France, England lead the contenders as Germany hosts Euro 2024

France, England lead the contenders as Germany hosts Euro 2024
Germany’s head coach Julian Nagelsmann speaks at a press conference after an international friendly football match between Germany and Ukraine at the Max Morlock stadium in Nuremberg, Germany, Monday. (dpa via AP)
Short Url
Updated 04 June 2024
Follow

France, England lead the contenders as Germany hosts Euro 2024

France, England lead the contenders as Germany hosts Euro 2024
  • England carry the burden of never having won the Euros
  • Absent from the last two World Cups, Italy will be in Germany to defend their European crown

BERLIN: Euro 2024, beginning in Germany on June 14, is a mouth-watering prospect, as France and England lead the heavyweight contenders for a tournament which will be played out in some of the continent’s finest stadiums across a football-mad nation.

The setting for the month-long competition is important, given the underwhelming nature of the last Euros three years ago, held all over the continent rather than in one country, and played before limited crowds during the COVID-19 pandemic.

This time all fans will descend on 10 stadiums in Germany, many with memories of the unforgettable summer of 2006 when the country last staged a major tournament.

The hope is this competition will be just as memorable, and for the right reasons, despite security concerns in a tense global climate and complaints about Germany’s creaking rail network.

That 2006 World Cup was won by Italy, who come into this European Championship as title holders, but it also saw Germany emerge again as a force to be reckoned with after years in the doldrums.

Back then there were question marks about the host nation’s chances, yet they reached the semifinals.

There are similar doubts this time surrounding Julian Nagelsmann’s team, given Germany have exited the last two World Cups in the group stage and lost in the last 16 at the last Euros.

However, it would be foolish to talk down the three-time European champions too much given the players at their disposal.

“I have the feeling that we can win the tournament. And most of the time, my intuition is not too bad,” said Nagelsmann, whose team play Scotland in the opening game in Munich.

There are good reasons why France and England are widely seen as the favorites to raise aloft the Henri Delaunay trophy at Berlin’s Olympic Stadium on July 14.

France are Europe’s top-ranked nation and have been in the last two World Cup finals. Their team has evolved since Qatar in 2022 but the quality at their disposal, beyond Kylian Mbappe, is fearsome and they are eager to win a first European Championship since 2000.

“Like other nations we have the potential to maybe go all the way, but we must not already be thinking about the semifinals or a possible final,” warned coach Didier Deschamps.

It is not always the case that everything goes to form. But if it does, and France and England top their groups, they will be on a collision course to meet in the semifinals at Borussia Dortmund’s Signal Iduna Park.

England carry the burden of never having won the Euros. Beaten on penalties by Italy in the 2021 final, Gareth Southgate’s team lost a nail-biting quarterfinal to France at the last World Cup.

The two men who could give them the edge are Harry Kane and Jude Bellingham.

Kane will be at home in his surroundings having just scored 44 goals in his first season for Bayern Munich.

Munich’s Allianz Arena hosts the first semifinal. The other semifinal venue was Bellingham’s home ground for the three years he spent at Dortmund, but he comes to the Euros after a fine first campaign at Real Madrid, fresh from winning the Champions League.

“Are we one of those teams who can win? Of course,” said Southgate, whose team are in Group C with Denmark, Serbia and Slovenia.

“I’d be an idiot if I said no, but if I said yes, that doesn’t mean there’s not a lot of work ahead of us.”

Absent from the last two World Cups, Italy will be in Germany to defend their European crown, despite losing twice to England in qualifying.

The Azzurri are in a group with Spain, semifinalists at the last Euros but who have not won a major tournament knockout game in 90 minutes since Euro 2012.

There may be as many as eight realistic potential champions, including 2016 winners Portugal, still led by Cristiano Ronaldo, even though he is now 39.

Belgium and the Netherlands will hope to make an impact too, but the Euros — the third edition since expanding to 24 teams — is richer for the presence of less-fancied nations.

Ukraine will be afforded widespread sympathy and have a decent team under Serhiy Rebrov.

Albania, under the Brazilian Sylvinho, appear at only their second Euros, while Georgia make their debut.

Managed by former France and Bayern Munich defender Willy Sagnol, and led by Napoli winger Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, they will be worth watching.

Their tournament starts on June 18 against Turkiye in Dortmund.


Leipzig sign in-demand Xavi Simons from PSG until 2027

Leipzig sign in-demand Xavi Simons from PSG until 2027
Updated 30 January 2025
Follow

Leipzig sign in-demand Xavi Simons from PSG until 2027

Leipzig sign in-demand Xavi Simons from PSG until 2027
  • German media reported Leipzig paid a club record of around $52 million for the 21-year-old Netherlands international
  • “I feel very comfortable in Leipzig and have felt honored by the great appreciation I receive at the club,” Simons said

BERLIN: RB Leipzig have made Xavi Simons’ loan from Paris Saint-Germain permanent, breaking the club’s transfer record to sign the attacking midfielder until 2027.
The Red Bull-owned club announced the transfer on Thursday, making it Leipzig’s first big signing since Jurgen Klopp took over as its parent company’s Global Head of Soccer in early January.
German media reported Leipzig paid a club record of around 50 million euros ($52 million) for the 21-year-old Netherlands international.


Simons was reportedly in the sights of several European giants including Bayern Munich and Manchester United, making the deal a coup for Leipzig.
“I feel very comfortable in Leipzig and have felt honored by the great appreciation I receive at the club,” Simons said in a statement.
Leipzig signed the Barcelona youth product on loan in the summer of 2023 and extended the loan by a year the following summer.
Simons has 15 goals and 19 assists in 60 games in all competitions for Leipzig.
At international level, Simons has played 24 times for the Netherlands, scoring three goals including the opener against England in the Euro 2024 semifinal.
Leipzig’s sports CEO Marcel Schaefer said the club had “worked for a long time” on the deal.
“Xavi has developed extremely well with us and underlined that RB Leipzig is the right club for young, exceptional players.”
Leipzig were eliminated at the group stage of the Champions League and sit fifth in the Bundesliga, 16 points behind leaders Bayern Munich.
The winners of two of the past three German Cups, Leipzig host Wolfsburg in the quarter finals of the competition in February.


Barcelona’s Pedri extends contact to 2030

Barcelona’s Pedri extends contact to 2030
Updated 30 January 2025
Follow

Barcelona’s Pedri extends contact to 2030

Barcelona’s Pedri extends contact to 2030
  • The 22-year-old Pedri was hailed as a great future hope from age 16
  • Pedri penned the deal alongside Laporta and Barcelona sports director Deco

BARCELONA: Barcelona playmaker Pedri extended his contract by four years through to June 2030 on Thursday in a boost for club president Joan Laporta who has been in the spotlight over the handling of the Dani Olmo debacle.
The 22-year-old Pedri was hailed as a great future hope from age 16, and has filled the gap left by departed club legend Andres Iniesta.
Part of Spain’s European championship winning line-up in 2024, Pedri penned the deal alongside Laporta and Barcelona sports director Deco, the club’s website reported.
Laporta has been under pressure at Barcelona since the national league ruled the club had failed to register summer signings Olmo and Pau Victor in time. The pair currently have temporary playing licenses.
Hansi Flick’s Barcelona made sure of second place in the 36 team Champions League on Wednesday but the Blaugrana trail Real Madrid by seven points in La Liga.


Kyle Walker not regretting leaving Man City for lackluster AC Milan ahead of derby debut

Kyle Walker not regretting leaving Man City for lackluster AC Milan ahead of derby debut
Updated 30 January 2025
Follow

Kyle Walker not regretting leaving Man City for lackluster AC Milan ahead of derby debut

Kyle Walker not regretting leaving Man City for lackluster AC Milan ahead of derby debut
  • Walker insists he hasn’t had any second thoughts — even when Milan were 2-0 down at home to Parma
  • “Definitely not. It’s football. Things happen in football,” he said

MILAN: England defender Kyle Walker could be forgiven for having some regrets over leaving Manchester City for AC Milan.
Especially after seeing close up how his new team are performing, with even Milan coach Sérgio Conceição saying his players are lacking “footballing basics.”
Walker joined Milan last week on loan, with the option to make the move permanent at the end of the season.
He watched Milan’s rollercoaster win over lowly Parma from the stands at San Siro last weekend. The Rossoneri were trailing 2-1 in injury time before two stoppage-time goals.
Walker, who was cup tied, was also just an observer on Wednesday for Milan’s Champions League match at Dinamo Zagreb, where the 10-man Rossoneri lost 2-1.
But Walker, who won six Premier League titles and the Champions League in seven seasons at City, insists he hasn’t had any second thoughts — even when Milan were 2-0 down at home to Parma.


“Definitely not. It’s football. Things happen in football,” he said. “But by the end of the game, we won 3-2. And that’s what the main things is. We got the victory that we wanted, that we needed. This is a step in the right direction.”
Possible debut in Milan derby
Man City’s long-serving right back left the Premier League club to get more playing time and explore a move abroad. Walker will likely get a baptism of fire on Sunday if, as expected, he makes his debut in the Serie A derby against fierce rival Inter Milan.
Defending champion Inter are second in Serie A, three points behind Napoli and with a game in hand. AC Milan also have a game in hand, but is 19 points behind Napoli.
Milan have won both derby matches this season, however; in the league in September and the Super Cup final this month.
“I’m expecting an exciting match. They’ll be looking for revenge after the Super Cup,” Walker said.
“This is where the character, the mentality comes in, that this is our crown now and we need to make sure we go to that game fully committed. Not just for ourselves and for the league table position but also for the fans as well.”
Walker won 15 major trophies at City after joining from Tottenham in 2017 and established himself as one of the best right backs in Premier League history.
At Milan, he finds himself in a team that are clearly lacking in confidence and leadership.
That is what the 34-year-old Walker has been brough in to help resolve.
“It’s what I have to do. At my age, from my experience, I can pass on that to the younger players,” Walker said. “But also I can’t do it alone.
“And I have seen that there is leaders but maybe the confidence is a little bit low. The rhythm is win game lose game, have a bad performance have a good performance. And you need a level of consistency.”
Conceição’s emotions encouraged
Milan are already on their second coach of the season, after Conceição replaced Paulo Fonseca at the end of last year.
Like Fonseca and previous coach Stefano Pioli, Conceição has criticized his players for their lack of determination and mentality, something he has been struggling to remedy as he strives to instil into AC Milan the same values he had as a player: Courage, combativeness and a hunger to win.
Conceição dropped to his knees and screamed after the late winner against Parma, before having to be restrained after the final whistle during a heated exchange with Milan captain Davide Calabria.
“I feel that from what I’ve been listening to over the last few days he (Conceição) has got a good idea, he’s got a good foundation that he wants to build this club on. And I think it’s needed,” Walker said.
“Sometimes there needs to be discipline, sometimes there needs to be that fire and emotion coming from the body because it projects onto the players. And recently the players have lacked a bit of that.”


New-look Champions League produces jeopardy, but giants survive

New-look Champions League produces jeopardy, but giants survive
Updated 30 January 2025
Follow

New-look Champions League produces jeopardy, but giants survive

New-look Champions League produces jeopardy, but giants survive
  • “It’s nice to have a bit more jeopardy,” Real Madrid’s English superstar Jude Bellingham told UEFA.com
  • European football’s governing body is now beating its chest about the success of the new format

PARIS: European football body UEFA hailed the “more dynamic” new format of the Champions League as a huge success after the first phase concluded on Wednesday while all of the continent’s biggest clubs survived to reach the knockout stage.
“It’s nice to have a bit more jeopardy,” Real Madrid’s English superstar Jude Bellingham told UEFA.com after the reigning champions rounded out the league phase with a 3-0 win against Brest in France.
He was not referring to that particular game, one of 18 played simultaneously on the eighth and last matchday, a frenzied night which saw a total of 64 goals fly in around Europe, including one for Bellingham himself.
It was rather a reference to the fact that the new format — with all 36 clubs playing eight games against eight different opponents — took some getting used to for every club, even the biggest fishes.
Madrid were themselves caught out as they lost three of their first five matches. Manchester City certainly faced jeopardy as the competition’s winners in 2023 needed to win their last game at home to Club Brugge in order to avoid elimination, and found themselves 1-0 down at half-time.
They came back to win 3-1 to avoid humiliation and reach the knockout round play-offs, and Club Brugge also went through.
UEFA introduced this new format to replace the group system which had been in place for two decades, doing so in response to the threat of a breakaway Super League involving a select band of giant clubs.
European football’s governing body is now beating its chest about the success of the new format in “delivering on its promise to reinvigorate” a competition which had gone slightly stale in the group stage.
Only two clubs came into the final matchday having secured direct qualification for the last 16, without having to go through the play-offs.
Only nine had been eliminated, leaving 25 with something to play for in their last game.
It has naturally been hailed by clubs who may have struggled under the previous system, most notably Brest, who finished 18th and have reached the play-offs in their debut European campaign.
“I really like it, and I think tonight the people watching on television and in the stadiums must have really enjoyed it. There was a lot of suspense. It gives a chance to the smaller teams like us,” said Brest coach Eric Roy.
Another French side, Lille, pulled off a remarkable performance to finish seventh and go directly into the last 16, beating Real and Atletico Madrid along the way.
“I have really liked this format. There is room for surprises,” said Lille’s Thomas Meunier.
In contrast, Real coach Carlo Ancelotti has not hidden his displeasure at the increase in the number of games in the league phase, to eight from six in the old format.
“My idea of football is that we must reduce the number of matches to diminish the impact on the players,” Ancelotti said.
One leading player at a leading European club who asked not be identified shared that view, saying the new system might be exciting for fans but that it takes its physical toll.
“I’d prefer less games to be honest,” was that player’s frank assessment.


There will be even less opportunity to rest for those clubs who must now come through a two-legged play-off tie in February to reach the last 16.
But there will be plenty of excitement in the play-offs, the draw for which takes place on Friday.
The way the draw is organized means Real and Bayern Munich each know they will either face Manchester City or Celtic next. AC Milan could play Juventus.
Nevertheless, the new format ultimately produced the same end result.
All of the top eight who progress straight to the last 16 hail from Europe’s five biggest leagues, with three from England, two from Spain, and one each from Italy, Germany and France.
Only six clubs from other countries have reached the play-offs, all of a certain pedigree: former European Cup winners in PSV Eindhoven, Benfica, Feyenoord and Celtic, former runners-up in Club Brugge, and Portuguese giants Sporting.
No club from east of Munich has progressed, and the only club who were probably expected to qualify but failed to do so were RB Leipzig, although they were hampered by injuries and had a difficult draw — their opponents amassed more points combined than those of any other team.


Lack of improvement meant Gerrard’s departure from Ettifaq was a matter of time

Lack of improvement meant Gerrard’s departure from Ettifaq was a matter of time
Updated 30 January 2025
Follow

Lack of improvement meant Gerrard’s departure from Ettifaq was a matter of time

Lack of improvement meant Gerrard’s departure from Ettifaq was a matter of time
  • Team finished sixth in the former Liverpool’ player’s first season as coach, but there has been a clear lack of progress this term

LONDON: When reports emerged that Steven Gerrard was leaving Ettifaq, it wasn’t much of a surprise.

The Liverpool legend, appointed in July 2023, lasted 18 months, and while there were a few highs, the returns given the money invested were, on the whole, quite low.

The same can be said of the club’s current 12th place, just five points clear of the relegation zone and a full 16 behind Al-Nassr in fourth.

The 2-2 draw at Al-Wehda on Saturday left Gerrard clearly disappointed with his players, and on Thursday night social media reports suggest that he was quitting for “personal reasons.” In hindsight, it was only a matter of time.

Getting into the top four was always going to be a tall order, but to at least challenge was the target. It’s clear that Ettifaq don’t have the financial power of the Big Four — Al-Hilal, Al-Nassr, Al-Ittihad and Al-Ahli — who have attracted the megastars, but with the talent available they should have the ability, however, to be fighting it out with Al-Shabab and Al-Taawoun in the next level below. At the very least, the two-time champions should not be four and five places, respectively, behind Al-Riyadh and Al-Khaleej. 

Last season there were some hiccups but Gerrard was handed a contract extension midway through and steered the team into sixth, an improvement on the previous campaign. There were more new faces incoming and this season started well with three straight wins and a lot of enthusiasm. But just two more victories came in the next 14 games. 

There is little doubt where the problem did lie — scoring goals. In the first 12 games of the season, they managed just nine and were too easy to defend against. Opposing defenders knew that if they could stop Moussa Dembele then there wasn’t much of an attacking threat from elsewhere. Former Liverpool midfielder, Gini Wijnaldum, has chipped in occasionally but Cameroonian forward Karl Toko-Ekambi, who scored six in 15 starts last season, has yet to find the target in eight appearances this time. Going forward, Ettifaq have too often been predictable and one-dimensional.

Yet there were recent improvements, with Ettifaq scoring 10 in the last five. In an attacking sense at least, there was more fluidity and rhythm. Was this another blip or a turning of a corner? We will never know. 

There is plenty of talent throughout the squad. Gerrard brought in midfielders such as Wijnaldum, Seko Fofana (since departed) and Alvaro Medran. He also has Saudi Arabian internationals such as defensive midfielder Abdulelah Al-Malki and forward Abdullah Radif, and defenders such as Madallah Al-Olayan and Abdullah Madu. 

Gerrard has not quite managed to deliver and his tactics have come in for criticism, not helped by a King’s Cup defeat against Al-Jabalain in October, a team then struggling in the second tier. His ability to manage matches was called into question. 

Results are always paramount but he wasn’t helped by comments he made to English media earlier in the season about arranging training so he could watch Liverpool’s games. “Both myself and John (Achterberg, goalkeeping coach) have got one eye on it. We put all our schedule around the Liverpool games. The players are on to me now; we’ve been training at 9 or 10 at night!”

Gerrard moved quickly to refute any suggestion that he was not fully focused on the Dammam club.

“I was asked if I still followed Liverpool and I said, ‘Of course I still follow Liverpool,’ they played a huge part of my life and shaped me as a player, person and coach I am today. I want to make it abundantly clear my priority is Ettifaq, I have a contract with Ettifaq and I am in a real privileged position.”

The comments may not have been serious but they didn’t go down well. Gerrard should have known this, as fans of his previous club Aston Villa sometimes wondered if he was there just to warm up for a future move back to Liverpool.

His performances in Saudi Arabia won’t make that any more likely but that is no longer Ettifaq’s concern. At least there is the example of Villa, who, after Gerrard, brought in Unai Emery and have not looked back.