Italian football on trial as Juventus aim to prove there’s life in the Old Lady yet

Juventus need to pick themselves up after the 3-0 defeat to Real Madrid and restore some pride in the second leg. (Getty)
Updated 10 April 2018
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Italian football on trial as Juventus aim to prove there’s life in the Old Lady yet

  • Juve face a mountain to climb after the first leg
  • So solid in Serie A, Juve's defence looks shaky in Europe

The tie, realistically, has gone. Were Juventus to overhaul a 3-0 deficit from their home leg away to Real Madrid, it would be the most unexpected comeback in the history of football.
No side has ever accomplished such a task in European competition. All that remains for Juve is to try to salvage some pride, not just for the club but for Italian football as a whole.
The first leg was extremely troubling for Serie A. In the 25 matches before it, the Old Lady had kept 21 clean sheets. The only four games in which they had conceded had been in 3-1 wins over Verona and AC Milan and in both legs of the previous round of the Champions League as they drew 2-2 against Tottenham before beating them 2-1 at Wembley. That suggested they were some sort of impregnable force. But in their Champions League knockout games so far they have looked anything but.
At Wembley, it is true, there was a half-hour spell after they had scored their two goals in quick succession in which bodies were hurled in front of shots, blocks were made, and Giorgio Chiellini and Gianluigi Buffon screamed at each other. That was enough to bring forth from sections of the media all the stereotypes about streetwise Italian sides and the great catenaccio tradition.
But it was largely nonsense. The truth is that Juve had been overrun for long periods but had the canniness to disrupt Tottenham early in the second half and the ruthlessness to take the two opportunities that suddenly, unexpectedly, fell their way. A spirit of emotional defiance was reached in the latter stages, but even then there were three good Tottenham chances.
Good defending is about stifling opposing moves at source; once keepers are making saves and defenders are hurling themselves in the way of shots, there is an element of lottery about it. Those last-dich interventions can be vital, of course, but they are the sign of a side rescuing themselves; the very best do not get into trouble in the first place.
Within three minutes last week, Juve’s defensive structure had collapsed. It was not just that Cristiano Ronaldo was allowed to make an unchallenged run across the near post, startling as that was, it was the build-up as Douglas Costa lingered upfield, leaving Mattea De Sciglio trying to deal with two men wide on the left. Marcelo had a simple task to prod the ball to Isco in space and he then had time to measure an excellent cross. How could a defense that could permit that to happen have kept 21 clean sheets in its previous 25 games?
Even Ronaldo’s overhead kick for the second, magnificent as it was, was the result of a passage of play begun when Juve lost possession following some confusion between Buffon and Chiellini.
Juve looked shaky against Tottenham and were shambolic against Madrid. That that defense, so obviously vulnerable in the Champions League, has leaked just 18 goals in 31 games domestically feels barely credible, and raises serious concerns about the general quality of Italian football.

KEY CLASH

Cristiano Ronaldo’s record against just about everybody is remarkable, but against Juventus it is particularly so: He has scored nine goals in six games against them. His scoring form generally at the moment is preposterous: 24 goals in his last 13 games for Real Madrid, and 14 in the Champions League this season, six more than anybody else in the competition.
Ronaldo’s transition from flighty winger to bustling, deadly no. 9, adapting as well as anyone ever has as his body has aged and its possibilities changed, should have made him more the sort of player Juve’s aging but physical central defense is comfortable in combating, but there was little sign of that last week. His movement was too good, his finishing too precise for them to deal with. Chiellini may have radiated defiance in the final minutes against Tottenham at Wembley, but in the first leg Ronaldo made him look every second of his 33 years.


Kylian Mbappe signs with Real Madrid for upcoming season

Updated 02 June 2024
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Kylian Mbappe signs with Real Madrid for upcoming season

MADRID: Kylian Mbappe has signed every document completing his transfer to the LaLiga club Real Madrid next season, according to noted Italian sports journalist Fabrizio Romano on X.
The French striker made his decision in February to leave Paris Saint-Germain after seven years of playing for them. His contract was set to expire this summer making him a free agent.


Mbappe’s stint with Paris Saint-Germain has won him six Ligue 1 titles, three French Cups, two League Cups and a record five Player of the Year awards.
Real Madrid celebrated a record-extending 15th Champions League title on Saturday after defeating Borussia Dortmund 2-0 at Wembley Stadium. 
Madrid’s latest triumph came without a recognized striker after club icon Karim Benzema departed last year. The gap was filled by English midfielder Jude Bellingham, but by next season Ancelotti will have more fire power to call upon. 
Mbappe is the name most wanted by Madrid fans after a decade-long pursuit of the man many believe to be the heir to Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo as the world’s greatest player.


No marathon this time as Swiatek sprints into French Open quarterfinals

Updated 02 June 2024
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No marathon this time as Swiatek sprints into French Open quarterfinals

  • Defending champion dismisses Anastasia Potapova in just 40 minutes with a crushing 6-0, 6-0 win
  • Swiatek remains on course for her third consecutive French Open title and fourth overall

PARIS: After the French Open marathon came the sprint.
Defending champion Iga Swiatek swept into the quarterfinals at Roland Garros in just 40 minutes after a crushing 6-0, 6-0 win against Anastasia Potapova.
Swiatek won without even facing a game point against her. The match ended when Potapova hit a forehand into the net on the first match point.
“I was just really focused and in the zone,” Swiatek said. “It went pretty quickly, pretty weird.”
Their match started at around 11 a.m.
That’s just eight hours after men’s defending champion Novak Djokovic finished his five-set, 4 1/2-hour marathon against Lorenzo Musetti at just after 3 a.m. in the latest finish in tournament history.
Swiatek remains on course for her third consecutive French Open title and fourth overall. The top-ranked Pole will play Wimbleon champion Marketa Vondrousova after the fifth-seeded Czech beat unseeded Serb Olga Danilovic 6-4, 6-2.
They played on Court Suzanne Lenglen, the only other court with a roof. After five consecutive days with rain delays, play on the other roofless courts got underway on time.
Later Sunday, third-seeded American Coco Gauff took on unseeded Italian Elisabetta Cocciaretto.
Australian Open champion Jannik Sinner and two-time Grand Slam winner Carlos Alcaraz were in men’s fourth-round action.
Second-seeded Sinner faced Frenchman Corentin Moutet and third-seeded Alcaraz played No. 21-seeded Canadian Felix Auger-Aliassime.


Pakistan will look to be positive in T20 World Cup— skipper Babar Azam 

Updated 02 June 2024
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Pakistan will look to be positive in T20 World Cup— skipper Babar Azam 

  • Pakistan, T20 world champions in 2009, reached semifinal and final stages in 2021, 2022
  • Their preparation for this year’s World Cup includes losses against Ireland and England 

Pakistan captain Babar Azam called on his side to stay in high spirits as they begin their Twenty20 World Cup campaign off the back of a poor run of form.

Pakistan, T20 World Cup champions in 2009, have performed well in the past two editions of the competition, reaching the semifinals in 2021 and losing to England in the final in 2022.

However, their preparations for this year’s tournament in the United States and West Indies has been far from ideal, with a sobering defeat by Ireland in an eventual 2-1 series victory followed by a 2-0 defeat by England in a rain-affected series.

“Effort is in our hands, but results, we do not know,” Babar said in an episode of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) podcast released on Sunday.

“How we present ourselves on the ground, our body language and how we communicate with each other will matter. We must be positive, so results will come... Conditions in the USA may pose challenges as we are going there as a national side for the first time.

“We are in the process of collating various cricket and match-related information from players who have played there, which can help and assist us in our preparations.”

Pakistan are in Group A of the World Cup and begin their campaign against hosts US on June 6. They will then take on arch-rivals India in one of the event’s highly-anticipated matches three days later.

Pakistan and India have faced each other seven times at the T20 World Cup, with Pakistan winning just once.

“An India-Pakistan match is always the most talked about; it is discussed too much wherever you go in the world,” Babar said.

“The players get different vibes and excitement. What will happen is that everyone supports their country, so the focus is on that match. The whole world is focused on the day when the India-Pakistan match is held.

“Naturally, there will be nerves, but we need to keep our focus, stick to the basics and play easy cricket. It is always a pressure game; the more you keep cool and calm, believe in your skills and hard work, then things get easier.” 


Turkish club Fenerbahce announces Jose Mourinho as its new coach

Updated 02 June 2024
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Turkish club Fenerbahce announces Jose Mourinho as its new coach

  • Former Real Madrid boss Jose Mourinho will be unveiled as the new coach of Fenerbahce soccer club, the club said

ISTANBUL: Former Real Madrid boss Jose Mourinho will be unveiled as the new coach of Fenerbahce soccer club later Sunday, the club said.
Following days of strong indications that Mourinho was to take charge of the Istanbul club, it said in a post on social media platform X early Sunday that the Portuguese manager was to attend a ceremony at its Sukru Saracoglu ground.
“Saracoglu is waiting for its new coach Jose Mourinho and its great fans at 19.00!”
On Saturday night Fenerbahce had posted a video message from Mourinho, 61, in which he told Fenerbahce fans he would “see you tomorrow in Kadikoy and let’s start our journey together.”
It’s Mourinho’s first job since he left Roma in January after two and a half years marked by winning the Europa Conference League in 2022 and a series of disputes with referees.
The Portuguese has not worked outside of the top five European leagues since 2004, when he left Porto after winning the Champions League and joined Chelsea, which was on the rise under then-owner Roman Abramovich.
Since then he has also coached Inter Milan, Real Madrid, Manchester United and Tottenham in a career filled with trophies and off-field controversy.
Fenerbahce finished second to fierce rival Galatasaray in the Turkish league this season and clashed with the Turkish soccer authorities, including by taking its team off the field in the Turkish Super Cup game in protest.


Makhachev beats Poirier by submission at UFC 302 to defend lightweight title

Updated 02 June 2024
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Makhachev beats Poirier by submission at UFC 302 to defend lightweight title

NEWARK: Islam Makhachev defended his lightweight title and extended his winning streak to 14 fights, third-longest in UFC history, by getting a submission victory over Dustin Poirier in the fifth round on Saturday night at UFC 302.
Overcoming one of the sport’s accomplished veterans and a crowd that was against him from the start, Makhachev ran his record to 26-1 and said afterward he may move up in weight for another challenge.
There’s certainly not much left for the Russian at 155 pounds, where he defended his title for the third time and showed again why he is ranked as the pound-for-pound best in UFC.
Poirier (30-9) fell short in his third attempt for the undisputed title, all three ending by submission.
He battled back after Makhachev controlled the first round and bloodied the champion’s face later, but Makhachev took him down midway through the fifth and quickly pounced, with Poirier unable to escape.