a coaching coup when the Colorado Rapids hired him ahead of the 2018 MLS season. He’d been linked to Sunderland, among other opportunities, and Rapids sporting director Pádraig Smith called Hudson “one of the top and up-and-coming coaches in world football,” at his unveiling.

But the ensuing 17 months were a disaster. Nothing went right. Several signings didn’t work out and consistency proved elusive as Colorado won only eight MLS matches in 2018, finishing 21st overall with the league’s 11th-highest payroll. A 0-7-1 start to the ’19 campaign left Hudson feeling like the walls were closing in. That’s how it worked in England, after all. So he vented at a postgame press conference following a loss to Atlanta United, saying, “We are fighting at the bottom with a bottom group of players. … There are teams with a lot more quality than us, and that’s what we’re competing against.”

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He was fired a few days later.“I take full responsibility. I’m not gonna start pointing the finger at different things. I came in with probably a bit of an ego thinking I knew the league better than I did,” Hudson said last week.“I think you have to have key principles or an overarching way of playing,” he continues. “But then when you’re handed a group of players, it’s important to adapt and set the team up in a shape, in a way, that helps get the best out of them. And I didn’t do that. I basically tried to put my way onto a group of players that probably didn’t help get the best out of them. So I came away from that learning a very big lesson. It was a tough one.”https://007a2c5aa0ac40497d5cb4962abeb1f4.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

It was a sharp blow to that “top and up-and-coming” reputation he’d been developing, one that led to opportunities like the week Hudson spent with José Mourinho at Real Madrid back in 2013. U.S. fans and media didn’t follow Bahrain or New Zealand. They knew only that Hudson flamed out fast in Colorado. It would’ve made sense if he was on the first flight back to London.“It was tough. You’re a foreigner in another country. I had no family over in the States,” he says. “Getting fired is tough, and I thought about moving and then I thought, ‘You know what? I just can’t keep moving. I’ve been to the Middle East. I’ve been to New Zealand. I’ve been to America and after three or four years you build up all these good connections and good relationships, and you build a foundation of some type of community and then you leave?’

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“So I decided, ‘Look, I’m here now. And even though it’s not gone well, I still want to build relationships. I believe in the game out here. I see some amazing things happening in the game here, and I want to help out in any way I can.’ So it was just a case of just one step at a time, trying to rebuild.”

Hudson loves the U.S. He says his father “especially” loves it, and that Alan, capped twice by England, insisted that his local pub in Chelsea hang American flags inside during the Qatar World Cup. And so Anthony stayed, hoping the same qualities that impressed the likes of Redknapp and Taylor might lead to something here.

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“It’s really strange because I’m actually not someone who’s super extroverted. I don’t go out of my way to keep connections going. Like my personal life is—I don’t really like my phone. I don’t. I want to be left alone. I love my dogs,” says Hudson, who runs a rescue and shelter assistance organization called Forgotten Dogs Foundation in his spare time (the board includes Redknapp and U.S. women’s star Rose Lavelle).

“But also along the way you meet—I don’t have a huge amount of friends—but you meet some good people along the way that you instantly hit it off and you have a respect for, and I think I’ve been fortunate in that way to just, you know, bumble along sort of meeting people like Gregg [Berhalter],” Hudson continues. “You strike up a relationship, and you want to learn from them and ask advice and stuff like that. And yeah, there’s all these little connections where that’s happened, for sure.”

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Berhalter competed against Hudson while at the Columbus Crew and believed his MLS adversary remained a coach with promise. So once Berhalter took over the U.S., he and former sporting director Earnie Stewart hired Hudson to coach the U-20s. In 2021, he was elevated to senior team assistant. He was with the U.S. when it won the Concacaf Gold Cup and Nations League that summer, as it navigated World Cup qualifying and then through the four matches in Qatar. That sort of promotion and responsibility might have seemed odd to those familiar only with what happened at Colorado. But bigger names have failed, improved and moved on.

“I can’t control what people say or what people think or what people write,” Hudson says. “I think in so many jobs, you know things are not always as good as everyone writes how good they are, and they’re also not as bad as people write how bad they are.”

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Kellyn Acosta agrees. The U.S. and Los Angeles FC midfielder was a Rapid when Hudson arrived with fanfare and departed under a cloud. It’s worth noting when Acosta was contacted to speak about Hudson’s rebirth with the national team, LAFC was between a midweek Concacaf Champions League game and Sunday’s derby against the LA Galaxy. If Acosta had nothing nice to say about Hudson, he easily could’ve declined without prompting inference or suspicion. But he wanted to talk.

“In a coach’s career, similar to a player’s career, obviously we all have times in our career that don’t go as planned,” says Acosta, who was out of the national team for two years before returning in 2021 and evolving into an easy choice for the World Cup squad.

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“I think as time goes on you evolve, you learn, and you adapt, and I think that he’s done just that. I’ve known him from the Colorado days, and we struggled when I first got there, but he’s a guy that I admire greatly—even working under him at Colorado. He’s a guy that’s super passionate and detail oriented,” Acosta adds. “He’s a delight to work under.”

Hudson was appointed interim U.S. manager when Berhalter’s contract expired, and his potential reappointment was scuttled by the scandal sparked by Claudio and Danielle Reyna’s accusations and then Stewart’s subsequent departure. Hudson coached last month’s Nations League group-stage wins over Grenada and El Salvador. He’ll be on the bench in Wednesday’s friendly outside Phoenix, and then he’ll almost certainly be in charge for June’s Nations League final four and this summer’s Gold Cup. U.S. Soccer is nearing the end of its search for Stewart’s successor, who will be charged with appointing the permanent national team coach. Hudson’s contract runs through August.

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Meanwhile, Hudson’s appearance at last week’s Gold Cup draw in L.A., where he carried Concacaf’s most prestigious trophy onto the stage as reigning champ, was a reminder this is very real. The former Dagenham & Redbridge intern and Colorado Rapids washout is the U.S. coach, and he’ll be leading the American men in their biggest games this year.

To an outsider, the next three months represent a priceless and tantalizing opportunity. Do well, and that awkward year and a half in Colorado recedes further into history, perhaps destined to be a footnote on a lengthening résumé. Win a trophy or two, and doors inevitably will open—whether that’s with U.S. Soccer or MLS, or beyond.

Some insiders see it that way as well.

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“Your failures aren’t who you are, and people shouldn’t hold on to what he experienced four years ago. That’s not who he is and that’s not what he wants to be known as,” Acosta says. “He has a great opportunity to kind of showcase all that he’s learned, all that he’s absorbed, and the direction he wants to head towards. … This is a huge opportunity for him to showcase himself and be in a better light.”

But Hudson doesn’t. He can’t. His journey has been about answering the door each time there’s a knock, and about doing whatever he had to do to be on the field that day. He learned hard lessons about what happens when there’s ego involved. So he’s not campaigning for the U.S. job—or any job for that matter. Just about every time he’s asked about his own plans or ambition, he defers to his players, to the program, to the progress he feels the team made under Berhalter and to his obligation to be the best steward possible.

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“It’s just not in my thinking,” he says. “I don’t wake up every day and think, ‘You know what? I’m going to prove them wrong.’ I’ve moved on. A lot has happened since Colorado and a lot happened before Colorado. There’s more to my working career than Colorado Rapids.

“I’m more about just purely looking forward, wanting to grow, wanting to do a good job. I believe in what I do.”

There may be some small tweaks on the field (the U.S. played in more of a 4-2-3-1 last month), and the way things are discussed or communicated will vary simply because Berhalter and Hudson are different people. But Hudson says there’s no compulsion to make his mark or put his stamp on the team. He has too much respect for what Berhalter accomplished—“Gregg did an incredible job,” he says. There’s also a veteran’s belief that if he maintains a supportive and successful environment and shepherds the program in the right way, the people who matter—those who may knock on his door—will recognize it.

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“He just wants to work. He loves the game, and sometimes you need to take a step back to go a step forward,” Acosta says. “You always want to have the head coaching role, but I think this time for him, maybe he needed to reset and find himself again, gain that confidence to be where he’s at now.”

The future is unknown, and the scoreboard ultimately will tell a lot of the story. But Hudson’s American roller coaster, from capsizing in Colorado to coaching in Qatar, has only strengthened his connection and affection for this country. He was raised inside a footballing cauldron, the son of a famous player who often was tabloid fodder, and now finds himself charmed by the growth of the game in his birthplace. Even though those stakes have made him a target at times, they elevate the work he’s doing now. It’s all he’s ever wanted.

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“I feel how much the game means to people here. I get it. This role, especially, the responsibility … the people I work with, the staff, the players, are desperate—you can see it in their eyes—desperate for this game to keep moving forward. [And] the fans,” he says. “I truly feel the passion and the desire for the game to grow here, and I feel it’s a privilege to be in this spot for this moment in time.”

Premier League: The Big Six era is OVER, with a new era now taking its place

Mark White Tue, May 2, 2023, 1:00 AM EDT·9 min read Four Four Two

The Big Six has defined the Premier League, at least on Sky Sports, for a while now… whether you love, loathe or just feel indifferent to the term.

It’s been inescapable. ArsenalChelseaLiverpoolManchester CityManchester United and Tottenham Hotspur fought it out for four Champions League spots and two Europa League spots for over a decade: Super Sunday was often built around two of them facing off, while the other 14 teams in the league all fought to stop them from motoring into the distance – sometimes literally, with threats of breakaways. Pick any two and you could find beef. Pair any one with another club and it would be watchable.

Well, everything comes to an end. The Premier League is 31 years old this year: it’s an era in itself of English football. But within that time, there have been subtle changes brought about by new managers, new owners and new developments. We’re just entering a brave new world for the Prem once more, as another chapter closes at the end of this season.

Each Premier League era, up to the Big Six… 1992-97: The Kings of the North Era

Eric Cantona has a claim as the most transformative footballer that English has ever known: equal parts continental flair with that fire that made our audiences warm to him immediately. The Frenchman’s move from Leeds United across the Pennines brought Sir Alex Ferguson his first Premier League title – and together, they’d win a second shortly after.

Blackburn Rovers would win in 1995, Liverpool and Newcastle United would memorably push for the crown, too, as the power lay in the north of England for at least the first few Premier League campaigns. Aston Villa were the southernmost club in a top three before Arsenal managed it in 1997. That feels bonkers now, right?

Fergie defined this time with his mind games, his Class of 92 and his ever-evolving United team – but it wasn’t without its challengers stepping up, in the form of Keegan, Dalglish and others. For some, this era of the Prem will never, ever be beaten. Yes, mainly United fans.

1997-2004: The Duopoly Era

Once again, it was a Frenchman who would change English football, bringing the Premier League title down south for a first time in 1998.

For six years, realistically, the title was either going to be won by Arsene Wenger or Sir Alex Ferguson, as the pair formed arguably the division’s greatest rivalry. It felt like the Battle of Britpop as north faced south in a bitter war of cultures and identities – and though other teams would breach the top occasionally during this time, the title either swung one way or the other.

Other clubs would have success in cups, some would go deep in Europe. But these were the two forces of English football: it was Sir Alex and Arsene who defined the Premier League at this point, with the former pipping the latter 4-3 for titles during this time.

2004-2010: The Big Four Era

In 2003, Arsenal vice-chairman David Dein described new Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich as parking, “his tanks on our lawn and firing £50 notes at us”. Yet it was the Reds who would win the Champions League before the Blues.

Liverpool and Chelsea joined the party in the mid-noughties, with Rafael Benitez and Jose Mourinho taking charge of each side respectively. Don’t believe it was now a top four? Check out this FourFourTwo cover from 2008 which specifically references such a concept…

As Wenger had revolutionised English football in the late 90s, Benitez and Mourinho reshaped it tactically again, their 4-3-3s and continental styles proving better-suited for European glory. Wenger would refocus around Cesc Fabregas with his Gunners side cash-strapped from building the Emirates Stadium; Ferguson would recalibrate with a thicker midfield, too, before conquering Europe again in 2008.

Between 2005 and 2010, only two teams other than these four would finish in those Champions League spots. Everton did it under David Moyes in 2005, failing to make the group stage after qualifying – though Liverpool qualified as European champions that year – before Tottenham pipped the Reds in 2010 to bookend this era.

2010-2016: The Big Six Era pt. 1 (Rises and Falls)

In 2010, Manchester City were beaten 1-0 at the Etihad by a Peter Crouch strike, as Tottenham secured Champions League football for the first time. City needn’t have worried about being left behind, mind.

A new decade brought a new force in Manchester – backed, of course, by riches that we’d only seen at Stamford Bridge. City would land an FA Cup in 2011 as a foreshadowing of what was to come in the league the following year: but the Big Four was extended by another two, as Tottenham would get into Europe every time from 2010 to 2016, finishing in the top four three times. In 2013, Ferguson stepped aside and this really felt like open season, with unpredictable title races.

Really, this was an era of turbulence for English football, while Spain ruled the roost. A World Cup in 2010 for La Roja was followed by Champions League titles in 2011 and 2014 through to 2018 for El Clasico, while no English side reached a Champions League final between 2013 and 2017. Real Madrid and Barcelona were the two most glamorous sides on Earth, with Bayern Munich and Juventus close behind. England struggled to attract the best managers and players during this time – and it showed. Even in the seasons immediately before Fergie left, United were a shadow of some of their better sides.

It took Leicester City winning a title in 2016 to stop the Big Six from being quite so complacent in the league and actually reassert their dominance for good…

2016-2022: The Big Six Era pt. 2 (The Super Gaffers)

Just as Arsene and Jose had done before him, Pep Guardiola brought the next era to English football, complete with his ball-playing keeper, false nines and dual 10s. From 2016 onwards, the Big Six grew stronger and more ruthless than ever.

Each of the big guns had a manager to match. Jurgen Klopp brought heavy metal football to Liverpool, Antonio Conte won a first league title with a back three in England at Chelsea, with Pochettino at Spurs, Wenger at Arsenal and Mourinho at United completing a box office lineup. At the start of the 2016/17 season, the FourFourTwo Season Preview cover announced ‘The Season of the Super Gaffer’, complete with illustrations of all 20 managers – and it felt like a brave new world from post-Fergie malaise.

Naturally, not every manager would last but, of course, the kingpin manager feel continued, as some clubs opted for club icons as coaches in the absence of true A-list bosses – Ole Gunnar Solskjaer at United, Mikel Arteta at Arsenal and Frank Lampard at Chelsea, but to name a few – while the likes of Marcelo Bielsa, Carlo Ancelotti and Manuel Pellegrini all managed “smaller” teams.

Leicester would push close, Arsenal would drop out of the top six a couple of times (albeit winning trophies in this period) and the quality of the Premier League would continue to grow. The Premier League thrived in Europe a little more but most importantly, it caught up tactically once more with Spain and Germany. England actually doing better at the World Cup in 2018 was proof of the Prem’s improvement, right?

2023 onwards: The… Super Billionaire Era?

Between 2016 and 2022, it was argued that Leicester City could displace one of the underfiring giants from the Big Six altogether. Just one problem with that: nothing about the very nature of Leicester’s model was “big”.

In 2023, there are big hitters – and those doing things on a smaller scale are competing with the bigger clubs. Newcastle are set for Champions League football as possibly the richest club on Earth but they’re yet to overhaul the players who were in relegation scraps. Chelsea have overhauled their squad with new owners but lie midtable, while Liverpool and Manchester United could both have new investors by next season, and Tottenham fans are angling for Daniel Levy’s exit. This could be the era of brand-new owners. But one thing’s for certain: the Big Six as we know it is over.

Were a Super League to rear its head, Newcastle would be among those interested. Is it now a Big Seven? Possibly – but who knows whether Brighton & Hove AlbionFulham and Brentford have enjoyed one-off stunners this season or can maintain that trajectory, with the gap between themselves and some of the traditional Big Six closer than ever. With smaller clubs and players bought for less competing at the top, have we reached the point where money doesn’t matter quite so much? That would be nice, wouldn’t it? Or is this the mad one-off season akin to 2015/16 before something more familiar next season?

Whether we’re set for a Big Seven, a Big Six without Chelsea, a Big Eight, a Dominant Top Half or the Big Four is to be re-worked once more, we’re due this update. Football moves in cycles, after all. It’s reassuring in a way to know that everything will pass. Including who the “big clubs” at the top of the table are.

Bella Bixby’s teammates react to her shocking game-tying strike against Angel City FC this weekend.

Goalkeeper goal draws Portland level at the death
Troy Wayrynen/USA TODAY Sports Portland and Angel City played to a blockbuster 3-3 draw on Saturday evening, in a game with the most unlikely of endings.Portland’s Bella Bixby scored only the second goalkeeper goal in league history in second-half stoppage time to keep the Thorns undefeated.The game held attacking fireworks long before Portland’s result-saving punch.No. 1 draft pick Alyssa Thompson struck first for Angel City, showing off her speed while scoring her second goal of the season in the 10th minute.Portland then drew even on a penalty after Julie Ertz committed a foul in Angel City’s 18-yard box.Morgan Weaver put Portland ahead, before two set-piece goals (including a header by Ertz) gave Angel City a shot at an upset.Bixby emptied Portland’s net in search of a final equalizer, backheeling the ball into the goal off a corner kick.“I still can’t believe it, but it’s like a once-in-a-lifetime thing. I gotta really absorb it,” the goalkeeper said after the match.

Teenagers ruled the NWSL this weekend.

  • 18-year-olds Jaedyn Shaw (San Diego Wave) and Alyssa Thompson (Angel City) scored in their respective matches over the weekend, while 17-year-old Olivia Moultrie (Portland Thorns) notched a key assist.

Bigger picture: As professional soccer opportunities grow in salary and stature, more teenagers have gone pro in the NWSL rather than play in college first.

  • Two 15-year-old players made appearances this weekend: Washington’s Chloe Ricketts and San Diego’s Melanie Barcenas.
  • Barcenas became the youngest active NWSL player in league history, making her debut at 15 years and 177 days old on Saturday.

Shaw now has three goals on the season, tying her with Alex Morgan for the most tallies on San Diego in 2023.

  • Thompson has two goals this season, tying her with Katie Johnson for the most scored for Angel City.

Bottom line: The future of the NWSL is already here, and they’re keeping pace alongside league veterans as the 2023 season nears the quarter mark.

FA Cup Final sells out Wembley Stadium
HARRIET LANDER/CHELSEA FC VIA GETTY IMAGESThe women’s FA Cup has sold out Wembley Stadium for the first time ever, marking women’s football’s meteoric rise in England.Manchester United and Chelsea will face off for the Cup on May 14 in front of more than 70,000 fans.Crowds for the Lionesses have soared since England’s Euros win last year, and the momentum has firmly crossed over to the domestic club game.Arsenal sold out the Emirates for the first time during their Champions League semifinal tie against Wolfsburg on Monday.Arsenal also attracted a WSL record crowd of 47,367 for the North London derby earlier this year.

PGMOL Review Recording Of What Paul Tierney Said To Jurgen Klopp And Find Referee “Acted In A Professional Manner”

  • ROBERT SUMMERSCALES 6 HOURS AGO
  • he PGMOL, the organization responsible for Premier League referees, has refuted Jurgen Klopp’s claim that Paul Tierney said something unacceptable to him during Liverpool’s 4-3 win over Tottenham on Sunday.Referee Tierney showed Klopp a yellow card after the Liverpool manager had shouted something in the face of the fourth official while celebrating Diogo Jota’s late winning goal.Speaking to the media after the game, Klopp suggested that Tierney had an agenda against him and his team. Klopp also told Sky Sports: “What he said to me when he gave me the yellow card is not ok.”

Klopp refused to reveal what Tierney had said o him but the PGMOL has since listened to the conversation by reviewing a recording from the referee’s microphone.A statement read: “PGMOL is aware of the comments made by Jurgen Klopp after his side’s fixture with Tottenham Hotspur.”Match officials in the Premier League are recorded in all games via a communications system.”Having fully reviewed the audio of referee Paul Tierney from today’s fixture, we can confirm he acted in a professional manner throughout including when issuing the caution to the Liverpool manager.”So, therefore, we strongly refute any suggestion that Tierney’s actions were improper.”

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