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Thứ Sáu, 31 tháng 10, 2014

Ferdinand risks further FA action


31 October 2014, 22:07

Rio Ferdinand risked putting himself on a fresh collision course with the Football Association on Friday after apparently endorsing a tweet which accused the governing body of double standards in giving him a three-match ban.

The Queens Park Rangers defender was suspended for three games and fined £25 000 ($40 000, 31 800 euros) by the Football Association on Wednesday for referring to the mother of another Twitter user as a 'sket', a derogatory slang term for a promiscuous woman.

However, a tweet from the account @flowingmindset sent on Friday accused the FA of a "double standard" in its treatment of Ferdinand compared to its handling of a text message exchange between former Cardiff manager Malky Mackay and the club's former head of recruitment Iain Moody which contained racist and sexist terms, and also its treatment of a disciplinary case involving former senior referee David Elleray.

Ferdinand tweeted "preach!!" in response to the message posted by @flowingmindset and sent another in which he appeared to suggest the FA's punishment had left him "baffled".

The FA have yet to announce whether Mackay or Moody will face any disciplinary action, although several reports in the British media have suggested they may escape punishment should their messages be regarded as private correspondence.

Elleray, the chairman of the FA's referees committee, was ordered to go on an equality and diversity training course by the FA after making racist comments to a black delegate at a refereeing event at the governing body's St George's Park training base in central England in pre-season but faced no further punishment.

A minute before his tweet to @flowingmindset, Ferdinand told his Twitter followers: "Is humour even allowed....I'm baffled! Ludicrous.... & I don't mean the rapper."

Ferdinand is set to miss strugglers QPR's Premier League trip to leaders Chelsea on Saturday and further matches against Manchester City and Newcastle under the terms of his ban.

QPR chairman Tony Fernandes, chief executive Philip Beard and manager Harry Redknapp held meetings with Ferdinand and his representatives on Thursday to consider whether to lodge an appeal.

Redknapp, who first worked with Ferdinand when the defender was making his name in football at West Ham, endorsed the former England centre-back by saying he was a "top-class person".

Ferdinand also received backing from QPR teammate Joey Barton, who criticised the FA's handling of the case on Friday.

"Can someone from the @FA send me a list of offensive, ban-incurring words that I can't use online and the requisite bans attached to each," Barton wrote on Twitter.

"The punishment (in the Ferdinand case) isn't fitting of the crime in my opinion.

"3 games is violent conduct. (John) Terry only got 4 games for racial abuse?

"3 games and £25k for a tweet? Come on."

Source : supersport[dot]com

Andy Goldstein's Sports Bar Best Bits - October 31

Andy Goldstein's Sports Bar Best Bits - October 31

Join Andy Goldstein and chums as they round up the best bits from the Sports Bar week.

Also check out a special extensive interview with world super-middleweight champion Carl Froch, who dropped into the talkSPORT studios on Wednesday evening.

audio_title: 
Listen to the latest Andy Goldstein's Sports Bar Best Bits
Source : talksport[dot]com

Manchester United Striker Radamel Falcao to Miss Derby But Wayne Rooney Passed Fit

Radamel Falcao
Radamel Falcao to miss Manchester derby Getty

Manchester United striker Radamel Falcao will miss Sunday's derby against Manchester City through injury but Wayne Rooney is set to make his return, Louis van Gaal has confirmed.

Rooney has completed his three-game suspension but reports of a minor foot injury sparked speculation the captain would miss the clash with Manuel Pellegrini's side.

While van Gaal was able to ease those concerns, the Dutchman confirmed Falcao has not recovered from the knock that ruled him out of the 1-1 draw with Chelsea last Sunday.

"Falcao is still injured. Rooney was never injured," van Gaal told a press conference. He shall play, he is my captain. I think [Antonio] Valencia is fit again to play."

Falcao also missed the 2-2 draw with West Bromwich Albion prior to the Chelsea game due to jetlag, according to his manager. Rooney's return, however, will help supplement the Colombian's absence against United's city rivals, although his manager did not confirm whether the skipper would start.

Marouane Fellaini is likely to retain his place in the side after impressive performances in his last two appearances.

"He has made a great contribution and also the assist for the [Chelsea] goal," van Gaal said of the Belgian. "He has had a lot of time out injured but when he is fit I have played him. He has to continue with that because then I am very pleased."

Sunday's clash at the Etihad Stadium will be van Gaal's first taste of the Manchester derby but the manager insists the rivalry between the two sides has been felt in training all week, chiefly through his right-hand man Ryan Giggs.

"This is the biggest derby that I shall manage. It is one of 38 [league] matches we have to play, but for the fans it is unbelievably big as a rivalry and I have felt that also with a lot of the players in the squad, but also especially with Ryan Giggs. When he presented the analysis on City, I felt more tension with him. It was good to see.

"That is our goal, to win. It is possible, we are growing, we are developing ourselves. What we have seen of City in the last few matches was not so good. You never know."

Source : ibtimes[dot]co[dot]uk

Angel di Maria: No friends on pitch in Manchester derby against City, you are defending the pride of your colours

Ángel di María, Manchester United’s vibrant attacker, warned his Argentine friends in the City camp that there are “no friendships out on the pitch” in Sunday’s Manchester derby. “You are defending the pride of your colours,’’ said United’s No 7.

A quarter of Argentina’s World Cup outfield contingent could be involved at the Etihad. Along with his United team-mate Marcos Rojo, Di María knows Pablo Zabaleta, Sergio Agüero and Martín Demichelis well.

“We’ve got good friendships over the years and no matter what the colour of your shirt, you still see each other socially,’’ said Di María. “But once you’re on the field, you forget all that. Everyone is fighting for the shirt.’’

Friends for life, but rivals for 90 minutes, will embrace beforehand. “When we see each other in the tunnel before games, I think it’s right to say ‘Hi’ and greet each other – whether it’s an ex-team-mate or a good friend,’’ Di María added. “That’s normal, as long as you remember that you fight for the club and the shirt once the 90 minutes start.”

Zabaleta smiled wanly at the mention that he is likely to be facing Di María. “It’s tough, hard,’’ said the City right-back. “He’s a really good player, quick with great technique. He’s one of those players that defenders find really difficult to play against. You need the perfect day to stop players like him. I will try to play as good as I can.”

Zabaleta, Di María and Rojo turned coaches for the afternoon on Friday, helping out a Premier League Kicks session at Manchester College, Ardwick. With the derby looming, the emphasis was on a city united. Di María flicked balls up for youngsters from the City in the Community scheme to practise their finishing and congratulated them warmly when they scored.

Zabaleta did the same with kids from the Manchester United Foundation. As a local in an Argentina shirt looked on transfixed, Rojo rolled the ball into the path of City youngsters.

“When we do things like this, especially with the kids, it’s great to see the relationship between both clubs,’’ Zabaleta said. “We know about the rivalry. For fans this is the game they are looking for. Two big clubs in the same city, big rivals. This is the special game for the fans, so we will try 100 per cent to win to let the fans celebrate.’’

Having arrived six years ago, Zabaleta knows the city well, so well that Di María got in touch with him for some local knowledge when considering United’s offer while at Real Madrid in August. “Angel texted me to ask about the city, to ask things of someone who has been living here for a long time, so I could help with some information.”

Di María said nobody at City, not even friends such as Zabaleta, Agüero or Demichelis, tried to tempt him to the Etihad. “No, there was never any contact anywhere else,’’ Di María said. “The people who came with all the paperwork, signed and ready, showing real eagerness to sign me were United. As soon as I heard of their interest, there was no question of me going anywhere else.

“As a player, you’re always going to go somewhere if the club really want to sign you and show willing by putting that amount of money on the table. I think the figure was €75 million (£59.7 million). It would be hard for any club to turn that down – even Real Madrid. I felt from the word go that I was going somewhere where I’d be really loved. I’m not saying that I wasn’t loved in Madrid – but that kind of interest that Manchester United showed is hard to turn down.”

He was also indebted to Louis van Gaal. “It was him who showed that confidence in me by wanting to sign me,’’ Di María said.

Having enjoyed Di María’s company on the 3G pitch in Ardwick, Zabaleta was looking forward to seeing his friend again – after tomorrow’s game. “We’ve known each for many years,’’ Zabaleta said. “I was so happy when he signed for United because he was really excited to come here and play in the Premier League. When I see him happy, I will be happy as well – off the field.

“He’s been busy so it has been difficult to meet. He lives in Prestbury, I live in Alderley Edge, just five minutes away. Marcos lives in Hale, a little bit far from where we are. Kun has moved to Hale now. When everything is settled we will all get together. We’re Argentinians, we like to meet each other, to do barbecues. I’m thinking now of opening an Argentinian restaurant!”

He has not tried to persuade Di María of the joys of English fish and chips. “Not yet. He’s that thin. Probably he will try it.’’

Di María may be a stranger to the joys of battered cod but he is very familiar with the scraps of derby day. He has played in crosstown duels in Madrid with Real, in Lisbon with Benfica and the Clásico Rosarino featuring his Rosario Central side against Newell’s Old Boys.

“Derby games can be a nightmare over there,’’ said Di María of that Argentine fixture that dates back to 1905. “If you lost, it would be a case of not only not going out of the house for two or three days, maybe even two or three weeks, to get it out of your system. Everyone would really suffer if you lost – and didn’t want to show their faces to the fans.

“I played in two of these. I was on the winning side on one occasion – so obviously was very happy. But I also know what it’s like to lose. And that feeling of having to stay in the house for two or three days because of the disappointment of the fans. We will be doing our absolute best to make sure the red half of the city is happy at the end of the game.”

Di María’s importance to a cause is well known by Zabaleta. The World Cup final against Germany could have been different had Di María not damaged his thigh in the quarter-final win over Belgium. “It would have made a big difference if he’d been fit for the final,’’ Zabaleta said.

“It would have been great for us. He was one of the key players in the World Cup. When we played Germany, with the way they defended very solidly, we needed quick players to play on the counter-attack. Ángel is one of those players who never stops running, never stops going forward, attacking the space. He’s just unbelievable. Germany were a great team but with a player like Ángel we would have had something different.”

Many back home will be tuning in on Sunday. “Argentinian people love the Premier League, they watch all the games and especially now because they can see a lot of Argentinian players,’’ Zabaleta continued. “They feel proud. All we have to do is our job well and show how good we are for the next generations. We have to work 100 per cent to demonstrate to Argentinian people we love football, we play with passion, and we play in the most competitive league in the world.’’

Yet City are in a poor run of form, drawing with CSKA Moscow in the Champions League, losing to West Ham in the Premier League and then going out of the Capital One Cup to Newcastle United. “This is strange,’’ said Zabaleta. “We have a strong squad and great players to do much better than we have done the last three games.

"We must be more consistent as a team. Individual performances have not been great this season and when you don’t play well as a team, it’s difficult collectively. We know as players we should improve our performances. We were very unlucky to lose David Silva [knee] for this game because he was probably one of our best, most consistent players this season.

“Sunday is just about winning. It means we can get the confidence back – it’s something we need at the moment. We cannot drop points because of the race with Chelsea. United is the best team we can have [to play] now. It’s a special game. It is special for the fans.

"It’s the game everyone is waiting for. If you look at the form of both teams it is 50-50. United is one of the big contenders for the top four and maybe also for the league. But we are the champions, we play at the Etihad, the atmosphere will be great and we play with our fans behind us.”

And with Di María running at him. “If you do win there will be plenty of stick given out – and banter post-match,’’ said Di María. “But the real reason you want to give everything on the field is so your own fans go away happy.”

First-team players from both Manchester clubs were on hand to take part in a Premier League Kicks session between City in the Community and the Manchester United Foundation.

Source : telegraph[dot]co[dot]uk

Costa back for Chelsea


31 October 2014, 15:48

Chelsea's leading scorer Diego Costa is fit for Saturday's London derby at home to Queens Park Rangers, but Spain need to look after him in the next international break, manager Jose Mourinho said on Friday.

Mourinho did nothing to diffuse tension between the club and Spain's coach Vicente Del Bosque, whom he had accused of causing Costa's injury problems by over-playing him in two internationals earlier this month.

"He played for the national team and we lost him for four matches in three different competitions," Mourinho told reporters at a news conference.

"Now he is again available but he needs to be under special care. I'm always supportive of players playing for their countries when they are in the condition to do so.

"But I'm nobody to stand in the way of the national team, I can't stop him going away with his country."

Del Bosque had defended the decision to use Costa when he said on Thursday that "in some things we are flexible and in some we are stubborn and in this we are stubborn".

Chelsea's annoyance was compounded by having another of their three senior strikers, Frenchman Loic Remy, unfit as well.

That meant that Didier Drogba, 36, had to play two full games in the space of three days, in the Premier League away to Manchester United on Sunday and then at Shrewsbury in the Capital One (League) Cup.

He scored a crucial goal in each game but Mourinho, who is expected to rest him and bring back Costa against QPR, said it was asking too much of the veteran.

"He was fantastic in the last week when we were without Diego and Remy and in real trouble, doing something nobody should have to do in playing two lots of 90 minutes with 48 hours difference.

"He managed to do that in an absolutely fantastic way."

"It is good for us," the manager added of Costa's return. "It's difficult when you only have one striker available, but when you have two the situation improves."

Remy and midfielder Jon Obi Mikel are unavailable for QPR's visit to the league leaders, who go into the game four points ahead of second-placed Southampton and six clear of champions Manchester City, who do not play until the following day.

Source : supersport[dot]com

Man United transfer news: The free-scoring attacker being 'tracked' by the Red Devils, but is he needed?

Abdul Majeed Waris has emerged a shock transfer target for Manchester United and with that in mind talkSPORT takes a look at who he is and where he fits in.

Trabzonspor's Ghana international Abdul Majeed Waris has emerged as a shock transfer target for Manchester United, according to the Turkish club's chief executive Burak Gurdal.

Gurdal confirmed United are keeping close tabs on Waris and assistant manager Ryan Giggs is believed to have scouted the forward in Trabzonpor's Europa League game against Lokeren last week.

With that in mind talkSPORT takes a look at the Ghanian and where he would fit in at Old Trafford.

Who is he?

Waris, 23, is a striker who currently plies his trade in Turkey with Super Lig side Trabzonspor, joining the club in September for €6m.

He started his career in Sweden with BK Hacken, netting 30 goals in 63 appearances before moving to Russian side Spartak Moscow in 2012.

The striker was loaned to French Ligue 1 club Valenciennes in January this year, and rose to prominence scoring nine goals in 16 games, but it wasn't enough to help the club avoid relegation to Ligue 2.

The Ghana international has been capped 14 times by his country, scoring three goals and his performances for Valenciennes earned him a place in Ghana's World Cup squad this summer, where he featured against Portugal.

Do United need him?

Waris operates as a central striker, but he can also play as an attacking midfielder and has been used on the wing for Trabzonspor so far this season.

Given United's attacking threat and the investment on the likes of Juan Mata, Angel Di Maria and Radamel Falcao, it's surprising that Waris's name has emerged as a potential target.

If a move did materialise, you'd expect the Ghanaian to struggle to hold down a regular first team place and with reports suggesting he commands a £12m fee, it makes the departure of Danny Welbeck all the more strange.

With Javier Hernandez still contracted to the club (on loan at Real Madrid), and young striker James Wilson playing a prominent role in the first team squad this season, a move for Waris appears slightly left-field, but the interest gives an insight in the type of player and squad Louis Van Gaal is looking to assemble.

United fans, what do you think about the club's interest in Waris? Do United need another forward?

Source : talksport[dot]com

Mario Balotelli Doing Extra Shooting Practice to Save Liverpool Career, Says Steven Gerrard

Mario Balotelli
Balotelli is training harder than ever, says Gerrard. Getty Images/PAUL ELLIS

Steven Gerrard has also backed Mario Balotelli to form a impressive duo with Daniel Sturridge, and revealed the Italian striker is doing extra shooting sections in his quest to become a Liverpool hero.

Balotelli has had a tough start to life on Merseyside, and has come in for fierce from critics unhappy about his perceived lack of commitment.

However the former AC Milan and Manchester City striker scored against Swansea in mid-week, and Gerrard believes he can overcome the situation and thrive at Liverpool.

Speaking to Liverpool's official website, Gerrard said: "Mario has the ability to turn it around. I am not going to judge him after 10 games. I have to help and support him.

"To be a main striker at Liverpool you have to expect the pressure and the responsibility and embrace it. Our fans expect us to win every game.

"You have to accept and embrace it and enjoy the pressure and the fact you are being judged. That's what I have learnt to do since I was 19. [Balotelli is] a big lad. He's played for big clubs and has had the responsibility before."

While many believe Balotelli is a dilettante who lacks commitment to his team's cause, Gerrard says the striker is currently working harder than ever.

"He's not feeling sorry for himself. He is working hard, doing extra shooting sessions and doing everything he can to make it work. I've been impressed with the way he goes about his work."

Gerrard also told the Liverpool website that Daniel Sturridge has as much ability as any English striker he has ever played with, and suggests he has the potential to surpass even Wayne Rooney as an out-and-out number 9.

Sturridge has only started with Balotelli in one game this season, a 3-0 victory at Tottenham, and Liverpool fans will be hoping the pair can lead their team to more big wins when the England frontman returns from injury.

Source : ibtimes[dot]co[dot]uk

Thứ Năm, 30 tháng 10, 2014

Exclusive - Benali backs Southampton to challenge top four

Exclusive - Benali backs Southampton to challenge top four

Former Southampton defender Francis Benali sees no reason why the club cannot challenge the Premier League's top four this season.

The Saints are currently flying high in second under new boss Ronald Koeman - a position few could predict after a summer upheaval that included the exit of manager Mauricio Pochettino and numerous top stars.

However, new players such as Dusan Tadic and Graziano Pelle are shining for the south coast outfit, and Benali believes the club can continue the fine form which has brought six wins from nine Premier League games this season.

"I don’t see why not. I’m probably sticking my head out a little bit saying that," the Saints legend told Drivetime.

"My head probably tells me top ten or top eight, but they’re up there on merit at the moment. They’ve got some fixtures over the next two or three weeks that, fingers crossed, they should be picking up points in.

"Then they’re coming into playing a spell of games where they’re playing [Manchester] United, [Manchester] City and Arsenal. So that’s going to be the real acid test and if we’re still sat in the top four at that stage, I see no reason why we can’t be there [for the rest of the season]."

audio_title: 
Listen to the full interview with Francis Benali
Source : talksport[dot]com

Steven Gerrard interview: Mario Balotelli can still turn it around at Liverpool following stuttering start

Ten years ago, Steven Gerrard gave one of his most candid interviews admitting he may have no choice but to leave Liverpool.

The following May he lifted the European Cup, still wondering if his club truly wanted to keep him and whether it was right for him to stay – bewildered by the lack of a contract offer.

They love their anniversaries at Anfield, but the contemporary re-enactment of this particular episode in Gerrard’s career is unexpected.

Amid the background of Istanbul reunion plans at the end of this season, Gerrard again finds himself contemplating if this will be his last in a Liverpool shirt.

“I won’t be retiring this summer,” he says. “I will play beyond this season. We will have to wait and see if that’s at Liverpool or somewhere else. That’s Liverpool’s decision.”

If this is to be Gerrard’s last season at Liverpool it has a familiar ‘transitional’ vibe to it. When Liverpool finished second in 2002 and 2009, key players departed and the appeals for time began. Were the lesson learnt in 2014?

“When Luis Suárez left I knew it would be like that,” says Gerrard. “When you come close [to the title] it is important you keep your main players. It’s not just about those coming in, it’s about what got you there.

“You need to keep that together and add to it. When you are taking big chunks of it away and adding five or six into it, it’s not going to happen overnight.

“I would love a Fabregas or Costa here, but I have to understand how the owners want to do it and accept I am a Liverpool player, not a Chelsea or Manchester City player. They [Fenway Sports Group] have gone on record saying they want to bring exciting young talent into the club. You can’t just expect that to click overnight.

“I’m not looking for excuses but there are collective reasons for our stuttering start. We lost a key player; we’ve had a key player injured; we’ve had a huge setback through just falling short last season; other Premier League sides have improved. Chelsea have gone and got their missing pieces of the jigsaw, City get stronger every year because of the funds. That’s why we’re not sitting top of league with everything rosy.

“We are not in a position like City or Chelsea where the manager notices they are a little bit short and just goes bang, bang, two new signings.

"Maybe it’s slightly different this year where we had more available because of the money from Luis, but as you see at Tottenham if you make five signings there are a lot of changes.

“If Luis was here we probably would have won some of the games where we have slipped up. Also, if we had Daniel Sturridge fit. If you lose a player in Luis’s form and a player of Daniel’s potential, it is going to be up and down until you either get Sturridge back or Luis’s replacement starts firing some goals in.”

Ah, that replacement. The Mario Balotelli question arrives. Gerrard is reminded of his friend Jamie Carragher’s view that Balotelli will not last more than a season on Merseyside.

“It’s a bit early for shouts like that. He could score 10 in 10 now. What then? You still sell him in January?” Gerrard said. “I understand Jamie’s opinion. He is on TV and has to give opinions. Mario’s scored two in 12 games and when you play for Liverpool you are going to get judged harshly compared to Luis and Daniel, but Mario has the ability to turn it around. Then it will be interesting to see everyone’s opinion. People won’t be saying he is a panic buy then.

“He needs time to score the goals and prove to be people he is worthy of staying here. I am not going judge him after 10 games. I have to help and support him. To come in after Suárez is tough. A big ask.

“To be a main striker at Liverpool you have to expect the pressure and the responsibility and embrace it. Our fans expect us to win every game. To be top drawer you have to be quick and aggressive but above everything else you have to score regularly. Look at the ones I have played with – Fowler, Owen, Suárez, and Torres – consistent with goals. That’s what made them superstars.

“Being a No 9 weighs heavy, but so does the No 8. So do most of the numbers here. We have a huge following. The pressure is on us to perform every single game, we’re on TV every three days. You can’t hide.

“You have to accept and embrace it and enjoy the pressure and the fact you are being judged. That’s what I have learnt to do since I was 19. Perform consistently or people will be critical. With social media and the way the general media has gone there is so much criticism and opinion out there that if the No 9 weighed heavy 10 years ago it weighs even heavier now.

“I don’t think you have sympathy for Mario. He’s a big lad. He’s played for big clubs and has had the responsibility before. He’s not feeling sorry for himself. He is working hard, doing extra shooting sessions and doing everything he can to make it work. I’ve been impressed the way he goes about his work. You can understand where all the attention comes from and he enjoys it.

“It seems he likes the attention, likes being the main man up front. He loves the social media and loves talking to supporters. If he wants that at Liverpool you have to score goals. He will know that. And if he didn’t know it coming in then he will know it now.”

If Balotelli has much to prove, the frustration for Gerrard is Sturridge has been unable to build on his form.

“Brendan built his team around Luis and Sturridge,” Gerrard said. “He’d never played the diamond before, so it was a big compliment to Luis and Daniel he changed the whole team set-up to get the best from them.

“Ability wise, Daniel is possibly the No 1 English striker I’ve played with. When you talk about speed, sharpness and skill and different types of goals he could go as far as he wants to. Who in this country is better?

“Wayne Rooney is different, between a nine and 10 for me, but Wayne is 30, Daniel is 25. Some of the things he does in training blow me away. I knew he was good but I saw what he could do last year. He needs to hit high numbers season after season. His goal-to-game record is scary. Last year he was in Luis’s shadow. Now it’s for Daniel to be Liverpool’s iconic No 9 – the main striker – for many years.

“Brendan said he needs to repeat games. That is any player, not just Daniel. I have experienced the frustration of picking up niggles and missing big games. It is not just frustrating for him, but all of us – players, fans and staff – because we need him back as soon as possible.”

Wherever Gerrard plays he is reminded of last season’s near miss by opposition fans. The slip against Chelsea was celebrated beyond Stamford Bridge.

“I’ve had stick since day one and the reason is I’ve been a decent footballer and they see me as a threat to their team,” he says. “It’s gamesmanship. I would have to be very naive or insecure to feel sorry for myself, saying it’s not fair because I gave service to England and don’t deserve it. Liverpool fans give some opposition players absolute hell when they come to Anfield, but they only go for the best players out there, so I presume it’s the same when I’m getting pelted.

“Do I hear it? Of course I hear it. Does it affect me? No, it drives me on to perform better.”

Mourinho revelled in stopping the Liverpool title charge, suggesting his players were meant to be ‘clowns’ on that fateful day at Anfield.

“I’m a big fan of his. I understand and respect he loves winning and will do anything to get the win,” Gerrard said. “People say he tactically outclassed us and outwitted us – maybe he did in parts of the game – but they came to destroy the game and break it up, to stop us blowing them away. His tactic was to slow us down and spoil – stop us getting into a rhythm. He’d seen what we could do, and put men behind the ball, his biggest, most powerful team to disrupt us. It worked for them so credit where it is due. It hit me hard and I know it hit the supporters hard.”

Gerrard knows there may never be another chance to complete the medal collection with the trophy he craves. Not at Liverpool, anyway. If they don’t want him and act before he becomes a free agent in the next two months, it will be noted by plenty of others with title aspirations.

Source : telegraph[dot]co[dot]uk

Celtic Winger Aleksandar Tonev Banned for Seven Games for Racist Abuse

Aleksander Tonev
Aleksandar Tonev handed ban for remarks made to Shay Logan (Getty)

Celtic winger Aleksandar Tonev has been banned for seven matches for racially abusing Aberdeen's Shay Logan.

The 24-year-old Bulgarian international denied the charges but has been judged to have used "offensive, insulting and abusive language of a racist nature" following a disciplinary tribunal, the Scottish FA has announced.

Celtic have already confirmed they will appeal against the punishment, insisting Tonev, on loan from Aston Villa this season, is "not a racist".

"Racism has no place in football and as a club for all people, Celtic absolutely abhors racism of any kind," a spokesman from the SPL said. 

"This was a very unfortunate case, but the club has accepted Aleksandar's explanation that he did not say the words that were alleged to have been said and that he is not a racist.

"We are, therefore, very disappointed by the outcome today and can confirm that Aleksandar will be appealing this decision."

The incident took place during a Scottish Premiership match at Celtic Park in September.

Source : ibtimes[dot]co[dot]uk

All PSL, NFD matches postponed


30 October 2014, 13:07

The Premier Soccer League Executive Committee (Exco) met on Thursday in Johannesburg for its monthly meeting.

A decision was taken to postpone all Absa Premiership and National First Division (NFD) fixtures scheduled for this weekend.

This was done following discussions between the League, title sponsors Absa, the broadcast partners and other relevant stakeholders regarding the extraordinary circumstances relating to the passing and funeral of the late Orlando Pirates and Bafana Bafana captain, Senzo Meyiwa.

Meyiwa will be buried at his hometown in Durban on Saturday morning. The funeral service will be held at the Moses Mabhida Stadium.

Source : supersport[dot]com

Bayern Munich were about to beat Hamburg and then this happened...

Franck Ribery was slapped by a fan on Wednesday night

It was a match that went by without incident as the Bayern Munich juggernaut continued to rumble on, this time dispatching with Hamburg in the DFB Pokal, but no-one would have expected it to end in such circumstances as the Bavarian's 3-1 victory became overshadowed by the actions of one single fan.

With the referee on the verge of calling time, a Hamburg fan stormed onto the pitch and appeared to slap Bayern star Franck Ribery in the face with his scarf and then taunted the Frenchman before being set upon by stewards. It was an unsavory end to what had been another wonderful performance by the German champions.

Take a look below...

Source : talksport[dot]com

Manchester United's Wayne Rooney: Bryan Robson Welcoming Striker's Return 'After Red Card Talks'

Wayne Rooney
Wayne Rooney is expected to feature against Manchester City (Getty Images/LINDSEY PARNABY)

Former Manchester United captain Bryan Robson has revealed he has spoken to Wayne Rooney over his role as club skipper, warning him he will remain under more scrutiny than ever as he nears his return from suspension.

Rooney has missed United's last three Premier League games after being shown a straight red card for a challenge on West Ham United's Stewart Downing in late September.

Robson, who served as United captain between 1982 and 1994, believes Rooney remains one of the standout role models for those at the club but insists the striker must be wary of how much scrutiny he will remain under when he wears the captain's armband.

"The way Wayne goes about the game, works hard for his teammates and works hard for himself, it is an example of everyone," Robson told a Q&A session at Old Trafford.

"The one thing Wayne has to take on board is that he's under even more scrutiny now. We saw him get sent off recently and, as a captain, you can't be doing that. But Wayne knows that – I spoke with him at the training ground after the incident and he is well aware of it."

But despite his recent dismissal, Robson insists the 29-year-old has drastically curbed his wild streak in recent years, a trend he expects to continue as the former Everton star continues to lead the club in the coming years.

Robson said: "He's calmed down an awful lot in recent years. When he was 18 he hadn't matured; now it looks like he's beyond that. But in my mind I think he's done that because he's keen to impress, desperate to show people he cares. I don't think it'll happen again."

The England international is expected to make a return in the Manchester derby on Sunday 2 November at the Etihad Stadium.

Source : ibtimes[dot]co[dot]uk

Thứ Tư, 29 tháng 10, 2014

City knocked out of League Cup


29 October 2014, 23:52

Manchester City suffered a shock League Cup defeat at the hands of a reinvigorated Newcastle United, who reached the quarterfinals with a superb 2-0 away win on Wednesday that left the holders nursing the wounds of a bruising past eight days.

Newcastle's 18-year-old winger Rolando Aarons struck in the sixth minute to hand the visitors an unlikely lead before Moussa Sissoko ended any hopes of a City fightback with a brilliant goal to gift underfire manager Alan Pardew a third win in 11 days.

"We are buzzing in the dressing room. It has given the club a massive lift. It's been a great week," Aarons told Sky Sports.

The result completed a miserable week for City, who are now without a win in three games, after they lost to West Ham United on Saturday and threw away a two-goal lead to draw with CSKA Moscow in the Champions League last Tuesday.

Elsewhere, Graziano Pelle scored twice as in-form Southampton let slip a 2-0 lead before advancing to the last eight with a thrilling 3-2 victory against Stoke City.

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Tottenham Hotspur eased through to the quarterfinals with a routine 2-0 win against Championship (second tier) Brighton & Hove Albion.

Newcastle, buoyed by successive Premier League wins started with plenty of intent and their harassing and tenacity in midfield gifted them an early goal.

City's Fernandinho was caught in possession and the ball was seized upon by Aarons who surged into the box and finished superbly through the legs of goalkeeper Willy Caballero.

That set-back sparked the hosts into life, but the closest they came in the opening period was when Newcastle's Fabricio Coloccini miscued a relatively routine cross onto his own post.

For all City's pressure, they could have found themselves 2-0 down at halftime but Martin Demichelis's timely challenge denied Adam Armstrong.

City continued to press after the break but could have conceded a penalty when Aleksandar Kolarov felled Gabriel Obertan, who earlier had a goal ruled out for offside, as the Frenchman burst into the box.

In the 75th minute Sissoko powered his way through City's static defence and clipped a brilliant finish past Caballero with the outside of his right foot to give the visitors an unassailable lead.

City had late chances, but the visitors remained resolute.

GOALSCORING REVELATION

Southampton's top scorer Pelle has been a revelation since his close-season move from Dutch side Feyenoord and the imposing Italian forward gave the visitors the lead with a superb goal.

The 29-year-old was afforded too much space by the Stoke defence and was able to curl in a sublime strike.

On the half hour Southampton doubled their lead with Shane Long sweeping home his first goal for the club at the end of another flowing attack.

Stoke pulled a goal back through Steven N'Zonzi's low strike early in the second half and restored parity through Mame Biram Diouf in the 82nd minute.

As extra time beckoned Pelle bundled home his ninth Southampton goal of the season in the 88th minute just moments after Stoke had been reduced to 10 men after Peter Crouch's red card.

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At White Hart Lane, Tottenham dominated possession but failed to take the lead until the 54th minute when Erik Lamela danced into the area before dispatching a neat finish.

Harry Kane converted Roberto Soldado's parried shot for a deserved second.

Source : supersport[dot]com

Exclusive - Davis praises Koeman for Southampton's great start to the season

Exclusive - Davis praises Koeman for Southampton's great start to the season

Southampton midfielder Steven Davis told talkSPORT the board and new manager Ronald Koeman deserve credit for the Saints' brilliant start to the season.

The south coast club were expected to struggle this season after losing boss Mauricio Pochettino to Tottenham and a host of first-team stars such as Adam Lallana and Dejan Lovren, while replacing them with little known recruits such as Graziano Pelle and Dusan Tadic.

However, under new boss Koeman, Southampton have excelled, reaching the dizzying heights of second in the Premier League and beating Stoke to reach the Capital One Cup quarter-finals on Wednesday night.

"We're going into the games with confidence because of the run we've been on," Davis told the Sports Bar after the 3-2 win at the Britannia Stadium.

"The players we've brought in have a lot of quality. He's [Koeman] got us organised, everybody knows their job. He's a calming influence and everyone's enjoying playing under him.

"At the end of the season we kind of knew one or two might leave but maybe not the numbers that did.

"It was a big period for the club but to be fair the board, and the manager that has come in, they've done a fantastic job in recruiting these players and they have got some real quality in."

audio_title: 
Listen to the full interview with Steven Davis
Source : talksport[dot]com

Manchester City 0 Newcastle United 2, match report: Rolando Aarons and Moussa Sissoko punish Manuel Pellegrini

Just when Manuel Pellegrini needed a morale-boosting victory at Manchester City, Newcastle United left the Etihad Stadium enveloped in dark clouds that are beginning to resemble fifty shades of grey.

Their reign as Capital One Cup holders over following eye-catching goals from Rolando Aarons and Moussa Sissoko, City must now prepare for Sunday's derby against Manchester United with David Silva struggling to overcome a knee injury, Yaya Toure battling a groin strain and the prospect of unbridgeable gaps opening up between themselves and their rivals in the Premier League and Champions League.

Newcastle, without a win at City since triumphing at Maine Road in 2000, deservedly earned a quarter-final trip to Tottenham after displaying too much passion and desire for Pellegrini's complacent and lethargic players.

The champions are not in crisis yet, but as United prepare to visit this weekend, Pellegrini conceded that his team are now suffering a crisis of confidence just two months into the season.

“My feeling is that we are not playing well,” Pellegrini said. “We are in a difficult moment.

“We are conceding too many easy goals and are not scoring the chances we have to score. That's the feeling at this moment “It's a lack of confidence that we must address as soon as possible because we need to continue to be involved in the other competitions.” With United desperate to avenge two defeats against City last season and concerns over Silva and Toure, Pellegrini even admitted he was â€⃜worried' about the games ahead.

“Of course we must be worried,” Pellegrini said. “We didn't win the three games we played this week. We must be worried about that, but we must find a solution and we must address it.

“We will see on Thursday with the doctor (about Silva). David has a problem in his knee. I don't know how serious it is. Yaya was a little bit tired with his groin so I didn't want to risk him [any longer].” Whatever the cause of City's malaise, Pellegrini is clearly not getting the most from a group of players who ultimately grew tired of Roberto Mancini's dictatorial approach.

Whether Pellegrini's cold, insipid approach has seen City go too far the other way is debatable, but what worked last season is not working now and Newcastle took full advantage.

Newcastle, without a major trophy since the 1969 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, have rarely threatened to end their lengthy silverware drought under the controversial ownership of Mike Ashley.

The common perception on Tyneside is that the sportswear tycoon only cares for the financial rewards of remaining in the Premier League, with the glory of success doing little to affect the bottom line.

While that carefree attitude is not shared by the Newcastle supporters, who remain desperate for a trophy of any description to be paraded around St James' Park, Pardew's team selection in cup ties has hinted at an acceptance that league points are the only currency that will keep him in a job.

So rather than retain the starting eleven which won at Tottenham on Sunday, Pardew made six changes to his team and found his players faced with a surprisingly strong City line-up ahead of the Manchester derby.

But while the tie appeared a mismatch on paper due to the respective teams, Pardew's fringe players clearly regarded this fixture as an opportunity to stake their claim and they stunned City by taking the game to the holders.

Ryan Taylor, making his first appearance since August 2012 following two cruciate ligament injuries, served notice of Newcastle's desire as early as the fourth minute when he conceded a free-kick with a heavy challenge on Silva.

The City playmaker rose to his feet and attempted to shake off the injury suffered in the challenge, but the Spaniard lasted just five more minutes before conceding defeat.

By that stage, Newcastle were a goal ahead after Aarons has punished a mistake by Fernandinho to put the visitors ahead.

The 18-year-old, making his first appearance since scoring in the 3-3 draw against Crystal Palace at the end of August, broke into the penalty area and scored with an angled shot past goalkeeper Willy Caballero after Taylor had dispossessed Fernandinho thirty yards from goal.

It was the dream start for Newcastle, who had been eliminated by City at the same stage of the competition last October, but the big question was whether they had struck too early.

City, clearly, had time to respond and they wasted no time in attempting to haul themselves level.

But it was Newcastle who carved out the best chance to extend the scoring before half-time, when Paul Dummett spurned a golden chance on 32 minutes.

Unmarked on the edge of the six-yard box, Dummett should have scored from Taylor's corner, but the defender shot straight at Caballero, who saved with his legs.

With the game entering the final half hour and no breakthrough in sight, Pellegrini opted to replace Toure, who had taken a first-half knock, with Jesus Navas in a bid to protect his midfielder and also add pace to his team's attacking forays.

But Newcastle were now attempting to suffocate the game, with Pardew instructing his players to defend in two banks of four, with only Adam Armstrong, and then substitute Emmanuel Riviere, staying up front to pressure the City defenders.

Despite their efforts to hold onto their lead, Newcastle remained dangerous on the break and they were unfortunate not to be awarded a penalty on 69 minutes when referee Stuart Attwell incredibly dismissed appeals when Aleksandar Kolarov upended Gabriel Obertan.

Pardew was incandescent, but his rage subsided six minutes when Sissoko won the game after waltzing past Fernandinho and Bacary Sagna before slotting the ball past Caballero for a victory Newcastle fully deserved.

Quarter-final draw

  • Derby County v Chelsea
  • Spurs v Newcastle
  • Bournemouth v Liverpool
  • Sheffield United v Saints
Source : telegraph[dot]co[dot]uk

Arsenal Loanee Wellington Silva Granted Spanish Passport That Allows Him to Complete in Premier League

Wellington Silva
Wellington Silva in a rare appearance in an Arsenal shirt in a 2013 friendly (Getty)

Brazilian starlet Wellington Silva has revealed he now has the relevant paperwork necessary to play for Arsenal next season.

The forward has been on the Gunners' books since 2011 after initially impressing the club during his early outings for Brazilian club Fluminense's youth side.

Arsenal had to wait until the player turned 18 before they could agree a deal but Silva has been unable to make a competitive appearance for the club due to work permit complications.

The 21-year-old has instead spent the last three years on a succession of loan spells at clubs across Spain, joining La Liga side Almeria on a season-long loan deal in July.

Speaking to Spanish daily AS, Silva has confirmed a breakthrough has been reached after he received a Spanish passport and is now free to return to Arsenal at the start of next season.

But the Brazilian insists he will not let his long-term future distract him from his current obligations with Almeria, who currently sit 13th in the league.

"It is very important for me," Silva said upon receiving the relevant paperwork. "I could go back to Arsenal next season if [Arsene] Wenger wants me to.

"But I am not going to worry about my future and my only desire right now is to help Almeria preserve their La Liga status. At this moment, I am focused on the present."

Silva has spent time out on loan at Levante, Alcoyano, Ponferradina and Murcia – where he scored three goals last season. He is yet to get off the mark at Almeria this term. 

Speaking in December 2013, Silva was confident of securing the documents needed in time to play for Arsenal this season only to miss the deadline.

"The process to the get the passport is already under way," he told the Brazilian media.

"The pre-season in England starts in July and I'll have a passport by then.

"I hope to have the opportunity to achieve my dream of playing for Arsenal. The team is strong and I hope to fit in well."

Source : ibtimes[dot]co[dot]uk

Drogba is the Special One - Mou


29 October 2014, 14:51

Some Chelsea fans thought manager Jose Mourinho had taken leave of his senses when he decided to bring the ageing Didier Drogba back to the club in the close season.

There was a feeling that the 36-year-old Ivorian was well past his best and that returning to Stamford Bridge might tarnish the legacy he left after a dazzling first spell with the Londoners.

Drogba has, however, well and truly silenced the doubters in the last week, scoring three goals in three games and proving a more than capable understudy for the injured Diego Costa and Loic Remy.

"His character is bigger than his body," Mourinho told reporters after the centre forward grabbed the opening goal in Tuesday's 2-1 League Cup fourth-round victory at Shrewsbury Town.

"What he did today maybe was because of his character and not because of his body. Let's see the reaction after this but this is what makes players special.

"If I was a kid player and I played with this guy on my side, what more could I wish for? For the kids it must be a privilege and they have to learn by example – the example the older guys gave today."

Drogba left Chelsea two and a half years ago after helping them win the Champions League for the first time.

He joined the Blues from Olympique Marseille in 2004 and scored 157 goals in 342 appearances in his first spell, hoovering up three Premier League titles, four FA Cups and two League Cups.

Drogba was on target from the penalty spot in the 6-0 romp against Slovenians Maribor in the Champions League last week and also struck with a trademark header in the 1-1 draw at Manchester United in the Premier League on Sunday.

SENIOR SERVICE

Premier League leaders Chelsea rested several first-choice players at fourth tier Shrewsbury and Mourinho said it was the senior professionals who carried his team through to the quarterfinals.

"The message I want is the message Didier, Filipe Luis, Oscar and Gary Cahill gave, doing something they shouldn't be allowed to do but they did, which is play two football matches in 48 hours," said the manager.

"They were fantastic. I had people like Petr Cech and John Obi Mikel, people with lots of years at the club, who would prefer to start the game at Old Trafford. They didn't and they came here today and gave a fantastic example.

"After that there are the young boys and they have to follow the spirit and the professionalism of the others," added Mourinho.

The Portuguese seemed to indicate he was less than satisfied with the performance of his younger players at Shrewsbury.

"I expect people that have not been playing a lot to raise their level and create problems," said Mourinho. "I love problems of choice but it's easy to choose my team for Saturday."

Next up for Chelsea, who have a four-point lead at the top of the Premier League, is a home derby against second from bottom Queens Park Rangers at the weekend.

Source : supersport[dot]com

Long-term Everton target set to reject Premier League switch

Long-term Everton target Cedric Soares is set to reject a move to the Premier League and instead sign a new contract with Sporting Lisbon

Long-term Everton target Cedric Soares is set to reject a move to the Premier League and instead sign a new contract with Sporting Lisbon.

The Toffees have been tracking the highly-rated Portugal international for some time and manager Roberto Martinez is keen to add much-needed cover in defence with John Stones out until February.

Martinez has had to call upon veteran full-back Tony Hibbert this season and youngster Tyias Browning to solve injury problems in defence, and he is concerned his team need more reinforcements to cope with the extra demands of Europa League football.

However, despite firm interest from the Blues and Scottish Premiership side Celtic, Soares now looks certain to stay with the Primeira Liga giants and pen a three-year contract extension to his existing deal which expires in June 2016.

According to Portuguese newspaper A Bola, Soares' £15m price tag has deterred the Merseysiders from bidding for the full-back up until now and the 23-year-old is ready to commit his future to the club where he began his career.

Source : talksport[dot]com

Jose Mourinho: 'Underperforming Chelsea Players Are Making Selection Job Easier'

Jose Mourinho
Jose Mourinho was disappointed with fringe players after disappointing Shrewsbury performance (Getty)

Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho has hit out at the fringe members of his squad for leaving him with little reason to consider them for his starting line XI against Queens Park Rangers on Saturday 1 November.

Filipe Luis, Andre Schurrle and Mohamed Salah were among those handed a chance to force their way into their manager's first-team plans in their League Cup tie with Shrewsbury Town but their lacklustre performances will not have helped their cause.

Chelsea struggled to a 2-1 win following Jermaine Grandison's own goal and the Blues manager believes he has been left with some easy decisions to make ahead of the visit of QPR.

"I expect players to give me problems. I love problems. But a lot of them didn't and they've made it easy to choose my team for Saturday," Mourinho said following the win on Tuesday 28 October.

"If players who played 90 minutes two days ago were fantastic, I expect people who are not playing a lot to raise the level to create me problems. They did not create me big problems."

Didier Drogba was on the scoresheet as he continued to deputise in the absence of Diego Costa and Loic Remy. Having played the entire 90 minutes in the 1-1 draw with Manchester United on Saturday 25 October, Mourinho was left particularly pleased with the veteran striker, who continues to inspire the club's younger generation.

He said: "Yes, I was worried when they equalised but we go through and Didier played a massive part in that.

"Hopefully he will be good for the weekend but we will have to see because right now his character is stronger than his body.

"Maybe what he has done today is through his character – not his body.

"That is what makes players special and any of the young players lucky enough to play alongside him learn from that."

Source : ibtimes[dot]co[dot]uk

Robin van Persie's Manchester United career is in decline, right? Wrong - his recent scoring rate is better than ever

On the face of it, Robin van Persie's Manchester United career could be defined by Sven-Goran Eriksson’s legendary summation of another uninspiring England performance.

‘First half good, second half not so good,’ perfectly encapsulated Eriksson’s reign as England manager and it also seems a good fit to describe Van Persie’s time at Old Trafford.

We have all witnessed Van Persie’s decline from the prolific striker who almost single-handedly delivered the club’s 20th league title during his first season at the club.

The grey flecks have increased, the injuries have started to mount up and the goals just don’t come along as regularly, or spectacularly, as they did in his early days at United.

Right? Well, no. Actually, the opposite is true.

The relief displayed by Van Persie as he celebrated his injury-time equaliser against Chelsea on Sunday masked a surprising reality about the Dutch forward’s contribution as a United player.

The truth about Robin van Persie is that, statistically, his United career should really be described as ‘first half good, second half even better.’

By scoring against Chelsea on Sunday, Van Persie broke into the top fifty of United’s all-time leading goalscorers chart.

With 51 goals, and at the age of 31, he can forget about overhauling Sir Bobby Charlton’s 249 goals to claim top spot, but Van Persie’s goals-per-game ratio is better than each of the top three -- Charlton, Denis Law and Wayne Rooney -- on United’s goalscoring list.

Only Tommy Taylor (0.69 goals per game), Ruud van Nistelrooy (0.68) and Dennis Viollet (0.61) can better Van Persie’s rate of a goal every 0.60 games for United.

Law, second to Charlton in the scoring charts with 237 goals, sits just behind Van Persie with a strike-rate of a goal of every 0.58 goals per game.

Those statistics could be misleading, with many supporters suggesting that Van Persie’s ratio would be a result of his incredible start at United following his 2012 transfer from Arsenal.

But as impressive as Van Persie was in his first few months at Old Trafford, his output since -- and David Moyes may rub his eyes in disbelief at this -- has been even better.

Van Persie’s first 25 goals, during his outstanding first season at United, took 43 games to amass.

His second 25, despite the injuries and loss of form experienced under Moyes, and in a team shorn of confidence, came within 38 games.

Van Persie made just 28 appearances for United last season, but scored eighteen goals, including a Champions League hat-trick against Olympiakos.

This season, the goal against Chelsea was his third in eight games -- a period which manager Louis van Gaal admitted has been a frustrating one for the centre-forward.

But against Chelsea, Van Persie’s all-round performance hinted at a return to the form many believe he has not displayed since his early days at United.

Van Persie, playing as a lone striker, led the line well, engaged in a physical battle with Chelsea John Terry and was rewarded with his late, late equaliser.

The last time United had scored a point-saving or point-winning goal in stoppage time was Van Persie’s free-kick against Manchester City in December 2012.

Perhaps Sunday’s performance proved that Van Persie performs best as a lone forward -- the role he played in the title-winning season -- but the goal numbers, at least, suggest that there really isn’t too much wrong with the player’s form.

During the 2012-13 season, Van Persie’s performance data -- runs, sprints, ground covered -- were regarded as off the scale by United, with last season resulting in an inevitable dip.

But under Van Gaal, the tide may be set to turn for Van Persie, with performances ready to match the goals that has been surprisingly consistent.

And rather than fear for his place, Van Persie can point to a strike-rate which proves he is delivering the goods, even when it appears as though he isn’t.

Source : telegraph[dot]co[dot]uk

Thứ Ba, 28 tháng 10, 2014

Mario inspires Reds, Blues advance


29 October 2014, 00:15

Mario Balotelli scored just his second goal for Liverpool in 12 appearances as they came from behind to beat Premier League rivals Swansea 2-1 and advance into the last eight of the League Cup at Anfield on Tuesday.

Balotelli has struggled since his £16 million pre-season move from AC Milan and on Tuesday he was on the bench until 11 minutes from time.

When the Italian striker was sent on by Reds boss Brendan Rodgers – a former Swansea manager – Liverpool were 1-0 behind after Marvin Emnes's goal had broken the deadlock in the 65th minute.

But four minutes from time Balotelli demonstrated excellent movement to get clear of the visitors' defence and guide the ball past Swans goalkeeper Gerhard Tremmel.

Then, with extra-time looming, Swansea's Federico Fernandez was controversially sent off for a challenge on Philippe Coutinho.

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And in the fifth minute of stoppage-time, Liverpool's Dejan Lovren got on the end of Coutinho's free-kick to head home the winner.

Premier League leaders Chelsea survived a scare before seeing off fourth-tier Shrewsbury 2-1.

Jermaine Grandison's own goal broke home side Shrewsbury's hearts with nine minutes left when he turned in Willian's cross.

Shrewsbury kept the game goalless for more than half the match until Didier Drogba finished from close range in the 48th minute for his third goal in as many matches and in three different competitions.

But Shrewsbury refused to be daunted and substitute Andy Mangan equalised just 84 seconds after coming on in the 75th minute before Grandison's unlucky intervention decided the match.

Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho was adamant he always expected a tough match.

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"I didn't change my feelings (that) the game was going to be difficult," he told Sky Sports. "It was difficult from minute one to the last minute."

Proud Shrews boss Micky Mellon added: "I just said to the players there, if someone would have said that we would have felt gutted and disappointed at the end of a game against Chelsea, we probably would have taken that emotion because it meant we would have been pleased, but we're gutted because we lost it on little bits of detail."

However, Chelsea's top-flight rivals West Bromwich Albion were knocked out by in-form Championship side Bournemouth, losing 2-1.

Bournemouth, fresh from their 8-0 thrashing of Birmingham, made 10 changes but that didn't stop the hosts reaching the last eight of the League Cup for the first time in the south coast side's history.

Eunan O'Kane gave the Cherries a 49th-minute lead and, after Georgios Samaras's shot deflected in off Tommy Elphick in the 85th-minute, Bournemouth scored the winner barely 60 seconds later through substitute Callum Wilson.

"I thought the lads were excellent," said Bournemouth manager Eddie Howe.

"The guys that came in, it's never easy but they were superb and I'm delighted for the fans and the club."

The all-Championship game saw second-tier leaders Derby County come from two goals behind to beat Fulham 5-2 at Craven Cottage.

Moussa Dembele's first Fulham goals fired the London club into a 2-0 lead shortly before halftime.

But Chris Martin pulled one back from the penalty-spot before the interval for Derby and the Rams stormed to victory after the break thanks to goals from Johnny Russell, Jeff Hendrick and two from Simon Dawkins.

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Meanwhile Sheffield United needed two goals in the final four minutes from Michael Higdon to beat fellow third-tier club Milton Keynes Dons 2-1.

League Cup holders Manchester City face Newcastle on Wednesday, while Stoke face Southampton – having lost 1-0 to the Premier League high-flyers last weekend – and Tottenham Hotspur welcome second-tier Brighton to White Hart Lane.

Source : supersport[dot]com

‘I have no regrets!’ West Brom boss backs decision to make ten changes

‘I have no regrets!’ West Brom boss backs decision to make ten changes

West Bromwich Albion manager Alan Irvine has revealed he has no regrets about making ten changes to his team as they were knocked out of the Capital One Cup.

The Baggies were beaten 2-1 by Bournemouth at the Goldsands Stadium as the bowed out of the competition.

But Irvine insisted he was right to rest players and allow other members of his squad the chance to play their way into his first-team.

He said: “I’ve got to look after the players who have been playing in all the games recently.

“I’ve also got to give other players, who are desperate to play in the first-team, a platform to impress. This was a platform for them tonight and some of them did but not enough of them.”

audio_title: 
Listen to the full interview with Alan Irvine here
Source : talksport[dot]com

Liverpool 2 Swansea City 1, match report: Mario Balotelli comes off the bench to spark late comeback at Anfield

It’s been the longest of countdowns but Mario Balotelli’s Anfield career, and Liverpool’s season, may finally have lift off.

This stadium was on the point of exasperation after 86 minutes of a Capital One cup-tie that was meandering Swansea City’s way courtesy of Marvin Emnes’ second half volley.

Balotelli had been summoned from the bench on 77 minutes, but it felt more in hope than expectation. He’d scored once in eleven games and in some previous appearances had been little more than an exhibition in the art of disinterest.

Then Fabio Borini scurried down the right wing and delivered the kind of cross his compatriot has been fantasising about. "Finally," he tweeted at full time. Finally, indeed. It was all about Mario for the right reasons, a neat finish in front of The Kop.

Dejan Lovren’s headed winner in the fifth minute of injury-time sparked the kind of celebrations usually reserved for the glorious European nights, but in the context of where Liverpool were heading it’s doubtful Brendan Rodgers has felt more relieved.

It was not without controversy. Federico Fernandez’s unfortunate red card a minute before time for a lunge on Philippe Coutinho assisted, enabling Liverpool to outnumber the visitors with the decisive 95th minute set-piece.

Garry Monk, an emotional and outspoken critic of referees a fortnight ago was more measured in his objections on this occasion.

For Rodgers, the opportunity to see this as catalyst for richer tidings will be irresistible. He has his sights on a trophy and with a Premier League challenge to match last season's highly unlikely the League Cup could become a meaningful consolation.

Rodgers swerved the post-match Press Conference (sending in assistant Colin Pascoe) possibly aware of a familiar subject in the post-match analysis.

At least on this occasion Balotelli delivered and there would no need to be defensive about his contribution.

It’s been a tough period of reassessment for everyone at Anfield and with four minutes left it seemed destined to be another evening where some fluent midfield play would go unrewarded.

Imagine heading to the Royal Shakespeare Company every week to see Laurence Olivier in his prime, only to find a year later you were being charged the same price to see Christopher Biggins playing Widow Twankey?

That is how it has felt for Liverpool supporters heading to this stadium since Luis Suarez’s departure.

It’s not Balotelli, Rickie Lambert, or Borini’s fault they’ve been so badly miscast in an attempt to replace the irreplaceable, but you have to forgive the audience for taking time to readjust their expectations.

The Kop needs some star quality to believe in again, so they’ll embrace this win and the manner of it, and hope their Italian striker produces similar every week.

Lambert was initially given the opportunity to give his Liverpool career a jolt and if goodwill has anything to do with it the goals will eventually flow for him, too. Like Balotelli, he is certainly improving and was somewhat unfortunate to be the man who made way for the Italian.

Other notable changes saw Steven Gerrard and Raheem Sterling rested, while Brad Jones replaced Simon Mignolet – and that is usually enough to make the sense of trepidation palpable. Jones’ distribution from the back makes Mignolet’s passing resemble Xabi Alonso.

It was Coutinho that offered the greatest threat. Gerhard Tremmel had to be alert to hold onto Lucas’ drive on eight minutes – Coutinho threading the pass to his compatriot. Playing in an advanced central role, Coutinho then dragged a shot wide on 13 minutes and another scintillating run at the heart of Swansea’s defence should have led to the opening goal midway through the first half.

Lucas and Henderson exchanged one-touch passes with Coutinho and worked a simple opening for Lazar Markovic, who somehow sliced a shot nearer to the corner flag than on goal.

Markovic was disappointing, likely to be the subject of plentiful 'give him time' lectures for the rest of this season. At £20 million, you have to expect much more.

There was a fluency to Liverpool’s game without the end product – not dissimilar to their weekend draw with Hull – and Swansea’s confidence grew as the game progressed, Jonjo Shelvey’s influence increasing.

By the time they took the lead through Dutchman Emnes on 66 minutes it was not surprising.

Borini, who performed well on his recall, had been involved in several tussles with Swansea full-back Neil Taylor, but it was the Italian’s tackle that deflected skywards into Emnes’ path.

He let it drop over his shoulder before volleying across Jones, an excellent finish to set up a finale that became more frenzied as full-time approached.

In truth, Swansea keeper Tremmel had been most troubled by shots from distance until Borini seemed to take the Swansea defence by surprise by the speed and height of his 86th minute cross, and the angle of delivery.

Balotelli, who would appear to be more of a six yard box poacher than all-round striker, was in the right spot to take advantage, shifting the momentum back Liverpool’s way.

When Coutinho was brought down by Fernandez the initial reaction – and the howls from The Kop – suggested it was a crude challenge. Referee Keith Shroud might have been affected by the emotional reaction of the stadium and showed the red card.

The replays were more sympathetic to the Swansea defender, but it left Monk’s side holding on for extra time.

Coutinho’s deep cross from a set-piece on the left wing found Lovren unmarked and Tremmel flapping. Liverpool had their win and Rodgers will hope both his side and his new striker will now find some momentum. Finally.

Source : telegraph[dot]co[dot]uk

Liverpool Striker Rickie Lambert Believes He Can Form Prolific Partnership With Misfiring Mario Balotelli

Mario Balotelli and Rickie Lambert
Mario Balotelli and Rickie Lambert played 30 minutes together during Liverpool's goalless draw with Hull (Getty)

Rickie Lambert believes he can form a prolific partnership with misfiring striker Mario Balotelli for Liverpool.

Lambert was positively singled out for his role during his side's 0-0 draw with Hull on Saturday 25 October after coming on as a second substitute.

Analysing the England international's impact, former Reds defender and Sky Sports pundit Jamie Carragher highlighted the way Lambert brought Balotelli into proceedings more.

He pointed out Lambert passed to Balotelli more times than any other player after he came on as a 60th minute substitute at Anfield as a replacement for the ineffective Adam Lallana.

Speaking after the game, Lambert said he can help improve Balotelli's fortunes in front of goal. 

He said: "I think I can forge a partnership with any of the strikers here.

"Sometimes it works better with two strikers, sometimes it doesn't. I've come on this season on plenty of occasions either as a one or a two, depending on the opposition.

"On Saturday [against Hull] it put more pressure on and we created more chances and it turned out to be a good formation."

Lambert is yet to score a competitive goal for Liverpool while Balotelli's only strike was the winner against Ludogorets in the Champions League last month. 

But the former Southampton striker has backed the Italy striker to get up and running soon.

"Mario is a good striker and we are all behind him. I thought he did well, held the ball up and did all the things he was asked to do," Lambert said.

"He was unlucky with a couple of chances. Like myself, Mario just needs a goal – that is exactly what a striker needs.

"If it goes in off your backside it doesn't really matter – then the confidence flows."

Source : ibtimes[dot]co[dot]uk