Eddie Howe hails Man City match-winner Kevin De Bruyne as Newcastle United coach bemoans lack of options

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola celebrates with Kevin De Bruyne after their Premier League match against Newcastle United at St. James’ Park, Newcastle, on Jan. 13, 2024. (Reuters)
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Updated 14 January 2024
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Eddie Howe hails Man City match-winner Kevin De Bruyne as Newcastle United coach bemoans lack of options

  • Super sub returns from injury to break Magpies’ hearts with equalizer at St. James’ Park

NEWCASTLE: There are levels to this game — and sometimes you just have to sit back and admire world class when you see it.

When Eddie Howe turned to his bench, he saw youngsters and Championship-level campaigners. Just a few meters away, Pep Guardiola had arguably the best creative midfielder on the planet in reserve, Kevin De Bruyne.

And it was the silky Belgian, back to supercharge Manchester City’s Premier League title charge after injury, who proved the match-winner at St. James’ Park.

While Newcastle United more than held their own for 70 minutes, De Bruyne’s introduction, then injection of final third quality and composure, where City had lacked it to that point, saw this encounter flipped on its head.

Bernardo Silva’s back flick opened the scoring early doors before the Magpies hit back with two flashes of quality of their own. And their equalizer will go down as one of the best you will see in the Premier League this season. The tenacity of Fabian Schar saw him win the ball, then show the composure to tuck into Bruno Guimaraes, whose first-time flick over the top to Alexander Isak saw the Swede net for the Magpies.

One soon become two when a similar turnover, this time from Isak pressure, found Dan Burn, who set Anthony Gordon away and a similar finish of equal quality followed.

As the game wore on, such has been the tale of the Magpies’ season, when Newcastle tired, due to 11 absentees on the day, they had little to turn to in reserve. Cue a De Bruyne masterclass. His equalizer made it a quartet of world-class finishes, finding space in the gap between Newcastle’s defense and midfield, he passed into the side netting with a nonchalance few can get close to. Then, as the game ticked into added time, another sub, Oscar Bobb, popped up with a well-taken winner.

“It was a difficult second half. We were a real threat and it was end-to-end. The second half was more difficult,” Newcastle head coach, Eddie Howe, said.

“We had chances in the game. We had a slow start but we could have scored more. Their quality told in the end. De Bruyne is obviously a world-class player. We just have to continue in the same form as really. There’s not a lot wrong with our performances. You can see we are a top team. The group is in a good place, I don’t see any negativity. I see hurt because we aren’t winning and that’s what we’re here to do.”

On De Bruyne, Howe added: “You just hope he’s rusty and not up to full speed yet, but then he comes on and delivers that and you think, ‘Well, there’s no rustiness there’. He was straight in. You know his qualities, and you just hope you can minimize the space for it and take away the opportunities for him to hurt you with his range. He crosses the ball so well, although for the majority of the time he was on, we dealt with those situations really well. But, of course, for his goal, we didn’t defend well enough, and then for the goal at the end, that was hugely frustrating. With just three minutes to see out, you thought we were almost there.”

Despite a much-improved showing from their December dips against the likes of Luton, Everton and Nottingham Forest, the Magpies still walked away with nothing to show for their efforts. And that is now four losses on the bounce in the top flight, and six defeats in their last seven since beating Manchester United at the start of December. In four of their last eight games in all competitions, they have led and lost.

Howe said: “I think what I’d say on our situation is that we love the players we have, it’s just unfortunately for us, all our attacking players are not available. There are a lot of attacking players missing and, whenever you get that, you’re in a difficult situation. If the injuries had been spread out a bit more evenly, it wouldn’t be so defining for us. I’m in a difficult position where I’m thinking, do I bring a defender on, which can potentially be viewed as a negative substitution? It’s generally a negative move when you take off an attacking player, and I didn’t really want to do that.

“I was hoping that Miggy (Almiron), Anthony and Alex could still be a threat in the match, even though they’d given a lot in that first half. I wanted to keep them on the pitch because of what they delivered for the majority of the game. I think if we draw the game and see the last three minutes out, then it’s probably not talked about as much. But, unfortunately, it’s cost us.”

Guardiola was in a much brighter mood after the game, understandably so, although he joked about being “grumpy” with match-winner De Bruyne.

“That was really good; sometimes it is better winning that way for the team, for everything. Incredible team the way we played with a huge personality. They showed me they want to be there, to fight until the end, that they want to retain the title,” he said.

“I am a little bit upset and grumpy with him (De Bruyne) because he didn’t score from the free-kick. When opponents are more tired, Kevin and Oscar provide another pace at the end.

“Oscar’s was a fantastic goal for the control. We were really impressed in pre-season, I knew from information for the second team he was special. When Kevin has the ball and we have runners, Kevin is unique in the world, but the finish by Oscar, I am so, so happy for him.”

Next up for Newcastle United is an FA Cup fourth round trip to Fulham’s Craven Cottage on Saturday, Jan. 27.


Sevilla beat Al-Ittihad 1-0 to take Antonio Puerta Trophy

Updated 27 July 2024
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Sevilla beat Al-Ittihad 1-0 to take Antonio Puerta Trophy

  • La Liga club host annual match in honor of former player who died aged 22 in 2007
  • Match is latest pre-season friendly for both clubs ahead of the start of their domestic leagues in August

DUBAI: La Liga club Sevilla FC defeated Saudi Arabia’s Al-Ittihad 1-0 to claim the Antonio Puerta Trophy at the Ramon Sanchez Pizjuan Stadium in Seville on Friday night.

Lucas Ocampos  scored the only goal of the game from the penalty spot after 42 minutes.

The annual friendly has been hosted by the Andalusian club since 2008 in honor of former player Antonio Puerta who died from heart disease in 2007 at the age of 22.

This was the 13th hosting of the match, which was not contested in 2015, 2018, 2020 or 2021. Sevilla now have won won the trophy 11 times.  

The match was also the latest outing for both clubs ahead of start of their respective domestic campaigns.

Al-Ittihad will play two more friendlies against Real Betis (Aug. 3) and Inter Milan (Aug. 7) before kicking off their Saudi Pro League season with a match against Al-Kholood on Aug. 24.

Sevilla will launch their La Liga campaign on Aug. 16 at Las Palmas.


‘Sevilla FC is open to the world,’ says club president ahead of Al-Ittihad match

Updated 26 July 2024
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‘Sevilla FC is open to the world,’ says club president ahead of Al-Ittihad match

  • Jose Maria del Nido Carrasco speaks to Arab News about the Antonio Puerta Trophy, his club’s links to Saudi Arabia and football’s development in the Kingdom

DUBAI: La Liga club Sevilla on Friday night take on Saudi Pro League side Al-Ittihad in the annual Antonio Puerta Trophy match, which is also part of the pre-season preparations for both teams.

Arab News spoke to Sevilla President Jose Maria del Nido Carrasco about the clash with Al-Ittihad and the state of Saudi Arabian football.

Here are some of his comments.

On the idea behind the Antonio Puerta Trophy …

Antonio Puerta is one of the biggest legends of our club. He was key in the first Europa League title we won in 2006 and in the ones that followed in the subsequent months. His passing was a hard blow for the club and the fans, which is why we honour him every year with this match. We always try to invite high-level teams to offer him the best possible tribute.

On playing Al-Ittihad in the 2024 edition …

We are in the middle of the preseason preparing the team. I believe that by that day, the 26th, we will have had 20 days of training since we started on July 6. We want to continue training, implementing the game model of our new coach. We expect Sevilla fans to enjoy a good match, ensure competitiveness, and let all of us who love football start to see what Sevilla will be like in the upcoming season.

On the Saudi Pro League project …

The growth of the Saudi Pro League is very interesting. For clubs like Sevilla FC, where part of our business model is based on selling players to generate profits that allow us to make new investments, it is important to have emerging markets willing to invest. The key now is for them to maintain that level of investment, build solid structures in the clubs, professionalize all areas, and invest in formation for youth teams to allow also a technical improvement in local players.

On Sevilla’s attendance at the World Football Summit in Jeddah last December …

Our experience at this summit was very positive. Different members of our club were able to see firsthand how football is developing in Saudi Arabia, and we can expand our network of contacts in the region to continue generating alliances and synergies.

On Sevilla’s ties with Saudi Arabia …

We have had different trips to Saudi Arabia. Our head of artificial intelligence, Elías Zamora, visited to showcase the tools we have and can offer to the general football market and specifically to Saudi Arabia. Additionally, through our sporting management, we can share our extensive knowledge, our transfer policy, and our scouting policy, which has been recognized in recent years and further improved with artificial intelligence. We aim to create bonds where we can learn from them, and they can learn from Sevilla Football Club.

On exporting Sevilla’s renowned scouting methodology …

At the beginning of the 21st century, we started a scouting policy that allowed us to find players unknown to the market. These players came to Sevilla Football Club, we maximized their performance, achieved sporting successes in the form of European qualifications and national and European titles, and then we sold them, generating significant profits that we reinvested in new signings. When this practice became more common in football, we introduced a new factor: artificial intelligence. This sporting know-how can be offered to the Arab market to give them the ability, through artificial intelligence and the scouting of each club, to have an effective player acquisition and sales policy.

On Sevilla’s global relationship-building …

Sevilla Football Club is a club open to the world. Our internationalization plan aims to grow our fan base worldwide, and to do that, it is important to continue building relationships with clubs from different regions. We are also open to play as visitors against other clubs if an attractive opportunity arrives.


Canada women’s football coach removed by Canadian Olympic Committee over drone controversy

Updated 26 July 2024
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Canada women’s football coach removed by Canadian Olympic Committee over drone controversy

  • Canada’s camp was thrown into disarray this week after two team staffers were sent home for allegedly using a drone to spy on a New Zealand practice
  • Priestman denied any involvement, but did not attend Thursday’s 2-1 victory over New Zealand as FIFA — football’s world governing body — and the International Olympic Committee investigate

PARIS: The Canadian Olympic Committee removed women’s national football head coach Bev Priestman for the remainder of the Paris Games following an alleged drone spying scandal.

The COC said in a statement released early Friday that assistant coach Andy Spence would lead the defending gold medalists for the remainder of the tournament.

Canada’s camp was thrown into disarray this week after two team staffers were sent home for allegedly using a drone to spy on a New Zealand practice.

Priestman denied any involvement, but did not attend Thursday’s 2-1 victory over New Zealand as FIFA — football’s world governing body — and the International Olympic Committee investigate.

Canada Football CEO and general secretary Kevin Blue said in the COC release “additional information has come to our attention regarding previous drone use against opponents, predating the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.”

He added Priestman was suspended from her duties until the end of the tournament and the completion of the organization’s independent external review.

The COC said Wednesday that assistant coach Jasmine Mander and analyst Joseph Lombardi were “sent home immediately,” and that it had accepted Priestman’s decision to remove herself from coaching the opening match.

Priestman held a brief media availability Wednesday after guiding her team through a one-hour practice.

“My reaction was you feel like this program has let the country down,” the 38-year-old Priestman said. “That’s why I took the proactive step to do what I felt was the right thing. Irrespective of the details, I’m ultimately accountable.”

Priestman had agreed to a contract in late January to coach Canada through the 2027 Women’s World Cup.

Priestman was hired in November 2020 to succeed Kenneth Heiner-Moller and had been working on a rolling contract. She led Canada to a gold medal at the 2021 Olympics, but was eliminated in the group stage of last year’s World Cup. She has coached the team to 28 wins, nine losses and 10 draws.

Priestman spent five years with the Canadian Football Association in a variety of coaching roles before returning in June 2018 to her native England, where she served as coach of the women’s under-18 team and assistant coach with the senior women’s team. Before that she spent 4 1/2 years as head of football development in New Zealand before leaving in June 2013.


Historic French club Bordeaux to become amateur after bankruptcy

Updated 26 July 2024
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Historic French club Bordeaux to become amateur after bankruptcy

BORDEAUX: Former French Ligue 1 champions Bordeaux on Thursday said they will become an amateur club for the first time in almost 90 years after filing for bankruptcy.

They had announced earlier in the week that they would accept their relegation to the third-tier Championnat National by French football’s financial watchdog, the DNCG.

Bordeaux, based in France’s south-west, won the last of their six top flight titles in 2009.

They first turned professional in 1937.

The club needs to find 40 million euros ($43.6 million) to balance their books and had been in talks with the owners of Liverpool, Fenway Sports Group (FSG), before the American investors pulled out of negotiations earlier this month.

“On Tuesday, the club filed for bankruptcy with Bordeaux’s commercial court, to be able to begin necessary restructuring,” they said in a statement.

“The club had to give up asking to maintain its professional status” as it risked “heavy sanctions” if it presented a recovery plan to the DNCG that did not reflect its future financial reality.

Bordeaux were relegated to Ligue 2 in 2022, just 12 years after reaching the Champions League quarter-finals.

The town’s mayor slammed the decision by Bordeaux’s controversial owner Gerard Lopez, who has invested 60 million euros into the club since 2021.

“I’ve learnt with consternation the sudden and personal decision made by Gerard Lopez,” Pierre Hurmic told AFP.

“It confirms the risky management that has led our club in the space of three years from the elite Ligue 1 to the amateur level,” he added.

A host of well know players — past and present — have played for Bordeaux including World Cup winners Zinedine Zidane, Bixente Lizarazu and Christophe Dugarry, as well as Real Madrid midfielder Aurelien Tchouameni.

“I feel extremely sick like everyone who loves the club,” 1998 World Cup winner Lizarazu said on Instagram.

“What’s happing is unfortunately the result of disastrous football and financial management for many years,” he added.

One consequence to the move is that the club’s academy will close and a host of professional players will leave the outfit.

The new Championnat National season begins on August 16 with Bordeaux expected to play at their 42,000-capacity Matmut Atlantique home, France’s sixth biggest stadium, for the campaign.


USA, World Cup holders Spain win women’s Olympic football openers

Updated 26 July 2024
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USA, World Cup holders Spain win women’s Olympic football openers

  • Spain are making their Olympic women’s football debut at the Paris Games but are leading contenders to win the gold medal
  • It is the perfect start for Spain in Group C, in which rivals Nigeria and Brazil meet later

PARIS: Reigning Ballon d’Or Aitana Bonmati scored one goal and helped create another as World Cup holders Spain beat Japan 2-1 in their first game of the women’s Olympic football tournament on Thursday, while record four-time gold medallists the United States beat Zambia 3-0.

Spain are making their Olympic women’s football debut at the Paris Games but are leading contenders to win gold after their World Cup triumph in Australia and New Zealand last year.

They fell behind against Japan in Group C in the western French city of Nantes to Aoba Fujino’s superb early free-kick, but Bonmati soon equalized as she rounded the goalkeeper to score midway through the first half.

Spain then grabbed the winner in the 74th minute when Mariona Caldentey exchanged passes with Bonmati before firing in.

With 12 teams split into three groups of four, there is margin for error as the two best third-placed sides will advance to the quarter-finals.

That will provide some comfort for Japan, silver medallists at London 2012.

A strong Spain starting XI featured seven players who were in the line-up for last year’s World Cup final win over England in Sydney, plus Alexia Putellas, the two-time former Ballon d’Or winner.

In the same section, two-time silver medallists Brazil beat Nigeria 1-0 in Bordeaux.

Former world player of the year Marta, in her sixth Olympics at the age of 38, had an effort disallowed for offside before setting up Gabi Nunes for the only goal late in the first half.

The USA have come to the Games with a young squad but with high hopes of success under new coach Emma Hayes.

They were comfortable winners against Zambia in Nice but should have triumphed by a greater margin after netting three times in the first half against opponents who had a player sent off before the break.

Trinity Rodman and Mallory Swanson both hit the woodwork before Rodman — daughter of former NBA superstar Dennis Rodman — scored on 17 minutes with a lovely turn and finish in the box.

Swanson made it 2-0 on 24 minutes when she controlled Lindsey Horan’s pass and finished, and she netted again just a minute later, this time rounding the goalkeeper to slot in.

Zambia’s Pauline Zulu was left in tears as she was sent off following a VAR review shortly before the break for a foul on Sophia Smith. However, the USA could not add any more goals with the extra player.

Also in Group B, 2016 gold medallists Germany outclassed Australia, winning 3-0 in Marseille with Marina Hegering and Lea Schueller both scoring headers before Jule Brand wrapped up the victory.

The USA and Germany meet each other in Marseille on Sunday.

France survived a wobble to beat Colombia 3-2 in Lyon, where there were plenty of empty seats to greet the host nation.

Marie-Antoinette Katoto scored twice in the first half either side of a Kenza Dali strike as France appeared to be cruising.

However, Catalina Usme pulled one back from a penalty early in the second half and substitute Manuela Pavi further reduced the deficit before a red card for Mayra Ramirez ended Colombian hopes of snatching a point.

In the same Group A, reigning Olympic champions Canada shrugged off a spying scandal to claim a 2-1 win over New Zealand in Saint-Etienne.

Mackenzie Barry gave New Zealand the lead before a sparse crowd at the Stade Geoffroy-Guichard.

Arsenal’s Cloe Lacasse levelled in first-half stoppage time for Canada, who beat Sweden on penalties in the final in Tokyo three years ago. Evelyne Viens then fired in the winner 11 minutes from time.

Canada’s build-up had been overshadowed after an assistant coach and an analyst were sent home from the Olympics on the eve of the game.

The analyst, 43-year-old Joey Lombardi, was also given a suspended eight-month prison sentence for flying a drone over a New Zealand training session this week in Saint-Etienne.

Head coach Bev Priestman apologized and took no part in the game against New Zealand, feeling it would not be appropriate.

“As a Canadian, these are not our values. We are not cheats,” said defender Vanessa Gilles, who described the episode as a “humiliation.”