What does Pep Guardiola staying mean for Manchester City?

“At a time of significant uncertainty around Manchester City and the Premier League, Pep Guardiola’s new contract is a major boost for the club. The Brighton fans sang “you’re getting sacked in the morning” as City lost their fourth match in a row before the international break, but the quality of the manager and his employers’ absolute confidence in him meant that, far from scrutiny, in his two weeks off, he was handed a new deal that should see him stay at City for another two years. Guardiola’s ability speaks for itself and has been reiterated by the latest City in-house documentary, but the very fact he remains in place is surely just as valuable given the change of sporting director, the possible departure of some key players and, of course, an impending outcome of the Premier League charges. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
BBC: Five challenges ahead for Guardiola and Man City

The Slot Machine: How Liverpool set up against elite teams – and beat them

“It was the elephant in the room that Arne Slot went out of his way to address. Up until the last international break, Liverpool’s head coach repeatedly referenced the kind early-season schedule when assessing his team’s start. The run of fixtures from the October break to this international window was meant to give a clearer indication of where expectation levels should be set. Premier League matches against Chelsea, Arsenal, Brighton & Hove Albion and Aston Villa were broken up by Champions League fixtures versus RB Leipzig and Bayer Leverkusen, with a trip to Brighton in the Carabao Cup squeezed in. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

The Premier League Owners: Who has invested the most?

“From the local businessmen propping up boyhood clubs to the Gulf states chasing reflected glories, an eclectic mix has taken over English football’s top 20 clubs. Owners of Premier League teams have spent millions to secure a seat at the top table but no two stories are the same. Some are in for billions, gambling on long-term prosperity. Others have already assured themselves of vast returns. To begin a series on the Premier League’s owners running across this week, The Athletic has calculated the total investments of those at the top of all 20 clubs. And, yes, we’ve even put them in descending order for you to argue over. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Kylian Mbappe and France – what’s happened?

“Kylian Mbappe is France’s star forward and one of the most recognisable players in world football. The Real Madrid player was France’s captain at Euro 2024 and has 48 goals for Les Bleus — but for the second consecutive international break he has been left out of the squad by manager Didier Deschamps. It has not been a straightforward few months for Mbappe. He has struggled for form at the Bernabeu since joining after his contract expired at Paris Saint-Germain — though he remains in a legal battle with them over unpaid wages — and in October reports linked him to an alleged rape in Sweden. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Greece 0 England 3: Lee Carsley’s Watkins gamble pays off as Pickford and Curtis Jones impress

England regained control of their Nations League group on Thursday evening, beating Greece 3-0 in Athens. Lee Carsley’s surprise decision to pick Ollie Watkins paid off after just seven minutes, the Aston Villa striker poking England into the lead after good work from Noni Madueke on the right wing. It was a deserved reward after a bright start, with England recording almost as much xG in the opening 18 minutes (0.69) as they did in the whole of the reverse fixture at Wembley last month (0.84). Greece rallied midway through the half but England were good value for their lead at the break. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Fear and loathing in Premier League academy football: Scouts in a pen, no team sheets and denying access

“At a Manchester City Under-16s game last month, 21 academy scouts were corralled into a tight square next to one of the corner flags, far from the rest of the spectators. They had not congregated together out of choice. This was the designated area, outlined by bright cones, other clubs’ talent spotters were frogmarched to before kick-off. A few years ago, it would have been a peculiar sight. Today, it is a scene recreated every weekend across most of the Premier League academy landscape. The motive? To keep rival scouts isolated from parents, so they cannot lure away your top players. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Body stockings, buzzers, microchips: League 1 America, the failed attempt to revolutionize soccer

“The history of soccer in the United States is littered with failed leagues, all attempting to do the same thing: Americanize the world’s game. For nearly a century, proponents of the sport in the U.S. altered the long-standing rules of the game to make it more high-scoring, more action-packed, less… foreign. Some of those rule changes and innovations — the use of substitutes, for example, or the backpass law — were truly groundbreaking and ended up being adopted globally. Others, including the 35-yard shootout and the countdown clock, were interesting ideas that eventually fell by the wayside. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Gedling Town F.C.

Gedling Town Football Club was a semi-professional football club based in Stoke Bardolph, Nottinghamshire, England. Founded in 1985 as R & R Scaffolding, the works team of a construction firm from Netherfield, the club played its first four seasons in the Notts Amateur League before adopting the Gedling Town name in 1990. Gedling joined the nationwide league system in 1992. At the time of its dissolution in 2011 due to insolvency, the team competed in the East Midlands Counties Football League(EMCFL) Premier Division at the tenth tier of the English football pyramid. …”
Wikipedia

What to Know About the Attacks on Israeli Soccer Fans in Amsterdam

Police officers formed a security cordon around a bus after the soccer match in Amsterdam early Friday.
“A soccer match between Dutch and Israeli teams in Amsterdam on Thursday night was followed by dozens of arrests, after what officials in Israel and the Netherlands described as antisemitic attacks on the fans of the Israeli team. Tensions had mounted a day earlier when Israeli fans vandalized a taxi and burned a Palestinian flag in the city. Many details of what happened on Thursday, including the identities and affiliations of those involved in the attacks on fans, are still unclear. …”
NY Times

Is Premier League title race already down to two teams?

Has the Premier League title race been whittled down to two teams after just 11 games of the season? Leaders Liverpool had the dream weekend after victory over Aston Villa coupled with defeat for Manchester City against Brighton – and Sunday’s 1-1 draw between Arsenal and Chelsea. They now lead City by five points – and the rest of the pack by nine points or more. Opta’s ‘supercomputer’ gives Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal just a 3.5% chance of the title, with Chelsea down on 0.2% and anybody else on 0%. …”
BBC

How Liverpool turned the underlap into a potent weapon under Arne Slot

“Different season, same Mohamed Salah. Nine goals and nine assists in 16 games in all competitions show how the 32-year-old is in white-hot form. Questions will continue to swirl around the club until there is greater clarity over Salah’s future — his contract is up in the summer and he is free to negotiate a pre-contract move with a foreign club from January 1 — but there is little doubt his dual-threat from a creative and goalscoring perspective. As The Athletic has recently analysed, much of Salah’s creativity has been directed towards the back post, with last week’s assists for Cody Gakpo and Luis Diaz against Bayer Leverkusen adding to his suite of services provided to his team-mates from his switched crosses. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Ange Postecoglou will understand his Tottenham squad much more after bruising experience

“Even before Galatasaray signed Victor Osimhen on loan from Napoli, everybody knew that Tottenham Hotspur’s biggest test in the opening round of this season’s Europa League would be their trip to Istanbul. When Micky van de Ven and Cristian Romero, Spurs’ first-choice centre-backs, were ruled out through injury, the task became harder. To make matters even worse, 17-year-old forward Mikey Moore, who was suffering from a virus, joined the long list of absent forwards, which includes Richarlison, Wilson Odobert and Timo Werner. Son Heung-Min has only just returned to fitness after a persistent hamstring injury. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
W – Ange Postecoglou

2024-25 FA Cup, 1st Round Proper: location-map, with fixtures list & current league attendances.

The FA Cup – the oldest football tournament in the world – begins its 144th edition on Friday the 2nd of November 2024. The number of teams entered has increased from 732 to 745, and the growth of the 9th tier is the reason for the increase. The lowest-placed team to make it to the 1st Round this year is Hednesford Town (of south Staffordshire), who are in the 8th tier, in the Northern Premier League D1-West, and who are currently drawing an impressive 1,265 per-game (in home league matches). …”
billsportsmaps
W – FA Cup
BBC – FA Cup

Thomas Tuchel is wasting precious time by not taking charge of England this month

“Today should have been Thomas Tuchel’s inauguration day. The man who signed to be England manager on October 8, and was unveiled to the world as such eight days later, could have been starting his tenure this month. He could be announcing his first England squad today, meeting his players for the first time on Monday, flying to Athens next Wednesday, coaching his first game against Greece a day later and then his second against the Republic of Ireland the following Sunday. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Champions League Briefing: Why were Arsenal and Villa penalties given? Can Barcelona contend for crown?

“Fairytales continued in the Champions League group stage on Wednesday night. Brest and Monaco continued their push at the top of the table, joining Sporting Lisbon — who beat Manchester City on Tuesday night — as one of the unlikely candidates to go straight through to the round of 16 that are currently on course to do so. Barcelona also continued their fine form, while Paris Saint-Germain find themselves in a difficult position after four matchdays. There were also two controversial penalties in the games involving English sides on Wednesday night. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

The Briefing: Are we set for a thrilling title race and can Forest’s form continue?

“Welcome to The Briefing, where every Monday this season The Athletic will discuss three of the biggest questions to arise from the weekend’s Premier League football. This was the round of games where Tottenham produced a brilliant second half to thrash Aston Villa, Southampton finally got their first win of the season — and Ipswich came so close to theirs — while Chris Wood’s amazing form continued. We will ask whether the flaws of the contenders will give us a thrilling title race over the coming months, what Ruben Amorim will think after watching Manchester United’s draw against Chelsea and whether Nottingham Forest are the most impressive team in the 2024-25 Premier League so far. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Defensive issues have impacted Manchester City’s week – could they undermine the entire season?

“All of a sudden, Manchester City look rather mortal. If Wednesday night’s Carabao Cup defeat at Tottenham Hotspur can be chalked up as a blessing in disguise for a side with a packed schedule, Saturday’s Premier League loss away to Bournemouth was, at best, sobering, and at worst, genuinely concerning. It means City have been beaten in consecutive games for the first time in over a year. The last time it happened was September 2023, when they lost 1-0 at Newcastle United in the Carabao Cup’s third round and then 2-1 at Molineux by Wolverhampton Wanderers in the league three days later. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

The overstuffed football calendar is reducing quality but increasing drama – Jonathan Wilson

“It was a very good weekend for Liverpool, and a pretty good weekend for the Premier League. It’s one round of games, and blips and quirks do happen. But that three of the top four on Saturday morning could lose felt not only invigorating – maybe this isn’t a league entirely predetermined by how much money you have – but also, perhaps, part of a pattern. And that pattern is of football that is a bit patchy, a bit scratchy, a bit lacking the sort of fluidity and quality we’ve become used to, which is perhaps not so good. Moisés Caicedo’s equaliser aside, Chelsea’s draw at Manchester United in Sunday’s showpiece was an extremely limited game. The sense this autumn has been of a lot of sides packed with good players not playing particularly well. …”
Guardian

With Spain still mourning Valencia’s flood victims, why did La Liga play on?

Girona’s Miguel Gutiérrez, one of many players with a connection to Valencia who featured in La Liga, dedicates his goal to victims of flooding.
“Thousands of people were at Mestalla this weekend, huge queues all along Avenida de Aragón where Valencia’s players arrived, but there was no game on, not here. They came instead with water, food and clothes for victims of the greatest natural catastrophe the country has seen: floods that have killed more than 210 people and destroyed towns and lives in the Horta Sud, just inland and south of the city, where a year’s worth of rain fell in eight hours. Hundreds of cars and vans turned up and unloaded, and many more made their way by foot. More than a million tonnes of aid filled the space under the stand, silent above them. …”
Guardian (Video)

Barça’s Lamine Yamal bares teeth and turns Bernabéu into his playground

The 17-year-old became the youngest scorer in the clásico as Hansi Flick’s side ran riot in second half
“A young boy with train-track braces in blue and red like Barça defeated the giant that couldn’t be defeated, he and his friends standing tall in the place where everyone else falls. There were 13 minutes left in the opening clásico of the season, the first of a new era that wasn’t supposed to be theirs, when Lamine Yamal Nasraoui Ebana bared his teeth. Bared his teeth, pointed at the name on his shirt and danced with Alejandro Balde for a bit, four celebrations in one starting with a calm down, I’m here: down in the south-west corner of the Santiago Bernabéu smiling, the ball in the net for the third time, victory secured and history written. Maybe a new future too. …”
Guardian

Juventus’ Kenan Yildiz seizes stage in a glorious eight-goal Derby d’Italia


An all-time classic clash between Inter and Juventus was rounded off by the Turkish teenager’s two-goal cameo
“It had been a bonkers, record-setting, night – one of the highest-scoring matches ever in a rivalry that goes back 115 years – but not all the protagonists were enjoying themselves. ‘Thanks for the show!’ said Zvonimir Boban in the Sky Sport studio to Simone Inzaghi at full-time. The Inter manager winced and forced a laugh. … Inzaghi had seen his team fritter away a two-goal lead in the final 20 minutes against Juventus, letting 4-2 become 4-4. …”
Guardian (Video)

Le Classique becomes damp squib amid Marseille’s tactical missteps

Amine Harit (third from right) reacts after being sent off by François Letexier.
“Much ado about, well, not nothing, but very little. Le Classique came around with more fanfare than in recent editions and, from a Marseille point of view, with increased expectations. Those expectations, however, were quickly shattered in front of a record crowd at the Vélodrome. Not since November 2011 have Marseille beaten Paris Saint-Germain at home in Ligue 1. Les Parisiens’ takeover of PSG in that same year changed the dynamic between the two fierce rivals with OM now occupying the role of the underdog. …”
Guardian

Why the Premier League table after 10 games is a reliable guide to how the season will end

“There is an understanding that a league table does not truly “take shape” until clubs have played 10 of their allotted matches in that season’s competition. It is an ancient and arbitrary threshold we have created for ourselves, but it has merit. First, it is a nice round number. Second, it’s… double figures. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Why don’t goalkeepers wear caps anymore?


“The death of the long ball has been frequently pronounced as football has evolved in the past few years. Playing out from the back has become the standard. Direct teams are the anomaly rather than the norm. The logical tactical evolution after that was the rise of the high press, followed by attempts to deliberately lure the press to exploit spaces in behind those opposition players doing the pressing. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Real Madrid 0 Barcelona 4 – Mbappe’s Clasico to forget as Flick’s team stun European champions

Barcelona demolished Real Madrid at the Bernabeu to take a six-point lead in La Liga. Hansi Flick’s side were rampant at the home of their fierce rivals, frustrating Kylian Mbappe with their well-organised offside trap in the first half and then striking four times after the break. Robert Lewandowski scored in the 54th and 56th minutes, his 13th and 14th goals in La Liga this season, to put Barcelona in control. Then Lamine Yamal scored his first Clasico goal in the 77th minute before the in-form Raphinha added a fourth with six minutes left to play. The result takes Barcelona to 30 points at the top of the table, six clear of Madrid. Here, our writers analyse the key talking points. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: The three passes that can unlock El Clasico and the two Barcelona players who can make them
NY Times/The Athletic: So… Barcelona are good again?

Does height matter in football? Yes, but not in the way you might think

“Conventional wisdom has it that being tall is advantageous. The problem with conventional wisdom is that it’s often wrong. There are studies that correlate height with happiness and higher salaries, admittedly at the cost of shorter lifespans. In certain sports, elite athletes are almost exclusively big, such as basketball, rowing (except the cox) and volleyball (except the libero). Successful Olympic swimmers have become bigger and heavier in recent decades. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Jhon Duran reminds Aston Villa he can be an ‘awesome’ starting option

“Jhon Duran. Villa Park. Champions League nights. It is a combination that has provided nothing but unbridled joy to Aston Villa so far. That dramatic winner from the bench against Bayern Munich set the tonebut Duran took the opportunity to show his quality from the first whistle against Bologna after being named in the starting XI for only the second time in all competitions this season. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Barcelona 4 Bayern Munich 1: Raphinha hat-trick gives Hansi Flick a triumphant night against his former club

“It was Robert Lewandowski against Harry Kane. It was Hansi Flick taking on his former side. It was Barcelona against Bayern Munich, two of the continent’s most decorated clubs going head-to-head in a gripping, frantic clash in the Champions League. Barcelona were ahead inside the opening minute, Raphinha taking advantage of Bayern’s muddled defensive line to round Manuel Neuer and score. Then it was the turn of the big-name strikers to make their mark. Harry Kane headed past Inaki Pena but was judged, semi-automatically, to be offside. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

RB Leipzig 0 Liverpool 1: Rampaging Nunez, Liverpool go three from three and Leipzig stutter

Darwin Nunez’s poacher’s finish fired Liverpool to victory at RB Leipzigand maintained their flawless start to life in this season’s Champions League. Arne Slot’s side made it three wins from three in the competition with a 1-0 win in Germany, with former Leipzig players Ibrahima Konate and Dominik Szoboszlai tasting victory against their old team thanks to Nunez’s first-half goal. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Thomas Tuchel is a symptom, not a cause, of English football’s coaching problems


“There is one issue with England appointing Thomas Tuchel as Gareth Southgate’s successor — and it isn’t his nationality. Rather, what does it say about English coaches — in number and quality — that Tuchel was the ‘outstanding candidate’? The FA interviewed ‘approximately’10 candidates for the senior men’s head coach role, including ‘some’ English coaches. However, none have a CV that can compete with Tuchel’s. He’s won 11 trophies in a 15-year career, including the top division in Germany and France and, most notably, the Champions League with Chelsea in 2021 — he was voted the world’s best club coach that year. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Liverpool’s patience out of possession under Slot is working – but Chelsea showed the approach isn’t flawless

“For long periods of their 2-1 victory over Chelsea on Sunday afternoon, Liverpool didn’t feel quite like Liverpool. It’s been two months since Arne Slot’s first competitive game in charge, but this was something new: his first Premier League match at Anfield against genuinely strong opposition. Previous home games were against Brentford, Nottingham Forest and Bournemouth — sides you expect Liverpool to dominate. There was no guarantee of that against Chelsea, who wanted to play out from the back and enjoy long spells of possession. Liverpool, for most of the last decade, would try to deny opponents that luxury. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Premier League: 10 talking points from the weekend’s action

Wolves 1-2 Manchester City
“… 2 – Tight margins go against O’Neil again: The obvious topic of debate at Molineux centred on whether Bernardo Silva impeded José Sá’s ability to save John Stones’s 95th-minute header. The officials concluded Silva had no impact on the goal and, while hugely disappointed, the first thing Gary O’Neil did when he got into his manager’s office was to study how Stones was able to register an effort on goal. O’Neil acknowledged the minutiae make the difference in tight games, leading him to bemoan having to substitute the 6ft 4in Wolves goalscorer Jørgen Strand Larsen, owing to fatigue. …”
Guardian

Confessions of a football collectibles obsessive: ‘I’m uneasy… my palms are sweaty’

“The woman behind the counter hands me a piece of cardboard and tells me to hold it up in the air if I want to bid. I’m number 7002 and that makes me feel uneasy. Is that how many people are going to be involved? Inside the auction room, it is a Trevor Francis nostalgia-fest. There are medals and trophies laid out on a table and, in a glass cabinet, the shiny red shirt from the night he — the first £1million footballer — scored the goal that won Nottingham Forest the 1979 European Cup. People are taking their seats. We eye each other suspiciously and avoid small talk. But those of us attending also know it’s the people we cannot see that we really have to worry about: the online bidders, dialling in from Canada, the United States and Australia to fill out their collections. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Bournemouth 2 Arsenal 0: Saliba sent off, unbeaten start over and hosts’ set-piece magic

“For the third time in eight games this season, Arsenal had to navigate a large chunk of a Premier League match with 10 men — but for the first time it cost them as their unbeaten start to the campaign came to an end at Bournemouth. William Saliba’s 30th-minute dismissal — given after a VAR review — for bringing down striker Evanilson meant Mikel Arteta had to adapt his game plan, something he had to do in draws with 10 men against Brighton & Hove Albion on the opening day and Manchester City last month. This time, though, the outcome was very different. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Guardian: Arsenal’s sloppiness calls into question whether they are serious contenders – Jonathan Wilson
NY Times/The Athletic – Explained: Why was William Saliba sent off for Arsenal at Bournemouth? (Video)

Reach Barcelona – or die trying: The hope and abandon behind a famous rallying cry

“Walking through the streets of Barcelona, there’s a common slogan you are bound to spot among the graffiti around the city: ‘Barca o mort’ (Barca or death, in Catalan). For some of Barca’s most fervent fans there is an almost religious bond with the club. Almost 5,000 kilometres away on the west coast of Africa, a similar expression reflects a very different reality. In Senegal, it is ‘Barca ou Barzakh’. Barzakh is an Arabic word that literally means ‘isthmus’. In Islam, it describes a stage of the afterlife where souls rest until judgement day. The phrase is like a rallying cry. It is an expression of solidarity, of shared hope before a voyage towards peril, leaving peril behind. Reach Barcelona, or die trying. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Manchester City have a specific defensive flaw – but will their rivals be able to take advantage?

“The thing with Manchester City is that everybody seems to have learned not to worry too much about any dips in form. Whether you are a fan of the club or one of their rivals for the Premier League title, City have proven that they smooth things out sooner or later. (There were doubts about the team in the second half of the season during the last two years, but they won the title on both occasions anyway.) Heading into the international break, following City’s fairly uncomfortable 3-2 victory over Fulham, Pep Guardiola said he would use his time to look at the goals that his team have conceded this season. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Liverpool have the best defence in the Premier League – can they maintain it?

Liverpool are the early leaders for the best defence in the league competition. Yet while there has been plenty of talk about the impact of Arne Slot’s possession-based philosophy, less remarked upon is that his side have conceded just two league goals in their opening seven games — four fewer than the joint-second lowest, Arsenal and Nottingham Forest. In their 10 matches in all competitions, they have conceded just four goals and kept six clean sheets. That is a significant improvement from last season when they kept the same amount of clean sheets in their final 27 games. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

France: 2024-25 Ligue 1 – Location-map with 3 Charts

“The map shows the 18 clubs in the current season of the French Ligue 1 [2024-25]. The map features the locations and crests of the 18 current Ligue Un clubs, plus the recently-promoted and -relegated teams are noted. (Promoted in 2024: Angers, Auxerre, and Saint-Étienne; relegated in 2024: Metz, Lorient, Clermont.) Also shown on the map are the 10 largest French cities, and the 13 Regions of Metropolitan France (aka European France). {Largest French cities’ metropolitan area populations from 2016 census, here}. The major French rivers are also shown on the map, and at the foot of the map the 10 longest rivers in France are listed (with brief descriptions). The first chart shows the consecutive seasons each club has currently spent in the 1st division… Paris Saint-Germain are the current longest-serving member of Ligue 1, with 51 straight seasons (PSG have also won 10 of the last 12 French titles, including 2023-24). …”
billsportsmaps
W – 2024–25 Ligue 1

‘This is more than Subbuteo’: A day with the best table footballers in the world

“It’s the firmly established anthem for calms before sporting storms — but what’s the maximum number of times you’d want to listen to Intro by the xx in a single day? If your answer is ‘a dozen, easily’, I may well be experiencing the Sunday of your dreams. It’s two minutes and eight seconds of calm. The storm? More than 300 players from 26 nations descending on the 168th-biggest town in England for the World Cup… of Subbuteo. I arrive at Tunbridge Wells Sports Centre with an open mind but one lingering doubt: is this just Warhammer for full-kit wankers? …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Mauricio Pochettino’s week of ‘speaking about confidence’ pays off for Musah and USMNT

“It is a rarity to see Yunus Musah without a smile. An ear-to-ear grin is a mostly-permanent feature for the 21-year-old midfielder. But as he sprinted towards the corner flag on Saturday night in Austin, Texas, having scored his first goal in a U.S. senior men’s national team jersey in his 42nd appearance, the sense of gratification on his face shined through — even for someone who usually has a happy expression plastered on. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

England 1 Greece 2 – Carsley’s wake-up call, defensive jitters and a fitting tribute to Baldock

England have endured the first setback of Lee Carsley’s stint as interim head coach. Greece, placed 44 places below their hosts in FIFA’s world rankings, secured their first win over England after Vangelis Pavlidis’ stoppage-time goal. For Carsley, there was plenty to ponder after this 2-1 defeat in the Nations League. The head coach had briefly seen Jude Bellinghamwho else? — haul England level, but even a draw would have felt fortuitous on a night when the home side’s tactical tweaks failed to pay off. England’s performance was disjointed for long periods. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: Lee Carsley’s England future no longer looks secure after confusing moments on the pitch and off it
Guardian: It is hard to see how Lee Carsley claws back his case to be England manager

Advantage Amorim? How Hugo Viana appointment might influence City’s Guardiola succession-planning

“Life at Manchester City is generally pretty calm, but this week’s events could be a sign that times are changing. Monday brought the much-disputed outcome of City’s associated party transaction legal challenge to the Premier League, Tuesday the news that Txiki Begiristain is to step away from his role as director of football at the end of this season and now it has been revealed that Hugo Viana will leave Sporting Lisbon to replace him. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Football Manager 2025 has been delayed until March – why? Is this a big deal? And has this happened before?

“Football Manager 25, scheduled for release next month, has been delayed until March. This is the first major delay for an edition of Football Manager since 2002 and will impact millions of gamers worldwide. The 2024 edition of the game was played by seven million players within 100 days of its release. Football Manager content creators attract hundreds of thousands of subscribers on YouTube. And Sports Interactive, the creator of Football Manager, had revenues of over £66million in the financial year ending in March 2023, according to Companies House. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Dissecting Manchester United’s ‘game model’: What is Erik ten Hag hoping to achieve?

“What are Manchester United hoping to achieve this season? An underwhelming start to the new campaign has left those around the club trying to ascertain what Erik ten Hag wants from his squad. Things are not helped by the United manager’s cagey approach to press conferences, where he prefers to discuss previous successes than talk about tactical details at length. Ten Hag believes United will be successful at the end of 2024-25, but figuring out how that success will come about is proving difficult. A clue might be found in Ten Hag’s use of the phrase “game model”, which has steadily increased in recent weeks. But what is that? And how will it affect his team in the coming weeks? …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
The Times: Erik ten Hag does have a plan – so why are United still in disarray?
NY Times/The Athletic – Aston Villa 0 Manchester United 0: Evans gamble, lucky Rashford, what now for Ten Hag?

Celtic’s humiliation exposes the miserable state of Scottish football


“The sniggering from Dortmund to Durness has been unmistakable. The intensely tribal nature of Scottish football combined with Celtic’s dominance of the same scene means results such as the 7-1 trouncing by Borussia Dortmund on Tuesday are widely celebrated. Petty, parochial but perfectly understandable. The trouble is, yet another harrowing night for Celtic provided the latest snapshot of Scottish football’s miserable state. There is no point in revelling in Celtic’s scenario because the pickle they continually find themselves in against serious opposition tells all about the standard in Scotland. …”
Guardian

Monaco mark their centenary in style as young talents point to bright future

Adi Hütter
“There was just cause for Adi Hütter to feel a little intimidated on Saturday evening. Not because of the calibre of opponent that awaited his Monaco side, but on account of the onlookers in the stands. Between the club president, Dmitry Rybolovlev, and Prince Albert II in the VIP box and Hütter on the touchline sat a cast of managerial club legends, including Arsène Wenger, Gérard Banide, Claude Puel and Leonardo Jardim – the latter being the last to win the Ligue 1 title with Les Monégasques. …”
Guardian

English football’s 3pm kick-off is dying – does anyone care?

“‘At three o’clock on Saturdays, we know who we are, where we belong, and where we should be even when we aren’t,’ wrote Daniel Gray, the author and historian, in his 2016 book Saturday, 3pm: 50 Eternal Delights of Modern Football. Gray calls that sacred point in the English week ‘football time’, the opportunity for hundreds of thousands to escape the humdrum and stresses of everyday life and find a fleeting, common sanctuary. ‘What a privilege that is,’ he concludes. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

How to stop Arsenal scoring from corners: Hybrid marking, better grappling and an active keeper

“When Nicolas Jover signed up for an online set-piece course last summer, the tutors initially thought it was a prank. Despite transforming Arsenal’s set-piece play over the past three years in his role as a coach dedicated to that specific area of the game — he has turned them into one of Europe’s best at dead-ball situations — Jover has always wanted to learn. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

List of Scottish Football League clubs

Aberdeen and St Johnstone
“The Scottish Football League (‘SFL’) was established in 1890, initially as an amateur league as professionalism had not been legalised in Scottish football. In 1893 a Second Division was formed, with the existing single division renamed the First Division. The Second Division was discontinued during the First World War but revived in 1921. A Third Division was added in 1923 but collapsed three years later as a number of its member clubs found themselves unable to complete their fixtures for financial reasons, with many folding altogether. After the Second World War the divisions were rebranded as Division A and Division B and a Division C was added. This included a mixture of new member clubs and the reserve teams of clubs from the higher divisions, but this division was dropped in 1955. …”
Wikipedia

Five tactical takeaways from the Premier League’s first five weekends

“It is unwise to draw firm conclusions about your Premier League team in the early weeks of the season. While it might be premature to spot any statistical trends, that doesn’t stop us from identifying some fun quirks that have stood out. As luck would have it, each of the five teams in question finished outside the top five positions in the Premier League last season. Don’t you love the symmetry? From West Ham United’s woes to Fulham’s flanks and a word from the xG gods, let’s dive in: feast your eyes on five tactical takeaways from the first five weekends. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Tactical Fouls in the Brasileirão


“Tactical fouls are a polemic subject within football. Many view them as a valid defensive resource but there are plenty more who see them as a cynical exploitation of the rules. … There are various ways to define a tactical foul, but for the purposes of this article the definition will be: fouls committed within five seconds of an open-play turnover. It’s an approximation, but I’ve checked it against video and it seems to cover the large majority of situations that could be classified as tactical fouls. …”
StatsBomb

Germany: 2024-25 Bundesliga – Location-map, with 3 Charts…

“The map page shows a location-map for the 18 clubs in the 2024-25 Bundesliga, with recently promoted and relegated teams noted. (Promoted in 2024: FC St. Pauli, Holstein Kiel; relegated in 2024: FC Köln, Darmstadt.) The map also shows the 16 Federal States of Germany, and the 14 largest cities in Germany, with 2021 population estimates listed at the the top of the map. …”
Bill Sports Maps
W – 2024–25 Bundesliga

The Rise of Hungary and the Carpathian Brigade

Hungary’s ‘Carpathian Brigade’ before a recent game against Bulgaria 
“As a Hungarian, who is infatuated with the national team, growing up in the late naughties  and early 2010’s, I was not exactly accustomed to seeing my beloved reds represent the  country of roughly 10 million people, at a national tournament. Let alone three  consecutive tournaments. As a matter of fact, none of us Hungarians, who were alive  between 1986 and 2016, were used to seeing the ‘Mighty Magyars’ on the TV, whenever  the World Cup was on. In the aforementioned timeframe, the team failed to qualify for a  single international tournament. This meant, that, back then, if you were Hungarian, and  an avid follower of football, like such a big chunk of this nation’s population happens to  be, you had to settle for a different nation’s team, come the World Cup or the Euros. …”
Football Paradise (Sep. 10, 2024)
NY Times/The Athletic: Hungary, Viktor Orban and the weaponisation of a national football team (June 13, 2024)

Italy: Serie A, 2024-25 season – Location-map, with 3 charts: Attendance (2022-23)

“The map page has a location-map of the 2024-25 Serie A, along with 3 charts. The location-map features each club’s home kit [2024-25]. The map also shows the 20 Regions of Italy. And the map also shows the 11 largest cities in Italy (2020 metropolitan-area figures) {Metropolitan cities of Italy}. The cities’ population figures can be seen at the top of the location-map. Also, the map shows the locations of both the 3 promoted clubs and the 3 relegated clubs from 2024…Promoted to Serie A for 2024-25: (Parma, Como, Venezia); relegated to Serie B for 2024-25: (Frosinone, Sassuolo, Salernitana). …”
Bill Sports Maps
W – 2024–25 Serie A

Is there a trend of Premier League head coaches getting younger?

“Life provides us all with many reminders that we’re getting older. Your body aching for no ostensible reason. The increasing realisation you have no idea what music is cool anymore. Hangovers appearing after a couple of quiet beers, rather than a big night out. Measuring the time since you last visited a nightclub in decades, rather than years. For us football fans, there’s another: managers getting younger. And in the Premier League, they are getting much younger. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Erik ten Hag’s FC Twente years – ‘He always thought he knew better than the coach’

“‘He was always the best. He was always a big mouth. He was a little Johan Cruyff with the mouth (giving instructions to team-mates during matches). He was always thinking he knew things better than us.’  Leon ten Voorde is speaking about his childhood friend Erik ten Hag, now the Manchester United manager, whose team on Wednesday face FC Twente, where he spent 23 years as a player and then coach. Ten Hag’s love of football started with playground games with Ten Voorde in their hometown of Haaksbergen. Situated 10 miles away from the city of Enschede where FC Twente are based, its people are proud Tukkers. A Tukker is not only a regional distinction for those in the east of the Netherlands, but also a description of a particular way of life. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

How Milan’s brave use of Christian Pulisic in a narrow position helped them defeat Inter

“The script was already written. AC Milan’s head coach, Paulo Fonseca, was under pressure, his struggling team were up against Inter Milan, and a win separated Simone Inzaghi’s side from making history. After six consecutive victories against their city rivals, Inter needed another one to ink their names into the record books. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Penalty area


“The penalty area or 18-yard box (also known less formally as the penalty box or simply box) is an area of an association football pitch. It is rectangular and extends 18 yd (16 m) to each side of the goal and 18 yd (16 m) in front of it. If any part of the ball is over any part of a line demarking the penalty area then the ball is considered to be inside the penalty area. Within the penalty area is the penalty spot, which is 12 yd (11 m) from the goal line, directly in line with the centre of the goal. A penalty arc (often informally called ‘the D’) adjoins the penalty area, and encloses the area within 10 yd (9.1 m) of the penalty spot. It does not form part of the penalty area and is only of relevance during the taking of a penalty kick, when any players inside the arc are adjudged to be encroaching. …”
Wikipedia

How Morocco’s World Cup Run Reignited a Debate on Soccer Colonialism

Larbi Ben Barek of Marseille and Eloy of Sedan during a French Cup quarterfinals match in 1954.
“The French soccer team knocked Morocco out of the World Cup last week, leading to many broken hearts across North Africa, the Middle East and, because of its history of colonial migration, France. France established a protectorate in Morocco that lasted from 1912 to 1956, effectively colonizing the country. So the match seemed the opportunity for a postcolonial reckoning, particularly after Morocco’s victory over two of its other ex-colonial powers, Spain and Portugal. But soccer between France and Morocco has always been a microcosm of imperial control. In Morocco, the French hoped to govern more peacefully and with a greater emphasis on soft power than they did in their occupation of neighboring Algeria. …”
New Lines Magazine
A postcolonial World Cup showdown for the ages
How soccer’s colonial past still plagues the game today
[PDF] Football and colonialism: body and popular culture in urban Mozambique
amazon: Football in the Middle East Edited by Abdullah Al-Arian, Football and Colonialism: Body and Popular Culture in Urban Mozambique

Champions League draw: Predictions, best games and breakthrough star in league phase

“The draw for the revamped Champions League league phase is — after what seemed like a never-ending ceremony — complete. As expected, the new format ensured a smattering of mouthwatering games, as well as a few less mouthwatering ones, ahead of the start of the competition proper next month. You can read an explainer on the new format here. But this is what our experts made of the draw itself… ”
NY Times/The Athletic