Tag: team spirit

  • How Matildas rose from ashes of ‘innuendo and mystery’ in Aussie sport’s ugliest divorce

    How Matildas rose from ashes of ‘innuendo and mystery’ in Aussie sport’s ugliest divorce

    Here the Matildas stand, 90 minutes away from progressing to the final of the Women’s World Cup on home soil as a clash against eternal rivals England awaits.

    To get to this moment in time, it has been a long, windy, bumpy, pot-hole filled road.

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    There’s been some seriously troubling results and performances in previous tournaments.

    There’s been the small hurdle of how Covid impacted international travel and the subsequent effect it had on the Matildas.

    Yet Tony Gustavsson, who may have been left battered and bruised throughout the journey, remains upright and on the verge of continuing the Matildas’ dream run at the World Cup.

    His tenure has experienced several peaks and troughs and his appointment followed high drama with the unceremonious sacking of his predecessor, Alen Stajcic.

    Here’s a look back at the journey — from Stajcic’s rise and fall, to Gustavsson leading the Matildas to a historic footballing feat.

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    THE IMMEDIATE STAJ EFFECT THAT PUT MATILDAS ON WORLD MAP

    After six years filled with success and silverware with Sydney FC’s W-League side, Alen Stajcic was given a chance in the big chair in April 2014.

    Hesterine de Rues had been ousted amid widespread reports of a player mutiny within the squad who didn’t see eye-to-eye with her methods.

    Stajcic was brought in on an interim basis despite the 2014 Asian Cup rapidly approaching.

    But the 49-year-old managed to guide the Matildas all the way to the final where they lost 1-0 against Japan, a team that would go on to make the final of the 2015 World Cup.

    Stajcic would go on to earn the permanent gig and oversaw the Matildas’ 2015 World Cup campaign where they qualified for the quarterfinals thanks to a stunning 1-0 win over Brazil in the Round of 16.

    They would be undone by Japan once again, but there was clearly optimism this team was headed places under Stajcic.

    Victory at the 2017 Tournament of Nations, which included Australia’s first-ever win over the United States, created plenty of buzz around the Matildas as they returned home to play friendlies against Brazil in front of crowds upwards of 15,000.

    The Matildas would also enjoy their highest world ranking ever under Stajcic, as they were ranked fourth in December in 2017.

    Alen Stajcic oversaw the Matildas’ best run of results. (Photo by Marc Atkins/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    But it would be just a year later when things began to turn a little stale.

    A fourth-place finish at the 2018 Algarve Cup was followed by yet another appearance in the final of the 2018 Asian Cup.

    However, the road to that game was not easy as a late Sam Kerr goal rescued a point in their group stage game against Japan while Alanna Kennedy’s stoppage-time strike pushed their semi-final against Thailand to extra time, where they would go on to win via penalties.

    As Socceroos great Robbie Slater points out, a coach in the same gig for too long doesn’t typically end well.

    “There is a life span,” Slater told foxsports.com.au.

    “It’s rare and you do have the exceptions around the world, (Sir Alex) Ferguson and (Arsene) Wenger, but you’re talking about the very top of the tree.

    “Coaches have a certain life span. You think of Ange (Postecoglou), he usually stays a couple of years and then moves.”

    But Stajcic’s journey didn’t end because of results.

    Results trended downwards towards the end of Stajcic’s tenure. (Photo by Catherine Ivill/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    ‘INNUENDO AND MYSTERY’: THE SHOCK AXING THAT ROCKED AUSSIE FOOTBALL

    Shockwaves were sent through the Australian football community when Football Federation Australia (now Football Australia) sacked Stajcic in January 2019, just months before a World Cup campaign.

    Stajcic’s axing was due to perceived “workplace issue” which came about as a result of two confidential surveys conducted by the Professional Footballers Association (PFA) and Our Watch, an Australian organisation aimed at ending violence against women.

    However, details of the survey’s findings have remained a closely guarded secret in the immediate aftermath and the years since in one of the messiest sagas seen in Australian football.

    Curiously enough, several of the Matildas stars voiced their support for Stajcic in the wake of his shock sacking.

    Midfielder Chloe Logarzo wrote on Twitter: “Shattered with what we have found out TODAY.”

    Kyah Simon added: “We’ve been preparing meticulously under him over the last 4yrs to have the best crack to win in France and under his guidance we have been the most successful team in Matildas history.”

    Sam Kerr, who denied she had been “gagged” by the FFA to talk about Stajcic’s sacking, also came out in defence of her former boss.

    Chloe Logarzo was one player left stunned by Stajcic’s shock axing. (Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    “I have not commented because I wasn’t ready to comment while I am still shocked and upset,” Kerr said.

    “My trust was in Staj to lead us to the World Cup final & I believe he was the best coach for that. Thankful for everything his (sic) done for me and the team.”

    Slater was also caught by “surprise” by the call to bin Stajcic at the time.

    “It wasn’t the proudest time for the women’s game when Stajcic was sacked after that survey,” Slater said.

    “Certain people didn’t behave in the manner in which they should have, including board members.

    “There were rumours about culture, but I think it’s important that a number of players came out and publicly supported Stajcic.

    “In a nutshell, what happened was shrouded in innuendo and mystery. But it happened. It wasn’t the best possible time for anyone involved in that era.”

    Ante Milicic, who had spent five years in the Socceroos national team setup, was appointed the interim Matildas boss and tasked with leading the team in the 2019 World Cup.

    But he could only guide them as far as the Round of 16 as an exit at the hands of Norway in a penalty shootout and went on to resign from his role almost a year later.

    Milicic’s resignation would come just weeks after FA had secured Australia the hosting rights for the 2023 World Cup along with New Zealand.

    With the tournament to take place in three years’ time, who would be appointed as the man or woman to take charge of the Matildas for their most important tournament to date?

    Ante Milicic lasted just over a year in the Matildas hot seat. (Photo by Linh Pham/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    THE BRUTAL 25-YEAR LOW AND TOURNAMENT FAILURES THAT ALMOST DOOMED GUSTAVSSON

    Tony Gustavsson was announced as the new Matildas boss in September 2020, ending the FA’s search for Milicic’s replacement.

    Gustavsson arrived with plenty of tournament pedigree and experience having been an assistant coach with the United States in their triumphant 2015 and 2019 World Cup campaigns.

    The 50-year-old, a maths and PE teacher by trade, enjoyed a playing career across several Swedish clubs before transitioning into the dugout.

    Unfortunately for Gustavsson, he took on the role in the midst of the Covid pandemic, robbing him of vital time on the park with his new team and players.

    In fact, the Swede’s first games as Matildas boss took place almost five months after he was appointed and the early results were brutal.

    The Matildas shipped 13 goals in three games against Germany, the Netherlands and Denmark in a horror start to their Tokyo Olympics preparations.

    Gustavsson’s side navigated a tricky group to progress to the quarterfinals, where they beat Great Britain 4-3 in an extra-time thriller but ultimately fell short to Sweden in the semi finals and to the US in the bronze medal match.

    Gustavsson guided the Matildas to a fourth-place finish at the Tokyo Olympics. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    There were glimpses at the high-tempo, attacking brand of football Gustavsson wanted to implement, but the team’s high line was constantly exposed at the Olympics and were perhaps fortunate not to have conceded more.

    Further tournament anguish would come at the 2022 Asian Cup as the Matildas crashed out in the quarterfinals to South Korea having missed several golden chances to take the lead.

    Results wouldn’t get much better from there, as Gustavsson oversaw the Matildas’ heaviest defeat in 25 years when they lost 7-0 to Spain in June that year.

    However, it must be said the team was without several of their heavyweight stars including Kerr, Steph Catley, Mary Fowler, and Hayley Raso to name just four.

    It was all part of Gustavsson’s brief to blood several youngsters and boost the Matildas’ depth across the field, something the team was sorely lacking prior to his arrival in 2020.

    The tournament failures and Spain thrashing left many loudly calling for Gustavsson to be axed from his post, but FA CEO James Johnson opted to stick with his man rather than twist.

    As proved by the Matildas’ stunning run from last October to their final friendly prior to the World Cup in which they won nine games from 10, it has paid dividends.

    The Matildas suffered their heaviest defeat in 25 years under Gustavsson. (Photo by Fran Santiago/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    HOW GUSTAVSSON AVOIDED CATASTROPHE AS ‘LOYAL’ FA BOSS VINDICATED

    Gustavsson would have had shivers sent down his spine when he lined up on the touchline for the national anthems ahead of the Matildas’ World Cup opener against Ireland.

    Played in front of just over 75,000 fans at Stadium Australia, the Swede oversaw a gritty 1-0 victory over the Irish, yet the headlines were dominated by Kerr’s shock injury diagnosis.

    The superstar striker was ruled out of Australia’s first two games with a calf injury and would be reassessed ahead of the final group game against Canada.

    However, the focus quickly zeroed in on Gustavsson amid Australia’s horror 3-2 defeat to Nigeria.

    It was a result very few saw coming, even without Kerr.

    Gustavsson was smashed from pillar to post for his tactics, including Slater.

    However, he could only praise the Swede for how he looked inward and tweaked his system for the do-or-die Canada game.

    “I questioned and everyone questioned him tactically against Nigeria,” Slater said.

    “To be fair to him, I think he did get it wrong tactically against Nigeria and he practically admitted that in the post-match press conference.

    “But what he did against Canada was tactically perfect and he hasn’t taken a false step in the games that have followed.”

    The Matildas salvaged their World Cup campaign with a 4-0 thrashing of Canada. (Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    An impressive 2-0 win over Denmark in the Round of 16 followed, before the Matildas emerged victorious over France via the longest penalty shootout in World Cup history.

    Not many might have imagined the Matildas getting to this stage of the tournament, especially on the back of their Asian Cup performance and the Spain hammering even if it was a weakened squad.

    Yet Slater believes Johnson must earn plenty of plaudits for believing in the man he appointed to see it through.

    “Since James Johnson’s been in charge, he’s stayed very loyal to his coaches both men’s and women’s,” Slater said.

    “The same kind of thing happened to Graham Arnold at the end of our qualifying campaign where we finished third and went into the play-offs.

    “There were calls from very prominent people for Arnie to be sacked, and James Johnson stood by him. He’s done exactly the same with Gustavsson.

    “Given the results for both managers, he’s made the right call. Even if we lose the semi final, which everyone would feel a little let down by given the euphoria, but it still would be a successful tournament given we’ve never been to a semi final before.”

    Football Australia CEO James Johnson opted to keep Gustavsson in the role despite vocal calls for him to be sacked. (Photo by Daniel Pockett/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    It’s hard to distil the secret recipe to Gustavsson’s success at this World Cup.

    He’s made it to the final four largely without Kerr and has had to deal with the intense scrutiny and pressure that comes with playing in front of a home crowd for each game.

    But facts are facts: Gustavsson is the most successful Matildas coach at a World Cup and he’s helped a nation fall in love with the team.

    Slater feels the success shouldn’t be a massive surprise given Gustavsson’s credentials during the latter stages of World Cups.

    However, it is the unbreakable bond and team spirit he has developed with the players that Slater believes has propelled the team this far.

    “When you see what he’s done in this tournament and the way he talks, this group of players love him,” Slater said.

    “It’s not feigned, it’s not acted. He’s created a culture where these girls are like one, whether they’re starting or not.

    “Now they’ve embraced the support of the nation and the crowd’s behind them. It’s like the crowd’s an extension of this team, yet Gustavsson’s remained calm.”

    Fans have turned out in droves to various live sites to cheer on the Matildas. (Photo by Diego Fedele/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    The joy and euphoria attached to the Matildas is a far, far cry from the toxicity that surrounded the women’s game in the wake of Stajcic’s infamous axing in 2019.

    A lot has changed in the four years since, whether it be from administrative level in the game’s governing body to the coaches or the large swath of newly-capped Matildas.

    But it’s all arrived to this moment as Gustavsson prepares to lead his side into battle against England at Stadium Australia.

    Who knows where the journey goes from here?

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  • ‘The one I missed’: How 2019 heartbreak sparked Aussies’ greatest moment — Talking Points

    ‘The one I missed’: How 2019 heartbreak sparked Aussies’ greatest moment — Talking Points

    The Matildas have written their names into the pages of Australian sporting history with an incredible penalty shootout win over France in the World Cup quarterfinals.

    The result is revenge, in a way, for the Matildas’ penalty shootout defeat at the last Women’s World Cup, in 2019 on French soil.

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    MATILDAS END CURSE AND GET PENALTY REVENGE

    It’s been four long years since one of the most heartbreaking moments in Matildas history.

    It was 2019, in France, the previous edition of the Women’s World Cup.

    On that day, the Matildas were locked at 1-1 with Norway after extra time. Sam Kerr stepped up for Australia’s first penalty after Caroline Graham Hansen nailed hers – and missed.

    Guro Reiten made it 2-0 to Norway – and Emily Gielnik missed. Norway scored twice more, making Steph Catley’s goal just a consolation.

    4-1. What had been viewed as Australia’s best chance of World Cup glory – until this year, that is – had ended in a dismal Round of 16 defeat.

    This time around, Sam Kerr wasn’t going to make the same mistakes.

    She said after the game: “The only penalty I was thinking about was the one I missed at the last World Cup. It went away from my routine and what I normally did, so this time it was all about self-belief and just putting it where I normally do.

    “It was all about routine, about focus, and sticking to my plan.”

    Sam Kerr after her penalty miss at the 2019 World Cup.Source: Getty Images

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    Speaking on Optus Sport tonight, Matildas star Chloe Logarzo (involved in that Norway game but missing this tournament) said: “Every single player has been training for this for the last four years since that.”

    She added through tears: “What people don’t understand is that we’ve been in this situation twice before and we’ve lost major tournaments because of penalties.

    “And I’m so proud of the people who missed those penalties who stood up and took that because it takes a lot of courage to be able to do it. And I couldn’t be more prouder than us making history. And I can just feel how amazing it feels and just, I’m so proud.”

    Sam Kerr was in disbelief after the Matildas’ win over France.Source: News Corp Australia

    14 members of Australia’s squad for this tournament were part of that 2019 campaign and experienced the heartbreak.

    On that day, Australia’s final act in extra time was to take Ellie Carpenter off ahead of the shootout. This time, she had her chance – and she duly buried her attempt.

    Mackenzie Arnold was another member of the 2019 squad, though she was on the bench for that game. Though she missed her own penalty attempt this time around, she made two crucial saves – including one when she was forced to face a penalty re-take after coming off her line too early the first time around.

    Kerr said: “Mackenzie was amazing. She saves all our penalties at training and robs our confidence. We all just stuck to our routines and we knew she’d come through for us, but she was amazing in the game as well. I’m really happy for her.”

    Before 2019, Australia had been dumped out of the World Cup in the quarterfinals at three consecutive tournaments (2015, 2011, 2007).

    Now, they finally have their first quarter-final win and their first final-four appearance.

    Kerr added: “I hate penalties. I wish there was golden goal or something because it’s such a bad way to lose. It was an absolute rollercoaster, up and down.”

    It was a bad way to lose back in 2019. But that heartbreak has inspired the Aussies to even greater heights – and to end their quarter-final curse.

    FRANCE’S ‘GRAHAM ARNOLD MOMENT’ BACKFIRES

    When the fourth official raised the substitute board in the 123rd minute, the minds of Australian football fans raced back to the early hours of June 14 last year.

    Back then, Socceroos boss Graham Arnold rolled the dice when he substituted on Andrew Redmayne for Matthew Ryan.

    It was a shock move, especially since Ryan is adept at saving penalties himself and there was a spot in the men’s World Cup at stake.

    But one crucial save later and as they say, the rest is history as Redmayne became the ‘Grey Wiggle’ and the Socceroos would go on to make it to the Round of 16.

    Now, back to the Matildas’ clash against France.

    Les Bleus coach Herve Renard decided he would make a late change between the sticks, taking out Pauline Peyraud-Magnin and replacing her with substitute goalkeeper Solene Durand.

    Seven commentator David Basheer couldn’t ignore the scary parallel.

    “It may be a Graham Arnold-type move for France,” Basheer said.

    France’s goalkeeper Solene Durand couldn’t copy Redmayne’s heroics.Source: AFP

    The shock switch no doubt sparked fear among Aussie fans given they knew just how well Arnold’s move played out and how painful it was for Peru at the time.

    With Renard placing his and thus an entire nation’s faith in Durand, there was a mountain of expectation on the 28-year-old’s shoulders – someone who had only made TWO prior appearances for France.

    Part of the switch was to play some mind games with the Matildas, but Renard and his coaching staff had no doubt prepared Durand for such a scenario in training and she’d have been studying every inch of the Australian penalty takers.

    But for a goalkeeper subbed on with the sole intention of saving penalties, Durand didn’t quite have the desired impact.

    Australia’s goalkeeper #18 Mackenzie Arnold is congratulated for her heroics.Source: AFP

    Instead, it was Matildas goalkeeper Mackenzie Arnold who stole the limelight.

    Arnold saved the first penalty of the shootout from France’s Selma Bacha and produced a stunning stop to tip Eve Perisset’s shot onto the post.

    The Queenslander did have a chance to seal the win when she took the fifth penalty, but her effort smacked against the post.

    But Arnold would once again come up big when she denied Kenza Dali not once but twice after VAR ordered a retake as the Aussie came off her line for the first save.

    Matildas coach Tony Gustavsson was full of praise for Arnold, hailing her as one of his now-famous “game changers.”

    “She was unbelievable for the whole game plus penalty shootout,” Gustavsson told Optus Sport.

    “The composure, the bravery, but then also to come back from that miss when she (could have) been the hero of the century.

    “To stay in the game and then come back and be the game changer, I’m so happy for her.”

    Arnold saves the fifth penalty from Eve Perisset of France.Source: Getty Images

    Teammate Steph Catley said about Arnold’s performance: “I just got goosebumps.

    “I’m so happy for her. She’s worked so hard, she’s come into her own, she’s been brave, she backed herself. She’s done what we’ve been waiting for her to do. We’ve all known she’s capable and she’s just gone ahead and taken ownership and done it herself.

    “You can see it in the games and the game play and big saves she makes – but we all know how good she is at penalties. That’s always been her thing. When we went into this, I was like, ‘We’re good. Mac’s going to save probably the lot of them.’

    “I’m just so proud of how far she’s come. She’s incredible. She did something so special tonight.”

    Arnold has certainly cemented herself as a national hero for her penalty heroics, but what makes it even more remarkable is that she has fought her way to become the Matildas’ first choice between the sticks.

    A year ago, Arnold looked like the third choice between the sticks, between veteran Lydia Williams and young superstar Teagan Micah. Micah appears to be the Matildas’ long-term future goalkeeper, but a serious concussion suffered late last year sidelined her for months and gave Arnold a chance to compete for the starting position.

    She secured the gig with a sublime series of performances in the Cup of Nations in February, earning her player-of-the-tournament honours – and she’s never looked back.

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    GOALS WIN GAMES, DEFENCE WINS TROPHIES

    Four clean sheets in five World Cup games is one hell of a record – especially when it includes wins over two of the world’s top-ten teams.

    First it was the Olympic silver medallists Canada in the group stages, and now world number five France.

    The Matildas have turned into a remarkably resilient team at this tournament, but don’t think that it’s come out of nowhere. It’s been the result of years of progression and hard-won lessons.

    When Tony Gustavsson started his tenure in charge of the Matildas, the team conceded ten goals in their first two matches.

    At the last World Cup (2019), Australia’s defence struggled. The Matildas conceded six times in their three group games, and another at the hands of Denmark in a 1-1 draw that led to a heartbreaking penalty shootout defeat.

    France opened this World Cup campaign with a goalless draw with Jamaica, before scoring eight goals in their next two group-stage games, and adding another four in a crushing win of Morocco in the Round of 16. Their entire forward line was firing, none more so than Kadidiatou Diane, who had scored or assisted seven of France’s 12 goals (the most goal involvements of any players this tournament).

    But Clare Hunt and Alanna Kennedy did exceptionally in centre-back to keep her under wraps, while the fullbacks (Ellie Carpenter and Steph Catley) both had strong games against France’s wide players.

    Clare Hunt had a sensational game against France superstar Kadidiatou Diani.Source: Getty Images

    And of course there was Mackenzie Arnold, the goalkeeper earning player of the match honours for her standout performance.

    But Australia’s defensive efforts are not just down to the back line – it is the product of a tactical evolution over the years.

    The team now presses as one, but only in specific moments and scenarios so well-drilled in the team that it becomes instinctive. Coach Gustavsson says his team looks for ‘triggers’ to press. No wonder Australia’s players race at their opponents like bullets from a gun.

    It all starts in the hardworking forward line. That’s part of why having central midfielder Emily van Egmond play as a centre-forward in Sam Kerr’s absence has proven so effective – not just to hold up the ball and pass to teammates going forward, but for her ability to close down opponents using her intelligent reading of space.

    In the midfield, Katrina Gorry and Kyra Cooney-Cross have turned their defensive efforts into an efficient one-two punch – one of them closes down and forces the error, and the other is there to pounce on every loose ball.

    Australia’s players raced to celebrate Vine’s winning kick.Source: News Corp Australia

    It is a mark of the Matildas’ development throughout the years, but equally of their mentality and team spirit, that the defence has been able to weather wave after wave of opposition attacks without crumbling.

    France dominated the first half and had stretches of dominance for the rest of the match, times when they poured forwards and the Matildas’ backs were against the walls – but never beaten. The French took 21 shots in the match without finding the back of the net.

    Sure, the Aussies rode their luck at times against France – they could easily have conceded in the 12th minute when the French missed a sitter, or in extra time when a corner kick bounced off Kennedy’s head into her own net (which was rightly called back for a foul on Foord).

    But the Matildas’ clean sheets aren’t a fluke, they’re a trend. Against France in a friendly the week before the World Cup began, the Matildas won 1-0 – another clean sheet. And their match before that? 2-0 over England. Another clean sheet, another win.

    When they face England on Wednesday, let’s hope the defence stands tall once more.

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  • Chelsea confirms ‘world class’ new manager’s PL return after $1bn disaster

    Chelsea confirms ‘world class’ new manager’s PL return after $1bn disaster

    Mauricio Pochettino is back in the Premier League with the tough task of putting the pieces back together after Chelsea’s disastrous first season under their new ownership.

    The Argentine will take charge of a club that finished 12th in the Premier League despite an eye-watering outlay of more than £550 million (AU$1.04 billion) on new players under Todd Boehly’s consortium.

    “Mauricio is a world-class coach with an outstanding track record. We are all looking forward to having him on board,” Chelsea co-owners Todd Boehly and Behdad Eghbali said in a statement.

    Pochettino made his name in management by making the most of meagre resources at Espanyol, Southampton and particularly during a five-year stint at Tottenham.

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    Eighteen months at Paris Saint-Germain delivered the first silverware of the 51-year-old’s career – the Ligue 1 title and French Cup – but he never appeared comfortable managing the egos of a star-studded squad before leaving in July 2022.

    Pochettino’s man-management skills will face a severe examination at Stamford Bridge as he tries to succeed where three managers have already failed under the new regime.

    Thomas Tuchel, who led Chelsea to Champions League glory in 2021, was unceremoniously sacked by co-owners Boehly and Behdad Eghbali, of private equity firm Clearlake Capital, just seven games into this season.

    At the time Chelsea sat sixth in the Premier League and few could have foreseen the calamity that would follow the German’s departure.

    Graham Potter lasted less than seven months at Stamford Bridge, even though Chelsea paid more than $38 million to snatch the Englishman from Brighton.

    Even worse was to follow as club great Frank Lampard returned as interim boss only to oversee six successive defeats in his first six matches.

    All three bosses have faced the challenge of hands-on owners and a bloated squad.

    Experienced defender Thiago Silva confirmed last month that the club had to extend the dressing room to accommodate a group of more than 30 players.

    A major clear out is needed at the end of the season to give Pochettino a more manageable squad to work with and instil a team spirit that has been sorely lacking.

    Paris Saint-Germain’s Argentinian head coach Mauricio Pochettino. Photo by FRANCK FIFE / AFPSource: AFP

    Chelsea’s huge spending over the past 12 months may mean he has limited room for manoeuvre in the transfer market.

    The Argentine faced a similar challenge at Tottenham, when the club punched above its weight to finish in the top four of the Premier League four times under his leadership.

    The Blues’ spending is under scrutiny due to financial fair play controls but much of their outlay was with one eye on the future.

    Wesley Fofana, Benoit Badiashile, Enzo Fernandez, Mykhailo Mudryk, Carney Chukwuemeka, Noni Madueke, David Datro Fofana, Malo Gusto and Andrey Santos are all 22 or younger.

    Chelsea have been ridiculed for putting some of those players on eight-year contracts, but the club’s ownership are betting on Pochettino’s record with young talent to prove them right.

    He produced impressive results at Tottenham, helping turn young homegrown talents such as Harry Kane and Dele Alli into household names on a budget.

    “I can’t speak highly enough of him. He’s a fantastic manager, a fantastic man,” said England captain Kane, during their time together at Spurs.

    “You just want to perform for him, work hard for him, win for him. He’s very passionate. You can tell sometimes he wants to be out there himself, putting in tackles, running about.

    “You respond to that. On nights like that, big occasions, you just want to do him justice.”

    Before appointing Pochettino, Spurs had only finished in the top four of English top-flight twice in 24 years.

    He also inspired a run to the club’s first-ever Champions League final in 2019 and Tottenham’s struggles since his departure have led to a clamour from fans for his return.

    Pochettino’s reputation appears to be untarnished by his indifferent spell at PSG, given the French giants’ struggles on and off the field this season.

    Should he turn Chelsea’s motley crew back into Premier League contenders, his status as one of the world’s leading managers will be restored.

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  • $950m … for 12th: Fallen giants’ disaster as ‘next title challenger’ arrives — PL Winners and Losers

    $950m … for 12th: Fallen giants’ disaster as ‘next title challenger’ arrives — PL Winners and Losers

    Erling Haaland fired Manchester City to a third consecutive Premier League title, but there was also plenty to celebrate for Arsenal, Newcastle and Manchester United as they secured a return to the Champions League next season.

    Liverpool and Tottenham were among the major disappointments as they crashed out of the top four despite high hopes for the season.

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    Doucoure’s ROCKET keeps Everton up | 01:10

    Chelsea’s scale of underachievement took some beating as the Blues finished 12th after spending over £500 million ($A950 million) on new players.

    After Sunday’s final round of fixtures, AFP Sport looks at the winners and losers from the 2022/23 Premier League season:

    WINNERS

    Erling Haaland

    Haaland already has one trophy, individual prizes and a series of new records to show for his first season in England and is still only getting started.

    Any doubts over how Pep Guardiola’s men would adjust to having a focal point up front were banished as Haaland’s 36 Premier League goals set a single-season record.

    The 22-year-old has collected a clean sweep of Premier League player, young player and football writers’ player of the season awards.

    But it is two more pieces of silverware that will turn Haaland’s remarkable season into a historic one.

    Beat Manchester United in the FA Cup final on June 3 and Inter Milan a week later in the Champions League final and City will become just the second English side to ever do the treble.

    Manchester City’s Norwegian striker Erling Haaland.Source: AFP

    Brighton

    Brighton were one of the beneficiaries of a season of managerial change despite having their coach Graham Potter poached by Chelsea in September.

    The Seagulls duly pocketed £20 million in compensation for Potter and hired Roberto De Zerbi, who has led the club into Europe for the first time in their history.

    Guardiola hailed the Italian as “one of the most influential managers of the last 20 years” for his revolutionary style that has made Brighton one of the most attractive sides in Europe to watch.

    The Premier League’s predators are already waiting to pounce for the likes of Moises Caicedo and Alexis Mac Allister in the transfer window, but Brighton have become a conveyor belt of young talent.

    Of the 20 goals scored by teenagers in the Premier League this season, 11 came from the Brighton trio Evan Ferguson, Julio Enciso and Facundo Buonanotte.

    From hope to horror in 92-seconds | 00:46

    Newcastle

    Backed by the Saudi sovereign wealth fund, Newcastle look the best long-term bet to challenge Manchester City’s dominance of English football.

    But few expected the Magpies’ rise to be so rapid that they could secure Champions League football for the first time in 20 years in the first full season under the new regime.

    Newcastle’s success can also not be explained solely by money. They appear to have learned from the early days of other state-backed projects City and Paris Saint-Germain in not splashing out immediately on superstars.

    Instead, Eddie Howe has managed to get the best out of players that were previously seen as expensive flops on Tyneside such as Joelinton and Miguel Almiron and fostered a fine team spirit despite an influx of new arrivals.

    LOSERS

    Chelsea

    The Blues finished with their lowest ever Premier League points tally despite spending more than any club ever has in one season in the transfer market.

    Mauricio Pochettino is expected to be named as the new man in charge at Stamford Bridge in the coming days, but the Argentine has a huge job on his hands to turn a bloated squad back into contenders at the top of the table.

    The biggest concern for Chelsea fans will be whether the club’s new owners will quickly learn from their foolhardy approach in their first season in charge.

    Managerial stability

    Only nine Premier League sides ended this term with the same man in charge that started the campaign, with a record 14 managers dismissed throughout the course of the season.

    But a change of coach rarely brought about the desired result. Chelsea, relegated Southampton and Leeds were the three clubs to fire two managers.

    By contrast, there were no sackings among the clubs that finished in the top six, while Brentford and Fulham enjoyed brilliant seasons under Thomas Frank and Marco Silva respectively.

    Even at the bottom, West Ham and Nottingham Forest were rewarded for sticking by David Moyes and Steve Cooper as they stayed up.

    Leicester

    Seven years after their stunning title triumph, Leicester will swap trips to Anfield, Old Trafford and the Etihad Stadium for less glamourous assignments at Rotherham, Plymouth and Hull in the Championship next season.

    Relegated Leicester’s fall from grace came as a huge shock as a talented squad boasting the likes of James Maddison and Youri Tielemans failed to deliver on their potential.

    A run of two wins in their last 17 games sealed Leicester’s fate as they crashed into the second tier for the first time since 2014.

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  • Horror end to miracle champ’s seven-year hell amid unthinkable PL first: Relegation state of play

    Horror end to miracle champ’s seven-year hell amid unthinkable PL first: Relegation state of play

    It was a miserable weekend for the Premier League’s bottom clubs, but it only made one of the most fascinating relegation battles in years more intriguing.

    The bottom eight clubs are separated by just 11 points as the Premier League enters the final stretch. For most sides, just seven games remain – seven chances to ensure survival in the world’s greatest league.

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    Making this race to the finish even more thrilling is the historic nature of the clubs in strife.

    It marks a significant change from standard yo-young of teams between the first and second tiers. For example, this year two of the promoted teams Fulham and Bournemouth were back in the top flight after just one and two years out. Two of the teams they replaced – Watford and Norwich City – were both relegated after just one year in the top flight.

    This year, things could be very different.

    Rock-bottom Southampton has spent 11 consecutive seasons in the Premier League, but this one is almost guaranteed to be their last if they can’t find a late-season miracle.

    Second-last is Leicester, who won the league in 2015-16 and finished fifth twice since then, as well as lifting the FA Cup in 2021. They’ve been in the top flight since 2014-15 but now seem destined for the drop.

    Another established club at risk of relegation is 17th-placed Everton, a club that has been in England’s top flight since 1954-55 – the second-longest stint in the first division behind Arsenal, who were last relegated in 1912-13 and returned to the first tier in 1919-20.

    And in the hunt for survival is West Ham, also in their 11th straight season in the league but suffering a dramatic fall from grace after finishing seventh last campaign.

    The historic nature of so many of the clubs at the bottom end of the table has made this a relegation rumble for the ages.

    Here’s the state of play as the home stretch approaches.

    Arsenal blow 2-0 lead over West Ham | 01:55

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    12TH: CRYSTAL PALACE — 36 points

    It might seem bizarre to put a team as high as 12th in a relegation discussion. But the only reason Palace isn’t in huge danger of being relegated is their immense form in recent weeks. The return of Roy Hodgson to the dugout has delivered a huge bounce. Three straight wins, with nine goals scored and just two conceded. Yes, all three have been against bottom sides (Leicester, Leeds, Southampton), but those relegation ‘six pointers’ have given Palace a crucial boost in points as well as confidence.

    After three straight games against fellow strugglers, their next three matches are also against teams below them – Everton, Wolves, and West Ham.

    Win those, and they’ll be flying well clear of danger.

    Lose, and their relegation fears could come back even stronger than before. The most interesting part of their final run of games is their season-ender – hosting Nottingham Forest in a match that could have huge implications for the currently second-bottom side.

    Remaining games: Everton (h), Wolves (a), West Ham (h), Tottenham (a), Bournemouth (h), Fulham (a), Nottingham Forest (h).

    Roy Hodgson has Crystal Palace playing some lovely stuff since returning to Selhurst Park. (Photo by Bryn Lennon/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    13TH: WOLVES — 34 points

    Despite sitting bottom of the table at Christmas, Wolves have climbed off the canvas and are sitting pretty in 13th.

    Julen Lopetegui has overseen a remarkable reversal in fortunes at Molineux with impressive wins over the likes of Liverpool, Tottenham, Chelsea and Brentford in the new year.

    Given Wolves have proven capable of beating some of the Premier League’s big boys, it should give the side plenty of confidence given they face four teams in the top seven before the season is done.

    But they also encounter a number of relegation rivals in the final stretch, giving them a chance to put further distance between them and the dreaded drop.

    Two wins is all it will take for Wolves to get to the magical 40-point mark and given some of the teams they have to face, it’s hard to see them capitulating from this point onwards.

    Remaining games: Leicester (a), Crystal Palace (h), Brighton (a), Aston Villa (h), Man Utd (a), Everton (h), Arsenal (a)

    Julen Lopetegui has brought Wolves from the bottom of the table to 13th. (Photo by Eddie Keogh/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    14TH: BOURNEMOUTH — 33 points

    There’s rollercoaster seasons and then there is Bournemouth’s 2022/23 campaign.

    The Cherries beat Aston Villa on the opening day of the season and then went on to lose their next three games, albeit they were against Manchester City, Arsenal and Liverpool, with the latter a 9-0 defeat that cost Scott Parker his job.

    Gary O’Neil took over and guided Bournemouth to a six-game unbeaten run where they rose as high as 10th, but they’d go on to tumble down the ladder with two wins from their next 15 games.

    Sitting rock-bottom on the table, many wouldn’t have been surprised if Bournemouth had no more punches left to throw.

    But O’Neil, who is in his first managerial gig, has revived the Cherries as they have won four of their last six games.

    Based on table positions, Bournemouth have an extremely favourable run to the end of the season as they face just one team in the top 10: Manchester United.

    Bournemouth’s destiny is very much in their own hands and based off their impressive recent scalps of Liverpool, Fulham and Tottenham, the Cherries’ second wind might be enough to preserve their Premier League status for another season.

    Remaining games: West Ham (h), Southampton (a), Leeds (h), Chelsea (h), Crystal Palace (a), Man Utd (h), Everton (a).

    After a nightmare start to the season, Bournemouth could end up being safe after all. (Photo by Adrian DENNIS / AFP)Source: AFP

    15TH: WEST HAM — 31 points

    With the quality at their disposal – including England midfielder Declan Rice – it is immensely surprising to see the Hammers struggle so badly this season.

    Add to that the kind of gutsy effort they delivered on the weekend, fighting back from two goals down to draw against league-leading Arsenal, and the Hammers feel like a team that should be comfortably in the top-half of the ladder.

    Last year they finished seventh in the league and earned qualification to the Europa Conference League – the third tier of continental competition beneath the Champions and Europa leagues.

    Balancing the additional minutes and travel of European competition has proven a tricky task for many teams, and that’s been the case for the Hammers this season.

    Nevertheless, they remain alive in that competition, and will next travel to Gent for the second leg of their quarter-final this Friday morning AEST, with the score currently 1-1 on aggregate.

    And their recent form in the league has been strong as well – two wins and two draws from their last five, plus a game in hand to boot.

    There have been tough moments, like when Newcastle put five past them earlier this month.

    But even including those kinds of big defeats, they have still conceded just 41 goals this season – fewer than the likes of fifth-placed Tottenham or top-10 pair Brentford and Fulham.

    After Bournemouth next up, they’ve got a very tricky run: the Reds, Palace, then City and United. Things could turn very concerning very quickly.

    Their final two matches, against Leeds and Leicester, could easily end up being win-or-go-down encounters. Bring it on!

    Remaining games:Bournemouth (a), Liverpool (h), Crystal Palace (a), Man City (a), Man United (h), Brentford (a), Leeds (h), Leicester (a)

    David Moyes must save the Hammers yet again. (Photo by Alex Pantling/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    16TH: LEEDS UNITED — 29 points

    When legendary college football coach Bear Bryant coined the phrase “offence sells tickets, defence wins championships,” someone evidently forgot to tell Leeds United.

    Granted, the Yorkshire outfit aren’t gunning for the title, but Bryant’s quote is still relevant when you’re in a relegation dogfight and you’ve just shipped 11 goals in two games.

    Leeds’ midfield and backline had more holes in it than a block of Swiss cheese as Crystal Palace and Liverpool ran riot in 5-1 and 6-1 victories respectively.

    The losses also consigned Leeds to the worst defensive record in the league having conceded 60 goals all season long.

    Leeds also had the third-worst goal difference last season but were saved by a last-day win against Brentford, so these problems at the back aren’t exactly an isolated incident.

    Javi Gracia must find a way to tighten up the Premier League’s leakiest backline as they search for their first clean sheet since a 1-0 win against last-placed Southampton on February 26.

    That might be a tall ask given they face three teams in the top five in the final four games of the season, but if they can at least stem the tide of goals at the back, it’ll give them a fighting chance.

    Remaining games: Fulham (a), Leicester (h), Bournemouth (a), Man City (a), Newcastle (h), West Ham (a), Tottenham (h)

    Leeds’ defensive woes have been exposed in alarming fashion recently. (Photo by Stu Forster/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    17TH: EVERTON — 27 points

    The Toffees shipped three goals to Fulham on the weekend and looked utterly devoid of confidence.
    Their next three games could define their chances – they face the resurgent Palace before Newcastle, before a massive clash with Leicester. Last year, they pulled off a great escape. Former Burnley boss Sean Dyche replaced Frank Lampard in January in a bid to provide stable, no-nonsense leadership to the struggling Toffees.

    But with Burnley already securing their promotion to the top flight with a sublime Championship campaign under Man City great Vincent Kompany, it could well come at the cost of Dyche’s Everton.

    Failure to stay in the English top flight would mean Everton loses its membership card to an exclusive club of teams to have never been relegated from the Premier League and that’s an honour, if you can call it that, Dyche will not want to be associated with.

    Remaining games: Crystal Palace (a), Newcastle (h), Leicester (a), Brighton (a), Man City (h), Wolves (a), Bournemouth (h)

    Sean Dyche is hoping to avoid being the man to end Everton’s spell in the Premier League. (Photo by Gareth Copley/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    18TH: NOTTINGHAM FOREST — 27 points

    Ahead of this season, the promoted side made a splash in the transfer window with a radical squad overhaul, bringing in a British-record 21 new players.

    They followed it up with even more transfers in January, taking them to over 30 arrivals since their promotion!

    It was a high risk strategy – but as Fulham discovered a few years earlier, it can have disastrous consequences.

    Forest won just one of their first 11 games as their new-look squad failed to gel together.

    Manager Steve Cooper somehow survived the sack and Forest slowly found their feet to slowly climb out of the relegation zone and up to 13th after solid performances between November and early February.

    However, they’ve slipped right back down after failing to win in ten games since February 6. With some of their relegation rivals enjoying a new-manager bounce after sacking their head coaches, Cooper once again appears on the brink of the sack.

    A trio of tricky games looms – Liverpool at Anfield, Brighton, then away to Brentford. Three losses would very likely see Cooper punted in a last-ditch bid for survival.

    If he does stay around – and if he does keep the team up – it would be a remarkable achievement.

    As veteran coach Sam Allardyce told the No Tippy Tappy Football podcast last month: “If Nottingham Forest survive relegation, Steve Cooper has definitely done the best job of all the managers in the Premier League this season.

    “What becomes difficult in terms of building team spirit is having too many players. Most managers don’t have enough. What they don’t have enough of is quality, and what they don’t want is quantity.

    “It’s counter-productive when you have so many players. Not only because most of the players aren’t going to achieve the heights that you need, but you also have a number of players that aren’t involved in the squad that become antagonists and become your problem.”

    Remaining games: Liverpool (a), Brighton (h), Brentford (a), Southampton (h), Chelsea (a), Arsenal (h), Crystal Palace (a)

    Steve Cooper could be up for a managerial gong should he keep Nottingham Forest in the Premier League. (Photo by Darren Staples / AFP)Source: AFP

    19TH: LEICESTER CITY — 25 points

    Leicester have bounced from woeful relegation locks, to safe and sound, and all the way back down into the red zone in a rollercoaster campaign. They haven’t won in nine games now, including three since Brendan Rodgers was sacked. But they’ve got a crucial few games ahead – facing Wolves, Leeds then Everton in a three-game run that could make or break their survival hopes.

    With Fulham, Liverpool, and Newcastle after that – all top-half-teams – they could be done and dusted even before juicy final-round clash with 15th-placed West Ham.

    Considering the Foxes were Premier League champions just seven years ago and made it to the semi-finals of the Europa Conference League last season, it would represent an almighty fall from grace.

    Remaining games: Wolves (h), Leeds (a), Everton (h), Fulham (a), Liverpool (h), Newcastle (a), West Ham (h).

    20TH: SOUTHAMPTON23 points

    The Saints are winless in six, and have been rooted to the bottom of the table since Boxing Day last year.

    Using three different managers this season hasn’t seemed to solve their problems – a lack of cutting edge up front and giving away cheap goals at the other end.

    Their 11th-straight season in the Premier League might be their last.

    Remaining games: Arsenal (a), Bournemouth (h), Newcastle (a), Nottingham (a), Fulham (h), Brighton (a), Liverpool (h)

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