Shortlisted: Tottenham looking at "sensational" Postecoglou replacement

da 888: There is no denying it: this season is not going to plan for Tottenham Hotspur.

da blaze casino: The North Londoners have looked incredible in some games but utterly dire in others, and over the last week, they have dropped points against Fulham, AS Roma, Bournemouth, and most recently, Chelsea.

It’s a run of results that has piled the pressure on Ange Postecoglou, and while plenty of fans are desperate for him to succeed, there are murmurings that he may not get the chance.

In fact, even before the devastating loss to Chelsea, reports were linking the club with another manager, someone who has already got the better of the Australian this season.

Postecoglou's Spurs career

Tottenham made the shock decision to appoint Postecoglou in the summer of 2023, and while there were plenty of detractors at the time who claimed his success with Celtic wouldn’t translate, it didn’t take long for him to start impressing fans and pundits alike.

For example, they went undefeated in their first ten league games and were actually sitting in first place for the October international break.

However, in their 11th league game of the season, they lost 4-1 at home to Chelsea, in a game that saw James Maddison and Micky Van de Ven come off injured, and Cristian Romero receive a red card.

That result saw the North Londoners’ campaign turn entirely on its head, and by the time the final whistle was blown in game week 38, they had fallen to fifth place, with a record of 20 wins, six draws, 12 losses, a goal difference of just 13 and 66 points – 25 off Manchester City in first.

Unfortunately, while some hoped that a fresh start this season would see the team return to their pre-Chelsea form of last year, that has not happened.

Postecoglou’s Spurs record

Games

63

Wins

32

Draws

9

Losses

22

Points

105

Points per Game

1.67

Goals For

124

Goals Against

95

Goal Difference

+29

All Stats via Transfermarkt

Instead, Postecoglou’s side now sit in 11th, on 20 points, with six wins, two draws and a staggering seven defeats to their name already.

In other words, Tottenham have lost 19 of their 53 Premier League games under the Australian’s stewardship, and while there is undoubtedly a chance that his incredibly entertaining brand of full-throttle football could eventually turn things around, it’s no surprise that they already have a shortlist of potential replacements should they pull the plug.

Postecoglou's potential replacement

So, according to a report from Football Transfers, Spurs have shortlisted Ipswich Town manager Kieran McKenna as their first choice to replace Postecoglou should they choose to sack the Australian.

The Northern Irishman has a strong connection to the club, as he spent time in the academy before injury forced him into retirement, then returning a few years later as a scout and then the U18 manager after that.

His success in North London saw him snapped up by Manchester United, where he spent more time as a scout and U18 manager before then earning a place as an assistant manager for Ole Gunnar Solskjær, José Mourinho, Ralf Rangnick and Michael Carrick.

However, after years of learning from some of the best in the business, the 38-year-old accepted his first senior manager job, joining League One Ipswich in December 2021.

Over the next few years, the “sensational” tactician, as John Barnes dubbed him, led the Tractor Boys on a stunning journey from the third tier right up to the Premier League in back-to-back promotions, and while they currently find themselves in the relegation zone, they’ve shown enough to indicate they could well stay up.

For example, they picked up points against Aston Villa, Manchester United, and Brighton & Hove Albion and even beat the Lilywhites 2-1 away from home just before the last international break.

Now, one added benefit to appointing McKenna is that his preferred formation of 4-2-3-1 could help the club to tighten up at the back, as a double pivot would both provide the back four with that bit more cover, as well as the two in the pivot.

McKenna’s Ipswich record

Games

147

Wins

77

Draws

41

Losses

29

Points

272

Points per Game

1.85

Goals For

275

Goals Against

155

Goal Difference

+120

All Stats via Transfermarkt

Moreover, it could see Maddison unleashed in a more traditional number ten position, which would allow him to do what he does best and create incredible chances for his teammates.

Ultimately, there is a sense that as things stand, fans would still rather stick by Postecoglou and see if he can turn things around, but if the board has other ideas, McKenna could be the ideal replacement.

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Fabrizio Romano: £36m Liverpool star on the brink of signing new contract

It is a “matter of time” until an “outstanding” Liverpool player signs a contract extension at Anfield, according to a big update from journalist Fabrizio Romano.

Liverpool contract latest

The Reds may be flying in the Premier League under Arne Slot, topping the table and making a great start to the season with their new head coach, but the contract situations surrounding key trio Trent Alexander-Arnold, Virgil van Dijk and Mohamed Salah are threatening to act as a distraction.

All three have been among the most influential players of this era at Anfield, winning the Champions League, Premier League and many other trophies along the way, not to mention standing out as arguably the best players in their world in their respective positions.

Alexander-Arnold, Van Dijk and Salah are all out of contract at Liverpool at the end of this season, and as things stand, none have agreed extensions yet, leading to concern regarding their futures.

For that reason, it is only natural that replacements have reportedly been lined up for them, with Bournemouth winger Antoine Semenyo seen as a potential successor to Salah on the right wing, for example. Now, a new contract update has emerged – one relating to a different Reds hero.

Liverpool star Ibrahima Konate likely to sign new contract

Taking to X, Romano claimed that it is now a “matter of time” until Ibrahima Konate extends his stay at Liverpool.

The £70,000-a-week Frenchman has been such a strong signing for the Reds since arriving from RB Leipzig for £36m in the summer of 2021, proving to be a brilliant partner for Van Dijk. In fact, the Dutchman recently heaped praise on his colleague after the 2-1 victory away to Wolves in the league.

“He is a fantastic player who still can be better. As you saw, he is important with the goal, he is defensively solid, a bit unlucky with the goal we conceded, but obviously the qualities he has are outstanding in my opinion. He is learning, growing, getting better and looking after himself much better in order to be ready every three days as that’s what asked.”

Injuries have been the one thing holding Konate back, with a string of absences over the past three-and-a-bit years proving to be frustrating, but when he is fit and firing, he is among the leading centre-backs in the country.

This season, the 25-year-old has averaged 3.6 clearances and 2.6 aerial duel wins per game in the league, and his pace and physicality are going to be vital to Liverpool’s chances of winning the title.

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A new deal for Konate makes complete sense, especially given his age, and the Reds should see him as the future leader of their defence, assuming he can avoid further injury problems.

R Ashwin and Shreyas Iyer make it 2-0 for India in close finish

Mehidy’s five-for gave the hosts a big chance before the duo patiently took India over the line before lunch break

Vishal Dikshit25-Dec-20223:23

Jaffer: India’s defensive approach in a small chase was disappointing

A fighting and defiant half-century stand between No. 8 Shreyas Iyer and R Ashwin saved India from a lower-order collapse and led them to a thin three-wicket win on a turning and low pitch on the fourth morning in Dhaka. Resuming on 45 for 4, India needed 100 more to win and Bangladesh six wickets. Mehidy Hasan Miraz’s five-for gave the hosts a big chance with quick wickets in the first half hour before Ashwin and Iyer used patience, accounted for the low bounce and also scored at a good clip – at over four an over – to take India over the line before the scheduled lunch break.India strengthened their second spot on the WTC table with the 2-0 series win and have a four-Test series coming up at home against Australia, of which they can afford to lose only one game to not lose out on the final spot.WTC standings as on December 25, 2022•ESPNcricinfo Ltd

India were in deep trouble in the first hour at 74 for 7, still 71 adrift from the target, when Iyer and Ashwin came together. Iyer used his straight bat to play out the spinners patiently and Ashwin used a low stance for the low bounce especially against Mehidy as the Bangladesh spinners stuck to a stump-to-stump line that had fetched them three wickets in the morning.Mehidy even created a chance when Ashwin was on 1 and India on 80, when Ashwin gloved the ball to short leg where Mominul Haque put down a straightforward chance. Just like Bangladesh made India pay for the dropped chances on Saturday, Ashwin cashed in on the life he got and picked up regular boundaries once he moved into double-digits. He collected two in an over off Khaled Ahmed and finished things off in a 16-run over off Mehidy which started with a first-ball six over midwicket and ended with back-to-back fours, taking Ashwin to an unbeaten 42 off 62 while Iyer was on 29 at the other end.Mehidy Hasan Miraz had India in all sorts of trouble on the fourth morning•AFP/Getty Images

Bangladesh had raced ahead with an early advantage in a dramatic first hour that saw a few boundaries, numerous appeals, two reviews, and three wickets.Jaydev Unadkat survived a very marginal lbw call on the third ball of the day and Bangladesh’s review showed the ball was just hitting leg stump, which wasn’t enough to overturn the on-field decision. Unadkat slog-swept the very next ball for six over midwicket but fell in the next over when Shakib Al Hasan slipped in a quick one from around the wicket to trap him right in front on the back foot and Unadkat wasted a review.Mehidy then removed two left-hand batters in consecutive overs for his eighth Test five-for. Rishabh Pant, at No. 7, unleashed a reverse sweep early on against Shakib for four but also looked nervous while either stepping out too often against the spinners or going on the back foot dangerously against sharp turn. Mehidy bowled on the fourth stump line consistently to him from around the wicket and pitched one marginally shorter to trap Pant on the back foot for 9.Seventy-one for 6 quickly became 74 for 7. Axar Patel carried on from his overnight 26 with regular strokes to keep the score ticking whenever he got width or length to work with. But he also became a victim of Mehidy’s stifling line and flat trajectory when a grubber deflected off his pads on the back foot and hit the stumps to send him back for 34.Shakib replaced himself with Taijul Islam to keep the left-arm spin threat going from one end and Iyer and Ashwin kept their bats close to pads and leaned forward to block the ball patiently in a boundary-less spell of 67 balls. With two right-hand batters on now, Mehidy’s magic didn’t look as unplayable now, barring the life Ashwin got. Iyer hit his first four on his 29th ball when Mehidy pitched one wide and then stepped out to drive Shakib inside out for a powerful cover drive followed by a pull for two more fours to quickly take India past 100 and switch the momentum.When India were 34 away, Shakib brought on pace for the first time in the day. After conceding a four down the leg side, Khaled Ahmed nearly created a chance with Ashwin’s thick edge past a diving gully fielder but that also went for four. Taijul came back on, Mehidy tried going around the wicket and Bangladesh hoped maybe lack of bounce would get them an opening, but nothing worked.Ashwin quickly scored 31 off the last 34 runs with the help of four fours and a six and kept Bangladesh still searching for their first Test win against India.

فيديو | السنغال تفوز على إنجلترا بثلاثية ودياً

تمكن منتخب السنغال من تحقيق الفوز على مضيفه منتخب إنجلترا بثلاثة أهداف مقابل هدف وحيد، في لقاء ودي جمع بين المنتخبين.

وواجه السنغال خصمه المنتخب الإنجليزي، على ملعب “سيتي جراوند”، بمدينة نوتينجهام الإنجليزية.

اقرأ ايضاً.. هولندا تكتسح مالطا بـ 8 أهداف نظيفة في تصفيات كأس العالم

افتتح هاري كين التسجيل لصالح منتخب الأسود الثلاثة بالدقيقة السابعة من عمر الشوط الأول.

ونحج إسماعيلا سار في تسجيل هدف التعادل لصالح منتخب السنغال بالدقيقة 40، مستغلاً تمريرة حاسمة من نيكولاس جاكسون.

في الشوط الثاني ومع الدقيقة 62، أضاف حبيب ديارا ثاني أهداف أسود التيرانجا، بصناعة من كوليبالي.

واختتم شيخ سابالي أهداف الضيوف مع الدقيقة الثالثة من الوقت المحتسب بدل من ضائع عن نهاية المباراة، بعدما تلقى تمريرة حاسمة من لامين كامارا. اهداف مباراة انجلترا والسنغال (1-3) مباراة ودية 

 

 

Ben Stokes hails 'greatest away Test win' as England stick together in adversity

Captain proud of team’s selflessness and resilience in overcoming sickness and pitch

Andrew Miller05-Dec-20221:33

‘This is how Tests should be played’ – Ben Stokes

Ben Stokes hailed the selflessness of his reinvigorated England team after an extraordinary performance in the first Test in Rawalpindi, in which they overcame a bout of pre-match sickness, an unforgiving pitch, and some stout last-day Pakistan resistance to seal what he described as “one of England’s greatest away Test wins”.In front of a rapt crowd at the Pindi stadium, Jack Leach claimed the final wicket of Naseem Shah with roughly eight minutes of daylight still remaining, as England – in their first Test in Pakistan for 17 years – recorded only their third win in the country in 25 attempts, and their first since another famous battle in the fading light in Karachi in December 2000.”It’s just incredible,” Stokes said in the post-match presentation. “We’re pretty lost for words in that dressing room. The hard work and toil that everyone’s put in over this five days is really hitting everyone. Jimmy Anderson was saying he felt a bit emotional, so having a bloke with near enough 180 Test matches [176] feeling like that at the end of this is proof that we’ve achieved something very special this week.”Related

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The scenes at the end of the Test were a far cry from the chaos beforehand, with England so stricken by illness on the eve of the game that officials from England and Pakistan even met to consider a 24-hour delay to the start. In the end, a decision was made on the morning of the game to carry on as planned, but not before Will Jacks had been drafted in for a debut moments before the toss, after Ben Foakes failed to recover in time.”There’s a few things that you can plan for, but some that you can’t, which is obviously what happened to the squad a few days before the Test match,” Stokes said. “It seems a long time ago, when we were running around, wondering if we were going to start the Test match on time, so I’ve got to give the group of players a serious lot of credit for turning up a little bit under the weather.”Jacks ended up being an unexpected star with the ball, claiming six first-innings wickets after a tour-ending injury to Liam Livingstone put a greater onus on his offspin, while Ollie Pope not only fronted up with a century at No. 3, but also put in an accomplished display as the stand-in wicketkeeper, with his seven catches including a crucial one-handed take down the leg side to prise out Zahid Mahmood in the tense closing stages.”You could go through this whole Test match and point out key individuals,” Stokes added. “But what we’ve had to deal with coming in makes this one a little bit better. We’ve got some broken bodies in that changing room, but having the lads run in like that today … as a captain, it’s amazing to see. I don’t think I’ve seen a group of players who want to put their bodies on the line as much for the other 10 guys on the field.”Stokes himself, however, was instrumental to the team ethic. He put his own body on the line in a critical 11-over spell of reverse-swing on the final afternoon, and committed to the attacking fields that ensured that England maintained their remarkable record of claiming ten wickets in each of the 15 innings they have bowled since he became full-time captain.However, the collective buy-in from England’s batters was perhaps the most ringing endorsement of Stokes’ leadership, as they bought into his unrelenting attacking approach that produced an unprecedented match haul of 921 runs from 821 balls across their two innings.”I’m not going to lie, I did look quite far ahead as to how this could play out,” Stokes told Sky Sports at the close. “From day one, we were going to have to score these runs quickly. It was going to be batting error that was going to get the batsman out on this wicket, because there wasn’t any swing, wasn’t any spin. So we had to really capitalise on that fact.”And then, as the Test match went on, it was all about somehow getting the game into a position on day five, where both teams were in a position to win the game, because I think dangling a little carrot there, with that declaration, played to our favour and gave them a little sniff.”No-one batter epitomised the buy-in better than Harry Brook, who not only scored an 80-ball hundred in the first innings of his second Test, but then sacrificed an opportunity to go even better than that in the second innings, when he was bowled for 87 from 65 balls while trying to set up the game on the fourth afternoon.”Those two innings were incredible to watch,” Stokes said. “He could have cruised himself to a hundred, but we had about half an hour left until the tea break. We just sent the message out, saying put your foot down now, because we’re going to declare at tea. There was no second-guessing ourselves on that, because that’s how we wanted to go into day five. We don’t want people turning the TV off, because it might be the inevitable draw.”The selflessness that he went out there and played with… the freedom, the way he expressed his talent, was absolutely incredible. He’s one for the future. It’s always one of those difficult things, you don’t want to start talking someone up too much, but Harry’s got everything, across all formats as well. I don’t think that too many players in their second Test match have quite shown the ability of what Harry has showed there.”Stokes and Brendon McCullum celebrate England’s win•Matthew Lewis/Getty Images

After eight Tests in charge since the start of last summer, Stokes and England’s head coach Brendon McCullum have now overseen seven victories and one defeat, and each of those wins have been achieved in a thrilling, enterprising fashion that has transformed the standing of an England team that had won just one of its previous 17 up until the end of the Caribbean tour last spring.”With myself and Brendan in charge, one thing that we do is focus on ourselves more than the opposition,” Stokes said. “We were always going to look to take the positive route, whether that be with bat or ball in hand, and try not to second-guess ourselves with what the opposition is going to offer.”We know we’re a very exciting team and we wanted to come here to Pakistan, and carry on with our mantra of exciting cricket, and give ourselves the best opportunity to win a Test match. I’ve got no interest in playing for a draw, the dressing-room has no interest in playing for the draw.”And as England left the field in the fading light, Stokes added that the acclaim of the Rawalpindi crowd, who had flocked to witness a thrilling finish, made all of their endeavours worthwhile.”The crowd here this week was amazing, and I’m not going to lie, the reception that we got walking off the field as winners in Pakistan was very special. I hope that everyone in Pakistan who turned out to watch this game, appreciated the cricket that was being played, obviously not just from us, but also from Pakistan.”

Shubman Gill nears his ton as Glamorgan make good progress on rain-hit day

Glamorgan made good progress on a rain-ruined first day against Sussex in their push for promotion from Division Two of the LV= County Championship.Eight points behind second-placed Middlesex at start of play and needing a win to give them a chance of finishing in the top two, they progressed at more than five runs an over in the 41.2 overs possible at the 1st Central County Ground, reaching 221 for 3.Indian batter Shubman Gill led the way with an unbeaten 91 off just 102 balls while skipper David Lloyd, fresh from his triple hundred against Derbyshire last week, scored 56 against an anodyne Sussex attack.Skipper Lloyd bucked the recent trend at Hove by batting first when play began an hour late because of morning rain. His decision was quickly justified as Glamorgan made serene progress on a flat pitch.Brad Currie was the pick of the Sussex attack and took two wickets but the home side, who haven’t bowled an opposition out twice all season, struggled to back him up.Pakistan all-rounder Faheem Ashfraf, who is playing the final game of a three-match trial before Sussex decide whether to sign him for 2023, was withdrawn after bowling three wayward overs for 21 runs with the new ball.At the Cromwell Road end Currie was much more effective and he broke through in his fifth over when Eddie Byrom was surprised by a ball that left him off the pitch which he edged to wicketkeeper Charlie Tear for 21.Gill and Lloyd put on 57 in 12 overs between further stoppages either side of lunch with few alarms with Lloyd, who scored an unbeaten 313 in his last Championship innings, passing fifty for the sixth time this season. It was a surprise when left-armer Sean Hunt went round the wicket and thudded the ball low into his pads as the batter played half-forward. Lloyd’s 56 came off 64 balls with six fours and two sixes.Sam Northeast became Currie’s second victim when he edged an outswinger which Tom Alsop caught low at first slip with the total 151 in only the 27th over.Even with the floodlights on, Gill and Billy Root had little trouble in adding a further 70 runs in 15 overs before the players came off again 20 minutes after tea because of bad light. Gill, strong on the front foot and dismissive of anything short, has so far hit two sixes, including an effortless pick-up over mid-wicket off Currie that was the shot of the day, and 11 fours. Root is unbeaten on 17.Umpires Paul Baldwin and Tom Lungley held two further inspections before calling play off at 5.15pm but Glamorgan will feel it has been a productive day.

'You can't win with your shirt' – USMNT's Golden Generation dealt another harsh reminder that 2026 World Cup dreams rest on their shoulders, not Mauricio Pochettino's

The USMNT's supposed "Golden Generation" keeps wasting golden chances, and the players must hold themselves accountable

LOS ANGELES – "We need to play with personality, we need to play relaxed, we need to play with intensity. When we do these things, we're a really good team. But when we don't, we're an average team."

A spot-on analysis of the USMNT's CONCACAF Nations League performance, right?

But here’s the thing: that quote isn’t from Thursday night. It’s not even from Mauricio Pochettino. Indeed, former U.S. boss Gregg Berhalter said those words in September 2022 after the USMNT’s loss to Japan, just weeks before the World Cup. On that day, with so much at stake, the U.S. failed to rise to the occasion. Nearly three years later, that same theme feels more relevant than ever.

This is a talented group of players, for sure, but those words are a cautionary tale of what can happen when attitude and intensity are missing. Pochettino, the U.S. manager brought in to reignite a meandering program, repeatedly bemoaned his side's lack of both after Thursday night's 1-0 loss to Panama in the Nations League semifinals.

Berhalter is long gone, Pochettino hired as his high-profile replacement. The Argentine's arrival was supposed to be the wake-up call this team needed. He was brought in to be the leader, the one that can finally coax a much-needed mentality shift out of this talented group of American stars. It's what makes moments like Thursday's so frustrating: this team is too good to lose these games, yet they seem to find ways time and time again.

At some point, that isn't all down to coaching. That's not down to the rah-rah speeches in the locker room or the training sessions or the tactics. At some point, it comes down to one question: does this team have it or not? And until they discover it, their hopes of even putting in a really good showing at next summer's World Cup look slimmer and slimmer.

The USMNT's supposed "Golden Generation" keeps wasting golden chances and, at some point, the players that make up that generation need to look in the mirror and figure out why. Pochettino is a fantastic coach, one who can help take a team to a new level. He can't save them from themselves, though, and this group's future will be defined by their ability to look in the mirror and reflect that desire on the field.

Getty ImagesAnother letdown

Every player in a USMNT shirt must be weary of seeing Panama. For whatever reason, this team just has the USMNT's number. Even when outplayed, Panama finds a way to win it, and the USMNT finds a way to lose.

On Thursday, the winner came from Cecelio Waterman, whose perfectly placed shot caught Matt Turner flat-footed. Waterman's subsequent celebration with Thierry Henry made the moment legendary, but the goal itself was already historic. For the first time, in this fourth edition of the CONCACAF Nations League, the USMNT won't lift the trophy in the end. They won't even make the final.

"Just lacking a bit of aggressiveness and creativity in the final third," Christian Pulisic said after the match. "We're still building our identity. This is a tough loss. We've won this tournament a couple of times now and it didn't go our way this year, but we just have to keep going from here."

It's not just this loss, though. It's the one in the Copa America in 2024 when Tim Weah was sent off to, ultimately, send the U.S. to their doom. They had a chance to avoid it days later against Uruguay, but couldn't muster much of anything as they were bounced from the tournament in the group stage.

It's the one at the Gold Cup in 2023. That U.S. group was without nearly all of their stars due to the nature of that tournament (with the top teams going with their B squads) but the feeling was largely the same. Penalty kicks were their undoing that time around. Who knows what could have happened if it got there on Thursday night?

To their credit, the U.S. has stepped up to the occasion multiple times. They've lifted this trophy three times for a reason, beating good Mexico and Canada teams to do so. They played hard as hell at the 2022 World Cup, too, showing well, in particular, against England.

That performance against was defined by their intensity and tenacity, but those haven't always been apparent in the years since. They should be non-negotiable but in the wake of Thursday's loss, Pochettino hit on those themes again when explaining away this latest setback.

AdvertisementAFPThe lack of intensity

Berhalter's quote from 2022 fit the theme of Thursday night. And Pochettino essentially echoed the same sentiments after the match.

"I don't think we approached the game or started the game in the right way," he said. "That's why I feel so disappointed and we all feel disappointed. In the first half, we played too slow, too comfortable on the pitch. We didn't show aggression with the ball and there are consequences to not showing aggression with the ball. We also didn't show agression in a defensive way. Even if we didn't concede too much, only two or three shots and one on target going into that last action, but we knew we had to be aggressive with the ball and have a mature approach to the game. I think we didn't show that."

It's about competitive spirit, about desire, about fight. And the USMNT was lacking in all of those areas.

"It's the responsibility of everyone and we need to find a way to compete better," Pochettino said. "I don't like to say that. We are the USA, but you can't win with your shirt. You cannot win because you play here or there. You need to show and you need to come here and be better and suffer and win duels and work hard. If not, it's not going to be enough. We are going to play, but competing demands that level. At the international level, it's not going to be enough."

The stats support Pochettino's words. Panama won 44 duels to the USMNT's 34, which is the most telling stat. Virtually every other data point was in the USMNT's favor except for that one – and that's the one defined solely by effort and attitude. Talent doesn't win 50-50s, commitment does. Panama simply had more of it.

"The difference was the way that they fought for the game," Pochettino said. "They were hungry. Every single ball was the last one for every single player of Panama. That's something you can feel from the touchline. You feel that that was the difference."

It is reminiscent of Berhalter's point. The USMNT has struggled to find the line between intense and comfortable, composed and aggressive. It's something the best teams can do. The best teams find moments to switch on and attack. They bury teams before they get a chance to be buried themselves. It's a skill. The question is if it's one that this group of players can learn.

In fact, after Pochettino's hire was announced last fall, Pulisic specifically addressed what he wanted the Argentine manager to bring to this squad.

"Hopefully a culture that is willing to fight, that is willing to take risks, you know, win," Pulisic said. "There’s a lot of things that need to change, just the mentality and the culture of the group. I think we have the quality, but hopefully, that’s the first thing he’s going to want to change."

Pochettino has to be the one to teach them and guide them, but they also have to be willing to absorb, learn and execute. It's clear that's not yet happened. Yes, of course, the USMNT were unlucky with saves, posts, and VAR calls against Panama, but a better team wouldn't have let it get to that point.

Pochettino, though, wasn't without blame on Thursday. He, too, could have been better.

AFPPochettino's part in it all

USMNT star Tyler Adams made it abundantly clear: when a team loses in the way the USMNT did, the blame doesn't fall on the coach.

"I've never blamed the coach in my entire career," Adams said. "A loss depends on the players, and that's the bottom line, unless a coach goes out and tries something completely random and it wasn't what the coach was following or if there was a lack of communication. There was no lack of communication in what was happening today. We knew exactly what we had to do. We knew what we needed to be competitive. I don't think we were as competitive as we needed to be."

Pochettino was brought in for a reason. He's paid more than any USMNT coach in history for a reason. Every time the USMNT takes the field, Pochettino is expected to make a difference and, on Thursday, he couldn't find a way to do it.

His counterpart, Thomas Christiansen, sure did. It wasn't rocket science, of course, but the Panama coach drilled his players on shrinking the field and limiting the U.S. attack. He kept them hungry and gave them a game plan that worked. There was no big secret to it and, in some ways, that makes it all the more impressive.

Pochettino, meanwhile, never really turned the tide. Yes, the injury absences of top players such as Antonee Robinson and leading strikers Folarin Balogun and Ricardo Pepi also played a part. So, too, did the width of the field – literally more narrow than the pitch will be at SoFi for the World Cup next year. You could question at the roster selection, too.

Still, Pochettino had options at his disposal and he didn't deploy all of them. Patrick Agyemang and Jack McGlynn were thrown into the game in the second half, but Gio Reyna and Diego Luna were not. The game was crying out for them, and Pochettino admitted he was preparing to turn to them in extra time. They never got there, so he never got that chance.

"The last three times that we faced Panama in an official competition we were not capable of beating them," he said. "Why? I think that is a question mark, but it's a question mark that we, all together, need to find a solution."

It's a question that Pochettino arguably could have answered in real-time. Now, he and the players will be left wondering as they prepare for what's next.

ImagnLooking ahead

Chalk this up as yet another learning moment in a long line. Panama and Uruguay in the summer, Canada and Mexico in the fall and, now, Panama again in the spring – the USMNT seemingly has had ample education in what not to do.

"You always learn more from the setbacks than you do from other games," said veteran Tim Ream. "You can say we would have won, but you're just papering over the issues that I think everybody saw in terms of getting behind and aggression and all of that. There are always teaching moments, always learning moments in every game, every training, every day you step on the field.

"We have to look at that and make sure that we take on board exactly what he wants and exactly what he needs. That starts with duels and aggression and intensity."

The good news is that the USMNT will have a chance at some level of redemption on Sunday. Canada awaits in the Nations League third-place match – with Mexico facing Panama in the finale – offering the U.S. another crack at a good team. There will be no trophy lift, of course, but a win could lift morale. There will be no excuses in that one. If the U.S. fails to show up on Sunday, the knives will, rightfully, come out.

In the hours until then, the U.S. will have to dissect this latest loss, just as they have previously.

"We're not going to have the chance to win a trophy right now," Matt Turner said, "but I think you can go one of two ways from a result like this: you either come back on Sunday, put together a good result, and you have a good feeling going into the summer or you can implode, really. I don't foresee that coming… We can't let performances like this slide."

Maybe, on Sunday, those lessons will take hold. Maybe this time around the U.S. will discover that, as Pochettino says, it takes more than just a shirt to win a game. And if these players learn that lesson, they'll learn another one: Pochettino can't save this team on the road to the 2026 World Cup – only they can.

Composed Holder shows the way

With Jason Holder in the side, there is hope that West Indies could return to a time when success was measured not by bling or bank balance, not by strutting or swagger, but by deeds on the pitch.

George Dobell at North Sound18-Apr-2015This is why Jason Holder was appointed West Indies’ ODI captain. He may only be 23, he may only have been playing his fourth Test, but here, in Antigua, he produced a display of leadership that many of his more experienced team-mates would do well to emulate.It wasn’t so much the class of Holder’s shots that stood out; impressive though the back-foot drives, the lofted straight drives and the tight defence were.It was more the composure. On a fifth day pitch, against a pair of seamers with well over 600 Test wickets between them, with a Test to save and his top-order colleagues gone, he seemed to revel in the pressure. This was his first Test century; there will surely be more.There have been signs of such willingness to embrace responsibility before. Not only did he accept the captaincy of a weakened team ahead of the World Cup – an almost impossible challenge – but he also accepted the burden of bowling at the death.He knew his own figures would be tarnished by the role. And he knew he could, as other captains have done before him, have hidden himself from the worst of the fray and protected his own analysis.But that is not Holder’s way. So, against South Africa, after conceding only nine runs from his first five overs, he brought himself back at the end of the innings with arguably the world’s most destructive ODI batsman – AB de Villiers – at the crease.Holder’s final two overs cost an eye-watering 64 runs and left him with an ugly and unwanted record: no one has conceded more than the 104 runs he was plundered for in a World Cup match.The episode showed he had a little to learn about death bowling, perhaps, but it also showed a selflessness, a bravery, a willingness to lead that was admirable.Those in Barbados who know Holder best – and Ezra Moseley, the former West Indies seamer, has been a pivotal figure in his development – will not be surprised by this innings. He was always seen as a batting allrounder growing up and his leadership qualities were recognised when he was appointed captain first of Barbados U19 and then, briefly, West Indies U19.His batting ability may, in time, allow West Indies to go into a Test with a stronger, five-man bowling attack. If he could have batted at No. 6 or No. 7 in this game, West Indies could have played another seamer, or perhaps spinner, and used their strike bowlers in shorter bursts.But Holder’s excellence with the bat will mask – to some extent – the recklessness of some of his colleagues.For while Holder batted as if his life depended on saving the game, Marlon Samuels batted as if he had something better to do in edging a wide delivery to slip. While Holder batted with a composure that belied his tender years, Devon Smith – a decade his senior – batted with the naivety of a schoolboy in driving to mid-on. And while Holder batted with the discipline and denial of a high-quality Test batsman, Jermaine Blackwood batted with the disregard for conventional technique of a man in the last over of a T20 run chase in charging down the pitch and trying to slog through midwicket.Allowances can be made for Blackwood, in particular. He is a couple of weeks younger than Holder and, as a natural strokemaker learning his trade, it is inevitable that mistakes will occur. As his captain, Denesh Ramdin said, “he’ll learn from the experience”.But Samuels’ failure is more troubling. He had already survived a missed stumping opportunity after attempting a repeat of a lofted drive that carried for six off James Tredwell. So to continue to bat in such loose style was something of a dereliction of duty from a team perspective.To Samuels’ credit, he apologised to the team in the dressing room. But it remains infuriating that a man so obviously blessed averages just 35.55 in Test cricket. Not only was his batting inappropriate in the circumstances, it was against team orders. West Indies were not pursuing a victory target.”There were some shots there that were really disappointing,” Ramdin admitted afterwards. “They weren’t called for at the time.”Devon could have gone on to get a hundred and the game could have been different. We need those batsmen who get in to go on and make big scores. It’s very important, to create the belief, that we can win games”It was important we set up the game in the first hour. We needed not to lose early wickets. But it didn’t go as well as we planned. The guys apologised to the team for it.”There were other positives for West Indies. Antigua had to bid $US500,000 to host this match but the game generated the highest attendance figure for a Test on the island; the old ground may have seemed busier, but it had a smaller capacity. Meanwhile Jerome Taylor out-bowled his England counterparts with the new ball, Smith made his highest score for almost a decade (November 2005) and Blackwood showed he is a talent worth perseverance. Kemar Roach also enjoyed a good game and, by accompanying Holder for more than 50 deliveries, showed admirable character. Around such men, West Indies can build with some guarded optimism.Furthermore, West Indies have seen many of their proud records slip away in recent years, but at least they can say they have still never lost to England in Antigua. And, for the first time since 2009 – and the last time they held out for a draw against England in Antigua – they had batted for more than 100 overs in the fourth innings of a Test.From a negative point of view, the bowling of Sulieman Benn was disappointing and there were times in the field on the fourth day when the bowling and, in particular, the fielding became quite ragged.But Ramdin, whose own batting was also impressive, was in buoyant mood at the end.”This is a fantastic boost,” he said. “The draw feels good. Our confidence is up and we’ve continued that tradition of not losing a Test in Antigua.It was an understandable reaction. If nothing else, the continued development of Holder suggested that Phil Simmons’ pre-match cry for the team to play with “discipline and pride” did not fall on completely deaf ears.West Indies may have a long way to go before they reclaim a place in the top three of the Test rankings – which is Simmons’ aim – but with Holder in the side, there is hope that they are returning to a time when success was measured not by bling or bank balance, not by strutting or swagger, but by deeds on the pitch.

مدرب دورتموند بعد الفوز على صن داونز: أتعرق وكأنني خرجت من "الساونا"

أعرب نيكو كوفاتش، مدرب بوروسيا دورتموند، عن ارتياحه بعد الفوز الصعب على ماميلودي صن داونز، ضمن منافسات كأس العالم للأندية.

وتغلب بوروسيا دورتموند على صن داونز بأربعة أهداف مقابل ثلاثة، في إطار مباريات الجولة الثانية لدور المجموعات.

وقال كوفاتش في تصريحات لشبكة “DAZN”: “أنا أتعرق وكأنني خرجت من غرفة ساونا، كانت الأجواء صعبة جدًا على الفريقين، لكن الفريق المنافس معتاد على مثل هذه الظروف المناخية”.

وتابع: “لم نقدّم أفضل مستوياتنا، ولم يكن ذلك ممكنًا في هذه الظروف، ارتكبنا العديد من الأخطاء السهلة، ولم تسر الأمور بسلاسة، لكن الأهم أننا فزنا، وهذا هو ما يُحسب في النهاية”.

اقرأ أيضًا | رجل مباراة بوروسيا دورتموند وصن داونز في كأس العالم للأندية

والتقى الفريقان مساء اليوم السبت، في خضم منافسات الجولة الثانية من دور مجموعات كأس العالم للأندية، على ملعب “تي كيو آل ستاديوم”.

وتضم المجموعة أندية بوروسيا دورتموند وصن داونز رفقة أولسان وفلومينينسي البرازيلي.

وبفوزه اليوم يتصدر دورتموند بـ4 نقاط في المركز الأول، بينما تجمد رصيد صن داونز عند 3 نقاط في المركز الثاني، ويأتي فلومينينسي ثالثًا ويليه أولسان، وكلاهما يملك نقطة واحدة.

وتستضيف الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية، منافسات بطولة كأس العالم للأندية والممتدة حتى يوم 13 يوليو الجاري.

Dyche needed to axe Everton star in the summer but now he’s undroppable

Everton may have avoided relegation by 14 points last season, but it was hardly one to remember for the Toffees as they finished 15th in the Premier League.

Things aren’t exactly going much better this term either for Sean Dyche’s men, who have won just twice in the top flight.

Many players who Dyche was hoping to rely on have failed to deliver. Dominic Calvert-Lewin has scored just two goals all season, while defender Michael Keane has started nine of the club’s 11 league games due to Jarrad Branthwaite’s injury issues.

A few have shone, and they could be the reason for Everton retaining their top-flight status for another season.

Everton’s best performers this season

Dwight McNeil has been excellent in a number 10 role, scoring three goals and supplying three assists in the Premier League, shining under Dyche this term. Iliman Ndiaye has also scored three goals for the club and the presence of these two in the final third has given the Merseyside faithful some hope.

Dwight McNeil for Everton

With Orel Mangala and Abdoulaye Dououre running things in midfield, there are plenty of positives for Everton, that’s for sure. The key thing now is to string a run of victories together to move up the table.

One of the surprise hits of the campaign, however, has been the form of Ashley Young, who has performed excellently at right-back for the club.

Ashley Young’s statistics this season

Last season, Young made 31 league appearances for the Toffees. Despite missing only seven games, he ranked in the bottom 50% of positionally similar players in Europe for tackles, interceptions, aerial duels won and progressive passes per 90 last season.

It was clear that he was underperforming and while earning £40k-per-week in the process, a wage that Dyche would have liked to get off the bill, he should have been out the door.

Ashley Young’s Premier League stats this season

Assists

3

Key passes per game

1.4

Big chances created

1

Tackles per game

2.4

Total duels won per game

4.3

Successful dribbles per game

0.3

Via Sofascore

He wasn’t released during the summer, remaining at the club after penning a new deal, and with Nathan Patterson struggling with injury, Young became the first choice at right-back.

The 29-year-old has started all but two of the club’s top-flight games this season, registering three assists in that time, enjoying somewhat of a resurgence for Everton.

Among the first-team squad, Young currently ranks second for assists (3), fourth for accurate passes per game (27.6), second for key passes per game (1.4) and fourth for tackles per match (2.4), demonstrating how effective he has been for the team this term.

Ashley Young looks dejected for Everton

The veteran defender has certainly established himself in the starting XI and, given how good he has been recently, is Young becoming undroppable?

Patterson may be the long-term option on the right side of the defence, but it appears as though the former Manchester United star has this position sewn up at present.

There is no doubt Young is enjoying an Indian summer this campaign, and it will be interesting to see if his form continues when the domestic calendar returns.

Fewer touches than Pickford: Dyche must now finally ditch Everton star

The Everton man struggled against West Ham

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By
Joe Nuttall

Nov 9, 2024

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