ReportWire

Tag: Liverpool

  • Alpine give Esteban Ocon team orders | ‘Let me race at the moment!’

    Alpine give Esteban Ocon team orders | ‘Let me race at the moment!’

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    Alpine’s Esteban Ocon was given team orders at the restart to allow Fernando Alonso pass him and did not react kindly to the message.

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  • Ricky Hatton’s hilarious Zimmer frame ringwalk in Manchester

    Ricky Hatton’s hilarious Zimmer frame ringwalk in Manchester

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    Ricky Hatton began his trademark ‘Blue Moon’ ringwalk on a zimmer frame and was warmly received by his hometown crowd.

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  • Aberdeen 1-0 Dundee United | Scottish Premiership highlights

    Aberdeen 1-0 Dundee United | Scottish Premiership highlights

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    Highlights of the Scottish Premiership match between Aberdeen and Dundee United.

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  • Scott McTominay seals the win for Manchester United

    Scott McTominay seals the win for Manchester United

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    Scott McTominay makes it 4-2 to Manchester United to send them through to fourth round of the Carabao Cup. 

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  • ‘You plonker!’ | Frazer Clarke & Ricky Hatton share their love for Only Fools and Horses!

    ‘You plonker!’ | Frazer Clarke & Ricky Hatton share their love for Only Fools and Horses!

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    Heavyweight prospect Frazer Clarke visits Ricky Hatton to discuss all things Only Fools and Horses, with the pair big fans of the comedy sitcom.

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  • Rangers: Michael Beale reflects on his time at Ibrox and the visit north for the Aberdeen match

    Rangers: Michael Beale reflects on his time at Ibrox and the visit north for the Aberdeen match

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    Former Rangers coach Michael Beale discusses his return to Ibrox for the win over Aberdeen, his memories of the club and the pressure Giovanni van Bronckhorst is under.

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  • Real Madrid draws Liverpool in the Champions League last-16 stage | CNN

    Real Madrid draws Liverpool in the Champions League last-16 stage | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Real Madrid drew Liverpool in the Champions League round-of-16 stage on Monday in a rematch of last season’s final.

    Los Blancos beat Liverpool 1-0 in Paris in May to win their 14th European Cup.

    The 2022 final was overshadowed by chaos outside the stadium and there was widespread criticism towards the treatment of fans at the hands of the French authorities deployed for the game in May.

    Monday’s draw also pitted Paris Saint Germain and Bayern Munich against each other.

    The Parisians finished second in their group behind Benfica after the final matchday and must now face the team that beat them in PSG’s only ever final appearance in 2020.

    Elsewhere Antonio Conte will return to Italy to face AC Milan with his Tottenham Hotspur side while Chelsea will take on Borussia Dortmund.

    Pep Guardiola will continue his pursuit of the Champions League trophy that has eluded him for 11 years as his Manchester City side face off against German’s RB Leipzig.

    The draw is likely to please Real Madrid President Florentino Perez who recently complained about how infrequently top teams in football face each other and said midweek European competition should offer fans matches between “the strongest teams and with the best players in the world” throughout the year.

    “If we look at the last Champions League finalists, Liverpool, a historic team with six European Cups, it turns out that we have played them only nine times in 67 years.”

    The last time Liverpool beat Real Madrid Fernando Torres and Steven Gerard were in their pomp.

    If Real and Liverpool will play for a 10th time in 2023, the two teams have met twice in the final of the competition in the last five seasons with the Spanish side coming out on top both times.

    Real also beat Liverpool over two legs in the 2020/21 season as well and have not lost a match to the Reds in their previous six meetings.
    That last victory came in the round of 16 on a famous night at Anfield in in 2009 when Steven Gerrard and Fernando Torres inspired the home side to a 4-0 win.

    Real will be favorites to reach the quarterfinals given’s Liverpool’s stuttering start to the season – Jurgen Klopp’s team is well off the pace in the Premier League title race – while the European Cup holder has won their Champions League group with ease and is already in control in La Liga.

    The first legs are scheduled for 14/15/21/22 February, with the second legs on 7/8/14/15 March.

    Champions League last-16 draw:

    Paris Saint-Germain vs Bayern Munich

    Inter Milan vs FC Porto

    Borussia Dortmund vs Chelsea

    Eintracht Frankfurt vs Napoli!

    AC Milan vs Tottenham

    Liverpool vs Real Madrid

    Club Brugge vs Benfica

    RB Leipzig vs Manchester City

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  • Kirk Cousins celebrates Vikings win | ‘You like that?!’

    Kirk Cousins celebrates Vikings win | ‘You like that?!’

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    Minnesota Vikings’ Kirk Cousins enjoyed the win over his former side the Washington Commanders by delivering his now famous catchphrase.

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  • Liverpool FC Manager Jurgen Klopp’s Qatar Media Criticism Rewrites History

    Liverpool FC Manager Jurgen Klopp’s Qatar Media Criticism Rewrites History

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    Liverpool FC boss Jurgen Klopp has had enough of being asked about the World Cup in Qatar.

    Although the Reds boss’s reservations about holding the tournament in Qatar are well known, ahead of the club’s clash with Tottenham, Klopp decided the time had come to switch focus to the event itself.

    “It’s a tournament, it’s there, and we all let it happen and it’s fine because 12 years ago nobody did anything then. We cannot change it now” he told the media in his typically assertive tone.

    “There are wonderful people there and it’s not at all that everything is bad. It’s just how it happened was not right in the first place. But now it is there, let them play the games, the players and managers.

    “Don’t just put Gareth Southgate constantly in a situation where he has to talk about everything. He is not a politician, he is the manager of England. Let him do that,” he added.

    The German coach wasn’t done there, he wanted, as he has a habit of doing, to flip the attention or responsibility for this moral conundrum on the people behind the cameras; the journalists.

    “You more than I, let it happen 12 years ago,” he told a reporter.

    They responded by reminding Klopp that the media had done more to expose the human rights issues than most.

    However, Liverpool FC’s manager refused to accept this point.

    “But not then, not then,” he replied.

    The exchange continued with the pair debating whether the soccer community or the media held more responsibility.

    Perhaps we can forgive Klopp, who was in Germany managing Borussia Dortmund at the time, for not recognizing that the premise of his argument, that the media had not done enough 12 years ago, was not accurate.

    British journalism can be accused of a lot of things, but that criticism is unfair.

    ‘The evil of the media’

    Rewind the clock over a decade, to the FIFA deliberations for who would host the 2018 and 2022 World Cup, and it was journalists who were being attacked.

    According to Andy Anson, the chief executive of the failed England World Cup 2018, shortly before members of the executive committee began casting their votes ex-Fifa president Sepp Blatter, had spoken about the “evils of the media.”

    This wasn’t a generalized statement, the former leader was responding to very recent investigations by British outlets.

    Just three days before the vote took place, a BBC documentary was broadcast which made a host of allegations about bribery and corruption at FIFA. The Panorama show, titled Fifa’s Dirty Secrets, also made a range of claims about the bidding process for hosting the World Cup.

    That expose came hot on the heels of a series of powerful articles by British newspaper The Sunday Times, based on undercover footage that allegedly showed executive committee members selling World Cup votes.

    At the time, these investigations were not welcomed by large parts of the soccer community in England. The country was attempting to woo FIFA as part of a bid to host the 2018 tournament.

    So concerned were they about the impact of these stories, Anson met with the BBC’s most powerful executive Mark Thompson ahead of the broadcaster and labeled it “unpatriotic.”

    Gary Lineker, a representative of the English soccer community on the 2018 bid team, publicly criticized the national broadcaster for releasing something so critical of FIFA that close to the bidding.

    “The one thing I was unsettled by was the timing of this week’s Panorama program, coming just a few days before the decision is made,” he wrote at the time.

    “It was difficult to understand. It doesn’t affect the quality of the bid itself, but it does affect people’s emotions.”

    If anything this demonstrates just how willing British journalists were “at the time” to put their neck out and demonstrates how Klopp’s assertion “nobody did anything” is not accurate.

    The problem was not that the media didn’t use its power to sound the alarm, it was that the reaction to it was the opposite, this scrutiny was considered antagonistic.

    Or as Vyacheslav Koloskov, a lobbyist for the Russia bid, was reported to have said at the time, British journalists “are provoking members of the committee.”

    Interestingly Klopp suggests he would watch “an old documentary about the whole situation,” presumably created by journalists or media of some kind.

    Rather than trying to place blame, it might benefit the Liverpool manager to read about one of the rare instances where the soccer community was inspired by investigative journalism.

    Last year, I spoke to Tromsø IL midfielder Ruben Yttergård Jenssen who felt compelled to officially call for a tournament boycott after reading an article by the British newspaper The Guardian about the conditions of the workers building the stadiums.

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    Zak Garner-Purkis, Contributor

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  • Kilmarnock 2-3 Livingston | Scottish Premiership highlights

    Kilmarnock 2-3 Livingston | Scottish Premiership highlights

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    Highlights from the Scottish Premiership as Kilmarnock took on Livingston at Rugby Park.

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  • You’re no James Milner! | Jurgen Klopp x Joe Thomlinson FIFA rating

    You’re no James Milner! | Jurgen Klopp x Joe Thomlinson FIFA rating

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    Jurgen Klopp puts Joe Thomlinson through some physicality drills in order to give him a FIFA rating.

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  • Scores & Schedule

    Scores & Schedule

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    Catch up on all the scores from the Paris Masters with Brits Cameron Norrie and Andy Murray in action from Bercy.

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  • Mexico City Grand Prix | Race highlights

    Mexico City Grand Prix | Race highlights

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    Highlights of the Mexico City Grand Prix from the Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez.

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  • Skysports (Sky Sports)

    Skysports (Sky Sports)

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  • Why was Harry Kane’s goal disallowed by VAR?

    Why was Harry Kane’s goal disallowed by VAR?

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    Sky Sports News presenter Pete Graves explains why Harry Kane’s stoppage-time winner against Sporting Lisbon was ruled out by VAR.

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  • Youssoufa Moukoko Keeps Impressing For Dortmund But What Is Next For The 17-Year-Old

    Youssoufa Moukoko Keeps Impressing For Dortmund But What Is Next For The 17-Year-Old

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    It could have been the moment to decide the game. It is the 37th minute between Dortmund and Manchester City when Karim Adeyemi breaks through on the right; his low cross finds teammate Youssoufa Moukoko, but instead of tapping the ball home, the 17-year-old misses, and the ball goes wide.

    That goal would have secured Borussia Dortmund the win over Man City. Ultimately, it did not matter, however, as the two sides could not be separated in a 0-0 draw that saw both of them advance to the round of 16 of the Champions League.

    As a result, the moment will not even be a footnote in the career of the 17-year-old striker. In fact, it will not even make it into the annals of the 2022/23 season.

    But it did highlight something important after all. Moukoko is increasingly getting into scoring key scoring situations at crucial moments against tough opponents. An ability that has earned him the starting position for Edin Terzic at the Black and Yellows but also has gotten him on the list of the initial 44 players for Germany’s World Cup squad.

    That is surprising, considering where both Moukoko and Dortmund were at the start of the season, when the Black and Yellows reacted to losing Sébastien Haller by signing Anthony Modeste for $6 million and a yearly salary of an additional $6 million.

    Modeste has, however, struggled, scoring just two goals in nine games. Nonetheless, the Frenchman would initially start over Modeste, but that would change when Moukoko headed home the winner against arch-rivals Schalke on matchday 7.

    “Adeyemi and I came on and were able to bring a fresh wind to our side,” Moukoko said after the derby victory. “I am very much relieved,” Moukoko said when asked about his header that ended up winning the game for Dortmund. “I have been training with Terzic for this very situation, and I am elated that it worked out in that situation.”

    Another crucial goal against Bayern Munich followed Dortmund’s 2-2 comeback. The 17-year-old also scored a goal and an assist against Stuttgart on matchday 11—another crucial game after the Black and Yellows lost on matchday 10 against Union Berlin. Still, without a goal in the Champions League—where Moukoko can become the youngest German scorer in history with a goal against Copenhagen—the striker did have excellent performances against Sevilla and now against Man City.

    Those performances have brought up crucial questions. First, what is going to happen with Moukoko’s contract? The current deal will expire at the end of the season. The understanding here is that his 18th birthday on Nov. 20 should bring some resolution to Dortmund’s three-year $10 million offer. Hence, as pointed out on Gegenpressing, chatter about a move to Liverpool or elsewhere seem premature.

    Crucially, the day of his birthday is also the start of the 2022 World Cup in Qatar. With Germany boss Hansi Flick struggling for a true no.9, Moukoko has now become a serious option to make the World Cup squad.

    Reports in Germany have indicated that Moukoko is on the initial 44 squad submitted by Flick this week. On current form, it would be difficult to imagine that Moukoko will not be in Qatar.

    Manuel Veth is the host of the Bundesliga Gegenpressing Podcast and the Area Manager USA at Transfermarkt. He has also been published in the Guardian, Newsweek, Howler, Pro Soccer USA, and several other outlets. Follow him on Twitter: @ManuelVeth

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    Manuel Veth, Contributor

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  • What’s Wrong At Liverpool FC? The Injuries And The Inconsistencies

    What’s Wrong At Liverpool FC? The Injuries And The Inconsistencies

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    Liverpool were beginning to turn a corner following a poor start to the season. Three wins on the bounce, including a most impressive one against defending Premier League champions and usual title rivals Manchester City, had them looking like a team who could challenge the best teams once again.

    But the optimism came tumbling down when they were defeated by Premier League relegation favourites, Nottingham Forest, last Saturday—a team who prior to Saturday’s meeting with Liverpool had just one win to their name and were rooted to the bottom of the table.

    Several reasons could be given for Liverpool’s uncharacteristically poor start to the season.

    The most common suggested reason has been the lack of a quality signing in midfield. It is something the club appeared to have eventually agreed with, albeit after a couple of injuries in this area of the park, with the signing of Brazilian midfielder Arthur on loan from Juventus.

    This said, a last-minute loan signing wasn’t quite what the fans had in mind when they were calling for a new midfielder in the summer, and Arthur now joins the list of players who will be, or have been, out injured for a long spell, which in turn has led to a reliance on a number of young players all at once.

    Playing one or two youngsters in an experienced lineup can work well, but relying on teenagers and players in their early twenties to make the difference on their own at this level is asking a lot.

    Liverpool have also struggled to implement their game plan to the high levels seen in previous seasons. This could be due to fatigue or a lack of freshness, but also due to a drop in quality across the team.

    At the start of the season it could have been said that the lack of midfield signings made sense if Liverpool were moving to a two-man midfield.

    Despite predictions they would switch to such a formation, they began the season with variations of their usual 4-3-3 formation, but they failed to reach previous levels and eventually switched to 4-2-4 / 4-4-2.

    Injuries have been such that even a two-man midfield now looks fairly thin on the ground. On top of this, a drop in form from their only defensive midfielder, Fabinho, hasn’t helped, while club captain Jordan Henderson is at an age, 32, where his performances may start to decline, at least in a physical sense.

    One of Liverpool’s main problems this season so far has already been alluded to—injuries. It’s not a new problem at Anfield, and though speculating on deeper problems in this area of the club would be unhelpful, there does seem to be a trend developing.

    It hasn’t helped that the injured players have all been aged between 25 and 31—experienced players who should be at their mental and physical peak at these ages. Luis Diaz, Diogo Jota, Naby Keita, Joel Matip, Thiago, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, and the aforementioned Arthur have or are all spending considerable time out of the team through injury.

    On top of this, promising young centre-back Ibrahima Konate, 23, who looked like he might be developing into Virgil van Dijk’s best defensive partner, is also out injured.

    For the game against Forest, Darwin Núñez was also out injured, and though the club’s new signing up front has looked a bit rough around the edges, he has been a big goal threat any time he has played and Liverpool already miss him when he’s not available.

    An injury crisis affecting their season in a big way is not entirely unprecedented for Liverpool. They suffered a similar collapse when trying to defend their title in the 2020/21 season.

    Having started the season well they suffered a raft of defensive injuries and slipped down the table to the point where at one stage it didn’t look like they would even qualify for the Champions League.

    They eventually finished third that year, and it was still an impressive campaign given they were without their senior centre-backs for much of it.

    This time around doesn’t seem quite as extreme, given all the injuries that year were in the same part of the field, but the profile, experience, and quality of the players Liverpool have been missing in the 2022/23 season so far, has been notable.

    The manager, Jürgen Klopp, doesn’t think it’s all down to injuries, though.

    “It’s a mix of a few things, but we can see as like we see the performances and they are not as stable and as consistent as they as they were. Injuries are a little bit [of an explanation],” the Liverpool manager said in his press conference ahead of their Champions League game at Ajax this week.

    “We were actually in a good moment until we lost against Nottingham Forest in a strange game with a lot of problems for us.

    “Some players were injured some players were not allowed to play but [played anyway], and then you play against a deep defending side and you lose the game which we should win.

    “So do I expect us to play better consistently? Yes. Am I ready to make the necessary steps to get there? Yes.

    “Very good performances on a consistent level don’t fall off the trees, you have to work for it and you have to go for it in the long term, and that’s what we are doing.”

    By saying that “players who were not allowed to play” Klopp hints that some are coming back to games before they are fully match fit, which could itself lead to more injuries.

    Though there have been a raft of problems at Liverpool this season, and the midfield issues are clear (as shown by the fact they had to play Curtis Jones in the midfield two in the last game—his first time in the position), injuries to certain combinations of players at certain moments certainly haven’t helped.

    Klopp does not want to use it as an excuse though, and Liverpool will look to improve with what they have before the transfer window opens again in January.

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    James Nalton, Contributor

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  • Should West Ham’s goal have stood? Dermot Gallagher explains all…

    Should West Ham’s goal have stood? Dermot Gallagher explains all…

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    Former Premier League referee Dermot Gallagher gives his insight as to why West Ham’s controversial first goal against Bournemouth was given.

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  • Islam Makhachev wins lightweight title at UFC 280 with a second-round submission of Charles Oliveira

    Islam Makhachev wins lightweight title at UFC 280 with a second-round submission of Charles Oliveira

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    Islam Makhachev capped his ascent to the lightweight throne with a win by arm triangle choke against Brazilian Charles Oliveira; TJ Dillashaw suffered a dislocated shoulder against Aljamain Sterling and continued until referee Mark Goddard called a halt

    Last Updated: 23/10/22 9:30am

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    Islam Makhachev gives his reaction after beating Charles Oliveira at UFC 280

    Islam Makhachev gives his reaction after beating Charles Oliveira at UFC 280

    Islam Makhachev pulled off a submission win over Charles Oliveira to win the lightweight title and Aljamain Sterling beat TJ Dillashaw by TKO to claim the bantamweight belt at UFC 280 in Abu Dhabi on Saturday.

    Makhachev capped his ascent to the lightweight throne with a win by arm triangle choke against Brazilian Oliveira, the holder of the UFC record for submission wins with 16.

    Oliveira was stripped of the lightweight belt in May when he missed the weight for his title clash with Justin Gaethje and though he beat the American the title remained vacant, setting up the showdown with Russian Makhachev.

    After spending much of the first round defending and trying to threaten with submissions off his back, Oliveira tried to keep the fight on the feet in the second round.

    That tactic looked like it was paying off until he was decked by a punch from Makhachev, who wasted no time jumping on his opponent, locking in the choke and forcing the tap for Oliveira.

    Makhachev dedicated the win to his late coach Abdulmanap Nurmagomedov, who died in 2020, saying: “Many years ago he told me just train hard and I will be champion”,

    He then handed the belt to Khabib Nurmagomedov, who took over from his father as the Russian’s coach and is himself a former UFC lightweight champion.

    Makhachev’s 11th submission win moves the 31-year-old to a record of 23 wins and one loss as a pro.

    In the co-main event TJ Dillashaw, who had to give up the belt and serve a two-year suspension after testing positive for EPO in 2019, suffered a dislocated shoulder early in the first round but somehow made it through the first frame.

    Reigning champion Aljamain Sterling did not let up and Dillashaw’s shoulder popped out again in the second round, allowing the 33-year-old Jamaican-American to take him down and dominate him until referee Mark Goddard called a halt.

    “I probably popped it out about 20 times in training camp… I told the ref in the back that my shoulder is probably going to pop out, we’ll put it back so if it does don’t stop [the fight],” American Dillashaw said in his post-fight interview.

    In the main card’s other big fight, American Sean O’Malley won a close split decision over Russian Petr Yan after a three-round brawl to put himself in pole position for a shot at the bantamweight title.

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  • Christian Horner: Dietrich Mateschitz was a remarkable man

    Christian Horner: Dietrich Mateschitz was a remarkable man

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    Red Bull team principal Christian Horner pays his respects to Dietrich Mateschitz.

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