Tag Archives: Football Manager

Why Liverpool want Giorgi Mamardashvili – the ‘Georgian Wall’ goalkeeper coveted across Europe

“Before an unforgettable footballing adventure had even begun, a nation had one man to thank. Such was the magnitude of Georgia’s penalty shootout win over Greece in March — a victory clinched by Giorgi Mamardashvili, and which ensured the country reached their first major international tournament — that every player, coach and member of the football federation received the Order of Honour from the national president. Mamardashvili’s reputation has rocketed after a shot-stopping clinic at that tournament, the European Championship in Germany this summer, with onlookers incredulous as the saves stacked up. It’s no surprise the man known as the ‘Georgian Wall’ has admirers — although Liverpool might not have been the first team on everyone’s lips to be among them. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
W – Giorgi Mamardashvili

Build-ups, line-breaks and counter-pressing: How Premier League sides may evolve next

“We are just days away from the Premier League’s return. Saturday’s Community Shield meeting between Manchester City and Manchester United provided us with an amuse-bouche to the main event, but there is still time to build further excitement by asking some key tactical questions that might emerge ahead of the new campaign. To guide our path, The Athletic has picked out some statistical trends from last season with an exciting box of new tools to rifle through — using data from Footovision, an analytics company that uses video broadcast footage to combine event and tracking data to provide new contextual metrics at the team and player level. So, let’s dive in… …”
NY Times/The Athletic

The Transfer DealSheet: Latest on Man Utd, Arsenal, Liverpool, Real Madrid, Barcelona and more

“Welcome to the latest edition of the Transfer DealSheet, your weekly guide to what is happening in the summer window. Our team of dedicated writers, including Adam Leventhal and David Ornstein, will take you inside the market to explain the deals being worked on, the players who could arrive and the ones who are on their way out across the Premier League and beyond. In last week’s edition, we looked at Liverpool’s pursuit of a No 6 and the situation with Chelsea’s Englandmidfielder Conor Gallagher. The information found within this article has been gathered according to The Athletic’s sourcing guidelines. Unless stated, our reporters have spoken to more than one person briefed on each deal before offering the clubs involved the opportunity to comment. Those responses, where they were given, have been included in the Transfer DealSheet. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Inter were made from AC Milan. Never forget that: The story of the Milan derby


“Marco Materazzi’s elbow was out again and, in normal circumstances, Manuel Rui Costa would wince and brace himself for the impact. But this was no ordinary moment. Materazzi was leaning on his opponent’s shoulder in astonished repose as if they were at the Camparino bar in the Galleria, sharing a spritz. Inter’s enforcer did not seek to hurt Milan’s playmaker. Instead, they stood in shock and awe at what was going on in front of them, as plumes of grapefruit-coloured smoke streamed from dozens of flares. The image captured by the former Reuters photographer Stefano Rellandini came to define the Milan derby at its most extreme. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

“The Derby della Madonnina, also known as the Derby di Milano (English: Milan Derby), is a derby football match between the two prominent Milanese clubs, Inter Milanand AC Milan. It is called Derby della Madonnina in honour of one of the main sights in the city of Milan, the statue of the Virgin Mary on the top of the Duomo, which is often referred to as the Madonnina (“Little Madonna” in Italian). In the past, Inter Milan (commonly abbreviated to Inter) was seen as the club of the Milan bourgeoisie (nicknamed bauscia, a Milanese term meaning ‘braggart’), whereas Milan (nicknamed casciavit or casciavid, meaning ‘screwdriver’ in Lombard language, with reference to the blue-collar worker) was supported mainly by working class. Because of their more prosperous ancestry, Inter fans had the ‘luxury’ to go to the San Siro stadium by motorcycle (motoretta, another nickname given to the Nerazzurri). On the other hand, the Rossoneri were also known as tramvee or tranvee (i.e. able to be transferred to the stadium only by public transport). …”
W – Derby della Madonnina
Derby della Madonnina: Best Five Games
YouTube: Crazy Scenes In Milan As Inter Fans & Players Celebrate The 20th Scudetto In The Club’s History, Ultras World in Milano – AC Milan vs Inter (03.09.2022)

Algeria’s Équipe FLN: the movement that used football to fight for freedom


“Football has long proven to be more than just a game. National teams have unified entire populations. Take Brazil, for instance. In the early 20th century, it was a divided country with various takes on national identity. It wasn’t until they came together and won the 1958 World Cup that the nation truly started to move towards unification. It was in part thanks to football; that one, giant unifier that everyone in Brazil – rich, poor, black, white – could unite behind and identify as truly Brazilian. Now it’s seamlessly woven into their culture. You can’t think about Brazil without thinking of their legacy in football. Algeria can relate to that, just on a different scale. …”
These Football Times
Playing for Independence, The Story of Equipe FLN

The Soccer Fans That Toppled a Government – Michael Correia (2019)
“Algiers was in a celebratory mood when President Abdelaziz Bouteflika announced his resignation on April 2 after popular and military pressure. The crowd outside the central post office, an iconic early 20th-century neo-Moorish building, sang ‘La Casa del Mouradia,’ protesters’ anthem since their first peaceful march in February. It started on the terraces of the leading soccer club, USMA (Union Sportive de la Médina d’Alger). Its title refers to the presidential palace in Algiers’s El Mouradia district and to a hit Spanish television show about a gang of armed robbers, La Casa de Papel, or Money Heist. …”
The Nation

Young Algerian soccer fans sing and chant slogans during an April 12, 2019, demonstration against the country’s leadership. They’re on the peaceful front line of the protest movement, facing down water cannons with attitude, memes, and fearless calls for shampoo.

Is the cult of the manager over? How English football’s power structure changed

“There is no escaping the cult of the manager in English football. From Busby to Ferguson, from Chapman to Wenger, from Shankly to Klopp, from Revie to Clough, from Mourinho to Guardiola, it sometimes feels like one of the last bastions of the 19th-century ‘great man theory’ — as if, to bastardise the words of Thomas Carlyle, the history of English football is but the biography of great men. Some of the greatest are commemorated with statues outside their clubs’ stadiums: Herbert Chapman and Arsene Wenger at Arsenal, Bill Shankly and Bob Paisley at Liverpool, Sir Matt Busby and Sir Alex Ferguson at Manchester United, Sir Alf Ramsey and Sir Bobby Robson at Ipswich Town, Don Revie at Leeds United, Stan Cullis at Wolverhampton Wanderers. These men did not just win hearts, minds and trophies. They shaped eras. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

A Movement for Society and Self-Improvement: Beşiktaş’ Çarşı Ultras

“‘We’ll see beautiful, days kids, we’ll see sunny days.’ This isn’t the kind of song you’d expect to hear chanted at a football game, let alone by one of the most respected groups of ultras in the world. But this group have defied expectations and baffled social commentators for years. Like most things in football, it all began with a dream. But unlike most other significant things in football, it was the dream of a history teacher – from Istanbul. There are few images available of Optik Başkan, but the one that echoes well beyond his tragically short life is one of a man with his arms wide open, as if seeing the sun for the first time, embracing and embodying the agony and the ecstasy of the tumultuous life of a football fan in Turkey. This image has since become immortalised on scarves, banners and stickers – an image held with God-like reverence amongst the Beşiktaşlı. …”
These Football Times
W – Çarşı (supporter group)
YouTube: Besiktas Ultras – Best Moments

Explaining how the Argentina-Morocco soccer match at the Olympics descended into a ‘circus’

“There was a chaotic end to the Olympic men’s football match between Argentina and Morocco — with the game restarting nearly two hours after it had appeared to finish following crowd trouble and a last-minute equaliser. The teams left the pitch and broadcast feeds cut out as Argentina appeared to have secured a 2-2 draw courtesy of Cristian Medina’s goal deep in stoppage time, only for that equaliser to be later ruled out following an intervention from the video assistant referee (VAR). …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Ultras


Ultras are a type of association football fans who are renowned for their fanatical support. The term originated in Italy, but is used worldwide to describe predominantly organised fans of association football teams. The behavioural tendency of ultras groups includes singing football chants, playing musical instruments such as drums, their use of flares and smoke bombs (primarily in tifo choreography), frequent use of elaborate displays, vocal support in large groups and the displaying of flags and banners at football stadiums, all of which are designed to create an atmosphere which encourages their own team and intimidates the opposing players and their supporters. These groups also commonly organise trips to attend away games. Ultras groups have been responsible for many cases of football hooliganism and violence, although differently from hooligan firms, ultras do not have the explicit objective of fighting other fans. Ultras groups are also in some cases directly linked to ideologies like neo-Nazism and other forms of far-right politics, and sometimes far-left politics. …”
W – Ultras
W – Football hooliganism in the United Kingdom
GQ – ‘The far right has always been interested in football as a way to recruit’: James Montague on going Among The Ultras (2020)
Harvard International Review – Fanaticism and the “Ultras” Movement: How Far Will You Go to Support Your Team?
YouTube: Top 10 Loudest Football Stadiums In The World

Thirty years of the backpass ban: The story of modern football’s best rule change

“… This summer marks the 30th anniversary of the backpass law being introduced, following FIFA’s successful experiment in Italy a year earlier. It is arguably the most significant — and the best — rule change in the modern game. The mindnumbing sight of goalkeepers rolling the ball out to defenders, receiving it back, picking it up and holding it in their hands to kill games, was gone. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Five years of the ‘new’ goal-kick law – this is how it has transformed football

“It was in the autumn of 2017 when goal kicks first started to become viewed as a legitimate attacking instrument. After signing from Benfica, it soon became clear that the left leg of Manchester City goalkeeper Ederson was more of a trebuchet than a human limb, capable of striking the ball 80 yards over the top of the opposition defence to set up goals. The ploy befuddled teams, as it was something that had not been seen before. City’s entire front three would position themselves 20 yards beyond the opposition back line, safe in the knowledge they could not be offside from a goal kick. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

How Spain ruthlessly exploited England’s lack of collective quality at Euro 2024

Spain were worthy winners of the Euro 2024 final, but the investigation from England’s perspective should not be about how their opponents in Berlin were better on the night, but how they were so much better for the entire tournament. If you were to rank the 14 team performances by those two sides at this competition, in order of quality, you would list the seven by Spain and then the seven England ones. That was the extent of the difference. Spain impressed and enthralled in each game. They had weaknesses, like every side, but those weaknesses generally arose from their bravery and their commitment to attack. …”
NY Times/ The Athletic – Michael Cox
NY Times/ The Athletic – Euro 2024 tactical trends: Counter-attacks, youth, fast starts and comebacks
NY Times: A New Prince Leads Spain as It Rules European Soccer Again
NY Times/The Athletic – How Spain won Euro 2024: Proper wingers, an old-school No 9 and a Real Sociedad core
Euro 2024 Tactics: England’s substitutions are game changers and savers
YouTube: Spain vs. England Highlights | UEFA Euro 2024 | Final

‘It was inhuman’: Why the Copa America final was delayed and dangerously close to disaster

“The black gates at the southwest entrance of Hard Rock Stadium had been closed for one hour and 45 minutes when a young child was hoisted on a guardian’s shoulders amid the crush of people waiting to get in for the CopaAmérica final. The boy waved his hands toward the police officers and security guards standing next to the lone door that was opening to let people into the stadium. He put his hands together as if in prayer, pleading with them to let him in. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: Fox’s Copa America final coverage showed network is incapable of covering off-field turmoil (Video)
NY Times/The Athletic: Argentina are special – Copa America proves they just win
YouTube: FINAL COPA AMERICA‼️ COLOMBIA VS ARGENTINA

Euro 2024: Spain vs England – your ultimate tactical guide


“After 28 days of drama and more than 80 hours of football, 24 teams have been filtered down to two. There is only one more game to play. Spain and England prepare for battle at the Olympiastadion in Berlin on Sunday evening, meeting for the first time since 2018 to fight for the European Championship title — and there are some thrilling narratives to sift through. How do you stop Spain’s relentless wingers Lamine Yamal and Nico Williams? Have England become predictably unpredictable? Can you cut off Spain’s supply at source? England substitutions…. discuss. The Athletic profiles the finalists’ strengths and weaknesses, the key battles, and the many sub-plots in your definitive tactical guide to the Euro 2024 final. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
England’s Tactical Shift: Crafting a winning back-three setup for EURO 2024 – scout report
The Conventional Playmaker – Tactics: Spain knock out Germany in test between tournament’s two best sides
The Conventional Playmaker – England’s substitutions are game changers and savers
The Conventional Playmaker – Some teams have used space better than others
Guardian: Control holds key for England and ‘haunted’ Rice insists team are wiser
ESPN – Euro 2024 final preview: Spain vs. England (Video)

Copa America best XI picks: King James (Rodriguez) but does Lionel Messi make the cut?

“There are only two matches left of Copa America, so it’s time for a bit of fun. Who makes our writers’ team of the tournament? It won’t surprise you to see players from finalists Argentina and Colombia dominate our selections, with plenty of Uruguayan representation at the back and in midfield and a lot of love for quarterfinalists Venezuela. Perhaps understandably given the performances of the United States men’s national team, Jamaica and Mexico, very few picks are flying the flag for CONCACAF, with only Canada’s Alphonso Davies and Juan Pablo Vargasfrom Costa Rica sneaking into a few teams. No writer has space for Vinicius Junior, and Brazilian names are scarce given the team’s underwhelming displays before a quarterfinal final exit.And then there’s Lionel Messi. Sentiment aside, has he done enough to make the best XI?One man reigns supreme, however: Colombia’s James Rodriguez, surely the player of the tournament — although Argentina may yet have something to say about that in Sunday’s final. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

How Uruguay vs Colombia descended into chaos – and the questions raised by the ugly scenes

“What should have been a showpiece game in the semi-final of the Copa America in Charlotte on Wednesday night descended into something more akin to a bar-room brawl as several Uruguay players, including Darwin Nunez and the captain Jose Maria Gimenez, clashed with Colombiasupporters in the stands after the final whistle. It was an ugly, chaotic and extraordinary scene that overshadowed a compelling match, raising serious questions about the security arrangements in place at the Bank of America Stadium as well as CONMEBOL’s decision to stage a game of this magnitude at a venue that was being used for the first time in the tournament. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

How the Netherlands shut down England’s midfield – and made Watkins the perfect substitution


“We tend to remember brilliant stories by their happy endings. Ollie Watkins coming on in the 81st minute last night, with Englanddrawing 1-1 in the semi-finals of the European Championship against the Netherlands, to score a 90th-minute winner will be carved into the memories of English fans for years. Yet, the lead-up to a climactic finish is sometimes the building block to a jovial ending; Cinderella’s story isn’t only about marrying the prince. Watkins’ strike put England into their second final in the past three tournaments under the management of Gareth Southgate, and his introduction of the Aston Villa centre-forward made complete sense considering the way the match developed. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: Ollie Watkins, Cole Palmer and an England goal that was worth the wait (Video)

Netherlands 1 England 2: Late substitute Watkins hits winner to set up Euro 2024 final with Spain

“A late winner from England substitute Ollie Watkins against Netherlands put Gareth Southgate’s team into the final of Euro 2024, where they will face Spain. The Aston Villa striker replaced Harry Kane, the England captain, with nine minutes of normal time remaining and made it 2-1 in the first minute of added time. Xavi Simons put the Netherlands ahead in the first half with a long-range strike after dispossessing Declan Rice, and Kane equalised from the spot after being fouled by Denzel Dumfries. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: The stutter run-up is Euro 2024’s trending penalty technique – but why do players do it?

Spain 2 France 1: A semi-final for the ages as Yamal makes history with wondergoal – The Briefing


“Spain are the first nation through to the Euro 2024 final after beating France 2-1 in Munich. After a series of games at this year’s European Championship that could safely be filed as ‘cagey’, Spain and France served up a superb encounter on Tuesday evening. Didier Deschamps’ side took the lead inside 10 minutes via a Randal Kolo Muani header from a delightful Kylian Mbappecross, but Spain hit back with two extraordinary goals, the first a welcome-to-the-big-time rocket from Lamine Yamal (who, as you might have heard, is 16) followed by a clever finish from Dani Olmo four minutes later. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Will France’s players be liberated after ‘immense relief’ of country’s election outcome?

“The France team were en route to training when news emerged that the far right in the French elections had been defeated. Happiness and relief coursed through a group of young sportsmen who had taken it upon themselves to speak out in favour of the legendary national motto of ‘liberté, égalité, fraternité’. It took courage and confidence to tackle such a sensitive issue so publicly. The response to the election result from within the camp spoke volumes about how profound it has been for their message to have arguably helped swing the vote. … Kylian Mbappe had urged the public to vote and appealed in particular to the youth of France, warning against the dangers of extreme and divisive ideas. How must those players have felt watching the pictures coming through of young people crying in celebration as the election results assuaged their worst fears? …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: France, racial politics and why ‘the Mbappe effect’ is shaping a bitter election

England starting XI to face the Netherlands: Drop Kane? Guehi back? Eze for Foden?

England are in another major tournament semi-final, but let’s not pretend there are no issues to resolve. Gareth Southgate’s side has yet to deliver a convincing 90-minute performance at Euro 2024 and while that has not impeded their progress so far, the challenge cranks up a notch with Wednesday’s meeting with the Netherlands. So who should Southgate select for what could be either his last game in charge of the national team or the prelude to a glorious finale? Our experts lend him their thoughts. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

England penalties vs Switzerland analysed: Buddy system, Pickford bottle, crucial pauses

“Watching England’s penalties in their shootout victory over Switzerland in the Euro 2024 quarter-final, it would be tempting to think: why do people always make penalties look so hard. Because the five penalties — by Cole Palmer, Jude Bellingham, Bukayo Saka, Ivan Toney and Trent Alexander-Arnold — England took were so good it all looked very easy indeed. But, of course, it wasn’t — as generations of England players and fans will tell you. This was a long way from the failures of the past: this was a team that knew what they were doing, who had planned it all meticulously. It was the successful conclusion to a process that England have had in place for most of Gareth Southgate’s tenure but has been refined over the years. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic – Euro 2024 day 23: England’s ‘cheat code’ water bottle and can the Netherlands go all the way?

England’s change of shape against Switzerland worked – to a point – thanks to Bukayo Saka

“By this point, it’s time to accept that England will not play good football at Euro 2024. They will not exploit the full potential of the Bundesliga top goalscorer, the Premier League’s player of the year or arguably La Liga’s player of the year. There have been no vintage victories, no truly convincing performances, and the feeling is one of frustration as much as elation back home. But they could still win it. Gareth Southgate’s approach for yesterday’s penalty-shootout win over Switzerland was the clearest sign yet that England have given up on being good, and are happy to try to make the opposition bad. Southgate abandoned his Plan A, the system he used throughout the group stage and in the narrow 2-1 win over Slovakia, and switched to a back five featuring wing-backs. Or did he? …”
NY Times/The Athletic – Michael Cox

Fear and lunging in Las Vegas: How Uruguay v Brazil became this Copa America’s dirtiest match

“Sometimes it happens. High stakes, growing tension, a sheer desperation not to lose — the biggest games can light a fire within compulsive competitors that catches too quickly, spreads across the pitch, and burns any sense of spectacle to the ground. Uruguay’s Copa America quarterfinal clash with Brazil fell foul to that intensity: an ugly collision of arms, legs and bodies constantly interrupted by the referee’s whistle. By the time Dario Herrera signalled for the end, it felt as if the contest had barely been given the chance to begin. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

How Spain’s direct central midfielders unlocked Germany – they are the team to beat

“Under Luis de la Fuente, Spain are a different beast. The nation that came to dominate international football 15 years ago with its commitment to slow, methodical possession football has not entirely changed its identity. This is, after all, a side that plays 4-3-3, uses a high defensive line, has good ball-playing centre-backs and a sturdy holding midfielder who is good at distributing the ball. But they nevertheless possess a different mentality: a determination to get the ball forward quicker, to attack with genuine width, to use a proper centre-forward. The attackers received rave reviews in the group stage. The 2-1 extra-time victory in the quarter-final over Germany, a meeting between the tournament’s best two sides, was all about the central midfielders. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

France’s defence is controlled, disciplined and built in the image of Didier Deschamps

“Despite having an array of attacking talent at his disposal, not one of Deschamps’ players has scored a goal from open play during Euro 2024. And yet his team are through to a semi-final against Spain having beaten Portugal on penalties 5-3 following a 0-0 draw after extra time. For all of France’s offensive woes, they make up for it with the best defence of the tournament. They have conceded just one goal, a penalty against Poland (twice taken by Robert Lewandowski), in five games and are yet to go behind. Les Bleus have faced Romelu Lukaku, Lewandowski, Memphis Depay and Cristiano Ronaldo, who have a combined 344 international goals, admittedly some in better form than others. …”
HY Times/The Athletic

Martinez the saviour after Messi’s Panenka miss – how Argentina beat Ecuador on penalties

“The entire NRG Stadium in Houston, Texas gasped. The whistle blew and Lionel Messi moved towards the ball. Messi swung his famous left foot down at the ball… and chose a Panenka-style penalty to give his side the lead in the shootout. Except he didn’t. The Ecuador goalkeeper Alexander Dominguez dived to his left but the ball hit the crossbar and set in motion a shootout that had it all — including the now customary Emiliano Martinez antics that helped the Copa Americaholders win 4-2 on penalties to advance to the semi-final. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

England against the world: Are players embracing a ‘siege mentality’ at Euro 2024?

“It was a surprise to hear Jude Bellingham, making a rare media appearance after being named man of the match in England’s 2-1 win over Slovakia, talking about a ‘pile-on’. Bellingham is one of the most lauded young footballers in the world and had just produced a moment that will be remembered as one of England’s best in this competition — but he had something very different that he wanted to get off his chest. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic – Why England lost their set-piece superpower: Bad deliveries, flawed routines and the Maguire factor

How Spain have evolved under Luis de la Fuente – through crossing

“One of the wonders of the human brain is how it translates words into experiences, sounds and images. The notion, which is called semantic processing, is how our brain understands what we read by searching for associated words, sounds or images in our memory. Try reading the following words: Spain national football team. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: Why Spain vs Germany is one of the biggest quarter-finals in international football history

Why are France not scoring goals from open play at Euro 2024?

“Didier Deschamps is a glass-half-full sort of fella. France’s three goals so far at this summer’s European Championshipconsist of two own goals and a penalty. But after the 1-0 win against Belgium in the round of 16, Deschamps said: ‘My only regret is the number of shots we had and tried to put too much power into them, and they went off target. I’m immensely proud of what we’ve done, to be in the quarter-finals again.’ …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Political football: How soccer has shaped the UK general election

“A generous estate agent might describe the two-up, two-down terraced houses on the cramped side streets that lead towards Gillingham’s Priestfield Stadium as ‘snug’. On this warm day, the windows of several are open and the smell of frying mince and onions hangs over the turnstiles in the Brian Moore Stand, an open ‘temporary’ structure held together by scaffolding that has now been in place for more than 20 years. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Euro 2024 power rankings: how the teams in the last 16 shaped up


“A dominant 4-1 win against Georgia in the last 16 means Spain stay top of our rankings. They fell behind in the first half but the end result never felt in doubt. Luis de la Fuente’s side had 36 attempts to Georgia’s four; they attempted 823 passes and completed 94%. Or put it this way: Georgia were outplayed, yet they didn’t play badly. Spain were simply superb. Again. The starting XI seems settled now but there can be no complacency because the options from the bench are so strong. Against Georgia, De la Fuente put on, among others, Dani Olmo and Álex Grimaldo with the former scoring. …”
Guardian

Austria 1 Turkey 2: Missiles fall, records tumble – and the save of the tournament?

“This always promised to be one of the more frenetic nights at Euro 2024 — and Austria vs Turkey did not disappoint. A dramatic start. which saw Turkey take the lead inside a minute, relentless attacking, a miraculous late save and a feisty atmosphere — occasionally bubbling over into something more sinister — made for a compelling last-16 match. Ultimately, Turkey did enough to secure a quarter-final against the Netherlands in Berlin on Saturday night. Our experts debate the big talking points. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
NY Times/The Athletic: Euro 2024 day 19 – Turkey march into quarter-finals, Gakpo stars again, and who throws a shoe?

Romania 0 Netherlands 3: Stylish Dutch through to quarter-finals as Gakpo chases Golden Boot – The Briefing

“The Netherlands are through to the quarter-finals at this summer’s European Championship after beating Romania 3-0 in Munich. Romania started the game on the front foot but Ronald Koeman’s side grew into the game and deservedly took the lead after 20 minutes via Cody Gakpo’s third goal of Euro 2024. The Dutch dominated the remainder of the half — particularly on the right flank — but Edward Iordanescu’s side, as they have throughout the tournament, retained a threat on the break. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

The USMNT’s six minutes of hope – and what it says about this team

“For just over six minutes, it looked as though the United States would find its way into a Copa America quarterfinal. Gregg Berhalter’s side was coming off a shocking 2-1 defeat against Panama in Atlanta and it had lost the luxury of controlling its destiny to advance from Group C. Its final foe, Uruguay, had won its first two games and seldom showed a weakness to exploit against Panama and Bolivia. The hosts came out with a point to prove. In the opening 20 minutes, the United States pushed the tempo, orchestrated fluid attacking sequences and seldom afforded Uruguay similarly pretty passages of play. There was just one problem: they only refined all of that interplay into a single shot — a headed corner by left-back Antonee Robinson that was comfortably saved by goalkeeper Sergio Rochet. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

The secrets of Diogo Costa’s penalty heroics: Patience, explosiveness, going with your gut

“As the game moved into its 120th minute, it was so obvious Portugal and Slovenia’s Euro 2024 last-16 meeting would end with one group of players sprinting towards their goalkeeper from the halfway line, arms aloft, hailing his heroics. And surely it was going to be the goalkeeper who had already saved one penalty and been his side’s last line of defence in a resolute but intelligent and skilful rearguard action. It had to be Jan Oblak, Slovenia’s captain and seven-time player of the year, right? …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

France 1 Belgium 0: Are the French improving? Was De Bruyne wasted deep? What now for Belgium?

France are into the quarter-finals of Euro 2024 — despite having mustered only a penalty and two own goals in four matches to reach the latter stages of the tournament. The substitute Randal Kolo Muani’s late shot took a wicked deflection off Jan Vertonghen to defeat Belgium in a dour contest in Dusseldorf as Didier Deschamps’ side forced passage rather unconvincingly into a last-eight tie against either Slovenia or Portugal. The centre-half’s own goal was the ninth of the finals to date. Daniel Taylor, Peter Rutzler and Mark Carey analyse the key talking points from Dusseldorf. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: France still striving to coax the best from Antoine Griezmann

What England can expect from Switzerland – their four tactical traits analysed

“It turns out Murat Yakin wasn’t lying in 2022. He was just one tournament early. ‘I think we are the best Switzerland national team that has ever existed,’ said their coach prior to the World Cup. He promised their best-ever finish at an international tournament but did not deliver — Portugal beat them 6-1 in the round of 16. From heartbreak to broken records as, 18 months on, Switzerland knocked out Euro 2020 winners Italy in the round of 16 at Euro 2024. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Spain 4 Georgia 1 – Yamal excellent (again), Williams’ wondergoal, exciting Georgia head home

Spain were worried at moments against Georgia but, in the end, their leading stars proved decisive in a brilliant performance. They dominated early on, but the Georgians took the lead with their first attack after a flowing move, finished off with yet another Euro 2024 own goal, the eighth of the tournament (this time from Robin Le Normand). Spain drew level with the man for the big moment, Rodri, scoring from just outside the area. Then their 16-year-old wonderkid Lamine Yamal set up Fabian Ruiz to head in the winner. Nico Williams, another of their leading stars to have made them the tournament favourites, scored a devastating third before Dani Olmo completed the win. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

England 2 Slovakia 1 – Southgate’s side scrape through, Bellingham to the rescue, tactical questions remain

“England edged past Slovakia to reach the Euro 2024 quarter-finals, but only after staring a humiliating defeat in the face. Anyone hoping for an improved version of England in the knockout stages was left sorely disappointed during a disjointed and dispiriting first half. Sloppy defending from Gareth Southgate’s team let Slovakia in on several occasions in the first 20 minutes, a foreshadowing of the opening goal from Ivan Schranz on 25 minutes — the 30-year-old taking advantage of acres of space to slot past Jordan Pickford. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

The curious case of Santiago Gimenez: Wanted by Premier League clubs but struggling at Copa America

“… Anyone would have thought the same when Mexico’s Santiago Gimenezwas put clean through on goal in the early stages of Wednesday’s 1-0 defeat against Venezuela in Los Angeles. Except this wasn’t anyone talking. ‘Even though he’s my son, I’m an analyst and I have to say it. The difference between (Salomon) Rondon and Santi today was the goal.’ Yes, the man holding the microphone was Christian Gimenez, Santiago’s father, or ‘Chaco’ as he is more commonly known in Mexico. A former national team player, ‘Chaco’ was working for Fox Sports for the Venezuela game when he decided to tell it how it is on the back of a result that leaves Mexico’s hopes of reaching the Copa America quarter-finals hanging by a thread. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Germany 2 Denmark 0 – Havertz and Musiala put hosts through, and a night to forget for Andersen


Germany eased into the quarter-finals of Euro 2024 with a 2-0 victory against Denmark in Dortmund, courtesy of goals from Kai Havertz and the outstanding Jamal Musiala. The risk of lightning stopped play for nearly 25 minutes in the first half, as the players were taken off the pitch and water leaked through the roof at Signal Iduna Park, but Julian Nagelsmann’s side got the job done when the game resumed. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

The worst kick-off routine at Euro 2024 — and how Switzerland made Italy pay

“Twenty-seven seconds into the second half, Switzerland went 2-0 up against Italy in their last-16 clash in Berlin. But, hang on, didn’t Italy take the kick-off? Yes, they did — and they made a complete mess of it. Luciano Spalletti’s team started the second half with two players by the ball (the striker Gianluca Scamacca and midfielder Nicolo Fagioli), six players lined up along on the halfway line (three on the right and three on the left) and two players just deeper than the centre circle (the centre-backs Gianluca Mancini and Alessandro Bastoni). …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)
NY Times/The Athletic: Italy went backwards at Euro 2024, every time they played it looked like the first time
NY Times/The Athletic: Switzerland 2 Italy 0 – Holders dumped out, Vargas stars, Yakin wins tactical battle – The Briefing

The penalty shootout experience: ‘I wouldn’t wish it on my worst enemy’

“It is the walk. A penalty shootout means the walk and the walk is the bit where football stops, where this game of instinct, noise and mayhem is reduced to stillness. There is no scope to think until that epic trudge when, pushed to the limit of physical endurance after a draining game, an intense tournament, a wearing season, think is all you can do. When your mind becomes an enemy. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Euro 2024: Our ranking of all the games in Germany this summer

“You’ll see plenty of top 10 lists during this European Championship but how about a top 51 Starting today, The Athletic is ranking every game in the competition and we’ll be updating this piece each day. And with the group stage completed, there is already plenty (36) to choose from. Let’s dive in… …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Euro 2024 refereeing: More bookings, quicker VAR decisions, tactical foul crackdown

UEFA’s chief refereeing officer Roberto Rosetti has said he is “super happy” with the quality of decision-making during Euro 2024 so far, hailing a crackdown on tactical fouls, less dissent and quicker video assistant referee (VAR) calls. On a video conference call with reporters on Friday, Rosetti presented the key refereeing statistics from the 36 group-stage games and showed clips of several of the tournament’s most contentious decisions. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Analysing the USMNT performance vs Panama: An organized and determined response to adversity

“With Uruguay on the horizon in the final group game, last night’s fixture against Panama was justifiably billed as a must-win for the United States men’s national team. With 32 places in FIFA’s rankings separating the USMNT and their Thursday night opponents and an all-top five European league starting XI at his disposal, Gregg Berhalter’s side was heavily favoured to make it two wins from two in the group stages. But when one of those European stars is handed his marching orders after just 18 minutes for a shove to the face, there’s little more for the outnumbered crew to do than defend valiantly and execute clinically when chances present themselves. And to their credit, that’s largely what the U.S. did. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
NY Times/The Athletic: The Panama game was an important test for this USMNT generation – and they failed (Video)
NY Times/The Athletic: The USMNT are in danger of blowing their big moment at the Copa America
NY Times/The Athletic: USMNT’s Tim Weah apologizes to teammates after red card vs Panama

Euro 2024: Ranking every team in the group stage – England 13th, Georgia 5th, Austria 2nd


Romania
“The group stage of Euro 2024 is done. Opinions have been formed, conclusions drawn, rash predictions (revised from your pre-tournament rash predictions) have been made, players/teams/managers have been written off as chumps and losers or hailed as the next geniuses of the game. But who has been the best team at the tournament so far? There is a natural way of determining who’s been good and who’s been bad: specifically, who’s qualified and who hasn’t. However, that’s a little dull, isn’t it? It doesn’t take in the nuances of entertainment and subjectivity; just because you progress to the latter stages of a tournament doesn’t mean people want to watch you play football. So here’s a definitive ranking of the 24 teams who have done battle at Euro 2024. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Winners and Losers of the Euro 2024 Group Stage

“There are 67 hours between the conclusion of the Euro 2024 group stage on Wednesday and the start of the knockout stage on Saturday. After the near-constant soccer action for the first 12 days of the Euros—which brought breathtaking goals from outside the box, late drama, and history for multiple nations—it’s time for the business end of the tournament. The tournament began with 24 teams and is now down to 16. We bid adieu to Scotland, Hungary, Croatia, Albania, Serbia, Poland, Ukraine, and Czechia and are left with all of the top eight pretournament favorites in the round of 16. Switzerland and Italy will begin the knockout stage at 12 p.m. ET on Saturday, the first of eight matches in four days. …”
The Ringer

How Czech Republic v Turkey became the dirtiest game in Euros history

“As Cenk Tosun finished off a seven-on-four counter-attack in injury time, the Turkey bench were off their seats to celebrate a 2-1 victory that sealed their qualification for the knockout stages. It was chaotic stuff, and yet that was only the start of it. In the madcap aftermath, Romanian referee Istvan Kovacs handed out five bookings, extending the record set 20 minutes earlier for the most cards awarded in a single game at a European Championship. …”
NY Times/The Athletic

Georgia 2 Portugal 0: Biggest shock of Euro 2024, Ronaldo’s frustration, glorious Kvaratskhelia


“In the biggest shock (by the FIFA world rankings) of Euro 2024 so far, Georgia defeated Portugal 2-0 to secure a place in the knockout stages in what is their major tournament debut. Georgia, ranked 74, took advantage of Roberto Martinez rotating a Portugal team (ranked sixth) who had already qualified top of Group F, scoring in the second minute through the immensely talented Khvicha Kvaratskheliabefore Georges Mikautadze converted a second-half penalty. Cristiano Ronaldo started the game but his pursuit of becoming the oldest player ever to score at a Euros — he is 39 — goes on and he was substituted on 66 minutes with only a booking to show for his efforts. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Guardian: Kvaratskhelia propels Georgia to last 16 with famous win over Portugal
Independent: Georgia’s glorious victory over Portugal reveals Euro 2024 quirk that helped them make history
NY Times/The Athletic – Czech Republic 1 Turkey 2: Most cards in Euros history, Montella’s entertainers qualify, Czechs out
Guardian: Turkey progress after Tosun finally puts out 10-man Czech Republic’s fire

Slovakia 1 Romania 1 – Heavy rain and genuine excitement as both sides progress to last 16


Romania and Slovakia came into their final Euro 2024 group game today knowing that a draw would take them both through to the last 16… but the match did not begin sedately. There were 11 shots in the opening 25 minutes and the last of them resulted in a Slovakia goal — via a powerful header from Ondrej Duda. By half-time, Romania were level, thanks to an equally emphatic penalty from Razvan Marin. The two sides continued to trade blows into the second half, in a match further enlivened by lightning, heavy rain and one of the themes of the summer: a questionable pitch. Despite several close shaves, there was no more scoring, meaning we got the draw many expected, but in a significantly more exciting fashion than most imagined. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Guardian: Dignity reigns on stormy night as Romania and Slovakia battle into last 16
NY Times/The Athletic – Ukraine 0 Belgium 0: Qualified success for Belgians, heartbreak for Ukraine
Guardian: Belgium booed despite edging through as Ukraine receive heroes’ farewell

Argentina’s fanatical fans turned Times Square blue and white – then their team fought

“New York’s Times Square is one of the most recognizable sections of real estate in the world. It looked a lot different with Argentina fans in town. Police officers unfamiliar with Argentine football culture but accustomed to monitoring peaceful protests stood bewildered as midtown Manhattan turned into an Albiceleste street party. Tuesday’s ‘banderazo’, a pre-match tradition that encourages fans to fly flags and sing songs that honor the national team, proved that Messi and Argentina are still riding a euphoric wave since winning the World Cup in 2022. Are they now the most popular national team on the planet? …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Netherlands 2 Austria 3: Sabitzer’s sublime winner and Koeman outfoxed by Rangnick


Netherlands goalkeeper Bart Verbruggen can only look on after an own goal by Donyell Malen opens the scoring.
Austria are through to the knockout stage as group winners after a sensational and topsy-turvy 3-2 victory over Netherlands. Ralf Rangnick’s side took the lead twice but were pegged back on both occasions before Marcel Sabitzer’s 80th-minute winner sealed the three points and condemned Ronald Koeman’s side to a third-place finish. The result caps a disappointing group stage for Netherlands and they will have to wait and see which side of the draw they end up on. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Guardian: Austria top group with Netherlands in third after Sabitzer strike settles thriller
NY Times/The Athletic – France 1 Poland 1: Mbappe scores at last but draw sees French finish second in Group D – The Briefing
Guardian: France settle for second place as Robert Lewandowski earns Poland point

United by football?

“France’s Kylian Mbappé, Ousmane Dembélé and Marcus Thuram compose one of the most thrilling attacking trios in the ongoing 2024 European championships. Under normal circumstances, they’d be categorically focused on extending their national team’s domination in world football over the last eight years. In that time period, Les Bleushave won the 2018 FIFA World Cup and reached the final in three of the last four major competitions they’ve participated in (European championships and World Cups). Instead, the dominant media narratives that have sunk in over the last few weeks are not about the players’ footballing abilities, but rather their decision to speak out on France’s precarious political state of affairs this summer. …”
Africa Is a Country

England 0 Slovenia 0: Southgate’s side seal top spot in Group C but underwhelm again – The Briefing

England qualified for the knockout stage of the European Championshipwith a 0-0 draw against Slovenia that means they win Group C. Gareth Southgate’s team were underwhelming in their opening two games of the tournament and there was little sign of a revolution in the first half of their group finale on Tuesday evening. England dominated possession but managed just four shots on target, and a Bukayo Saka goal that was disallowed for a Phil Foden offside. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Guardian: Boos rock England fans’ Cologne party as team turn clock back 15 years
Guardian: England disappoint again but still top group after stalemate with Slovenia
Denmark 0 Serbia 0: Danes advance but Hojlund was isolated and Germany have little to fear – NY Times/The Athletic
Guardian: Denmark edge through as runners-up but Serbia exit after tame draw

Lionel Messi and Argentina excel at football’s hardest skill – keeping it simple

“The phrase ‘moves in twos’ has been around for a long time in coaching circles, and anyone who has experienced training exercises around that theme would know that Lionel Messi is your perfect partner. Both of Argentina’s goals in their Copa America opening victory against Canada came down to the relationship between Messi and a team-mate — their movement, his pass — and also served as a reminder that the simplicity of a diagonal ball and a straight run, or a straight ball and a diagonal run, is often a winning formula. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)

Croatia 1 Italy 1: Zaccagni goal puts Italy through, Modric’s minute of mayhem and more beer throwing


“A 98th-minute equaliser from Mattia Zaccagni secured Italy’s place in the knockout stages of Euro 2024 — at the expense of their opponents Croatia. Zaccagni’s outstanding finish in the closing minutes of the match for the reigning champions cancelled out Luka Modric’s goal for Croatia in the 55th minute — seconds after the midfielder’s penalty was saved by Gianluigi Donnarumma. On his 178th appearance for Croatia, at the age of 38 years and 289 days, he became the oldest-ever goalscorer at a European Championship. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Guardian: Mattia Zaccagni strikes at death to crush Croatia and send Italy through to last 16

Albania 0 Spain 1: Rotation rewarded, Torres hits 20 and outsiders’ dream ended


Spain’s Ferran Torres, centre, scores the opening goal during an international friendly soccer match between Spain and Albania at the RCDE Stadium in Barcelona
Spain underlined their credentials as a team with the quality and depth to go a long way at the European Championship, as they beat Albania despite making 10 changes. This was only the third time in the tournament’s history a manager had altered the starting XI so significantly (and the first for 16 years) but Spain’s understudies were dominant for the most part in Dusseldorf. Ferran Torres’ 20th international goal gave Luis de la Fuente’s side a first-half lead and though they did not add to their advantage and did lose a degree of control in the second half, they rarely looked in any real danger of being denied victory. …”
NY Times/The Athletic
Guardian: Ferran Torres’ first-half strike earns rotated Spain victory against Albania

Christian Pulisic has started smiling – this is why

“In Christian Pulisic’s diverse range of USMNT highlights, one thing is hard to spot: a smile. Since making his senior international debut as a 17-year-old in March 2016, his efforts have frequently been met with frustration. As a program prodigy, he was on the field in Trinidad the following year when the United States failed to qualify for a World Cup for the first time since Ronald Reagan was president. The man couldn’t even properly celebrate his long-awaited first World Cup goal in 2022; his effort to nudge the ball beyond Iran’s goalline left him in a crumpled heap as he suffered a pelvic contusion during that incident. …”
NY Times/The Athletic (Video)