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Kirkley & Pakefield U18

Address
Walmer Road, Kirkley, Lowestoft, NR33 7LE
Teams
Male, U18
Website
http://www.kpfc.co.uk
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Football Team News

» Enzo Maresca agrees with Chelsea fans despite major claim about £1bn squad
Chelsea were knocked out of the FA Cup by Brighton last weekend and they'll play the Seagulls once again on Friday, as Enzo Maresca's side return to Premier League action
» Ruud van Nistelrooy reveals true feelings on Martin Keown after Man Utd-Arsenal clash
Arsenal's Invincibles survived a last-minute scare when Ruud van Nistelrooy crashed his penalty off the crossbar before an infamous brawl with rival Martin Keown
» Liverpool hit with injury blow as star set for lengthy spell on sidelines
Arne Slot's Liverpool dropped more points away to Everton on Wednesday night but the Premier League leaders have been dealt a different kind of blow with some injury news
» Man Utd exile Antony sends another clear message to Ruben Amorim
Antony was allowed to leave Manchester United on loan during the winter transfer window and has been enjoying his football a lot more since linking up with Real Betis
» Tim Lovejoy reveals backlash over claim surrounding Soccer AM's infamous 'Soccerette'
Tim Lovejoy was one of Soccer AM's long-serving presenters, and the broadcaster has reflected on the sometime controversial 'Soccerette' feature which featured on the show
» Steven Gerrard tipped to become boss of Championship side - 'He'd jump at it'
Steven Gerrard recently left his position as manager of Saudi Arabian side Al-Ettifaq and the former Liverpool captain has already been backed to take a job in the Championship
» Ruben Amorim appears to agree with Paul Scholes as Man Utd 'eye two mega transfers'
Paul Scholes outlined exactly who Manchester United must sign if they’re to re-establish themselves among the Premier League’s elite - and Ruben Amorim appears to agree
» Cristiano Ronaldo was sport's highest paid star in 2024 - with no women in Top 100
The 100 best-paid sports stars in 2024 have been named, with Cristiano Ronaldo one of a number of footballers on the list, but not a single woman has made the cut
» Everton aim cheeky dig at Virgil van Dijk after Liverpool star's Merseyside derby jibe
Everton had the last laugh in Wednesday's Merseyside derby against Liverpool, their last ever meeting to be played at Goodison Park before the club's move to Bramley-Moore Dock
» Virgil van Dijk made feelings clear when taking over Arne Slot's job after four red cards
Arne Slot, assistant Sipke Hulshoff, and midfielder Curtis Jones were all sent off after Liverpool's clash with Everton, leaving captain Virgil van Dijk to pick up the pieces
» French club issue brutal five-word statement on Cristiano Ronaldo transfer claim
After a social media account linked Cristiano Ronaldo with a move to FC Versailles, the French lower-league club put out an official statement responding to the talk
» Liverpool's FA charges warning, statements on red card chaos, Virgil van Dijk's ref message
There was drama during and after the final Merseyside derby at Goodison Park with four red cards shown after a melee between both sets of players and protestations to referee Michael Oliver
» Mason Greenwood welcomes second child with partner Harriet Robson
Former Manchester United striker Mason Greenwood has become a father again after his partner Harriet Robson gave birth to their second child
» Arsenal issue Kai Havertz statement following return from Dubai training trip
Mikel Arteta has been dealt a huge hammer blow to Arsenal's title chances after forward Kai Havertz suffered a hamstring injury that looks likely to rule him out for the rest of the season
» Sir Alex Ferguson to return to dugout after 'immediately saying yes' to ex-Man Utd star
Sir Alex Ferguson looks set for a return to the dugout, with former Manchester United striker Giuseppe Rossi revealing the legendary manager has agreed to coach his farewell match
» 'I had Real Madrid move denied due to Brexit complications - now I'm in League One'
Andy Mangan, a former striker for Wrexham, Shrewsbury and Tranmere, looked set for a dream move to coach with Real Madrid, before Brexit regulations saw him denied a work permit
» Premier League infuriate Manchester United with decision on future of PSR
Several Premier League clubs wanted an alternative to the controversial Profit and Sustainability Rules, but top-flight bosses have decided to stick with the current regulations
» Curtis Jones' 'three-word message' to Abdoulaye Doucoure as Liverpool and Everton brawled
Liverpool's Curtis Jones was sent off post-match in the Merseyside derby after clashing with Everton's Abdoulaye Doucoure, and allegedly fired an insult his way after the scrap
» Ian Wright sends clear 'now or never' message to Arsenal star after Kai Havertz injury
Kai Havertz has become the latest Arsenal forward to suffer a serious injury and Gunners legend Ian Wright believes Raheem Sterling now has an opportunity to prove his worth
» Manchester City legend Tony Book's five hidden matches playing for Chelsea revealed
Chelsea missed out on Man City legend Tony Book after he played five games for Stamford Bridge club's Reserves in the 1950s
» Lip reader reveals what Liverpool boss Arne Slot told Michael Oliver to be given red card
Liverpool manager Arne Slot was shown a red card after the full-time whistle in the Merseyside derby, and a lip reader has revealed the Dutchman's exchange with Michael Oliver
» Liverpool release statement condemning vile racist abuse to Everton's Abdoulaye Doucoure
Liverpool and Everton player clashed after full time at Goodison Park after an altercation between Abdoulaye Doucoure and Curtis Jones, who accused the Everton star of provoking Liverpool fans
» Everton's James Tarkowski perfectly sums up what Liverpool equaliser means to him
Everton skipper James Tarkowski levelled in the 98th minute against Liverpool in the final Merseyside derby played at Goodison Park, sparking wild scenes of celebration
» Premier League to finally make VAR change with new technology weeks away
In a joint statement, the FA, Premier League and Professional Game Match Officials Limited (PGMOL) have announced changes to the use of VAR and plans to introduce new technology
From

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Other sport news:

» Porto 1-1 Roma, AZ Alkmaar 4-1 Galatasaray, Twente 2-1 Bodø/Glimt: Europa League – as it happened

AZ Alkmaar stunned Galatasaray, 10-man Roma held on in Portugal and 16-year-old Jorthy Mokio helped Ajax beat Union SG

Ajax lead in Belgium. A fine, end-to-end move was finished off beautifully by Christian Rasmussen, who clipped a first-time shot into the far corner from 19 yards.

It’s all going swimmingly for Jose Mourinho. Youssef En-Nesyri has put Fenerbahce 3-0 ahead with a mighty header from Sebastian Szymanski’s cross. He was about 15 yards out and powered it into the bottom corner at the near post.

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» Qatar Sports Investments considers reducing PSG stake amid Khelaifi investigation
  • Club’s backers open to diluting 87.5% investment
  • President Khelaifi under investigation in complex case

Qatar Sports Investments is considering reducing its stake in Paris Saint-Germain amid a row surrounding an investigation into the club’s president, Nasser al-Khelaifi.

The Ligue 1 club’s backers are open to further diluting their investment, which amounts to 87.5%, after Qatar reacted with anger to the latest proceedings involving Khelaifi. The 51-year-old was placed under formal investigation in France last Wednesday, in relation to a case surrounding a Paris-based media company, for alleged complicity in vote-buying, interference with the freedom to vote and complicity in abuse of power, as part of a wider case involving the businessman Arnaud Lagardère. Khelaifi denies wrongdoing.

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» Slot asked for cool heads then lost his: composure key for Liverpool in run-in

Leaders must listen to their captain Van Dijk and set aside their derby anger quickly with four league games in 11 days

Liverpool’s loss of composure after the final whistle at a boiling Goodison Park was absolutely normal, according to Virgil van Dijk. He was speaking in relation to Abdoulaye Doucouré’s provocative celebrations in front of the Liverpool support. Liverpool’s loss of control before the final whistle, however, was not normal for an Arne Slot team, though it also fuelled the anger that exploded on their final trip across Stanley Park.

There was comfort amid the mayhem of the last Merseyside derby at Goodison for Liverpool in the form of a seven-point lead over striker-less Arsenal at the top of the Premier League. There were also questions to be asked of Liverpool’s second successive below-par performance at the home of their oldest rivals. The visitors at least departed with a valuable point on this occasion but deserved no more, however much the manner of James Tarkowski’s 98th-minute equaliser stung.

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» Premier League to delay introduction of rules limiting spending on players
  • PSR set to stay in place for clubs next season
  • League intends to adopt new squad cost ratio approach

The Premier League is to delay the introduction of financial rules that would limit the amount clubs can spend on players, with profitability and sustainability rules (PSR) set to stay in place for next season.

The league intends to adopt a new squad cost ratio (SCR) approach to spending controls, which would limit clubs to spending a set percentage of their income on player-related costs. SCR rules are operating in shadow form and the league had said it hoped to approve the measures before the end of this season.

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» Football Daily | Goodison Park’s derby days go out with a bang for Everton and Liverpool

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As assorted boots, fists, water bottles, yellow and red cards, a policeman’s helmet and various expletives not suitable for a family football email emerged from a cartoon cloud of dust soundtracked by a baying mob in one corner of Goodison Park moments after the final whistle of Wednesday’s Merseyside derby, TNT Sports co-commentator Rio Ferdinand sounded very morose. “Nobody wants to see this,” he mournfully intoned, providing a level of insight into the human condition and fan culture that really ought to preclude him from ever being handsomely paid to enhance the TV viewer’s experience of what’s happening on a football pitch again. Needless to say, Football Daily is of the opinion that Rio enjoys a heated post-match stramash as much as the next football fan and was probably only saying what he thought his bosses would want to hear. The same bosses, presumably, who quickly posted an almost four-minute long clip of these “scenes nobody wants to see” on their YouTube channel, because they knew perfectly well that everybody who hadn’t been watching them unfold in real time would be desperate to watch them later.

Whisper it, but did VAR have a pretty decent night at Goodison? It correctly allowed the marvellous James Tarkowski goal to stand. And the delay in adjudication certainly helped build the atmosphere. Heck, I’ll even give VAR credit for the handbags and sh!thousery that followed. Well done, VAR” – Mike Wilner.

Further to reflections on the length of club allegiance (Football Daily letters passim), on Saturday I am taking my five-year-old grandson to his first match, Reading v Rotherham … leading to accusations of mistreatment from several friends. I’m hoping it will lead to lifelong support for Reading. Although sadly I would settle for the club still being in existence next season” – Alan Giles.

Love the new xP metric (yesterday’s Football Daily). But isn’t it just a reformulation of the TFB (Tortured Fan Base) metric? TFB clubs always have the highest xP, regardless of recent results. The xP and TFB are not constant as Manchester United and Spurs prove (as xP can be always 0.00 during the Fergie years but growing since, while Spurs range between 0.2 and 0.7). You don’t mention the value range of xP (0.00 – 1.00 like xG?), but it’s easy to think of it as xG = TFB/100” – David Cavallo.

I had to double take on yesterday’s News, Bits and Bobs (full email edition) when reading that ‘Kai Havertz is set to miss the rest of the season with hamstring-twang, leaving Arsenal without a recognised centre forward’. This would suggest that Arsenal had a recognised centre forward prior to Kai Havertz suffering hamstring-twang” – Mike Wrall (and others).

This is an extract from our daily football email … Football Daily. To get the full version, just visit this page and follow the instructions.

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» Blackburn risk burnout as Venky’s blunder in waving goodbye to Eustace

Promotion-chasing Rovers are searching for new head coach as owners’ lack of investment likely fuels Eustace’s decision to join Derby

The biggest question surrounding John Eustace’s departure from promotion-chasing Blackburn to struggling Derby is: why?

The manager’s tenure at Rovers was indisputably a success. Parachuted in after the messy exit of Jon Dahl Tomasson almost exactly one year ago, Eustace guided Blackburn to safety and this season the team, despite being tipped as relegation candidates, have been in the top six for much of the time. After Wednesday’s 2-0 win at West Brom – without Eustace – Rovers are fifth with 14 games remaining. A return to the Premier League after 13 years remains a tantalising prospect.

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» Europa League: previews and predictions for the playoff round

Roma, Porto, Fenerbahce, Real Sociedad and Galatasaray are among the teams trying to book a place in the last 16

By Ben McAleer for WhoScored

Fenerbahce are in good form in the Turkish league, their 2-0 win at Alanyaspor on Sunday extending their unbeaten run to 12 games. José Mourinho’s side are just three points behind Galatasaray, who remain unbeaten in the league. The downside for Fener is that they have only won twice in Europe this season and just once at home. They scraped into the playoffs, securing the 24th and final spot by the slimmest of margins, pipping Braga and Elfsborg on goal difference.

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» Kai Havertz injury lays bare Arsenal’s striking recruitment failings

Forward’s misfortune leaves Mikel Arteta having to rely on teenagers and players out of form or out of position

It was a cruel irony that would surely not have escaped Mikel Arteta. Confirmation that Kai Havertz is expected to miss the rest of the season came 24 hours after Arsenal’s players returned from a warm-weather training camp in Dubai, with scans revealing the Germany striker had a torn hamstring.

Having flown to the United Arab Emirates last week in an attempt to refresh his weary squad, Arteta has lost a third senior attacker to the same injury, Havertz joining Bukayo Saka and Gabriel Martinelli – who could be out for a month after limping out of the defeat by Newcastle in the Carabao Cup semi-final – on the sidelines. Gabriel Jesus is out until next season with an anterior cruciate ligament injury.

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» ‘An intrinsic motivation to get better’: Carlos Baleba justifies hype at Brighton

Cameroon midfielder is thriving having adapted to the Premier League and settled on the south coast

Fabian Hürzeler is getting used to what he calls the “big hype”. After almost every game, the Brighton head coach is asked about the performance of Carlos Baleba in central midfield and the answer is always similar.

“We all know that Carlos has an impact on our game because of his physicality and his quality in possession and he proved it in an impressive way,” Hürzeler said after the Cameroon international returned from injury to inspire the comeback victory over Chelsea in the FA Cup on Saturday night. “He played very mature and we are happy to have him back.”

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» Football Australia left to write next chapter of Sam Kerr saga with captaincy call

FA can only kick the can down the road for so much longer and a bold decision will have to be made before the Matildas’ next fixtures in April

It has been more than two years since Sam Kerr’s night out in south London ended in a dispute with a taxi driver and soon afterwards a heated exchange in a police station. In the meantime the star striker has led the Matildas at a Women’s World Cup, added to the trophies and honours she has won with club side Chelsea, and been sidelined for more than a year with a serious knee injury.

Kerr also had a criminal charge stemming from that turbulent night in January 2023 hanging over her head, after she was charged with racially aggravated harassment for calling a police officer “fucking stupid and white”. That legal case finally came to a close this week when the 31-year-old was found not guilty, but the shock waves from the incident that gripped football fans and more casual observers on both sides of the globe are still to abate.

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» Maeda gives Celtic Champions League hope but Kane wins first leg for Bayern

For 78 minutes, Bayern Munich performed like a team who were irritated at having to play an extra two games before taking a place in the Champions League’s last 16. The return leg next week looked ­little more than a box-ticking exercise.

What happened next was as ­curious as it was intriguing. ­Daizen ­Maeda’s header afforded Celtic hope to the extent that they actually ­finished as the stronger side. ­Bayern, once so vastly superior, started to rock. Vincent Kompany’s team will still be the heavy favourites to progress from this playoff but Celtic will believe they can cause a shock.

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» Chelsea’s Sandy Baltimore: ‘I knew football in England was intense, it was what I was looking for’

French forward discusses her move from PSG, Chelsea’s strong start to the season and what attracted her to the club

Sandy Baltimore stays on her feet for the interview. “I need to keep moving,” says the French forward on the edge of the pitch in the notoriously cold indoor arena of Chelsea’s Cobham training ground. All indoor 4G pitches at training grounds become greenhouses in the summer and are icy in winter and, on the day we meet, the temperature is particularly low.

At 5ft 1in Baltimore does not tower; and the height that helps create a low centre of gravity that makes her so formidable with the ball at her feet is evident. On those feet, the choice of bright pink Air Force 1s gives a subtle hint to her love of fashion, contrasting sharply with her training gear.

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» The great escapism: Everton’s Corner Flag Guy and football’s lasting capacity for joy | Max Rushden

This has been a testing time on a personal level but seeing the euphoria at Goodison reminded me how the game can liberate

The clock at Goodison reads 97.41 (+5). The Everton players, fans, stewards, ballboys are enmeshed in a throng of hi-vis and blue joy. In the middle of it stands a bespectacled man in a black puffer jacket and black bobble hat. It’s hard to tell from the footage, but he’s perhaps 50, maybe older. He is holding the corner flag aloft, waving it high in the air in his right hand – something between a medieval spear and the world’s most passionate morris dancer. He’s just scaled the Dawn Wall, he’s circumnavigated the globe. It’s a fleeting moment before a steward assumes control of the flag and our man bounces off in another direction.

I love Corner Flag Guy. I love how football has moved him in that moment. Those of us (most of us) who support success-starved clubs often question the point of it all. Everton may be the ultimate example. They were good once. How many times now does the radio cross to Goodison at full time: “A chorus of boos from the Gwladys Street End.” Years of blunt strikeforces, of channel balls, of being reduced to only loving your right-back; 11th, 11th, 7th, 8th, 8th, 12th, 10th, 16th, 17th, 15th. What is the point?

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» Jackson’s absence exposes flaws in Chelsea and Maresca decision-making | Jacob Steinberg

There is a fear the manager is repeating his late-season wobble at Leicester; making light of Cup exits does not help

The good news for Enzo Maresca is that refusing to accept Chelsea were in the title race earlier this season looks impressively prescient. The bad news, though, is that foreseeing a dip is not the same as being able to stop it. The mood shifts in that situation. What is Maresca made of? Chelsea’s supporters are starting to wonder. Accusations of one-dimensional tactics are growing, and it was naive of Maresca to respond to Chelsea losing to Brighton in the FA Cup last weekend by suggesting it could help them focus on their Premier League and Conference League campaigns.

Communication has to be better after three wins in 10 games. Perhaps there was logic to Maresca’s comments – fewer distractions could aid Chelsea’s league form – but making them immediately after going out of a winnable competition felt unwise. Fans who had watched Chelsea fold against opponents reeling from a 7-0 defeat in their previous game were never going to react well to their inexperienced head coach seeming relaxed about another shot at a trophy disappearing.

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» Championship: Argyle ride Cup fever to rout Millwall as Eustace joins Derby
  • Hardie the hero again as Plymouth move off bottom
  • Sunderland, Burnley and Sheffield United march on

The FA Cup giantkillers Plymouth roared to their second memorable win in three days to climb off the foot of the Championship table. Ryan Hardie, the penalty hero against Liverpool on Sunday, scored twice in a thumping 5-1 victory against Millwall.

Joe Bryan’s own goal gave Argyle the lead and another Hardie spot-kick put them two up. Home Park was buzzing again when Mustapha Bundu added the third eight minutes after half-time and Hardie grabbed his second before Bryan pulled one back.

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» Saudi ambassador tells World Cup fans: ‘You can have fun without alcohol’
  • Prince Khalid expects 2034 tournament to be dry
  • ‘There’s no alcohol. You can’t live without a drink?’

The Saudi Arabian ambassador to the UK has told football fans “plenty of fun can be had without alcohol” as he warned them not to expect to drink if they attend the 2034 World Cup.

Prince Khalid bin Bandar bin Sultan Al Saud also said “we will welcome everyone” when asked to address the safety of LGBTQ+ people at the controversial tournament.

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» Semi-automated offside aid for VAR to be trialled in FA Cup fifth round
  • PGMOL happy with improvements to delayed technology
  • Seven of eight FA Cup ties are at Premier League grounds

Semi-automated offside technology (SAOT) is to be trialled in the FA Cup fifth round next month with a view to it being introduced in the Premier League before the end of the season.

The Guardian has learned that the Football Association has agreed to run an experiment with the new technology, which has been delayed because of teething problems in the testing process.

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» Ratcliffe is being cast as Scrooge but Glazers made Manchester United’s mess | Jamie Jackson

Time will tell if the Ineos chief’s severe cost-cutting pays off, but this is a club that has been mismanaged for years

Sir Jim Ratcliffe is making drastic cuts to Manchester United’s operation for fear that the club are on a fast-track to bankruptcy. Whether such seismic concerns are legitimate or unfounded, it reflects a tale of off‑field financial woe that matches the club’s 12 years in the title‑contending wilderness.

The failure to reel in a 21st championship or make a genuine challenge for one is a direct corollary of slow decline and mismanagement under Malcolm Glazer, and then his six children after his death in 2014.

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» ‘No doubt’ kiss Luis Rubiales gave Jenni Hermoso was not consensual, court told

Prosecutor tells sexual assault trial that Spanish player has no reason not to tell the truth about what happened

There is no doubt the kiss Luis Rubiales gave Jenni Hermoso after her triumph with Spain at the 2023 Women’s World Cup was non-consensual, a court has been told.

Rubiales is standing trial for sexual assault in Spain after being forced to resign as president of Spain’s football federation in disgrace after the incident.

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» FC Dallas completes $5m swoop for former MLS MVP Luciano Acosta from FC Cincinnati
  • FC Cincinnati expected to sign Portland’s Evander as replacement
  • Deal is the largest yet made using MLS’s new internal cash trade system

FC Dallas acquired Argentine midfielder Luciano Acosta from FC Cincinnati for at least $5m Wednesday in one of the biggest official cash-for-player swaps to date in MLS.

The 2023 MLS MVP is Cincinnati’s franchise leader with 54 goals and 72 assists after joining the club in 2021.

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» Champions League review: a fired up Vinícius Júnior and McKennie’s screamer

The knockout stages are here, and there were plenty of storylines to digest. We hand out honours and dishonours from the latest round of action

Feyenoord

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» Everton’s logic-defying derby leveller reminds us football cannot be tamed | Jonathan Liew

Tarkowski’s goal against Liverpool didn’t undo the mistakes of the past but Goodison sure embraced the madness

Before the actual ending, and then the melee that followed the ending, there was the original ending. The studio cut. The official’s board goes up to indicate five minutes of injury time. Vitalii Mykolenko puts a cross straight out of play. Jarrad Branthwaite and Carlos Alcaraz run into each other and bang heads. Tim Iroegbunam smashes a shot into the Gwladys Street End, and almost into Gwladys Street itself. The Liverpool fans are singing about winning the league at Goodison Park. Quite a few people are leaving.

And let’s be honest here: this would also have been a fitting way for the last Goodison Park derby to end. Certainly it would have felt truer to where Everton and Liverpool are right now, at the start of 2025, a park and an ocean between them. Everton make noises, run hard, crack their whips; Liverpool shoot them in the face. Before the game, the Opta supercomputer simulated this fixture 10,000 times and gave Liverpool a 60% chance of winning. As the clock ticks over to 97 minutes, the Opta supercomputer is doing victory laps of the office and taking high-fives.

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» Again in the margins at Dortmund, Gio Reyna in danger of being an ‘eternal prospect’

With other former Dortmund stars thriving, the midfielder’s unlucky and ill-timed run of injuries shows no sign of slowing

Gio Reyna looked serene, or maybe it was just the carefully cultivated light and airiness bouncing off him in Peleton’s Manhattan headquarters, where we had met up for an interview last summer. Either way, he was healthy and happy for the first time in a while, after his half-season loan to Nottingham Forest had been a bust. He was still only 21 but seemed to have matured. He had just gotten engaged. The beef with US national team coach Gregg Berhalter was behind him – that whole sordid deal when Gio’s parents sparked a civil war within American soccer with ugly allegations against Berhalter around the 2022 World Cup.

He had dazzled, finally reemerging as the Reyna of old, at the Concacaf Nations League Finals in March, where he was named player of the tournament after guiding the US to a third straight title. He seemed perfectly positioned to make his mark on the Copa América. Instead the tournament turned into a debacle for the US. Reyna played plenty, but the host country eventually faced a group-stage elimination-cum-humiliation.

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» As any woman in the back of a locked taxi knows, Sam Kerr should never have been brought to court | Suzanne Wrack

The Matildas and Chelsea forward won’t be proud of the footage of her in a police station. But her acquittal underlines that the charges and court battle that followed were a waste of time and money

Any woman who has been sitting in a cab and reached for the handle to find the door locked and felt their muscles instinctively tense for a split second until they hear the familiar clink of the car unlocking, even though they have been safely delivered to their requested destination, will have had an opinion on Sam Kerr’s court case.

Drunk or sober, when a woman gets in a taxi at night, they are keeping a close eye on the route being taken, sharing their live location, messaging friends and/or partners and sharing trip details, watching the driver. In an Uber watching the driver go off the recommended route on your phone? Watching out the window as a driver turns off the route you know makes the most sense? Logical answers flash through your mind – there must be traffic, perhaps there are road closures, maybe there’s been an accident – but they do not quell a rising fear that puts you on high alert.

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» Anatomy of a Tifo: City’s Madrid jibe makes confused super club look small | Barney Ronay

Rodri banner is a worrying sign for an organisation that is slightly losing its own strict and impressive sense of order

It can be a fun exercise during Manchester City games to imagine the contents of Pep Guardiola’s inner monologue, the stream of consciousness inside that whirring cranium as he strides his touchline, arms revolving, dressed these days in flowing Jedi robes, skater trainers and guru scarf, like a bald indie-Gandalf.

Most of the time Guardiola seems to be worrying about tiny details, correctively raging at shape, positioning and pressing patterns, muttering things like Jack, Jack, NO JACK, NO JACK. YES JACK. Who knows? Maybe he’s just wondering if he should have worn the quilted over-gown after all.

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» Mapi León incident shows women’s football needs to protect its players | Suzanne Wrack

The fallout from Spain’s Liga F game at the weekend led to Daniela Caracas suffering horrendous online abuse

On Monday footage began to circulate on social media that appeared to show the Barcelona defender Mapi León inappropriately touching the crotch of the Espanyol defender Daniela Caracas during Sunday’s Liga F match. León then appears to say something to her opponent. It then spiralled out of control.

León was condemned for her perceived actions by some and a torrent of horrific online abuse was aimed at Caracas followed by others. Espanyol released a statement shortly after the footage began to circulate and gain traction expressing their “complete discontent and condemnation” of what they described as an “unacceptable” incident. The club said the incident should “not be overlooked” and that they would make their legal services available to the Colombia international should she wish to take legal action.

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» USL announces intention to start new league at same tier as MLS
  • USL president says new competition is not a threat to MLS
  • Would give USL competitions at every level of men’s soccer

The United Soccer Leagues (USL), the organization that administers most of the lower-division leagues in the United States, will announce on Thursday that it intends to add a new league to its portfolio: One that is sanctioned as Division I, the same level as MLS.

The as yet-unnamed league, which USL says it intends to launch in 2027, would give the organization a circuit at each level of the men’s US Soccer system, along with the Division II USL Championship, Division III USL League One, the semi-pro USL League Two, and USL Youth leagues. It will also seemingly open up a direct line of competition between the organization and MLS, years after the two ended their strategic partnership that saw many MLS reserve teams playing in USL leagues.

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» Luis Henrique: the Brazilian lighting up Marseille under Roberto De Zerbi

The young Brazilian forward has been sensational in Ligue 1 this season. Next step the Seleção and Premier League?

By Luke Entwistle for Get French Football News

When Luis Henrique signed for Botafogo three years ago, the club’s owner – who also owns Lyon – cracked a joke at his unveiling. “He spent a bit of time playing for a small, small team in France called Olympique de Marseille,” said the American businessman. “Those of you from Lyon, I hope you’ll enjoy the joke.” Lyon were not laughing last weekend, though. Henrique has returned to the Vélodrome and it was his late volleyed goal that gave Marseille a 3-2 win over their fierce rivals in the Choc des Olympiques.

It was Henrique’s ninth goal of the season, a remarkable achievement given he had only scored eight in his previous four seasons. The 23-year-old has racked up 15 goal contributions this season, which puts him among the top five most decisive Brazilians in Europe’s top five leagues, below Vinicius Junior, Raphinha, and Rodrygo, but above internationals such as Gabriel Martinelli and João Pedro.

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» Dortmund’s season is spiralling out of control after own goals on and off pitch | Andy Brassell

Niko Kovac faces a tough task after BVB’s Waldemar Anton and Serhou Guirassy aided their former club Stuttgart

It had to be him. Waldemar Anton can’t have relished changing ends at half-time on Saturday. The performance of Borussia Dortmund’s big summer purchase had already captured the defender’s time so far in Nord-Rhine Westphalia in microcosm, as his blind backpass led to former teammate Deniz Undav going one-on-one with Gregor Kobel. Only a swift intervention from Emre Can prevented Anton’s error from leading to a Stuttgart goal.

When BVB moved from defending the Südtribune in the second period, it became even more uncomfortable for Anton. He was that bit physically closer to the away Stuttgart fans in the north-eastern corner of Signal Iduna Park and their jeers and boos became more audible. They had been furious when the Uzbek-born centre-back had left, not so long after Anton had extended his contract and spoken of his pride at becoming Stuttgart’s captain. If the move north had come with a hefty bump in pay and status for Anton, it has so far been far from a resounding success and in a game in which Stuttgart created little of substance, his next inadvertent intervention felt almost inevitable.

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» In Retegui and Kean, Italy are finally spoilt again for in-form strikers | Nicky Bandini

Mateo Retegui and Moise Kean are firing Atalanta and Fiorentina up the table and themselves into Spalletti’s plans

It feels like only yesterday that Roberto Mancini was lamenting the scarce selection of centre-forwards available to him as Italy manager. He returned to the theme repeatedly through his final few months in the job, highlighting how few domestic players were even starting up front for the nation’s top clubs. “It makes things difficult for us,” he said. “Let’s hope it’s not an irreversible phenomenon.”

Luciano Spalletti has not dwelled on this subject since he succeeded Mancini in the role, but plenty of others were ready to say it for him as Italy crashed out early from Euro 2024. Starting up front in their last-16 defeat to Switzerland was Gianluca Scamacca, making his 20th appearance for Italy and yet to score his second goal. The only other recognised No 9 in the squad was Mateo Retegui, who had struck a modest seven times in his first Serie A season with Genoa.

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» Mbappé fires equaliser as Real and Atlético share spoils in Madrid derby

The match that was billed as a battle of the superheroes ended without a winner, all set up for a sequel instead. Kylian Mbappé and Julián Álvarez had looked out from Madrid’s front pages on the morning of the city derby, the media turning Marvel Comic, and they will probably be there on Sunday too but this isn’t over. The man they liken to a Mutant Turtle and the striker they call The Spider scored one each as another derby finished 1-1, leaving these two great rivals first and second in La Liga, a single point between them, left to fight another day.

Between them Mbappé and Álvarez had already scored 37 goals in their debut seasons; on a night that took a while to get going but did eventually become a real contest if certainly not a classic, they took that to 39. Atlético started in the ascendency then Real were revived.

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» Serbia and Albania move on from ‘drone’ game but tensions still simmer

Rivals will co-host the 2027 U-21 European Championship, years on from flashpoint that sparked a diplomatic incident

It was far more than a football flashpoint when, on a night in Belgrade that resembled the most vivid fever dream, all hell broke loose in a Euro 2016 qualifier between Serbia and Albania. The “drone” game of October 2014 is notorious and the abiding memory is of Albania’s players fleeing down the tunnel at Partizan Stadium, a tinderbox that had ignited dangerously. It sparked a diplomatic incident, the home country immediately summoning its near neighbour’s ambassador to discuss the chaos wreaked after a “Greater Albania” flag had been lowered over the pitch before half-time. Blame flew in every conceivable direction and it was a case study in how sport can amplify longstanding enmities in visceral, deeply consequential fashion.

Maybe it was a dream after all. On Tuesday Uefa announced that the two countries would co-host its Under-21 Championship in 2027, confirming a decision effectively made last year after Belgium and Turkey withdrew their bids. There is justifiable contentment inside European football’s governing body given the hurdles that needed to be overcome. The line, as repeated by the Albanian FA president and Uefa ExCo vice-president Armand Duka, is that the event will be “a catalyst for breaking down barriers, enhancing mutual understanding and creating a more positive future for the people of Albania and Serbia”.

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» Atlanta United break MLS record to sign striker Emmanuel Latte Lath
  • Former Middlesbrough striker signs through 2028
  • $22m fee is largest outlay for a player in league history

Atlanta United announced the splash signing of speedy Ivory Coast striker Emmanuel Latte Lath on Tuesday.

Atlanta reportedly paid an MLS-record $22m transfer fee to Middlesbrough, breaking the mark of $16.2m that FC Cincinnati spent in November to acquire forward Kevin Denkey from Belgium’s Cercle Brugge.

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» NWSL agrees to $5m settlement to resolve player abuse inquiry
  • Settlement creates $5 million fund for NWSL players
  • Players went public with allegations of abuse in 2021

The NWSL has agreed to create a $5m fund to compensate players who experienced abuse and implement reforms to resolve investigations launched by attorneys general for New York, Illinois and Washington DC after players came forward with allegations of harassment and sexual misconduct.

Players from across the US top-flight National Women’s Soccer League went public in 2021 with allegations of misconduct by coaches and officials dating back over 10 years.

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» Police footage shows officer dismissing Sam Kerr claims before arrest – video

A jury found the Chelsea footballer not guilty of racially aggravated harassment after she called a police officer 'stupid and white'. Police bodyworn camera footage, released during the trial, showed PC Stephen Lovell dismissing her claims and calling her 'little missy' as she and her partner Kristie Mewis were giving their version of events to him. Kerr explained that she had felt they were 'taken hostage' by a taxi driver as he locked the doors and drove them to a police station after she vomited out the vehicle window.

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» Luis Rubiales tells court he asked Jenni Hermoso if he could kiss her – video

The former Spanish football federation boss Luis Rubiales has told a court that he asked the footballer Jenni Hermoso if he could kiss her before doing so after the Women’s World Cup final in 2023.

Rubiales is accused of sexual assault and then attempting to coerce Hermoso, with the help of three other former football federation officials, into publicly saying the kiss on the lips at the awards ceremony in Australia had been consensual. He has denied the charges, saying the kiss was consensual, while Hermoso has said it was not.

The ensuing scandal eclipsed Spain’s first Women’s World Cup victory and spurred efforts by Spain’s female players to expose sexism and achieve parity with male counterparts

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» 'A big disappointment': Slot reacts to Liverpool's shock FA Cup exit – video

The Liverpool manager, Arne Slot, said there 'wasn't a lot to be happy about' after his team's loss against Plymouth Argyle in the FA Cup fourth round. 'Credit to them. Good gameplan. They worked incredibly hard,' Slot told reporters in the post-match press conference.

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» Player sent off after removing corner flag due to puddle on pitch – video

A Watford Women's player was sent off after she, about to take a corner, removed the flag due to a puddle and was told by the referee to return it. Annie Rossiter did so before taking it out again and receiving a red card following an exchange with the official. Watford ultimately lost 3-2 to Lewes in their National League Southern Division game. 'I feel like the game was probably spoiled by some officiating decisions,' said Watford head coach Renée Hector

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» Even Total Haaland cannot stop Manchester City’s continuing nightmare | Barney Ronay

Pep Guardiola had a plan with his Norwegian striker at the centre, but it was no match for Carlo Ancelotti’s aura

Almost, but also, somehow, nowhere near. For Manchester City this was once again an exercise in how to fall apart. For an hour at the Etihad Stadium, City became a flickering version of their best selves, driven on by a selection of creaking first-choice defensive parts lashed together and made to march four abreast into the sun for as long as their limbs could stand.

By the time Real Madrid scored their first goal of this game on 60 minutes, half of that string‑and‑brown‑paper back four had either gone off or was already limping. Rico Lewis was being twirled around the place by Vinícius Júnior like a child at a wedding reception disco. And half an hour later, as Jude Bellingham scored to make it 3-2 to Madrid, City’s hopes of making the post‑playoff second knockout phase of this competition had narrowed to a fine point.

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» An FA Cup shock shouldn’t unhinge Liverpool, but football isn’t logical

Plymouth showed the world’s oldest football competition still has life but Arne Slot won’t be too worried despite his team winning just five of their last 11 games

It was, it has to be acknowledged, a much-changed Liverpool lineup. Of the 11 players who began Sunday’s FA Cup fourth-round match at Plymouth Argyle, only Luis Díaz had made more than 10 league starts this season and only three others had made more than five. Even allowing for that, Plymouth’s victory registers as one of the great shocks of recent times, only the fourth time the leader of the Premier League has ever gone out of the competition to lower-division opposition.

As their quietly charismatic 42-year-old Bosnian coach Miron Muslić pointed out afterward, it was a day that will go down in Plymouth’s history, that will be recalled for generations, as a one-off result more impressive than anything they achieved in reaching the semi-final in 1983-84. It was Liverpool’s ninth defeat to lower-league opposition this century but, in terms of the scale of the shock, it felt perhaps most akin to their exit against non-league Worcester City in 1959 when they were a second-flight club, a defeat that precipitated the decline that led to Phil Taylor making way for the great Bill Shankly.

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» Postecoglou undone by tactics and injuries but fans reserve ire for Levy | John Brewin

As Spurs’ head coach ploughs on, he has no choice but to use his best young players during damaging run of defeats

The midfield press was non-existent, Morgan Rogers carving past white shirts before releasing Jacob Ramsey to shoot. The goalkeeping of Antonin Kinsky bordered on appalling but the travelling Tottenham fans who filled Villa Park’s North Stand had another culprit for the opening goal.

It usually takes longer than 57 seconds to be voiced but “Daniel Levy, get out of our club” – or variants thereof – will be heard at every Tottenham game until, well, Daniel Levy gets out of Tottenham. Or, far more unlikely, he changes his approach to spending the club’s money.

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» Tarkowski cracker unleashes Merseyside derby chaos: Football Weekly Extra - podcast

Max Rushden is joined by Barry Glendenning, John Brewin, Archie Rhind-Tutt and Ewan Murray as Everton earn a dramatic point against Liverpool at Goodison Park

Rate, review, share on Apple Podcasts, Soundcloud, Audioboom, Mixcloud, Acast and Stitcher, and join the conversation on Facebook, Twitter and email.

On the podcast today: Goodison Park’s final Merseyside derby is a classic. What a moment for Everton fans as James Tarkowski wallops home an equalising screamer in the 98th minute. Then the scenes afterwards, with Curtis Jones, Abdoulaye Doucouré and Arne Slot among those sent off.

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» Football Daily | Manchester City and the Expected Pain meter against Madrid

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It may have been a happy accident for Uefa, but opening the Bigger Cup playoffs with a game between the last two European champions was a boost for the new format and a treat for armchair fans everywhere. Fears that Manchester City and Real Madrid might keep things tight were forgotten once we got a look at the clown car parked in front of Ederson’s goal in the first 20 minutes. After Madrid had tried and failed to walk the ball into the net multiple times, City then took an unexpected lead through Jack Grealish’s cross, Erling Haaland’s forward run and clinical finish – all given a Guardiolan twist by left-back Josko Gvardiol popping up mid-move to chest the ball into Haaland’s path. The hosts held their lead until the half-time break, frustrating Carlo Ancelotti and intriguing Amazon Prime viewers in the UK who had pressed the wrong button while trying to watch Clarkson’s Farm.

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» Real Madrid do it yet again to stun Manchester City: Football Weekly - podcast

Max Rushden is joined by Barry Glendenning, Nicky Bandini and Philippe Auclair as the Champions League playoff round begins, featuring a five-goal thriller in Manchester

Rate, review, share on Apple Podcasts, Soundcloud, Audioboom, Mixcloud, Acast and Stitcher, and join the conversation on Facebook, Twitter and email.

On the podcast today: another one of those games between Manchester City and Real Madrid. An injury crisis in defence for the holders doesn’t deter them from taking a one-goal lead into next week’s second leg at the Bernabéu.

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» Hang them in the Louvre: football tables as works of art | The Knowledge

Plus: clubs making big profits on ageing players and the WSL teams playing each other four times in 13 days

“Magdeburg were top of the 2.Bundesliga on Friday night after 19 games of the season … despite not having won a single home game,” wrote James Plain a couple of weeks ago. “It should have been hung in the Louvre – crowds notwithstanding. But what are the other best examples of tables as works of art?”

Magdeburg have since dropped to fourth in the 2.Bundesliga. Thankfully they are yet to commit an act of cultural vandalism by winning a home game, so we’re saying this table qualifies as a work of art. Magdeburg are bottom of the home league table with seven points from 10 games and top of the away table with 27 from 11.

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» David Squires on … Liverpool’s sacrificial offerings meeting their end in Plymouth

Our cartoonist on the shocks, heroes, wondrous own goals and missing teeth of the FA Cup fourth round

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» Women’s FA Cup: talking points from the weekend’s fifth-round action

Khadija Shaw returns with a goal, Arsenal avoid an upset and Rugby and Wolves make the most of fifth-round ties

Khadija Shaw provided a defiant response to those who subjected her to horrific racial and misogynistic abuse last week - by scoring an important goal on her return to the Manchester City squad. The striker withdrew from Gareth Taylor’s squad before Thursday’s League Cup semi-final against Arsenal to protect her mental wellbeing. Shaw, who had been out with injury for over a month until the end of January, came off the bench at half-time and scored City’s third in the 3-1 win against Leicester less than 15 minutes later – her first goal since 8 December. “I think that will give her a lot of confidence,” said Taylor, who knows his side’s season will hinge on a remarkable four meetings with Chelsea in the space of 13 days next month – starting with the League Cup final on 15 March, and followed by a two-legged Champions League quarter-final either side of a WSL meeting. Emillia Hawkins

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» Bunny Shaw abuse fallout, League Cup and FA Cup drama – Women’s Football Weekly

Faye Carruthers is joined by Suzy Wrack, Sophie Downey, and Sanny Rudravajhala to discuss Bunny Shaw, Chelsea and City’s League Cup final showdown, and a dramatic FA Cup weekend

On the podcast today: Manchester City’s Bunny Shaw is subjected to vile racist and misogynistic abuse, leading to her absence from the League Cup semi-final. The panel discusses how football can better protect its players and the broader impact of such incidents.

Elsewhere, Chelsea and Manchester City set up a League Cup final showdown and Crystal Palace made history by reaching the FA Cup quarter-finals. Plus, we break down the Women’s Champions League draw as Chelsea and City prepare for four meetings in 12 days.

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» Moving the Goalposts | Meet Club YLA – the Club Brugge women’s team doing things differently

Belgian club has its own name, unique brand and the freedom to develop a philosophy away from just winning

Club YLA are fourth in the top division of the Belgian Women’s Super League, which is exactly where they finished in 2023-24. Catching the current leaders Leuven and the multiple champions Anderlecht is a long-term goal but this is a club doing things a bit differently.

The club is the women’s team of Club Brugge, led by the chief executive Guillian Preud’homme, with its own unique brand created in cooperation with the Dutch company Studio Dumbar in order to attract new supporters, boasting its own merchandise range with different colours to the men.

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» History, memory, grief and belonging: my bittersweet Goodison farewell

Evertonian Alexandra Topping – knowing that the famous old ground’s time was running out – made a final pilgrimage with her nine-year-old son

It’s the sound of Goodison Park that gets you. The deep rumble of feet pounding on planks when a blue shirt walks to the corner flag, a thundering drumbeat that vibrates through the legs, up into the torso, direct to the heart. It’s the staccato clatter of wooden seats flipping skyward as a player runs down the wing. The chants started in the belly of lower stands which spill out into the air in swirling eddies, echoing disjointedly around the ground.

It’s the sound of my childhood, the sound of my teens and a specific sound that – at the end of this season – will not be heard again. Everton Football Club are leaving Goodison Park – their home for more than 130 years – and moving to a state-of-the-art 52,888-capacity stadium at Bramley-Moore dock, on the banks of the Mersey.

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» Miron Muslic: ‘Real life is a lot more difficult than playing a football game’

New Plymouth Argyle manager on fleeing from genocide in Bosnia when he was nine and the ‘fantasy’ of managing against Liverpool in the FA Cup

As the waves crash against the harbour walls of West Hoe Pier, a Grade II-listed structure beneath Plymouth’s Grand Parade, Miron Muslic’s mind turns to the sights and sounds of spring 1992 in Bihac, Bosnia. He was a typical nine-year-old boy, happiest having a kickabout or watching He-Man, still on a high from getting a BMX for his birthday months earlier. “We became refugees overnight,” he says. “We faced a genocide in the heart of Europe. You fear for your life, you’re scared. It was just devastating. We had to grab everything we could put in a bag and move 700km [435 miles]. I don’t think I was really aware of what was going on. How could I be?”

Muslic, his younger sister, Marinela, and their parents, Camil and Mersada, fled to Austria via Hungary, eventually arriving in the scenic Pertisau am Achensee after a few days on the road via various modes of transport. “And from there, Austria became our second home,” he says.

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» Straight to penalties? Greed is football’s real shortcoming, not extra time | Jonathan Wilson

Shootouts are the least bad way the game has found to settle drawn matches, but they should be a last resort

So Uefa is considering doing away with extra time, at least in the knockout stage of the Champions League, another grand old tradition swept away as the arc of history bends towards the generation of revenue for the already wealthy. This is the way of the world and so it is the way of football, all that is great and glorious about the game desecrated to produce more content to be sold.

But first, a caveat, an increasingly necessary one as middle age hurtles by. Is this about age? Are our responses to extra time conditioned by our formative years? My first FA Cup final was 1982, a drab game enlivened by Glenn Hoddle putting Tottenham ahead after 110 minutes and Terry Fenwick heading an equaliser five minutes later (Spurs then won the replay). The Schumacher-Battiston World Cup semi-final in Seville came six weeks later: at 90 minutes it was 1-1, by the 98th minute it was 3-1 to France and by the end it was 3-3 and West Germany had won on penalties. The following year’s FA Cup final also went to extra time as Manchester United drew with Brighton; although there were no goals in the added 30 minutes, there was the drama of Gordon Smith’s late miss.

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» What becomes of diehard football fans who stop going to matches?

Why do once avid supporters drift away? I went in search of five former matchgoing fans to find out

By Donald Walker for Nutmeg magazine

What becomes of the broken-hearted? Or perhaps more to the point, what becomes of the scunnered, the disillusioned and the bored? For many of us bitten by the football bug, it’s often a lifelong condition, almost like a kind of malaria: manageable but prone to sudden, intense flare-ups, and impossible to cure.

But sometimes diehard supporters stop going to matches after years or even decades of faithful attendances. Why? Death is an obvious reason, or having to work on a Saturday, increased family responsibilities, poor health, the cost of living, moving away from the area, taking up a competing pursuit, falling out with friends, taking the huff with the club directors, or quite simply becoming fed up with football.

It’s Saturday and the sun is shining
Perhaps a visit to RSS Discovery
A step back in time, into history
Yet I’m not happy
You almost feel that Captain Scott is standing there
But he’s not the Robert Scott I long to see.

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» The 100 best male footballers in the world 2024

Rodri has beaten Vinícius Júnior and Erling Haaland to top our ranking of the most talented players in the world this calendar year

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» Rodri stands tall on top of the world after year of glory and pain

The Manchester City midfielder becomes the sixth player to top our ranking of the world’s best 100 male footballers

One of the worst things about seeing Rodri in agony on the pitch against Arsenal in September – and the subsequent news that he had ruptured an anterior cruciate ligament – was that in the buildup to the injury he had criticised the workload being put on players. It was as if he knew something bad was about to happen.

In April, after an epic 3-3 draw at Real Madrid the Manchester City and Spain midfielder said: “I do need a rest.” He added: “Let’s see how we speak, how we live the situation. Sometimes it is what it is. I need to adjust. It [rest] is something we are planning, yes.”

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» The 100 best female footballers in the world 2024

Aitana Bonmatí finishes top of our rankings for a second consecutive year, with Caroline Graham Hansen second and Sophia Smith third

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» Aitana Bonmatí on top of the world again but England close gap on Spain

The Spanish midfielder wins for a second consecutive year on a fast-moving list that sees 15 players appearing for the first time

Aitana Bonmatí emulates her Barcelona and Spain teammate Alexia Putellas and takes back-to-back wins in the Guardian’s 100 best female footballers in the world list.

The double Ballon d’Or winner received votes from all 99 of this year’s judges, finishing 667 points clear of her club teammate Caroline Graham Hansen, the Norwegian climbing to her highest ranking after a superb individual year for both club and country.

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» Next Generation 2024: 60 of the best young talents in world football

From Franco Mastantuono to Estêvão, we select some of the most talented players born in 2007. Check the progress of our classes of 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 and look at the editions from further back

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» Next Generation 2024: 20 of the best talents at Premier League clubs

We pick the best youngsters at each club born between 1 September 2007 and 31 August 2008, an age band known as first-year scholars. Check the progress of our classes of 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019and look at the editions from further back

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» Next Generation 2023: 60 of the best young talents in world football

From Warren Zaïre-Emery to Endrick, we select some of the best players born in 2006. Check the progress of our classes of 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2018

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