Argentina coach slams chaotic ‘scandal’ at Olympic soccer match vs Morocco

Argentina coach slams chaotic ‘scandal’ at Olympic soccer match vs Morocco
A member of security holds a fan of Morocco after numerous Moroccan fans invaded the pitch at the end of the men’s group B match against Argentina during the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at the Geoffroy-Guichard Stadium in Saint-Etienne on Jul. 24, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 26 July 2024
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Argentina coach slams chaotic ‘scandal’ at Olympic soccer match vs Morocco

Argentina coach slams chaotic ‘scandal’ at Olympic soccer match vs Morocco
  • Paris organizers said they were trying to “understand the causes and identify appropriate actions“
  • Argentina’s soccer federation said it issued a formal protest Wednesday to world governing body FIFA and would do “what is necessary” to guarantee the safety of players

PARIS: The head of Argentina’s soccer federation said the chaotic ending to their Olympic soccer match against Morocco on Wednesday “makes no sense,” and Argentina’s coach called the scene “a scandal.”
The opening match of the men’s soccer tournament was suspended for nearly two hours during added time after Morocco fans invaded the field and threw bottles in protest of a late goal by Argentina. The goal was later overturned by the video assistant referee, and Argentina lost 2-1.
“What happened on the field was a scandal. This isn’t a neighborhood tournament, these are the Olympic Games,” Argentina coach Javier Mascherano said.
Paris organizers said they were trying to “understand the causes and identify appropriate actions” after the match in Saint-Etienne. Argentina’s soccer federation said it issued a formal protest Wednesday to world governing body FIFA and would do “what is necessary” to guarantee the safety of players.
“Having to wait almost two hours in the dressing room, after Morocco fans entering the pitch, the violence that the Argentina delegation suffered, our players having to warm up again and continue to play a match that should have been suspended by the main referee, is really something that makes no sense and that goes against the competition rules,” Argentina Football Association president Claudio Tapia said.
The Argentina team also said their training base was robbed before the game, with midfielder Thiago Almada’s watch among the items taken.
Meanwhile, Argentine President Javier Milei arrived Thursday in Paris, his office said, and is expected to meet French President Emmanuel Macron after tensions escalated between their countries over the Argentine soccer team’s derogatory postmatch chants about French players at Copa America.
Morocco fans rushed the field to protest Cristian Medina’s goal in the 16th minute of added time at Stade Geoffroy-Guichard, which appeared to tie the game 2-2. Bottles were also thrown from the crowd and, in frenzied scenes, security tackled pitch invaders.
“Some of the fans thought it was the end of the match and decided to invade the pitch,” Thomas Collomb, the deputy director of security for Paris organizers, said Thursday. “The atmosphere was festive. At no time was there any security risk for players or spectators. Within minutes of the final whistle, a security bubble formed around the athletes.”
There were images of Argentina players flinching when what appeared to be a flare was thrown onto the field.
“I can understand why this might have been worrying for Argentine athletes,” said Bruno Le Ray, the organizing committee’s security director. “Stade Geoffroy-Guichard is known for having no barriers between the stands and the pitch. To our knowledge, no firecrackers were fired at any time. It’s definitely an incident, but not in the security sense.”
Morocco defender Achraf Hakimi wrote on X: “I deplore the attitude of certain supporters during the match, which tarnished the image of our loyal fans. Such behavior has no place in football.”
In the confusion, it was believed the final whistle had been blown when players headed to the locker room and fans were told to leave the stadium. FIFA’s official website declared the final score 2-2.
But it later emerged the game had been suspended with just minutes of play remaining and that Medina’s goal was being reviewed.
The players re-emerged to warm up in an empty stadium after about two hours and referee Glenn Nyberg confirmed he was reviewing video of the goal on the touchline monitor. He then confirmed it would be overturned for offside.
Morocco held on for the win as the teams played out the final three minutes.
“The game was suspended because of security. At no moment did they talk to us about any revision (of the play),” Mascherano said.
“Obviously it’s confusing, but we have to move forward. It’s already happened, it’s over. We have to focus on the two games (remaining). Save up the anger and let it all out in the coming games.”
Two-time gold medalist Argentina were one of the pretournament favorites and were aiming for more hardware after winning the World Cup in 2022 and back-to-back Copa Americas.
On Saturday, Morocco are scheduled to face Ukraine at Stade Geoffroy-Guichard.
“We’ll make sure we reinforce security by adding barriers or private security,” Le Ray said.


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 38 sec ago
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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.


Fire breaks out ahead of Man City’s Champions League match against Brugge

Fire breaks out ahead of Man City’s Champions League match against Brugge
Updated 29 January 2025
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Fire breaks out ahead of Man City’s Champions League match against Brugge

Fire breaks out ahead of Man City’s Champions League match against Brugge
  • Security staff had cordoned off the area and kept supporters away

MANCHESTER: A fire broke out at a concession stand outside Manchester City’s stadium ahead of the team’s Champions League match against Brugge on Wednesday.
Videos shared online showed large flames and smoke coming from the stand, located near the players’ entrance at the Etihad Stadium.
Firefighters extinguished the blaze, but the smell of smoke remained in the air for some time afterward as supporters waited to be let inside.
Security staff had cordoned off the area and kept supporters away.
City play Brugge in a must-win game as the new-look league phase of the Champions League reaches its conclusion.
The 2023 champion City are 25th in the standings. They need to win to secure a place in the playoffs for the round of 16.


French police arrest Feyenoord fans at the border ahead of Champions League match in Lille

French police arrest Feyenoord fans at the border ahead of Champions League match in Lille
Updated 29 January 2025
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French police arrest Feyenoord fans at the border ahead of Champions League match in Lille

French police arrest Feyenoord fans at the border ahead of Champions League match in Lille
  • 86 fans of the Dutch team have been refused entry to France and that 30 have been arrested
  • Police officers seized pyrotechnic devices and various objects

LILLE, France: Dozens of Feyenoord fans banned from traveling to Lille for a Champions League game between the two clubs have been turned away or arrested at the border, French authorities said Wednesday.
The Prefecture du Nord, which represents the French state in the Lille region, said 86 fans of the Dutch team have been refused entry to France and that 30 have been arrested.
Police officers seized pyrotechnic devices and various objects that could be used as weapons during their checks, the prefecture said.
France’s interior ministry said the travel ban was introduced because of a “real and serious risk of confrontation” between fans of the two teams ahead of Wednesday’s match at the Stade Pierre-Mauroy.
The French authorities said Feyenoord’s travels are often marred by “public order disturbances due to the violent behavior of certain supporters or individuals claiming to be supporters of this team,” and they cited several examples of fan violence.
In May 2022, there were violent clashes in France between Marseille and Feyenoord fans outside the Stade Velodrome stadium before their Europa Conference League semifinal game.
There were also violent clashes in Lille city center when the club played Bulgarian side Levski Sofia in the Europa League in 2010.


Liverpool rotate squad for game at PSV Eindhoven to rest Salah, Van Dijk and others

Liverpool rotate squad for game at PSV Eindhoven to rest Salah, Van Dijk and others
Updated 29 January 2025
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Liverpool rotate squad for game at PSV Eindhoven to rest Salah, Van Dijk and others

Liverpool rotate squad for game at PSV Eindhoven to rest Salah, Van Dijk and others
  • The Reds have already advanced to the round of 16
  • manager Arne Slot opted to take a second-string squad to the Netherlands

LIVERPOOL: Liverpool will give some star players including Mohamed Salah and Virgil van Dijk a rest for the Champions League game at PSV Eindhoven on Wednesday.
The Reds have already advanced to the round of 16, so manager Arne Slot opted to take a second-string squad to the Netherlands.
Along with Salah and Van Dijk, the other players who were left in Merseyside were Trent Alexander-Arnold, Alisson Becker, Ibrahima Konate, Ryan Gravenberch, Dominik Szoboszlai, Alexis Mac Allister and Luis Diaz.
Liverpool are in first place and can finish no lower than second in the league phase of the Champions League.
On Tuesday, Slot said with the packed schedule it was a chance for players to “get some freshness back.”
The Premier League leaders play at seventh-place Bournemouth on Saturday.


Ex-Belgium midfielder Nainggolan charged in drug trafficking probe

Ex-Belgium midfielder Nainggolan charged in drug trafficking probe
Updated 28 January 2025
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Ex-Belgium midfielder Nainggolan charged in drug trafficking probe

Ex-Belgium midfielder Nainggolan charged in drug trafficking probe
  • The 36-year-old footballer was charged with “participating in a criminal organization” and then conditionally released, his lawyer Mounir Souidi told media
  • Antwerp-born Nainggolan came out of retirement last week to join a lower-tier Belgian side

BRUSSELS: Former Belgium midfielder Radja Nainggolan was charged on Monday as part of an investigation into cocaine trafficking on an international scale, a day after he was arrested, the Brussels prosecutor’s office said.
The 36-year-old footballer was charged with “participating in a criminal organization” and then conditionally released, his lawyer Mounir Souidi told media after a hearing in Brussels.
Nainggolan was among 18 suspects arrested following a series of 30 searches carried out on Monday morning in the northern province of Antwerp, as well as in the Brussels area. Ten of them were imprisoned after being brought before a judge.
The majority of those held face charges of “importation, transport and selling of drugs without permission” and with the “participation in organized crime as leaders.”
Nainggolan was released on bail as he was charged with being a “member” of the organization and not a “leader.”


“The investigation concerns alleged facts of importation of cocaine from South America to Europe, via the port of Antwerp, and its redistribution in Belgium,” prosecutors said in a statement on Monday.
In addition to 2.7 kilos (six pounds) of cocaine, police seized around half a million euros ($521,000) in cash and gold coins, a stash of jewelry, and luxury watches including two worth some 360,000 euros each.
They further seized three firearms, two bullet-proof vests and 14 vehicles, prosecutors said.
Antwerp-born Nainggolan came out of retirement last week to join a lower-tier Belgian side — adding a final spell to a long career that saw him play 30 matches and score six goals for the national team.
Having played for Italian teams Cagliari, Inter Milan and Roma, he had been without a club since last summer before signing with Belgian second-tier outfit Lokeren last week.
He marked his debut with a goal at the weekend in Lokeren’s 1-1 home draw to K. Lierse.
He had previously returned from Italy to Belgium in the summer of 2021 to join Royal Antwerp.
A tattooed midfielder known for his off-field antics, he parted ways with Antwerp in early 2023.
A few months earlier he had been suspended for being caught smoking an electronic cigarette on the bench, according to Belgian media.