Tag: Western Asia

  • ‘Laughing stock’… or ‘village idiots’ who can’t hack an Aussie? Making sense of Ange ‘agenda’ claim

    ‘Laughing stock’… or ‘village idiots’ who can’t hack an Aussie? Making sense of Ange ‘agenda’ claim

    The tight rope Ange Postecoglou is walking is getting narrower.

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    That is to be expected when a big six club like Tottenham sits 14th on the Premier League table almost two-thirds of the way through the season.

    This time last week Spurs were still in the Carabao Cup, FA Cup and the Europa League.

    Now, only the latter remains.

    The results are not stacking up in the Australian’s favour, but there is an unshakeable feeling among his backers that if he was not an outsider in English football, he might be afforded more rope.

    It has been highly publicised that Tottenham have been hit with an injury crisis in recent months.

    It was back in December that Postecoglou grumbled “I’m just going to stop answering these questions. If people can’t see the obvious, I’m not going to point it out,” when asked yet another question about what is going wrong after his side were battered by Liverpool 6-2 at home.

    Spurs out of FA Cup with loss to Villa | 01:18

    Then on Sunday, he called out the English media once again, saying there is an “agenda” against his team.

    “There’s got to be a better appreciation for what a very small group of players have been doing for the last two and a half months,” he said.

    “It can’t be that people think that’s an excuse. That’s just not anywhere near close to objective analysis. That’s just agenda-driven stuff.

    “If it’s to get rid of me that’s fine. Good on ya. Go for it a million times.

    “But in terms of this group of players, what they’ve given over the past two and half months has been outstanding, it’s a credit to them, I can’t speak highly enough of them.”

    Yet, the questions keep coming despite the most glaring issue being clear for all to see.

    Postecoglou has been repeatedly forced to put out a makeshift defence with first choice goalkeeper Guglielmo Vicario, centre back pairing Cristian Romero and Micky van de Ven, and left-back Destiny Udogie all spending extended periods on the sidelines.

    Further afield, midfielders Rodrigo Bentancur and Yves Bissouma have been regularly unavailable, while their goal scoring stocks have suffered the blows of injuries to Dominic Solanke, Brennan Johnson and James Maddison at various times.

    Logically, it is no surprise that the losses have mounted.

    Liverpool sink Spurs in run to final | 02:05

    Just as they did for Newcastle United last season.

    The Magpies lost ten of their first 21 Premier League encounters last campaign.

    Undeniably, not good enough for a club with a lot of financial power considering its 80% per cent ownership by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, well-known for funding LIV Golf and spreading their wealth throughout the sporting world in recent years.

    But manager Eddie Howe faced nowhere near the level of scrutiny Postecoglou has received.

    It was widely accepted that the Englishman, who made his name by taking Bournemouth to the Premier League for the first time, had his hands tied by an injury-riddled squad.

    The added pressure of mid-week European competition, Newcastle played in the Champions League for the first time in 20 years, as well as cup fixtures and always demanding league schedule took its toll.

    It sounds familiar to Postecoglou’s current predicament.

    But unlike in Howe’s case, the English press, pundits, former players and fans have been baying for blood.

    And despite sometimes justified criticism of Postecoglou’s polarising tactics, some of the reasons for doing so have not always been fair.

    “Spurs’ Australian head coach is the latest target of the village idiots; the half-pint pundits and critics who prefer to laugh at the fact he finishes his sentences with ‘mate’ than listen to him contextualising his team’s problems,” football news correspondent for the UK Telegraph Matt Law wrote.

    The mockery unfortunately goes hand-in-hand with the club Postecoglou is at.

    Tottenham are repeatedly a laughing stock among rival fans courtesy of the well-documented absence of silverware in their trophy cabinet since 2008.

    The regularity with which they sack managers, Postecoglou is their 12th permanent manager this century, is the bud of many jokes.

    So too is the behaviour of their fans, who even wanted their own team to lose the penultimate game of last Premier League season at home to Manchester City, which they did 2-0, to deny arch enemies Arsenal the title.

    Therefore, of course, when an Australian arrived in north London with tales of how he has won a trophy in his second season with Celtic, Yokohama F. Marinos, the Socceroos, Brisbane Roar and South Melbourne, the punch lines were being written.

    Add to that the fact he had shown an unwavering commitment to attacking football, even when times are tough. That was until their last Premier League outing, a 2-0 victory away at Brentford, as a more defensive approach broke a seven-game winless streak in the league.

    Spurs sat deeper and gritted their teeth for 90 minutes, showing that they can be more resolute in defence, but Postecoglou is still spoken of as a madman.

    There are choruses of laughter in pubs and football clubs across England at Postecoglou’s and Tottenham’s expense, and they have only grown louder in recent days.

    Ange denies Tel initially rejected Spurs | 01:11

    In the past week, another dismantling by Liverpool, in the form of a 4-0 drubbing at Anfield in the second leg of their Carabao Cup semi-final after leading 1-0 following the first leg, was followed by a 2-1 defeat at Villa Park in the fourth round of the FA Cup.

    There is little shame in losing to the Premier League leaders, or Aston Villa have qualified for the Champions League Round of 16, but that did not prevent the pile on.

    Former Tottenham midfielder Jamie Redknapp was scathing on Sky Sports after the Liverpool loss, saying “I cannot remember a team in my lifetime go down with less of a fight with what Spurs did today”.

    “Not having one shot on target in the semi-final of a second leg when you’re trying to change the course of your history?” he added.

    Fellow former Spurs midfielder Jamie O’Hara, who has been a very vocal critic of Postecoglou, took to X to call for his sacking.

    “It’s time to go now, Ange is out of his depth. [Unai] Emery is on a different planet compared to him and his players bopped us off the park. Should have been five, we’re like reserve team playing in academy games that don’t matter, it’s crazy,” O’Hara wrote.

    It did not help things for Postecoglou either that Liverpool great Jamie Carragher opted to rub further salt into Spurs’ wounds.

    “It’s Tottenham!” Carragher said on Sky Sports. “When do Tottenham ever win a big game? When do Tottenham ever go and surprise, win against the odds?”

    The last few months it must have felt like Postecoglou was being forced to play game after game at a casino where the house always wins.

    With the injury crisis, the odds have been massively skewed against them, but the cup competitions kept the hope alive.

    Now, only the European dream remains to fulfil the Postecoglou prophecy of winning yet another trophy in his second season in charge of a team.

    Spurs finished fourth in the new look league phase of the Europa League with five wins, two draws and a loss to automatically advance to the Round of 16.

    Awaiting them will be one of Midtjylland, AZ Alkmaar, Real Sociedad or Galatasaray but arguably more important than the opponent they face, will be the respite Postecoglou’s injury hit squad receive.

    Their next European clash is not until March 6 as they will enjoy some much-needed breathing space between matches this month after a manic December and January.

    Tension eases as Spurs advance in Europa | 01:57

    Spurs played 17 matches across all competitions in that stretch as the casualty ward overflowed.

    It was reported by the UK Telegraph on Monday that Postecoglou has implemented a much-needed reset by affording the squad two days off this week to recharge the batteries before facing Manchester United at home in the league on Sunday.

    “The boys who are coming back, we’ll get the opportunity to give them a whole week of training, which is great,” Postecoglou said.

    “By the time we get to the back end of the week we should have something resembling a squad of players to prepare for a big game. That then folds into the following week when, again, we’ve got seven days and no midweek game to prepare for the next game.

    “So that gives us a real good opportunity to get some work into the guys who have been out for quite a while and give some rest to the guys who have been going at it. So by the time we get back to being in Europe and having midweek games we’ll be in a much better shape.”

    Postecoglou will be hoping the refresh, along with the possible returns of Vicario, Udogie, Maddison, Johnson and Wilson Odobert will be the morale booster the playing group desperately needs.

    Their frustrations came to the fore during the Villa loss on Sunday.

    “Spence ripped off his sock tape, threw it on the ground and headed straight down the tunnel with Yves Bissouma at full time,” The Athletic’s Jay Harris wrote.

    “Pedro Porro jumped up after being nutmegged and left in a heap on the floor by Marcus Rashford. He then brought Villa’s new striker down with a wild kick on the edge of the box and somehow escaped punishment. The Spain international received a yellow card in the final 10 minutes for a tackle on Ramsey.

    “Bentancur was booked for dragging down Rogers. Bergvall jumped into a tackle on Rogers and then clattered into him later on. He eventually picked up a booking for a foul on Ramsey, too.

    “These are the moments when Postecoglou needs his senior players, including the captain Son and Dejan Kulusevski, to calm everyone down.”

    Jovial Ange jokes before crucial goal | 00:57

    If the players can reset, they may be able to claw their way back to the days of Postecoglou’s honeymoon period at Spurs.

    The 59-year-old was a breath of fresh air when Tottenham amassed 26 points in his first ten games in charge, a Premier League record, when he took over last season.

    Most promising for Postecoglou is that the formula is still there.

    “The statistics still tell us this Tottenham team, for all their struggles this season, play a little differently to everyone else. The principles of play that had Postecoglou’s Spurs five points clear at the top of the table early last season remain in place,” Sky Sports’ Adam Bate wrote.

    “No team in the Premier League has won the ball high up the pitch more times than Tottenham. No team allows so few passes per defensive action. No team plays with more width than Tottenham. By design, it is supposed to be intense and expansive.”

    The numbers are a promising sign that if the medical staff can get most of their stars back on the pitch, the performances may turn quickly.

    Who knows what will happen in the Europa League knockouts, but for what it is worth, Howe’s Newcastle won nine and drew four of their final 17 Premier League games last season once the midweek grind subsided.

    They finished seventh, and currently sit sixth, two points shy of fourth-placed Chelsea and one of the lucrative Champions League places.

    Perhaps if Postecoglou is afforded the leniency of an Englishman, he may have the time to turn things around in a similar fashion.

    Who knows, they still have one chance to fulfil his trophy prophecy.

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  • Football 2024: Cristiano Ronaldo turns 40, Saudi Pro League, 1000 career goals, records, goalscoring, Al Nassr, Karim Benzema, news, videos

    Football 2024: Cristiano Ronaldo turns 40, Saudi Pro League, 1000 career goals, records, goalscoring, Al Nassr, Karim Benzema, news, videos

    Cristiano Ronaldo’s playing days may be numbered but his following is bigger than ever as he celebrates his 40th birthday in his adopted home of Saudi Arabia on Wednesday.

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    The Portuguese great appeared to trade an end-of-career payday for football obscurity when he moved to Riyadh’s Al Nassr two years ago in a deal said to be worth $250 million.

    But his influence became clear when he was followed by a parade of ageing superstars, including Karim Benzema and the perennially injured Neymar, to the big-spending Saudi Pro League.

    Saudi Arabia was then awarded the 2034 World Cup in December, the crowning glory for the oil-rich kingdom’s strategy of revamping its image through sports, tourism and culture.

    Leading the charge has been Ronaldo, an ambassador for the Saudi World Cup and now an online phenomenon, with more than a billion followers across his social media channels.

    When Ronaldo launched his YouTube channel in August, he gained one million subscribers in just 90 minutes and 20 million within 24 hours. He currently has 73.5 million.

    While Ronaldo’s perfect white teeth, bulging torso and product promotions are ubiquitous online, he remains equally energetic on the pitch.

    Cristiano Ronaldo of Al Nassr celebrates with his teammates after scoring his team’s second goal from a penalty during the AFC Champions League Elite match between Al-Nassr and Al Wasl at King Saud University Stadium on February 03, 2025 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (Photo by Abdullah Ahmed/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

    He scored twice for Al Nassr on Monday, including a trademark leaping header, and berates his own and teammates’ mistakes as fiercely as if he was still playing El Clasico for Real Madrid.

    “With age, one’s physical prowess diminishes hence it would have been easy for Ronaldo to take Saudi Arabian money and gently fade from view,” Simon Chadwick, professor of Sport and Geopolitical Economy at Skema Business School, told AFP.

    “However, the gusto and passion that he continues to display suggests a consummate professional, deeply passionate player, and a physically determined athlete, the likes of which we don’t commonly see,” he added.

    Although World Cup glory has probably eluded him, unlike his Argentine rival Lionel Messi, records still dangle in front of the five-time Ballon d’Or and Champions League winner.

    In September he passed 900 professional goals, an unmatched feat in official matches. Now on 923, and with a record 35 Saudi Pro League goals last season, the hallowed 1,000 is not too far away.

    New details in Sam Kerr trial | 01:48

    Despite this prodigious form Ronaldo is yet to win a Saudi or continental trophy with Al Nassr, with the Arab Club Champions Cup of 2023 his only triumph with the club.

    Questions now surround his future as his contract expires in June, with no confirmation on whether he will extend his stint in Saudi Arabia.

    Stay, go or retire, he has indelibly changed football in the desert country, while managing to grow his own brand at the same time.

    “Undoubtedly, his presence was key for the Saudi bid for the World Cup, especially with his constant positive talk about Saudi Arabia,” Egyptian TV football analyst Omar Nassef told AFP.

    “Ronaldo’s presence opened the way for players at European elite clubs to come directly to the Saudi league.

    “It’s not only about the amount of money, it’s also about going to play in a league that has one of the best players in the world.”

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  • $554m for ONE goal: One of football’s worst deals ever meets costly end

    $554m for ONE goal: One of football’s worst deals ever meets costly end

    Brazilian superstar Neymar has left sections of the football world in meltdown with an announcement about his return to boyhood club Santos expected to be made within days.

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    Saudi giant Al Hilal on Monday night released a statement to confirm the club had reached a mutual agreement to release the former Barcelona star from his mega-contract.

    The Champions League winner shared a message on Tuesday night, saying goodbye to his Saudi Pro League fans.

    “To everyone at Al Hilal, to the fans, Thank you,” he posted on X.

    “I gave everything to play and I wish we enjoyed better times on the pitch together.

    “To Saudi, thank you for giving me and my family a new home and new experiences I now know the real Saudi and have friends for life. I always felt your love and passion for the game. I will be following your journey ahead as a club and a country towards 2034.

    “Your future will be incredible, special things are happening and I will always support you.”

    Al Hilal’s Brazilian forward Neymar warms up. Photo by AFP.Source: AFP

    Neymar’s deal was reported to have been worth a staggering $215 million (£129m) per-year, The Sun reports.

    And after leaving following 18 months at the club, it meant he earned £193.8m in total.

    That breaks down to an outrageous $4.1 million (£2.5m) per-week.

    Combined with his transfer fee, Al-Hilal effectively paid $452 million (£271m) for Neymar’s single goal and three assists in seven matches.

    Al Hilal’s nightmare isn’t even over yet.

    Neymar will still pocket $87 million (£51.9m) of the wages he was owed for the remainder of the season, agreeing to give up just 15 per cent – which works out to $13 million (£8m).

    That means by the end of the season, his single goal will have cost over $554 million (£322m), while each appearance will have been worth £46m.

    If all that wasn’t enough, Neymar also raked in a cool £136m from commercial income, separate to his wage from Al-Hilal.

    The former Paris Saint-Germain winger played just seven times since joining the club in August 2023.

    Neymar was the subject of what is still the biggest transfer in football history when he joined Paris Saint-Germain from Barcelona in 2017 for a fee of 220 million euros.

    He followed fellow superstars Cristiano Ronaldo and Karim Benzema to the lucrative Saudi league.

    But two months after his arrival in Riyadh, he ruptured a cruciate ligament in his left knee while playing for Brazil in a World Cup qualifier in October 2023, which kept him on the sidelines for a year.

    He returned for Al Hilal with two brief appearances in October and November but injured a hamstring and has not played since.

    Club’s blunt Neymar statement as boyhood fairy tale nears

    Al-Hilal’s statement confirming Neymar’s exit was short and sweet.

    “The club expresses its thanks and appreciation to Neymar for what he has provided throughout his career with Al-Hilal, and wish the player success in his career,” said a club statement posted on social media.

    The decision to release Neymar came after boss Jorge Jesus admitted the player was no longer capable of the required physical demands.

    He said: “Neymar can no longer perform at the level we are used to.

    “Things have become difficult for him, unfortunately.”

    While Neymar had been courted by MLS teams in the United States, reports in Brazil said Santos, the club where Neymar made his name, was in talks for him to return to his homeland.

    A return to Brazil would likely be the last chance for a player who is his country’s all-time leading scorer with 79 goals in 127 matches.

    Neymar scores for Brazil at the 2022 World Cup. Photo by Justin Setterfield/Getty Images.Source: Getty Images

    Club president Marcelo Teixeira took to Instagram to deliver the message to Neymar on Tuesday night but did not officially confirm the 32-year-old’s return to the club where he first broke through in 2009.

    “The time has come, Neymar. The time has come for you to return to your people. To your home, to our beloved club,” said Teixeira.

    “Welcome back, Ney boy!… Come and be happy again in the sacred jersey. The Santos nation awaits you with open arms.”

    Earlier in January, Neymar said he was aiming to play the 2026 World Cup, to be hosted in the US, Canada and Mexico.

    “I know this will be my last World Cup, my last shot, my last chance and I will do everything I can to play in it,” he told CNN.

    At the start of his career he was cast as the heir to Pele.

    After scoring 107 goals in 177 appearances for Santos, he joined Barcelona in 2013, becoming the young star of a team that also featured Lionel Messi and Luis Suarez, which swept to the Champions League title in 2015 by beating Juventus 3-1 in the final in Berlin.

    A year later he scored the winning penalty in a shootout as Brazil won the men’s football gold medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics.

    In 2017, Qatar-owned Paris Saint-Germain prised him away from Barcelona with what is still a world-record transfer fee of 220 million euros ($230 million).

    He won five Ligue 1 titles and he and prolific French forward Kylian Mbappe led PSG to the final of the Champions League in the Covid-blighted 2019-2020, but they lost to Bayern Munich.

    PSG reunited Neymar with Messi in the French capital, but the trio with Mbappe failed to gel as personal rivalries got in the way and he was pushed to the exit, and to Saudi Arabia, by the Parisian management in 2023.

    — with AFP

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  • ‘His level was really poor’: Socceroos boss’ massive reality check for flashy young stars

    ‘His level was really poor’: Socceroos boss’ massive reality check for flashy young stars

    From the minutiae, to next-gen stars not pulling their weight, Socceroos coach Tony Popovic and his team of assistants are poring over every detail of his tenure so far.

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    Whether they have held too many meetings, or too few, and the length of the meetings. The content of training sessions and how messages are delivered during those sessions … they all form part of the discussions at Football Australia’s new headquarters in Sydney.

    Popovic, who took charge of the side for the first time during the October window last year, has six points from four games in charge; which sees the Socceroos sitting in second place in Group C during the third round of qualifying for the 2026 World Cup in North America. Everyone involved knows staying there for four more games will deliver automatic qualification for football’s showpiece event. Yet failure to do so will force the side into the fourth and possibly fifth rounds of qualifying, where the path to the first ever 48-team World Cup gets slimmer and slimmer.

    In two months, the wild ride to the biggest-ever edition of the tournament resumes. Indonesia, with newly installed coach Patrick Kluivert (yes, the Dutch legend) at the helm, travel to Sydney; where anything less than three points for the hosts will set alarm bells ringing.

    It’s no wonder Popovic is looking into every crevasse to ensure nothing gets missed.

    While discussing intricate details this week, Popovic also chose to address something a little larger.

    Asked about one-time wonderkid Daniel Arzani and where he was at in his journey, the Socceroos boss lined up the Melbourne Victory winger like he did to opponents during his glittering playing career.

    “I know Daniel well and he’s got potential,” Popovic started, while shifting in his seat.

    “We talk about him with potential and I think we’ve been talking about that since he was 18.”

    READ MORE

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    ‘Absolutely gutted’: Disastrous injury confirmed for Socceroos giant in already-weakened spot

    Tony Popovic on the sideline for Australian in Bahrain.Source: Getty Images

    Arzani has carried the tag of “the next big thing” in Australian football since bursting onto the scene in 2018 with a flurry of dribbles, assists, goals and awards for Melbourne City in the A-League.

    His dazzling feet, smart decision-making and ability to glide past defenders earned him a shock spot in Bert van Marwijk’s Socceroos squad for the 2018 World Cup in Russia, where he came on as a second-half substitute in group stage games against France, Demark and Peru in a side that exited the tournament with two defeats and a draw.

    A transfer from Melbourne City to Manchester City followed straight after the tournament and he was loaned to Scottish giants Celtic after barely having time to unpack his bags. After a few false dawns since the era of the golden generation, it appeared Australian football had finally (no, really) found its next big thing; only for an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury on his Celtic debut to send the trajectory of Arzani’s career on another path.

    Loan spells in the Netherlands, Denmark and Belgium followed, before he landed back in the A-League with Macarthur after a four-year spell that felt more like a cyclone than sport.

    A move to Melbourne Victory a year later, with Popovic then at the helm, saw Arzani rediscover some of his best form.

    Now 26, the winger might feel singled out by what his former club boss, now in charge of the national side, shared next; though it’s nothing Popovic hasn’t told Arzani to his face, and really about something bigger than one player.

    It is about the clamour for a player with Arzani’s skillset – and there have been several over the years – to be given every opportunity to shine even if they might not be ready. It’s about the desperation from fans to see the national side play a brand of football that you might find on a street in any city in Brazil. Adjacent to that noise is a coach who sees every minute of every game, training session and moment in between, with and without the ball. Instead of flashy social media clips, they form a fuller picture. Perspective is everything.

    Daniel Arzani (2nd L) isn’t at the top of Tony Popovic’s selection list currently.Source: Getty Images

    Arzani has seven Socceroos appearances to his name. Six of those came prior to his ACL tear in 2018. If not for that misfortune, he’d probably have many more caps on his resume, but good form with Victory saw him picked for the final window of the second round of qualifying in June last year. He’d miss selection for the first window of the third round in September – which turned out to be Graham Arnold’s last in charge before stepping away – but Popovic re-ignited the relationship in October.

    What he saw left him underwhelmed and Arzani didn’t get on the field.

    “When he doesn’t play everyone questions why he doesn’t play, but he needs to raise his level,” Popovic said bluntly.

    “Doing one good dribble or doing one good trick or setting up one goal should not be enough to play for the Socceroos.”

    From the outside, and with goals hard to come by during a difficult qualifying campaign, a player like Arzani would appear to be the perfect answer with dribbles, tricks and assists.

    But Popovic chose to lay bare the other side of what you could call the ‘next big thing’ conundrum.

    “It wasn’t good enough in October,” Popovic said referring to Arzani’s efforts away from the spotlight.

    “His level was really poor in training. Now maybe for him it’s OK, but it’s not enough, so every player needs to raise their level.”

    A similar weight of expectation fell on the young shoulders of striker Garang Kuol, now struggling to break through at Premier League side Newcastle United after transferring from the Central Coast Mariners, and another winger in Nestory Irankunda.

    Popovic on the hunt for Aussie talent | 01:00

    Without the monumental injury setback, Irankunda’s footballing story and that of Arzani’s isn’t too different.

    A kid who bursts onto the scene with breathtaking skill in the A-League, followed by a call-up to the national team while still a teenager and then a move to a mega-club that seemed before its time.

    German giants Bayern Munich came calling for 18-year-old Irankunda. The former Adelaide United star has been on the right and wrong ends of selection calls when it comes to the Socceroos as well, with first Arnold and then Popovic having to defend themselves in the court of public opinion for not picking a player on the books of one of the biggest clubs in the world.

    In search of senior minutes, after being part of the youth team set-up at Bayern, Irankunda recently secured a loan move to Swiss Super League club Grasshoppers — but Popovic insists that might not be enough to earn a recall in March.

    “Just playing a game because someone has got some minutes at Grasshoppers, for example, that can’t be enough,” Popovic said.

    “They need to be at elite level at Grasshoppers, then they are elite for the Socceroos and then they can help us get in the top two.

    “In our last two World Cups we went through the play-off system, but we keep expecting to make top two.

    “That’s good, but if we expect to come in the top two then we must raise the level, we must raise the bar.

    “Your expectation and my expectation should be higher because history shows we don’t do that often. We don’t go automatically to World Cups, but that is something we should aspire to. We shouldn’t shy away from that.”

    Nestory Irankunda needs to be playing at a high level with his new loan club, Tony Popovic says.Source: Getty Images

    Not picking very good players is an odd way, on the surface, to solve that problem, but Popovic clearly thinks betting the farm on human highlight reels isn’t the answer. The “expectation,” in his words, needs to be higher and only “elite” commitment to everything the coach sees as sacred is likely to be rewarded with regular minutes.

    Popovic has spoken multiple times about his admiration for Japanese football, but also his desire for Australia to match and then overtake their regional rivals.

    The gap to Japan, who lead Group C, is nine points. The Samurai Blue have won five of their six games in this phase to be on 16 points, which is the joint-highest total across the three groups with Iran. One more win from four remaining fixtures will ensure they seal automatic qualification. That is certainly something to be envious of.

    Japan, from Popovic’s perspective, are the current standard bearers and he believes its possible for Australia to “raise the bar.”

    In the coach’s eyes, Australian football should hold every player, even the absurdly talented ones, to the highest standard. If Popovic can find a way to marry that talent to his standards, then something special is truly possible.

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  • ‘Club of my life’: Teenage wunderkind’s huge reveal… and the $1.6b price tag placed on him

    ‘Club of my life’: Teenage wunderkind’s huge reveal… and the $1.6b price tag placed on him

    Football’s hottest young talent is going nowhere, with Barcelona wunderkind Lamine Yamal saying he will sign a new contract with the Spanish giants soon.

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    The 17-year-old has pledged his long-term future to the Catalan club despite massive interest from French titans PSG and Barcelona being embroiled in financial controversy.

    Yamal burst onto the scene as a key cog of the Spanish side that won last year’s Euros.

    He became the youngest ever player to feature in the tournament at just 16, and the youngest ever goal scorer when he curled an absolute stunner into the top corner in the champion’s 2-1 semi-final win against France.

    His left-footed strike from outside the box also won goal of the tournament.

    More than a year earlier, he made his first team debut for Barcelona as a 15-year-old after coming up through the club’s academy, and the records have continued to tumble in club football.

    In October he became the youngest ever player to score in El Classico history as he found the back of the net in Barca’s 4-0 win against Real Madrid.

    He scored again on his return to the side from an ankle injury in their 2-0 Spanish Super Cup semi-final win against Athletic Bilbao on Wednesday to take his season tally to seven goals and 12 assists from 22 games.

    So, it’s clear to see why the Parisian club put forward an offer of €250 million for his services.

    Barca, of course, rejected it and they have done their best to make it near impossible for any rival to pry away from the Olympic Stadium and then their traditional home of the Nou Camp when renovations are complete in 2026.

    That is the year that Yamal’s current deal expires, and it includes a €1 billion release clause.

    If that was not enough to alleviate any concerns about him potentially leaving Barcelona, ESPN have reported that there is an agreement lined-up to extend his deal until at least 2030.

    “I don’t know when [the contract will be signed], but I believe it will be soon,” Yamal told CNN.

    “At the end of the day, Barça is the club of my life. I hope to renew my contract with them and to be with them for as long as possible.

    “I want to play in the Spanish league. I want to play for Barça, and yes, I will renew my contract. I will.”

    The teenager’s comments are music to the ears of Barcelona officials after Yamal’s teammate Raphinha suggested that a recent fiasco might discourage potential transfer targets from joining the club.

    Dani Olmo and Pau Victor were both unregistered on New Year’s Day after Barcelona missed a December 31 deadline to prove they are compliant with La Liga’s financial fair play rules.

    Both players travelled with the squad to Saudi Arabia for the Spanish Super Cup semi-final, but neither were eligible to play.

    Raphinha experienced similar issues when he joined the club in 2022.

    The Brazilian had to wait for Barcelona to sell club assets to register him with the Spanish league.

    “I think it could,” Raphinha said on Tuesday when asked if the situation could force players to avoid signing for Barcelona.

    “I can’t say otherwise because I would be lying and that’s not me, I don’t like lying or telling stories. The truth is that if I was at another club and seeing the situation Pau and Dani are in, maybe I would think twice if it was best to be here.”

    La Liga and the Spanish Football Federation confirmed in a joint statement that Barcelona are compliant with financial fair play regulations at present, but they cannot register Olmo or Victor this season.

    Barca are challenging the decision with an appeal to Spain’s highest sports court, and they have requested a temporary allowance for the players to play as a resolution to the issue is not expected soon.

    Regardless of what happens, Barcelona will be confident that Yamal’s commitment will outshine any reputational damage inflicted by the registration saga.

    Raphinha may be correct that players will think twice before joining the Spanish giants, but the club’s officials will be certain that the opportunity to play with the sport’s most exciting young talent, in an expanded Nou Camp once it’s completed, in the shirt worn by the likes of Lionel Messi, Johan Cruyff and Diego Maradona is too appealing.

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  • ‘Absolutely gutted’: Disastrous injury confirmed for Socceroos giant in already-weakened spot

    ‘Absolutely gutted’: Disastrous injury confirmed for Socceroos giant in already-weakened spot

    Harry Souttar has been dealt a devastating blow, with the Socceroos’ defender facing up to 12 months on the sidelines after rupturing his Achilles.

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    Souttar suffered the injury in the final moments of Sheffield United’s 2-0 loss to Burnley in the Championship on Friday morning (AEDT).

    The 26-year-old was sent for scans which confirmed the worst.

    The incident occurred after Souttar took a heavy touch and lunged to clear the ball. It was immediately clear he was in discomfort and had to be helped off the pitch at Bramall Lane.

    “He is absolutely gutted,” Sheffield United manager Chris Wilder told BBC Radio Sheffield after their 1-1 draw with West Bromwich Albion on Monday morning.

    “Devastated for him, he loved it here.

    “He has been a great player to work with; great personality, great character.

    “Big disappointment to lose the big fella because he has been incredible.”

    Sheffield United and Australia’s Harry Souttar.Source: Getty Images

    It is the second serious injury setback for the towering centre back in three years. In November 2021, Souttar ruptured the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) in his knee during a World Cup qualifier against Saudi Arabia in Sydney.

    Remarkably, he returned to action with former club Stoke City just before the World Cup in Qatar 12-months later, playing a starring role as the Socceroos stunned the world with a run to the round of sixteen.

    “Thanks to everyone at Sheffield United,” Souttar said on his Instagram account.

    “Amazing club with great people.

    “Unfortunately, that’s me out for a while but I wish everyone at the club all the best for the rest of the season and beyond.

    “Once a blade always a blade.”

    This latest injury is a cruel blow. Souttar moved to Sheffield United on loan after struggling for game time at Premier League battlers Leicester City.

    Wilder had placed significant trust in the 6-foot-7-inch centre-half, with Souttar starting 21 of Sheffield United’s 23 matches in the second-tier Championship before his injury.

    Socceroos coach Tony Popovic. Picture: Michael KleinSource: News Corp Australia

    His absence also creates a significant headache for Socceroos coach Tony Popovic.

    With four crucial matches remaining in the third round of World Cup qualifying, the Socceroos currently sit second in Group C. Maintaining that position will secure automatic qualification for the 2026 World Cup in North America.

    The Socceroos face Indonesia in Sydney in March before an away game against China five days later. A clash with current group leaders Japanin Perth and a trip to face regional heavyweights Saudi Arabia awaits in June.

    Popovic will now have to fill a Souttar sized hole in the heart of his defence for all those fixtures.

    He’s also unable to call on 21-year-old centre back Alessandro Circati, who ruptured his ACL during a training session with Italian Serie A side Parma in late September.

    It leaves Cameron Burgess, Kye Rowles and Hayden Matthews as the most likely options moving forward for Popovic.

    Burgess is starting regularly for Ipswich Town in the Premier League while Rowles is doing the same with Hearts in the Scottish Premiership.

    However, both are left-footers and it remains to be seen how that could impact any potential partnership.

    Kye Rowles celebrates scoring a goal against Lebanon with Jackson Irvine.Source: Getty Images

    Matthews is right-footed and continues to grow in stature at Sydney FC.

    The 20-year-old only signed his first professional contract earlier this year, but Popovic not only handed Matthews his Socceroos debut during the last international window in November but named him in the starting side in their last start 2-2 draw with Bahrain.

    Souttar will be desperately hoping the Australians can navigate the next four fixtures and secure their spot at the 2026 World Cup.

    Even a 12-month recovery should see him back on the park with six months to go before the tournament gets underway.

    The defender has left Sheffield and headed back to Leicester to start rehabilitation.

    He is contracted to the Foxes until the end of the 2028 season giving him time to rebuild his career once back to full fitness.

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  • ‘League of his own’: Salah breaks PL record but drops latest hint about possible Liverpool exit

    ‘League of his own’: Salah breaks PL record but drops latest hint about possible Liverpool exit

    Mohamed Salah dropped another hint that his future could lie away from Liverpool as the Egypt star said he would be happy “wherever I am going to end my career” after starring in Sunday’s 6-3 demolition of Tottenham.

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    Salah scored twice and provided two assists in the goal-spree in north London as Liverpool moved four points clear at the top of the Premier League.

    The 32-year-old is the first Premier League player to bag at least 10 goals and 10 assists before Christmas, while his brace also took him into fourth place on Liverpool’s all-time list of scorers with 229 in all competitions.

    “He is, quite frankly, a phenomenon,” The UK Telegraph’s chief football correspondent Jason Burt wrote.

    “There is time for another statistic. In terms of overall goal contributions, in all competitions, Salah has an astonishing 33 in this campaign already. The next highest? Bukayo Saka with 22. The Egyptian really is in a league of his own.”

    Salah’s immense value to Arne Slot’s team is clear, but Liverpool have been unable to persuade the forward to sign a new contract as speculation mounts about his future.

    With Salah’s current deal expiring at the end of this season, he will be free to sign a pre-contract agreement with a foreign club from January.

    Salah has been linked with French giants Paris Saint-Germain as well as Saudi Arabian teams, and he has already made several comments earlier this season about this potentially being his last campaign with Liverpool.

    Post-match on Sunday, Salah once again made a cryptic reference to his future.

    “It’s great to achieve that at such a big club, but the most important thing is that we won the game. Wherever I am going to end my career I am happy about it,” he told Sky Sports.

    Salah added that there was “no update” on his contract situation, but Slot will surely be desperate to extend his talisman’s seven-year stay on Merseyside after he took his goal tally to 18 in all competitions this term.

    “Salah’s contract situation, with his current deal running out next June, has been well-discussed but the 32-year-old could do well to take a leaf out of Kevin De Bruyne’s playbook when it comes to negotiations,” Burt wrote in the UK Telegraph.

    “With his last deal at Manchester City, which also expires at the end of this campaign, De Bruyne brought up the data to reinforce his worth. Salah can simply say to Liverpool: “look at my numbers. Look at the facts”.

    With Salah to the fore, Liverpool have won 21 of their 25 games in all competitions since Slot replaced Jurgen Klopp as manager.

    Slot defends Postecoglou despite loss | 00:59

    “I didn’t think about it before the game but I’m glad I have done it, something that makes me proud, I’ll keep working hard,” Salah said of reaching double figures in goals and assists this season.

    Salah was less happy with Liverpool’s defending against Tottenham, adding: “We were quite good in front but I think we need to improve defensively as a team.

    “Conceding three goals is quite hard. It’s quite good the result and hopefully we just keep going.”

    Salah’s teammate Trent Alexander-Arnold has also been linked with a move away from Anfield, with the right back rumoured to be on Real Madrid’s radar.

    Several Liverpool people are becoming more resigned to the losing the star duo, as well as a possible exit for star defender Virgil van Dijk whose contract also expires in June.

    ‘Painful one for us’: Ange dejected | 01:06

    Former Reds defender Neil Ruddock believes “you can’t blame them” for looking elsewhere despite sitting top of the Premier League.

    “Players come to the end of their contracts but I’m sure they’ve been talking, you don’t leave it until after Christmas, I’m sure there’s a lot going on,” Ruddock told FourFourTwo.

    “I’m sure Liverpool are trying their hardest to keep the three of them there, but as a footballer, you can’t blame them if they want to taste playing abroad, playing for Real Madrid – for a young player like Trent, you can’t really blame him.

    “For the older lads like Salah, I can also understand. Why would you stay a couple more years if you don’t think you’re going to be the player you were and you lose that hero status?

    “There will be a lot of conversations going on between the players, the people who look after them and the club, there’s a lot to weigh up. For all three of them, I hope they stay, but you can also understand it if they go.”

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  • ‘Many will die’: Outrage over $1 trillion World Cup ‘vote’ as two strange tournaments locked in

    ‘Many will die’: Outrage over $1 trillion World Cup ‘vote’ as two strange tournaments locked in

    The vote for 2034 World Cup hosting rights has descended into farce with claims a $1 trillion “atrocity” is about to be made official.

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    FIFA will on Thursday (AEDT) confirm the hosts of the 2030 and 2034 World Cups and the outrage has begun before the result is even made official.

    A joint bid led by Morocco, Spain and Portugal is set to be awarded the 2030 hosting rights, while, Saudi Arabia has been a controversial choice to host the event in 2034.

    The awarding of hosting rights for both tournaments will go to a vote during a FIFA Congress to be held virtually, but there is no doubt about the outcomes with neither bid having a rival.

    The 2026 World Cup will be co-hosted by the USA, Canada and Mexico.

    Saudi Arabia’s bid for 2034 was boosted heavily as FIFA invoked its principle of continental rotation, therefore only welcoming bids from Asia or Oceania.

    Controversially, the body gave potential bidders barely a month late last year to submit candidacies, and Australia and Indonesia quickly abandoned their interest.

    That left Saudi Arabia as the sole candidate, clearing the way for the World Cup to return to the Gulf region following Qatar’s hosting in 2022.

    FIFA also linked the 2030 and 2034 votes together meaning European nations who would otherwise object to the Saudi event would be forced to vote against the Morocco, Spain and Portugal tournament – which they won’t.

    The kingdom’s de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, has been using sport for some time now to amass influence and improve its global image.

    Being handed the 2034 World Cup will be a crowning moment, and Saudi will win despite currently only boasting two stadiums with a capacity of 40,000, when a minimum of 14 are required.

    FIFA seems desperate for a fight.Source: Supplied

    The centre pieces of the bid were a stadium that will be built at the $1 trillion mega-city of Neom and a 92,000 seat venue to be called King Salman Stadium in Riyadh.

    Beyond that logistical challenge, the baking temperatures in the northern hemisphere summer could mean pushing the tournament back to later in the year, as happened in 2022.

    However, the fact that Ramadan will take place in December that year is an added complication.

    Moreover, the awarding of the World Cup to Saudi will make the issue of human rights a major talking point again, just as in 2022.

    Rights groups highlight mass executions in Saudi Arabia and allegations of torture, as well as restrictions on women under the conservative country’s male guardianship system. Free expression is severely restricted too.

    Saudi Arabia, which is hosting several high-profile events including Formula One and the WTA Finals tennis, is often accused of “sportswashing” — using sport to divert attention from its rights record.

    The push back has already begun.

    Norway’s soccer federation plans to abstain from giving its approval when the vote is formalised, AP reports.

    “FIFA’s own guidelines for human rights and due diligence have also not been adequately integrated into the process, increasing the risk of human rights violations,” Norway federation president Lise Klaveness said in a statement Tuesday.

    Steve Cockburn, Amnesty’s head of labour rights and sport, said in a recent statement: “There will be a real and predictable human cost to awarding the 2034 World Cup to Saudi Arabia without obtaining credible guarantees of reform.

    The King Salman Stadium will be completed in 2029.Source: Supplied
    The Marrakesh Stadium in Morocco has a long way to go. Photo by AFP.Source: AFP

    “Fans will face discrimination. Migrant workers will face exploitation, and many will die.

    “FIFA must halt the process until proper human rights protections are in place to avoid worsening an already dire situation.”

    He earlier said: “As expected, FIFA’s evaluation of Saudi Arabia’s World Cup bid is an astonishing whitewash of the country’s atrocious human rights record.

    “There are no meaningful commitments that will prevent workers from being exploited, residents from being evicted or activists from being arrested.

    “By ignoring the clear evidence of severe human rights risks, FIFA is likely to bear much responsibility for the violations and abuses that will take place over the coming decade.

    “Fundamental human rights reforms are urgently required in Saudi Arabia, or the 2034 World Cup will be inevitably tarnished by exploitation, discrimination and repression.”

    The 2030 tournament, meanwhile, will mark a century since the first World Cup was held in Uruguay, and as a result the bid will also see the South American nation handed a game along with Argentina and Paraguay.

    That makes it a remarkable and completely unprecedented bid, involving three different continental confederations.

    FIFA already confirmed over a year ago that the joint proposal led by Morocco, Spain and Portugal was the sole contender for 2030, with all other potential candidacies having fallen by the wayside.

    The Stade de Hassan will be the biggest football stadium in the world with 115,000 capacity.Source: Supplied

    A joint British and Irish bid was abandoned when they decided to focus on hosting Euro 2028, while there were suggestions of a bid from South Korea, China, Japan and North Korea.

    Four South American countries launched a joint bid in 2019, convinced that the centenary World Cup should entirely take place on the same continent where it all began.

    In late 2022, UEFA promoted a bid uniting Spain and Portugal with war-torn Ukraine in a show of “solidarity” following the Russian invasion.

    However, Ukraine was quietly dropped from that candidacy last year as Morocco joined forces with the Iberian neighbours, while South America agreed to step aside in exchange for being awarded the hosting of three games, one each for Uruguay, Paraguay and Argentina.

    Following these “centenary celebrations” in the comparative chill of the southern hemisphere winter, the six teams involved — along with their fans — will have to cross the Atlantic Ocean to play a part in the remaining 101 matches.

    This tentacular tournament will conclude with the final on July 21, and it remains to be seen where that game will be staged.

    Spain, which hosted the 1982 World Cup, is set to be the centrepiece as it boasts 11 of the 20 proposed stadiums.

    Morocco — which has tried and failed on five previous occasions to be awarded the staging of the tournament — will become the second African nation to host the competition after South Africa in 2010.

    Potential venues for the final include the Santiago Bernabeu in Madrid and Barcelona’s renovated Camp Nou, as well as the planned Hassan II stadium between Casablanca and Rabat, which is set to become “the biggest stadium in the world” with a capacity of 115,000.

    Portugal, which hosted Euro 2004, will offer two stadiums in Lisbon and one in Porto, and hopes to stage a semi-final.

    — with AFP

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  • Man City’s landmark court showdown with PL concludes… but it could be far from over

    Man City’s landmark court showdown with PL concludes… but it could be far from over

    Manchester City’s long-awaited hearing into 115 breaches of Premier League rules has concluded, according to reports on Monday, but a verdict is not expected until 2025.

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    The Daily Mail reported that closing arguments in the case, which opened on September 16 at London’s International Dispute Resolution Centre, were made to an independent panel on Friday.

    City strongly deny any wrongdoing, but face severe sanctions if found guilty, including potentially being relegated from the Premier League.

    Everton and Nottingham Forest suffered points deductions last season for breaches of the league’s profit and sustainability rules.

    The English champions stand accused of 80 breaches of financial rules between 2009 and 2018, plus a further 35 of failing to cooperate with a Premier League investigation.

    Since a 2008 takeover from Sheikh Mansour, a member of the United Arab Emirates royal family, City have been transformed into the dominant force in English football.

    They have won eight of the last 13 Premier League titles, including a record four consecutive league crowns in the past four seasons.

    City also lifted the Champions League for the first time in 2023. Those achievements have been clouded in controversy, with opposing fans often making reference to the charges City face.

    However, the club have always protested their innocence and vowed to clear their name.

    The Premier League brought the charges in February 2023 but there has been a long wait for the case to proceed before an independent commission.

    City stand accused of failing to provide accurate financial information between 2009 and 2018, including revenue from sponsors and salary details of managers and players.

    Other charges relate to breaches of both UEFA and the Premier League’s financial sustainability regulations.

    Even if City are found guilty of some or all of the charges by the commission, the club would likely appeal that decision, which would further delay the imposition of any sanctions.

    On the field, Pep Guardiola’s men are going through an lean spell with just one win from their last nine games in all competitions.

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  • ‘Always really wary’: Socceroos star’s ‘frustrating’ injury blow in striker’s nervous wait

    ‘Always really wary’: Socceroos star’s ‘frustrating’ injury blow in striker’s nervous wait

    Socceroos striker Kusini Yengi is awaiting scan results after missing Portsmouth’s 2-2 draw with Swansea in the Championship with a knee injury.

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    Portsmouth claim Yengi suffered the injury while on international duty with Australia over the last fortnight.

    “He picked up an injury during the game when Australia played Bahrain,” Portsmouth manager John Mousinho said prior to his sides latest outing.

    It’s unclear at this stage how bad the injury is or how long Yengi will be sidelined for.

    The revelation comes as a slight shock given the 25-year-old played the entirety of the contest in Riffa and scored both goals, as it finished 2-2.

    Mousinho said Yengi picked up the injury “just before half-time.”

    “His knee was slightly swollen,” Mousinho added.

    “He was scanned on Friday afternoon. So, we’re just awaiting the final scan results and for him to see a specialist.

    “With knees, ankles and hips we’re always really wary.”

    It has been a stop-start season for the forward.

    He missed Pompey’s first two matches of the Championship campaign with a groin injury before being sidelined just two games into his comeback for a further five fixtures with the same complaint.

    Brighton move to second on EPL ladder | 01:02

    Yengi had just come off a run of six games in four weeks prior to linking up with the Socceroos in Melbourne.

    He came on as a late substitute in a scoreless draw with Saudi Arabia in the Victorian capital before the side flew out to Bahrain.

    “Any injury is frustrating for us,” Mousinho said.

    “People do pick up injuries on international breaks. It’s probably one of the reasons why certain players don’t necessarily want to go on international duty.

    “We’re not one of those clubs. I want players to go away and play and represent their countries and I think it’s a really proud moment for anybody connected with Portsmouth when they do that.

    “It does come with a slight risk and unfortunately (Kusini) has ended up picking up an injury.”

    Any absence isn’t of immediate concern for the Socceroos.

    Roar & Macarthur duel ends in 4-4 draw | 02:04

    Tony Popovic’s side isn’t back in action until they face Indonesia and China in two must-win World Cup qualifiers in March.

    While Yengi has made a bright start to life for the national team, scoring six goals in 11 games, the interrupted nature of his season has impacted his output for Portsmouth. He’s yet to find the back of the net in the Championship after scoring 13-goals in 31 appearances in all competitions last season, while they were in League One, following a move from the Western Sydney Wanderers in the A-League.

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