“There was absolute silence at Valencia’s Mestalla stadium at 1.59pm on Saturday, as a crowd of 43,975 remembered the victims of the horrific flooding that struck the region last month. An incredibly emotional pre-game ceremony began with people from the areas most affected by the flooding bringing a huge Senyera, the Valencian regional flag, donated by Real Madrid, onto the pitch. Valencia and visitors Real Betis were led from the tunnel by kids wearing the shirts of clubs in the Horta Sud district, which was hardest hit. Players and match officials carried a giant black ribbon as a tribute to the 221 people who died in the worst natural disaster in Spain’s recent history. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
Daily Archives: November 25, 2024
Manchester United’s switches of play were the positive aspect of Ruben Amorim’s first game
“Manchester United didn’t play particularly well in Ruben Amorim’s first match in charge, a 1-1 away draw against Ipswich Town on Sunday. That wasn’t particularly surprising considering Amorim had only had a couple of days on the training ground with his key players, most of whom were away on international duty last week, and given he switched to a radically different formation to the one used by his predecessor, Erik ten Hag. So what was more significant about yesterday were United’s intentions rather than their actual level of performance. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Sudan, football and the ‘worst humanitarian crisis on earth’
“Before every training session, the Sudan men’s football team line up together and link arms. The captain calls them to attention for a moment of silence, which is broken by another shout before they clap three times in unison. It doesn’t matter where they are; it’s when they put everything else to one side and focus solely on football. They can’t play matches at home because, since April 2023, the north-east African country has been gripped by a bitter civil war between the government-led national army and the rebel Rapid Support Forces (RSF). As many as 150,000 people have been killed, according to U.S. estimatesand 14 million have been moved from their homes, says the United Nations (UN). …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Kyle Walker was not to blame for Manchester City’s vulnerable right side, Pep Guardiola was
“Modern football coverage has never been so focused on individuals, at a time when the game itself has never been so systemic. The reaction to Manchester City’s 4-0 home defeat against Tottenham Hotspur on Saturday was a good example — this was, from City’s perspective, surely a collective collapse rather than one based on individual failings. But post-match coverage focused largely on Kyle Walker and the space Tottenham found in behind him. So here, by way of providing some balance, is a defence of Walker, who was put in a very difficult position because of City manager Pep Guardiola’s approach. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: How Tottenham stunned Manchester City
NY Times/The Athletic: Sixteen things that help explain Pep Guardiola losing five games in a row for the first time
