Selasa, 25 Oktober 2022

England World Cup 2022 squad guide: Full fixtures, group, ones to watch, odds and more

 

Can Harry Kane lead England to World Cup success? (REUTERS)

Expectations are high, and hopes even higher, that England can pull off another superb run at a major tournament after reaching the semi-finals of the 2018 World Cup and the final of Euro 2020. Manager Gareth Southgate has instilled a confidence in his squad which has brought a belief that England can finally win the World Cup again. That confidence is also reflected in the betting markets with the Three Lions third favourites to lift the trophy behind Brazil and France.

Yet faith in Southgate and his squad is not as strong as it was after England stumbled through this year’s Nations League campaign. No wins in six games with two defeats to Hungary and relegation from League A has put a sour note on Southgate’s time in charge and sends England heading into this important World Cup campaign on rocky footing. The pressure to perform well has increased and the manager’s decision-making, on and off the field, will be more firmly under the spotlight.

No more so than when he names the 26-man squad he will be taking to Qatar. Harry Kane and Raheem Sterling are dead certs and will be hoping to replicate their form from the past two tournaments with Jordan Pickford also secure of a starting place in goal. Jude Bellingham is pushing to tie down a starting berth but the question of where Phil Foden’s best position in the team is hasn’t been answered. Calls to start Trent Alexander-Arnold at right-back have gone unheeded with Reece James and Kyle Walker preferred and the England boss has stuck with Harry Maguire and Luke Shaw despite their limited playing time with Manchester United.

Going in England’s favour is the group they’ve been drawn in. The expectation is that the Three Lions will win Group B featuring Iran, USA, and Wales – although Scotland proved at the Euros that Home Nations matches at major tournaments can be challenging. Things get trickier in the knockout rounds, and should England top the group they’ll likely face the African champions, Senegal, in the last-16 before a possible clash with current World champions France in the quarters. Belgium and Portugal are potential semi-final contenders before one of Spain, Germany, or Brazil await in the final, probably. It looks set to be the most difficult run England have had so far under Southgate but if they get through it, they’ll have guaranteed their spots in history.

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Here is everything you need to know:

Can Gareth Southgate take England on another memorable World Cup run? (Action Images via Reuters)

Group fixtures (all times GMT)

Monday 21 November: England vs Iran – 13:00

Friday 25 November: England vs USA – 19:00

Tuesday 29 November: Wales vs England – 19:00

Predicted squad

Goalkeepers: Jordan Pickford (Everton), Aaron Ramsdale (Arsenal), Nick Pope (Newcastle)

Defenders: Ben Chilwell (Chelsea), Eric Dier (Tottenham), Marc Guéhi (Crystal Palace), Trent Alexander-Arnold (Liverpool), Harry Maguire (Manchester United), Luke Shaw (Manchester United), John Stones (Manchester City), Fikayo Tomori (AC Milan), Kieran Trippier (Newcastle), Kyle Walker (Manchester City)

Midfielders: Jude Bellingham (Borussia Dortmund), Jordan Henderson (Liverpool), Mason Mount (Chelsea), Kalvin Phillips (Manchester City), Declan Rice (West Ham United), James Ward-Prowse (Southampton)

Forwards: Tammy Abraham (Roma), Phil Foden (Manchester City), Jack Grealish (Manchester City), Harry Kane (Tottenham), Bukayo Saka (Arsenal), Marcus Rashford (Manchester United), Raheem Sterling (Chelsea)

Ones to watch

Star – Harry Kane: England’s captain and main striker, Kane won the golden boot in the last World Cup and is guaranteed his spot in the starting XI. He’s hitting form at the right time scoring close to a goal per game for Tottenham in the Premier League this season. The 29-year-old can also drop deep and pick out passes through the lines for his speedier teammates which will prove useful against strong defences.

Teenager Jude Bellingham hopes to thrive in England’s midfield (The FA via Getty Images)

Breakout talent – Jude Bellingham: The question was whether Gareth Southgate would give him enough minutes to show off his talent at the World Cup but England’s recent 3-3 draw with Germany changed that. At 2-0 down 19-year-old Bellingham took control of midfield and launched the Three Lions into a counter assault. He broke up play, made runs into the box, slipped in quaint through balls and won a penalty, all but nailing down a spot in the starting XI in the process. Add on that Bellingham is only the third teenager to score in four consecutive Champions League appearances after Erling Haaland and Kylian Mbappé and England have got themselves a real talent.

Odds to win the World Cup (taken from Betfair)

13/2

Prediction

England should have enough quality and depth in their squad to breeze through the group stages with Wales, buoyed by reaching the World Cup for the first time in 64 years and motivated by inspiring speeches from Michael Sheen, the biggest threat. Results elsewhere may give England an easier route to the latter stages of the tournament but if things fall out as predicted getting past the quarterfinals will be good going for Gareth Southgate’s side. Knocked out in the quarter/semi-finals.

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Sabtu, 22 Oktober 2022

Traits that made Cristiano Ronaldo great now hasten his painful decline

 

Cristiano Ronaldo trained alone on Friday. In a way it was the perfect image: a footballer who perhaps more than any other embodies the trope of the individual superstar, the idea that one man can do it on his own, doing it on his own. The television cameras were there to film his arrival and they were there a few hours later to film Erik ten Hag as he weathered a squall of Cristiano-related questions. The soap opera continues. But for now the football career is on hold.

Ronaldo will not feature for Manchester United against Chelsea on Saturday afternoon. He has been suspended for storming down the tunnel after refusing to come on as a substitute against Tottenham on Wednesday. The word is that United will again try to move him on in the January transfer window, and may even pay him to leave.

Perhaps we should have known that this was how it would end from the moment Ronaldo returned last autumn in a blizzard of ticker-tape and social media numbers. But nobody involved – not United, and certainly not Ronaldo himself – was prepared to shake themselves from a shared reverie that would disintegrate upon its first contact with reality.

Fans gather by the huge banner on the front of Old Trafford to celebrate the return of Cristiano Ronaldo before before his return match against Newcastle United in September 2021. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

For United, it was a reality borne out in results and dysfunction. For Ronaldo himself, reality has taken the form of time. The fact that he is 37 years of age is no barrier in itself: Thiago Silva is still turning out for Chelsea at 38, Fabio Quagliarella and Pepe are doing it at 39 for Sampdoria and Porto respectively, Joaquín is pounding up and down the wing for Real Betis at the age of 41. Ronaldo remains in excellent physical shape, and as he proved against Everton a fortnight ago, there are still few deadlier finishers. He ended last season with six goals in five appearances.

But what has changed is the game around him: a sport in which players are covering ever greater distances, at an ever higher intensity, to an ever more intricate and complex series of technical instructions. What has changed is the concept that one player, however talented or driven, can be given free rein or have a team built around him. The very principles upon which Ronaldo built not just his game but his fame, not just his career but his entire psyche, are eroding in front of his eyes.

What must this feel like? How is Ronaldo experiencing the world right now? In part these are questions that are impossible to answer, and so for various reasons people have stopped bothering to try. Far easier to paint him in broad primary colours, as either a cartoon villain or a vengeful demigod, to reduce his human complexity to numbers, his human emotions to ciphers. Fans who just months ago hailed his second coming as the second coming are now urging United to sweep him aside, to cast him adrift.

In April, Ronaldo and his partner Georgina Rodríguez lost their newborn son in childbirth. He was one of twins; their daughter survived. Rodríguez would later describe this tragedy as “the worst moment of her life”. For Ronaldo it was “the greatest sadness”. In the subsequent days the world of football rallied around Ronaldo at this most awful of times. Then, as the world of football is wont to do, it moved on to other things.

Did Ronaldo move on to other things? Nobody on the outside can say with any great certainty how this tragedy might have affected him. Every family processes grief in its own way. But anybody who has lost a child will tell you that it is a life-changing moment: a sadness that defies words or solace, whose vapour trail is felt not simply for weeks or months but for years, and for ever.

Fans at Anfield applaud on the seventh minute for Manchester United’s Cristiano Ronaldo and his family in April following the death of his newborn son. Photograph: Peter Powell/EPA

Again, nobody here has a direct portal into Ronaldo’s brain, and ultimately we must all bear responsibility for our own actions. But I suppose the point here is that if one were to cast judgment on a man making a seemingly irrational emotional outburst – say, on the touchline during a televised football game – might this be the sort of thing you would want to take into account? If only a little, if only for reasons of simple compassion? Or is six months beyond the statute of limitations for these things?

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And then of course you can throw in the sense of athletic decline, which is often described as a form of sporting death, a brutal reacquaintance with one’s own mortality. For Ronaldo it is reasonable to presume that this reckoning will hit him harder than most, given the peaks he scaled and the levels of self-belief required to sustain them. Ronaldo will never be remotely as good at anything else as he is at football. Now, with decades of life to live, this thing is slipping away from him.

Cristiano Ronaldo looks on as he warms up on the touchline in Manchester United’s victory over Tottenham Hotspur. Photograph: Matt West/Shutterstock

United knew this, or at least should have done. Instead, they chose to sink more than £60m in fees and wages into a 36-year-old striker with seemingly no idea of what their exit strategy might be. In a way both United and Ronaldo were happy to indulge in the same delusion: that the good times would simply keep on rolling, that reality could simply be wished away through branding, star magnetism and sheer will. It was the ultimate marriage: a company convinced of its own immortal pre -eminence and a player convinced of his.

But of course companies can pivot, remake and reinvent themselves. Humans are stuck with the body they have. Even now, there are choices to be made. Ronaldo could simply knuckle down, take his medicine, accept a diminished role in an evolving team, acknowledge his limits. But to do so would be to go against every trait and instinct that drove him to the top in the first place. And so as United forge ahead, Ronaldo simply waits: alone, imprisoned by time, quietly going the way of all flesh.

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Rabu, 19 Oktober 2022

Ballon d'Or: Karim Benzema wins award as best player in world football for first time

 

Real Madrid and France forward Karim Benzema has won the Ballon d'Or - awarded to the best footballer of the year - for the first time.

Benzema scored 44 goals in 46 games as he helped Real win the Champions League and La Liga in 2021-22.

Lionel Messi (seven) and Cristiano Ronaldo (five) had won the award on 12 of the previous 13 occasions.

Bayern Munich's Sadio Mane, who was at Liverpool in 2021-22, was second ahead of Manchester City's Kevin de Bruyne.

Barcelona's Alexia Putellas retained the Women's Ballon d'Or, awarded to the best best female footballer of 2022.

England Euro 2022 winner and Arsenal forward Beth Mead was second.

Premier League champions Manchester City, who had six nominees at the ceremony, were awarded Club of the Year ahead of Liverpool.

The Ballon d'Or is awarded to the best footballer of the year, based on performance over the 2021-22 season.

Karim Benzema (left) is presented with the 2022 Ballon d'Or from Zinedine ZidaneZinedine Zidane (right) was the last Frenchman to win the Ballon d'Or First Frenchman to win prize since 1998

Monday's ceremony in Paris saw French F1 driver Esteban Ocon arrive at the Theatre du Chatelet with the Ballon d'Or trophy in a racing car.

Benzema is the first Frenchman to win the prestigious award since Zinedine Zidane in 1998. Zidane was at the event to present his countryman with the prize.

"This prize in front of me makes me really proud," said Benzema. "When I was small, it was a childhood dream, I never gave up. Anything is possible.

"I'm really proud of my journey here. It wasn't easy, it was a difficult time for my family as well."

Benzema was the overwhelming favourite to win this year's award.

His 44 goals included a hat-trick in 17 second-half minutes against Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League, and another away to Chelsea in the quarter-final first leg.

He also scored three more goals over two legs of the semi-final against Manchester City.

The 34-year-old, who has been at Real Madrid since 2009, is expected to play a key role for France at the World Cup in Qatar which starts on 20 November.

The Ballon d'Or is voted for by 100 journalists from around the world.

Warm reception for Haller

Borussia Dortmund's former West Ham striker Sebastien Haller, who has recently undergone chemotherapy for a testicular tumour, received warm applause from the audience when he walked on stage to present the Yashin Trophy to Real Madrid's Thibaut Courtois for best goalkeeper.

Liverpool's Alisson was second, with Ederson of Manchester City and Chelsea's Edouard Mendy third and fourth respectively. Tottenham's Hugo Lloris was 10th.

The Kopa Trophy, awarded to the best performing player under the age of 21, went to Barcelona and Spain midfielder Gavi, who turned 18 in August.

Sebastien Haller at the 2022 Ballon d'Or awards ceremonySebastien Haller on stage at the Ballon d'Or awards ceremony

Borussia Dortmund midfielder Jude Bellingham, 19, was ranked fourth and England team-mate and Arsenal forward Bukayo Saka, 21, was eighth.

Barcelona's Robert Lewandowski won the Gerd Muller Trophy awarded to the best striker after scoring 57 goals for Bayern Munich and Poland in 2021-22.

The inaugural Socrates Award, a humanitarian prize, went to Mane for his charity work.

Five-time winner Ronaldo ranked 20th

Messi and Ronaldo have dominated the award in recent years, apart from in 2018 when Croatia midfielder Luka Modric won it.

Messi had already won the trophy more times than any other player and his seventh success in 2021 came after wins in 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2015 and 2019.

However, he was not nominated this time after an underwhelming first season at Paris St-Germain.

Manchester United's Ronaldo, who last won it in 2017, was placed 20th of the 30 players nominated, the Portuguese's lowest Ballon d'Or ranking since 2005.

Ballon d'Or results

1. Karim Benzema (Real Madrid, France).

2. Sadio Mane (Bayern Munich, Senegal).

3. Kevin de Bruyne (Manchester City, Belgium).

4. Robert Lewandowski (Barcelona, Poland).

5. Mohamed Salah (Liverpool, Egypt).

6. Kylian Mbappe (Paris St-Germain, France).

7. Thibaut Courtois (Real Madrid, Belgium).

8. Vinicius Junior (Real Madrid, Brazil).

9. Luka Modric (Real Madrid, Croatia).

10. Erling Haaland (Manchester City, Norway).

11. Son Heung-min (Tottenham Hotspur, South Korea)

12. Riyad Mahrez (Manchester City, Algeria).

13. Sebastien Haller (Borussia Dortmund, Ivory Coast).

14. Fabinho (Liverpool, Brazil) tied with Rafael Leao (AC Milan, Portugal).

16. Virgil van Dijk (Liverpool, Netherlands).

17. Luis Diaz (Liverpool, Colombia) tied with Dusan Vlahovic (Juventus, Serbia) and Casemiro (Manchester United, Brazil).

20. Cristiano Ronaldo (Manchester United, Portugal).

21. Harry Kane (Tottenham Hotspur, England).

22. Trent Alexander-Arnold (Liverpool, England) tied with Phil Foden (Manchester City, England) and Bernardo Silva (Manchester City, Portugal).

25. Joao Cancelo (Manchester City, Portugal) tied with Joshua Kimmich (Bayern Munich, Germany), Mike Maignan (AC Milan, France), Antonio Rudiger (Real Madrid, Germany), Darwin Nunez (Liverpool, Uruguay) and Christopher Nkunku (RB Leipzig, France).

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Senin, 17 Oktober 2022

Hasenhuttl accepts importance of midweek clash with rivals AFC Bournemouth

Southampton manager Ralph Hasenhuttl during the Premier League match between Southampton and West Ham at St Mary's Stadium. Photo by Stuart Martin..

RALPH Hasenhuttl accepted the importance of Wednesday’s clash with AFC Bournemouth but insisted he retains “all the belief” in what Saints are doing.

The St Mary’s side visit the Vitality Stadium five points behind their fellow south-coast Premier League rivals after 10 matches.

Bournemouth, first managed by Scott Parker before Gary O’Neil took over on an interim basis, were firm favourites for relegation before the season began.

They were defeated 9-0 by Liverpool but are the only team in the division to remain unbeaten since, despite a difficult summer of recruitment and many feeling they have a weaker squad.

Saints, who are in the bottom three with eight points, must start picking up victories and crucially against teams they are likely to be competing with come the end of the season.

"For us, it's a Premier League game and an important one,” Hasenhuttl said, asked if there is any added incentive given the locality and shared objectives of the clubs.

“We go there and I think we know that they are in good shape at the moment, but we go there like we have always gone into in the past with all the belief in what we are doing to make it a good evening for us.”

The meeting comes off the back of a 1-1 draw with West Ham United, at St Mary’s, that ended a run of four straight defeats in the Premier League for Hasenhuttl and Saints.

It could have been a first win since the August victory over Chelsea, after Romain Perraud put Saints ahead and Che Adams squandered two big chances.

"For everybody it is very frustrating because these are the moments where you can make a big step forward,” Hasenhuttl admitted.

“But it would still be a long way to go. There's no guarantee that you win games but it makes it a little bit easier. And then you can definitely play a little bit calmer but we are never in the situation."

He added: "Let's say every point we get is a point gained and we know that we need every point.

“We are now going to Bournemouth and then against Arsenal so another two games this week. We have to be ready for the Wednesday game, immediately focus is on the game and hopefully we can get a win there."

Story continues

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Selasa, 04 Oktober 2022

UEFA Champions League bold predictions: Jack Grealish an unsung hero for Man City, Tottenham struggle and more


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We're approaching the halfway point of the Champions League (check out all the action on Paramount+), here's three interesting games and the tactical battles that could decide them:

Ajax vs. Napoli: Italians expose midfield issue

Perhaps the most intriguing of this week's games, Napoli travel to Amsterdam with a view to tightening their grip on Group A and perhaps even acquiring Ajax's mantle from last year as the dark horse whose early season form makes them appear to be a serious contender to win it all. Luciano Spalletti's side are leading the way at home and have been in authoritative form in the Champions League, crushing their two British opponents prior to the international break.

After losing to Liverpool, Ajax need to reel Napoli back into the pack and restore the sense that Group A is a two from three contest. This may, however, be an inauspicious moment for the Dutch champions to be playing such a critical fixture. Having lost at AZ Alkmaar before the international break, Alfred Schreuder's side were held by Go Ahead Eagles on Saturday. Ajax may feel hard done by the fact that they had 75 percent possession and 23 shots but were undone by their opponents sole effort on target, but this is the Eredivisie. That tends to be how the biggest sides drop their points.

Equally, there were issues in both of Ajax's recent misadventures that Napoli will look to exploit, most notably a sizeable channel that emerged in the center of the pitch and was vulnerable to the late-running advances of midfielders. It was from there that Go Ahead Eagles equalized at the weekend, a vulnerability that defensive midfielder Edson Alvarez spotted but found himself powerless to deal with as so many of his team mates had committed themselves upfield. The visiting strikers split, drawing Ajax's center backs wide, and the space they vacated is filled by Finn Stokkers.

In the previous game, AZ Alkmaar, now topping the table in the Netherlands, had done much the same, rapidly driving through the Ajax middle once play had broken their way. Devyne Rensch attempted to recover but he had left himself too much ground to make up, his sliding intervention only deflecting the ball on for Mees De Wiit to roll into the net.

These are risks inherent within the Ajax tactical approach, perhaps heightened by a summer of transfer business that means Schreuder's squad is not quite as experienced as that which ended last season, but also worth taking to allow this team to dominate territory. They are ones they will have to be willing to take against Napoli in a game where they need the win more than their visitors.

Spalletti's side, meanwhile, are not usually ones to play on the break, but they do have the players to hit Ajax forcefully through the heart of the pitch. Certainly if Schreuder saw Andre-Frank Zambo Anguissa drive through the Torino engine room, scoring twice in Napoli's 3-1 win, he will be hurriedly attempting to plug those midfield gaps. The former Fulham and Villarreal midfielder has taken real strides as a progressive force since moving to Italy, now he is getting into the penalty box more frequently whilst keeping his defensive numbers more than respectable. A player of such dynamism could be ideally suited to punishing Ajax on the counter and might just be the one to swing the game.

Frankfurt vs. Spurs: Conte's frustrations build against cautious opponents

After a bruising defeat in north London, Antonio Conte's side face another sort of challenge in Germany. Frankly it is one that they seem even less suited to than the derby. On Saturday, Spurs lined up with that familiar approach that they take against their biggest and best opponents: flood the box, ride their luck defensively and make the most of opportunities on the transition. It is, it should be noted, a more effective approach in practice than on paper and whilst it might demand eye of the needle passing and finishing they have Heung-min Son and Harry Kane. That is rather their modus operandi.

More challenging for Tottenham are opponents like Eintracht Frankfurt, the ones who don't want to assert their will on the contest but would prefer to see what Spurs can do when they are asked to set the tempo of the contest. Against Sporting, Conte's side had more of the ball in the most dangerous areas of the pitch but struggled to break down an obdurate home side who then hit them with a pair of late sucker punches. It is fair to wonder how different events might have been in the group stage opener if Chancel Mbemba hadn't been sent off for Marseille; indeed the only two shots Spurs had in that game were those from which Richarlison scored.

Europa League holders Eintracht Frankfurt will be perfectly willing to make Tottenham set the stage for Tuesday's game. By the breathless standards of the Bundesliga, this team is altogether more circumspect, ranking fourth from bottom in terms of passes allowed per defensive action (PPDA). It works for them. After all, it was the blueprint that took them past the likes of Barcelona and West Ham last season, when they seemed to relish their road games, and they have been no less circumspect early on in the Champions League. Indeed through the opening two games only Manchester City and Chelsea have allowed fewer shots on their goal than Oliver Glasner's side. 

Though they average slightly less possession than their opponents in the Bundesliga, they sit toward the bottom of the league in terms of shots on Kevin Trapp's goal. Had the German started the season saving on a par with the expected goals (xG) he is facing then his side might be even higher than sixth. Put the likes of Evan N'Dicka, Tuta and Djibril Sow in front of your goalkeeper and you should be safe enough anyway, all three are making plenty of interceptions so far this season.

These are just the sort of teams that tend to make Tottenham's life agonizing for 90 minutes at a time. It should be noted that they often get the job done -- see the wins over Marseille and Wolverhampton Wanderers -- but any Spurs' supporter travelling to Germany in expectation of a comfortably secured three points is likely to be in for an almighty shock.

Manchester City vs. Copenhagen: Grealish shines outside the spotlight

The big ticket stats might not be there -- one goal and no assists from seven appearances so far this season -- but, the more time passes, the more it seems that Pep Guardiola was not just saying something to be nice when he said plan was never for Jack Grealish to be judged on the goal contributions he had to his name. There has been a pervasive sense that the 27-year-old attacker has been something of a £100 million flop since making the move from Aston Villa to Manchester City and it is easy to see why. In the Midlands, Grealish was the main character, a superstar who carried the lode of Britain's second city on his back with charm and grace. Here was a player who guaranteed double figures in terms of goals and assists combined in a Premier League season. For City surely he would be reaching 10 goals and 12 assists with ease.

A season and a bit in and he has not got near those numbers. But then, Guardiola said a fortnight ago, that was not the point. "We didn't sign for the incredible goals or assists at Aston Villa. It was another reason, and when he played he did it." To watch Grealish against Manchester United on Sunday was to see his manager vindicated. The England international ended the match with no goals and no assists but his touch was on a great deal of City's best moments. A fact underlined by the rest of his stats which involved completing four passes into the penalty area, carrying the ball into the box five times himself, and receiving another pass as well.

Take Erling Haaland's second, for instance. The plaudits naturally went to the Norwegian for his deft back post flick and to Kevin De Bruyne for the cross measured to precision. Few if any acknowledged how Grealish had forged space for the Belgian to deliver the ball with his drive upfield, laying the ball off the moment Christian Eriksen had committed to tackling him. 

Or indeed Haaland's third, where Grealish has pinned back United's right back and dragged him infield so De Bruyne can lay the ball out to an overlapping Sergio Gomez, who crosses low to deliver another headline moment for the No.9. Grealish might even have taken the shot himself and probably scored. It was just the better play for the team was to let Haaland have it.

All these moments went rather unremarked on at the time and this author is not blame free in that regard, scrapping a post match piece on Grealish to celebrate Haaland's increasingly ludicrous excellence. The same may well happen again when Copenhagen arrive at the Etihad. Haaland will score by the bucket load and win all the headlines whilst Grealish toils away in the background, missing out on the big ticket stats but making his team far better regardless.

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Man United in turmoil after City loss, Barcelona take top spot in LaLiga, Arsenal thump Spurs, more

The international break finished on Friday, and club soccer returned this weekend across Europe in emphatic, entertaining fashion. The Manchester derby was one-way traffic in Man City's favor, as expected, and Arsenal thumped Tottenham in the first North London derby of the 2022-23 campaign to show that Mikel Arteta's work is very much going in the right direction. Elsewhere, Barcelona went back atop LaLiga with a win and Real Madrid defeat, Napoli cemented their spot atop Serie A and Liverpool still have issues despite a long spell without games in which to fix what was broken.

- Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga, MLS, more (U.S.)

It's Monday, and Gab Marcotti reacts to the biggest moments in the world of football.

Jump to: Man City derby fallout | Real Madrid drop points | Arsenal beat Spurs | Roma pile pressure on Inter | Liverpool still have issues | Plenty to cheer for Barca | Chelsea win, Palace right to be angry | Milan need more than Leao | Messi leads for PSG | Respite for Juventus | Dortmund collapse again | Napoli stay top | Atletico go old-school

Darkness returns to red side of Manchester as Phil Foden, Erling Haaland run rampant

Forget Anthony Martial's two garbage-time goals for Man United that came when the game was long over. Heck, forget Antony's solo effort, too: It was a great strike, but the sort of individual whack-it-and-see that players turn to when they're getting no help. Now consider that Man City could easily have reached double figures.

Ugly, ain't it? That's the negative reality that Erik ten Hag has to banish from his mind following the 6-3 drubbing his side endured at the Etihad on Sunday. Coaches are trained to be positive, to look forward, to build on strengths and mask weaknesses, but where does he even begin?

Ten Hag came as close to reading his team the riot act as he's likely to get.

"If you don't fight, you are going to have a problem against Manchester City," he said. "This was different to Brentford [when they were also 4-0 down at half-time]. In that game we didn't run, against City we wanted to run, but we didn't follow the principle and rules and had a lack of belief." Translated from Dutch coachspeak: The players didn't follow instructions, made poor decisions and didn't believe in what they're doing.

- Man United to hold inquest over City humiliation- Ogden: Haaland is the best player in the world right now- Haaland only the 15th player to get a 10/10 rating from L'Equipe

You have to appreciate Ten Hag's honesty here, because he's going out on a limb. If players aren't following tactical instructions, if those instructions are wrong, if they don't buy into what they're being told ... well, usually that's on the manager.

It's fair to put some of it on Ten Hag. United looked entirely unprepared for what hit them: That's a manager's first job. Equally, the fact that Casemiro, the $80 million man who was starting (and winning) a Champions League final just last May, has yet to start a Premier League game this season doesn't help, and that's on Ten Hag. It's not Bryan Robson, Paul Ince and Roy Keane rolled into one who is keeping him out of the side: It's Scott McTominay.

Some of it is on the players, especially given the space City were afforded on too many occasions. Not just at the back, either, but up front, where the press -- even a half-hearted, half-assed version -- was rarely seen.

And, of course, a lot of it is down to the fact that City are a better side by several orders of magnitude. Not just in terms of having better players -- that too, though lest we forget, we're also talking about Manuel Akanji, who was thoroughly unspectacular at Dortmund last season; Nathan Ake, who made 19 league starts in two seasons before this one at City; and, for most of the game, Sergio Gomez, who arrived with little fanfare from Anderlecht -- but rather in having better chemistry, organisation and coaching.

If United and Ten Hag are looking for answers and hoping Sunday was just a blip in what many thought was a mini-revival, City and Pep Guardiola can do no wrong right now. Haaland has given them a different dimension, sure, but there's a familiarity to how they move the ball -- with purpose, quality and pace -- that's been their hallmark for several years now. And when you parachute guys like Haaland, Gomez or Akanji into the team, or you move guys around (Ilkay Gundogan in place of the absent Rodri), they don't miss a beat. That's not just good players, that's good coaching.

Final point on -- who else? -- Cristiano Ronaldo, who stayed rooted to the bench and did not come on.

Some suggested this was disrespectful, but I take the opposite view, with the caveat that Ten Hag and those who work with him every day know best in terms of what he would find respectful and disrespectful. Sending Ronaldo on when you're 4-0 down would have been hanging him out to dry. You don't treat one of the legitimate G.O.A.T. candidates in the game that way.

It's not the Osasuna curse: Real Madrid were simply poor in dropping points...

Football folk are notoriously superstitious, so when, for the second year in a row, Real Madrid drop points at home against a side they should beat like Osasuna and Karim Benzema misses from the spot (twice last year, once this year), you're tempted to see patterns. There are none. It's called coincidence. These were different games, and the fact is that while Real Madrid could have won, they didn't play well (though they played even worse last season).

- Benzema returns, but Real Madrid aren't infallible

It's the first time they've failed to win this campaign, it comes after an international break and it marked Benzema's return after a month out. They still put together an xG of 2.65 (to the Osasuna's 0.50), so let's not freak out. That said, this team needs more cutting edge than scoring once with a weird long-range cross, like Vinicius did.

And no, the fact that Luka Modric was absent isn't an excuse. Leaving aside the fact that your fortunes shouldn't depend on a 37-year-old, the issue wasn't creating chances; it was converting them.

Arsenal are for real after passing Spurs test, but they'll need to find another level

Sunday's North London derby was a reminder of why performance matters and why sometimes, to paraphrase Rafa Benitez, "Football is a lie." What I mean by that is that but for very fine margins -- one of Arsenal's goals was a low-percentage worldie from Thomas Partey, another was a defensive error, the third came in garbage time against 10 men, Spurs uncharacteristically lacked quality and precision on their counterattacks -- Arsenal might have lost this game, and then the narrative would have been about Mikel Arteta's young guns being too green and losing against another Big Six opponent (just like they lost to Manchester United).

Fortunately, you can actually watch the games and not just rely on incidents and highlights. And if you did, you saw an Arsenal side that played very well against an opponent who set out to hit on the counterattack and did it very well for much of the game. So while the goals themselves may have been incidental, the play was not.

- Olley: Revenge for Arsenal as Conte's game plan comes unstuck

Arsenal were assured and purposeful and by no means fazed by the opposition or the occasion. Whatever limits are on this team aren't the sort of things they can change, which is why City still remain favourites for the title (play the combined XI game, and you'll see what I mean). But Arteta is affecting what he can affect, and that's all you can ask for right now. Oh, and if City stumble, who knows?

As for Spurs, Conte's plan seemed to be to absorb pressure and hit in transition. He said the latter area is where they came up short, and he's right. It's just that, with hindsight, maybe this game called for Tottenham taking the game to the opposition a little more than they did.

Roma defeat makes it four losses in six games for Inter and Inzaghi ...

It's inevitable, but now the target is squarely on Simone Inzaghi's back after Inter's 2-1 home defeat to Roma. It's inevitable, and maybe a bit harsh: Inter did not play poorly against Roma (Inzaghi said it was their best performance of the season, which is a bit OTT, but not far off), and again, it was a Samir Handanovic blunder that led to Roma's equalizer (paging Andre Onana).

Throw in that they were without arguably their two most important players -- Romelu Lukaku and Marcelo Brozovic -- and perhaps some perspective is needed.

On the other hand, the uncomfortable sense is that, even when Inter play well, it's the style that doesn't fit. The possession game is neatly executed, but it's often too slow, with patterns of play that become predictable. When the stars are present and on top of their game, they can hurt you in many ways. If something is just a little bit off, things break down.

As for Roma, Jose Mourinho (who was suspended and watching from a van nearby) got it right in dropping Tammy Abraham and going for a more lightweight attack, with Lorenzo Pellegrini as a de facto false nine and Paulo Dybala and Nicolo Zaniolo given plenty of freedom. Roma picked their spots and were rewarded with a Mourinho-esque win that keeps them just four points off the top.

No solutions found over international break as Liverpool concede three at home to Brighton

When things go wrong for Liverpool, Jurgen Klopp gives a grown-up response, essentially saying he'll go away, study what was wanting and figure out how to fix it. There's not much else a manager can do after the fact. Those who thought the international break might bring some wisdom, then, will have to wait on the evidence of the 3-3 home draw against Brighton.

- Ogden: Will Liverpool's slump in form impact Bellingham pursuit?- Firmino shines, Alexander-Arnold struggles again in Reds draw

The good news is that this team showed again they have plenty of character, coming from two goals down. The bad news is that they keep making individual errors that are often compounded by a lack of intensity further up the pitch.

Without taking anything away from Brighton, who were exceptional in Roberto De Zerbi's Premier League coaching debut, each of the three goals conceded can be pinpointed to mistakes by Jordan Henderson, Trent Alexander-Arnold and Virgil Van Dijk, respectively. And worryingly, they could have easily conceded two more goals if Leandro Trossard (who nevertheless bagged a hat-trick) and Danny Welbeck had taken their first-half opportunities.

Klopp blamed Liverpool's tactical execution, describing their positioning at 3-2 as "horrible to watch," but right now, it's only one of the problems he needs to fix.

It's not just about the win: Plenty to cheer for Barcelona despite so-so display

An absolute world-class goal of precision and misdirection from Robert Lewandowski (up to nine goals in seven games) was the difference on the day for Barcelona away to Mallorca. It was a more of a minimalist performance than we've been used to this season under Xavi, but that's OK, and not just because the win, coupled with Real Madrid's draw the following day, sees them return to the top of LaLiga.

Ansu Fati made his first start of the campaign, Marc-Andre ter Stegen extended his unbeaten streak between the posts, and despite the scare from Kang-in Lee at the end, Barca showed they can manage a lead. Most encouraging, though, was the rejiggered back line.

- Weekend Review: Barcelona leapfrog Real Madrid atop LaLiga

With Hector Bellerin, Jules Kounde, Ronald Araujo all out (and Eric Garcia on the bench), we saw Andreas Christensen and Gerard Pique team up in the middle, with Alejandro Balde switched to the right. They came through unscathed, and while there's still an evident gap in quality with the regulars (especially in central defence), performances like these build confidence. It's a long season, and Barca will need this depth.

Potter's Chelsea get first win, but Palace are right to be furious

Moments change games, and if you're Crystal Palace, the decision not to send off Thiago Silva when he handled the ball in a potential "denial of goal-scoring opportunity" (DOGSO) turned the match on its head.

- VAR Review: Thiago Silva handball, Emerson Royal red card, more

The referee felt Jordan Ayew was not heading toward goal and with 35 yards to go, Chelsea would have gotten a covering defender back to challenge him. The VAR was OK with it and did not ask for an on-field review. Thiago Silva stayed on the pitch (unlike Nathaniel Clyne, with whom he clashed in the incident), and moments later, he set up Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang's equalizer. Late on, Conor Gallagher delivered the winner for Chelsea.

It's premature to judge Graham Potter's impact on this team, so right now it matters that he got his first win and Aubameyang opened his account. It's not clear how these pieces fit together, especially at the attacking end, and you wonder whether he'll definitively abandon the back three (Chelsea played a back four at Palace and a three against Salzburg in his other game) or whether this midfield can hold up. Yet there's plenty of time for him to answer these questions and others.

Rafael Leao and a ton of grit powers Milan to victory, but they need more

You can look at the glass as half-full and consider the three points and the fact that AC Milan, already without Theo Hernandez, Alessandro Florenzi, Mike Maignan and Zlatan Ibrahimovic (OK, he hasn't been there since last season) also lost Simon Kjaer, Davide Calabria and Alexis Saelemaekers along the way and still weathered an injury-time equaliser away to Empoli to win 3-1, scoring in the 94th and 97th minutes. Or you can worry about how they conceded several late chances before the equalizer and really didn't create much in the first half.

I lean a bit toward the latter. Yes, this is a team that are supposed to be built around depth and intensity, but in reality too often have to ride their brightest stars, Rafael Leao and Sandro Tonali. And we saw what happens when they lose too many pieces along the way.

Milan are still very much in the hunt, but you feel a lot more comfortable when Stefano Pioli doesn't have to rely on grit and character and late goals to bring home all three points.

Messi free-kick sends PSG on their way against Nice as Ekitike makes his debut

Lionel Messi scored his first direct free-kick of the campaign to open the scoring for Paris Saint-Germain with the sort of eye candy strike that reminds you how last season's hiccups were just that: a nine-month hiccup. (October has only just started, and he has nearly matched last season's league total already.)

This game was closer than it should have been until Kylian Mbappe came on to replace Hugo Ekitike with half an hour to go. Ekitike was making his first start of the campaign, and, of course, at 20 years of age, he is one of the most hyped kids in Ligue 1. He didn't get a shot off, and PSG kicked it up a notch after Mbappe replaced him (duh...), but he did show flashes. And frankly, coming into a side and playing with Neymar and Messi straight away isn't as straightforward as it sounds.

He's the only true central striker PSG have; he'll get his chance to grow.

Juventus win first game since August, giving Allegri some respite

I wrote before about Juventus' "Septembre horribilis," and it matters that they returned from a break with a 3-0 win over Bologna. It wasn't a stellar performance, nor a great opponent, but it's at least something to keep the psychodrama at bay ahead of a key stretch of games (two must-wins against Maccabi Haifa in the Champions League, Milan away and the Turin derby).

The downside is that in getting this win, Max Allegri switched to a 4-4-2 formation, a system that worked well on the day but that Juve are unlikely to use when their injured stars return. That means it still doesn't feel as if they're building toward anything.

Sunday wasn't about that, and that's fine. For now. The real test will come in the next two weeks.

A second-half collapse costs injury-hit Dortmund

One of the things I was hoping to get from Edin Terzic's return to Dortmund was some semblance of normality. No such thing! They traveled to Cologne without a bunch of attacking regulars (Giovanni Reyna, Marco Reus, Gregor Kobel and Sebastien Haller), but they still took the lead and created chances in the first half.

Then came a staggering collapse after the break, as defensive errors -- one from Thomas Meunier (not surprising) and one from Nico Schlotterbeck (more surprising) -- allowed Cologne to take the lead in the space of four minutes. They would later add a third before Dortmund made it 3-2 in garbage time.

The thing is, they're still just two points out of first place in the Bundesliga, so it's understandable if Terzic figures it's best not to do major surgery and instead wait for the injured to return. Maybe. But performances like these are gutting, and they risk having knock-on effects. And further up the pitch, the lack of cutting edge is telling. Anthony Modeste was an emergency signing, fine, but he doesn't fit this team and he's not performing. It's time to give Youssoufa Moukoko a go, just to see what you have.

Zambo Anguissa fires Napoli to victory as they stay top of Serie A

Nobody get overexcited, but Napoli looked like the sort of team that win titles on Saturday in their 3-1 win over Torino. Still without Victor Osimhen, they wrapped things up in the first half with two goals from Andre-Frank Zambo Anguissa and one more from Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, before seeing out the victory in the second half.

Some will focus on their prolific attack or a defence that hasn't suffered with Min-jae Kim replacing the departed Kalidou Koulibaly. But where this team has really impressed is in the middle of the park, and while Stanislav Lobotka and Piotr Zielinski have drawn plenty of praise, don't forget Zambo Anguissa, who scored twice. At 26, he's entering the prime of his career and has ironed out some of the poor decisions that marred his time in the Premier League while maintaining the drive, quality and unpredictability that make him such a mismatch for opponents.

Atletico Madrid go old-school, but in a good way, to beat Sevilla

Diego Simeone talked up how his Atletico side played just the way he likes it away to Sevilla: tough, compact lines, grating counter-attacks, physicality up front with Alvaro Morata and Matheus Cunha and moments of quality (witness Marcos Llorente's gorgeous goal). It's great, and it works against most opponents. The question is whether they can bottle this and churn it out regularly. Or, whether it works best against an opponent on the verge of self-destruction with frayed nerves and a coach, Julen Lopetegui, who could be out real soon.

Sevilla made wholesale changes and gambled their way back into the game, losing shape and nerve before Morata scored the second to kill the match. For what it's worth, I thought this set-up looked more effective, with Cunha coming in from the left and Morata up front (and, of course, Griezmann coming on for his customary cameo with half an hour to go).

It means no room -- and fewer minutes off the bench -- for Joao Felix, and he was reportedly unhappy at getting just four minutes. So be it. For all his talent, he's not pulling his weight and doesn't fit this side most games. I'm Team Cholo on this one.

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Dua Pemain AC Milan Beri Dukungan untuk Theo Hernandez

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