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Saturday 10 December 2016

Meet the arsenal's dogged defender - shkodran Mustafi.

There might come a time, if it has not already, that Everton regret the decency David Moyes once showed to the sick boy who became one of the most imposing men in the Premier League.

It was in 2012 that Shkodran Mustafi went to see Moyes to say he felt it was time to move on. He had made one substitute appearance in the Europa League since arriving from Germany as a 17-year-old and he needed to get through 'the wall'.

'Sick of football,' was how he put it at the time. 'I had six months of my contract left,' recalls Mustafi. 'They had offered to extend it but I had made my decision.

Mustafi is finding his way again in England after enduring a tough time as a youngster

He arrived from Valencia in the summer and has already made a name for himself.

 'I went there when I was 17, so a young guy, and I understand it was not easy for David Moyes to pick me because his team was working, but after two and a half years I started to think I really needed to play.

'I thought I would prefer to make a step backwards and get games, rather than just going year after year not making a step. I knew I had to look for solutions, even if that meant going to the second division in Italy to get my games. It was a big decision.' Mustafi put all this to Moyes.

'I told the club and David Moyes,' he says. 'He actualy said to me, 'If you don't want to extend your contract, it is no problem. You are a young player, we do not want to destroy your career. If you want to go you can go, even in January if you want'. I really appreciate from David Moyes

'I might have 200 Premier League games for Everton by now but for me it was more important not to hit the wall.'

The 'what ifs' are surely more strongly felt by Everton in this scenario. Mustafi has gone on to become the Invincible in Arsenal's defence, a ball-playing boulder at the back who has won the World Cup with Germany and has never lost a game for Arsenal.

I left for Italy to play more games. It was important not to hit the wall.

The count is at 16 appearances in all competitions without defeat going into Saturday's fixture with Stoke, and there is a wider sense among staff at the club that this 24-year-old has the potential to become one of the great Arsenal defenders.

His background is fascinating, as are his views on topics from immigration to religion. The son of a road labourer, Mustafi was born and raised in Bad Hersfeld in central Germany after his grandfather had moved to the country from Albania with 'zero'. Grandfather Fariz is significant in Mustafi's tale.

'It shaped a lot for me,' Mustafi says. 'When I was 14 I joined Hamburg's academy (250 miles north of home) and at that age you are struggling in those first few weeks. You are not at home, you don't see your family and your friends, and suddenly it's not football the way I knew it at home.


'Instead of just playing with friends suddenly it's about pressure. I think about my grand-father's situation. I started at a pro club and grew in my career and he also started from zero because he left everything behind to go to Germany to build a life for him and for us as well.

'At least I knew the language and I was born in that country. I had it easier than him so I thought if he did it, I can make it as well. It helped me in that situation.'

The Hamburg move led to Everton and that led to Sampdoria in Serie B after Mustafi's conversation with Moyes. Following two seasons in Italy, he joined the circus of Valencia and their rotating managers where he truly excelled amid two seasons of chaos.

He was there when Gary Neville blew in and blew out again. 'I respected him as a player — he was fantastic,' says Mustafi. 'As a coach I think he had the right ideas but at that time in Valencia it was difficult for every coach, not just Gary Neville.

'I tried to talk as much as possible with him because he was a great defender. I wanted to learn from him but he was in a learning process, too. He wasn't used to Spanish football. It was a situation where I was trying to learn from him and he was trying to learn from us.

'I don't know if he will go back to coaching but if he wants he can because he has the character to be a leader.'

My grandad had zero - I thought if he can make it so can I.

When Mustafi made his own exit, joining Arsenal in the summer, his £35million fee made him the third most expensive defender in history.

He has lived in four countries in seven years but says: 'I feel settled. It is funny, as footballers we are all just moving around. I see people in England and then Italy and the same people in Spain. We're all moving all the time.'

Immigration, by extension, is a subject close to his heart. 'You have to understand when people who come into the UK and Germany that you don't know what this person saw in his life before,' he says.

'When I go back to Albania you have six-year-olds who do not go to school and have to work. There are no schools. So they come to this country and it is difficult. We all need to understand the differences.

'It is complicated but it needs understanding.'

Staff at Arsenal talk about Mustafi as a deeply socially-conscious presence, a devout Muslim who prays five times a day.

He once delayed the start of a Valencia Press conference because there was a bottle of beer on the desk.

He has given this interview, his first since joining Arsenal, to promote Arsenal's dedicated charity matchday against Stoke, with manager Arsene Wenger and each player donating a day's pay to The Arsenal Foundation.

'It's important because you can give so much with football,' he says. 'I talk to my father and ask why was he so obsessed with football? It was about not having time to go with bad friends and doing things I shouldn't.

'He was obsessed with bringing me to every training session. If you give people the opportunity to play, that's good because football is about respect and this foundation helps with that opportunity.'

It is to Arsenal's immense benefit that Mustafi once found his opportunities so limited.

Ultimately, he says he feels comfortable living in England and playing for the Gunners



Source: dailymail.co.uk








Friday 9 December 2016

Gabriel Jesus ban from taking Coca-Cola.



Gabriel Jesus band from taking Coca-Cola

The young star Gabriel Jesus has been band from taking his favorite beverage Coca-Cola by his new boss pep Guardiola.

Jesus signed  for Manchester city from Brazilian side Palmerias for 27 million British pounds but stayed back to finish the season and helped the club win their first league title in 22 years.

He enjoyed a a meal with his new manager, City director of football Txiki Begiristain and the club's Brazilian midfielders Fernando and Fernandinho at Fazenda, which has been rated as one of Manchester's finest Brazilian 'rodizio' restaurants.

Despite the Spinningfields restaurant being adorned with vintage bottles of wine and spirits, Jesus preferred drink was a bottle of Coca-Cola.

However, the forward has revealed that his choice of beverage will have to change under Guardiola's reign.

'He told me I cannot drink Coca Cola,' Jesus admitted of the now-imposed ban to Sport.

A switch from Brazil to England  for a nineteen year old is definitely going to be difficult but Jesus has revealed he would be moving with some of his family members and friends to help him settle. although he admitted he would have loved to move with his entire neighborhood (Jardim peri).

He told

ESPN.

: 'If I could, I'd take all the ones who are with me since my growth. I'm much connected to my neighbourhood, Jardim Peri, every time I'm having a day off at home, I go there.

'If I could, I'd take the entire neighbourhood there, and would make a Jardim Peri in England. It's a place where I have peace.

'I'm going with my mum, my brother and taking two friends who are always with me, played football with me when I was small. I hope they help me a lot there.'

The 19 year old forward is yet to be assigned a shirt number at city but has not hidden his love for the number 33. Same number he wore at Palmeiras.

'I had told them it's hard without the 33,' he added. 'I want this number because I used it since I was promoted at Palmeiras.'

GABRIEL JESUS FACTFILE

Born: 3 April 1997, Sao Paulo (age: 19)

Position: Forward

Clubs:

2015-16 Palmeiras

2016-present Manchester City

International:

Brazil - 6 caps, five goals

Honours:

Brazilian league - 2016

Brazilian cup - 2015 

Olympic gold medal - 2016  

 

Arsenal vs Stoke: Team news, kick-off time, probable line-ups, odds and stats for Premier League clash

Ahead of this weekend's Premier League action, shawnsportz  will be providing you with all you need to know about every fixture, with team news, provisional squads, betting odds and Opta stats. Here is all the information you need for Arsenal's clash with Stoke at the Emirates Stadium.


Arsenal vs Stoke (Emirates Stadium, Saturday - 15:00)

Team news

Arsenal

Arsenal could have Hector Bellerin back for the Premier League visit of Stoke on Saturday.

The right-back has been missing with an ankle injury but is back in training and may come straight into the side to replace Gabriel.

Petr Cech will return in goal after David Ospina deputised in the Champions League win over Basle on Tuesday, while Santi Cazorla (Achilles), Per Mertesacker and Danny Welbeck (both knee) are all definite absentees.

Provisional squad: Cech, Ospina, Martinez, Bellerin, Jenkinson, Holding, Gabriel, Koscielny, Mustafi, Gibbs, Monreal, Maitland-Niles, Elneny, Coquelin, Ramsey, Xhaka, Oxlade-Chamberlain, Ozil, Walcott, Reine-Adelaide, Iwobi, Sanchez, Akpom, Giroud.


Stoke

Bruno Martins Indi and Marko Arnautovic will be fit for Stoke when they travel to the Emirates Stadium to face in-form Arsenal.

Defender Martins Indi was sent for precautionary X-rays after he was elbowed in the face by Burnley striker Ashley Barnes last weekend but he has been passed fit along with midfielder Arnautovic, who was also nursing a knock following the 2-0 home win against the Clarets.

Ryan Shawcross remains a major doubt with his calf complaint and Geoff Cameron (knee) is still a couple of weeks away from getting back to fitness.

Provisional squad: Given, Grant, Shawcross, Martins Indi, Pieters, Muniesa, Whelan, Adam, Imbula, Bojan, Shaqiri, Sobhi, Arnautovic, Walters, Bony, Diouf, Crouch.

Key match stats (supplied by Opta)

- Arsenal have won each of their last 14 home games in all competitions against Stoke City, keeping eight clean sheets in the process.

- Stoke’s last away league win at Arsenal came in the first game of the 1981/82 season, with Lee Chapman scoring the only goal of the game.

- Arsenal are now on a 13-game unbeaten run in the Premier League (W9 D4 L0); their longest such run in the competition since a run of 16 games that ended in April 2011.

- Stoke City have lost only one of their last nine Premier League games (W5 D3 L1) and have won their last two matches in the competition without conceding a goal.

- The Potters have lost all eight of their visits to the Emirates in the Premier League. Only at Old Trafford have they gone longer without a win since being promoted in 2008 (nine games, W0 D1 L8).

- Alexis Sanchez scored twice and assisted another goal in Arsenal’s 3-0 win over Stoke in January 2015.

- Sanchez has had a hand in 25 goals in his last 25 Premier League appearances for Arsenal (18 goals, seven assists).

- This is Sanchez’s joint-best goal return after 14 apps of a league season in Europe (11 goals), equalling his 11-goal tally for Barcelona in 2013-14. If he scores in this game, it would be his best goalscoring start to a European league season after 15 games.

- Peter Crouch has scored eight times against Arsenal in the Premier League – only against Blackburn does he have as many goals in the competition.

- The Gunners have made a higher proportion of their passes in the final third of the pitch than any other team in the Premier League so far this season (36.5%).

ARSENAL VS STOKE

Kick-off: Sat, 15:00

Referee: Lee Mason

Odds (subject to change):

Arsenal 4/11

Stoke 13/2

Draw 4/1

Managers:

Arsene Wenger (Arsenal)

Mark Hughes (Stoke)

Recent league form:

Arsenal - WWDDW

Stoke - WWLDW.

Thursday 8 December 2016

Galacticos days helps me deal with pressure - Arbeloa

West Ham defender Alvaro Arbeloa believes his time as a Galactico at Real Madrid will help him cope with the pressure of a Premier League relegation battle.
The 33-year old admits that the stress of chasing trophies with the La Liga giants is different from the challenge he faces in helping to save Slaven Bilic's side from relegation, but Arbeloa says he's up for the fight.
"This is a different challenge but I am used to this kind of pressure because when I played for Real Madrid, if we lost one game it was really bad so I know what to expect," said Arbeloa in an interview.
"Every week and every day at Madrid we were under pressure so I am used to it but this is a different kind of situation.
"We have to train with a high intensity and we have to show our best form."
Arbeloa, who signed for the East London club in the summer on a one-year deal after his second spell with Real Madrid, believes West Ham have the ability to turn the club's fortunes around.
He said: "When I see my team mates I know that they have quality.
"I think the players are hurting a great deal after what happened on Saturday. We have a great manager and great players.
"We have been hit by a number of injuries, but there is nothing we can do about that. We need to stay together as a team and get more points."
West Ham travel to Anfield on Sunday with the incentive of knowing three points could be enough to keep manager Bilic in his job.
Liverpool and West Ham conceded nine goals between them last weekend as Jurgen Klopp's 15-game winning streak came to an end.
Arbeloa, who helped win the 2010 World Cup and two European Championships with Spain (2008 and 2012), is relishing the return to Liverpool seven years after leaving the club and says he has fond memories of his two-year spell on Merseyside.
"I have really good memories [of my time at Liverpool]. For me every game that I played at Anfield was amazing. I had an amazing final season there when we were fighting for the title with Manchester United.
"When I used to play for Liverpool at the Boleyn Ground I could feel from the West Ham fans that they had a great connection with the players.
He added: "It is important to have that kind of support and they are among the best supporters in England.
"I see similarities with [Liverpool and] West Ham as they both have great anthems when you walk on to the pitch and you can feel something special when you go on to the pitch."
The two-time UEFA Champions League winner says that West Ham will be spurred on by Bournemouth's dramatic last-gasp victory last weekend.
"It will not be easy but of course we can get a victory. They lost 4-3 against Bournemouth last weekend so it is possible," Arbeloa said.
"West Ham won at Anfield last season so there is no reason why we cannot do that again."

Wednesday 30 November 2016

Southgate appointed England manager on four-year deal.

Gareth Southgate was named as England's permanent manager on a four-year contract on Wednesday having impressed the Football Association during a four-match stint as interim coach.
The 46-year-old succeeds Sam Allardyce who departed 67 days into the job after being caught up in a newspaper sting.
Southgate said: "I am extremely proud to be appointed England manager. However, I'm also conscious that getting the job is one thing, now I want to do the job successfully."
Former England under-21 manager Southgate has overseen two wins and a draw in three 2018 World Cup qualifiers, leaving England top of the group, plus a friendly draw with Spain.
Southgate's contract will run through England's campaigns for the next World Cup and 2020 European Championship 

Former arsenal midfielder blames injury for not clinching the ballon D'or

Former arsenal midfielder Abou Diaby has said only injury prevented him from the ballon D'or.

The French international, who has not been able to wrack 200 appearance in thirteen years of  professional football  has claimed he has the potential of winning the ballon D'or  if not for  injuries.

The former arsenal midfielder Endured 10 years with the north London outfit making just 180 appearance and scoring 19 goals

The 30 year old midfielder  who feels he has the potential to be world best if not for injuries now plays for Marseille where he has only managed two appearances this season due to ankle injury.

'I have no limits. Once upon a time, people would ask me about the Ballon D'Or,' he told France Football.

'I told them I dreamt about it. I have always had big ambitions, like to become one of the best in my position. I think that I had the potential to achieve that.

'I am not saying it pretentiously, but some people in life are ambitious, others aren't.

Saturday 8 October 2016

Sturridge and Ali scores as Southgate begins on a bright note

It was the first test for Gareth Southgate as England's temporary Mannager against Malta.

After so much pressure from the 3lions, it's was only a matter of time before Daniel Sturridge found the back of the net from henderson's cross.

The English team wasn't done yet as Bamidele Ali neted  the second after his initial was shot stoped by the impressive Hogg.

England continued their domineering play but the likes of Walcott failed to take their chances.

Jesse Lingard was also handed his debut.

Saturday 10 September 2016

Zlatan Ibrahimovic slams Pep Guardiola once again ahead of Manchester United's tie with City




Zlatan Ibrahimovic slams Pep Guardiola once again ahead of Manchester United's tie with City


Zlatan Ibrahimovic has aimed another volley at ex-manager Pep Guardiola
Ibrahimovic branded Guardiola a 'spineless coward' in his autobiography
The Swede has claimed that Jose Mourinho is a superior man-manager
'He (Mourinho) is direct with everyone; he will not go behind your back' said the striker ahead of Saturday's all-important Manchester derby
Zlatan Ibrahimovic's feud with Pep Guardiola simmered on Friday as the Manchester United striker aimed another volley at his former manager.

The pair's relationship broke down at Barcelona, with Ibrahimovic branding Guardiola a 'spineless coward' in his explosive autobiography and then later labelling him 'not a man'.

He was at it again before Saturday lunchtime's highly-anticipated Manchester derby, claiming that Jose Mourinho has superior man-management techniques.

Ibrahimovic's feud with Pep Guardiola simmered on Friday ahead of  the Manchester derby

Ibrahimovic branded Guardiola a 'spineless coward' in his explosive autobiography
'He (Mourinho) is direct with everyone,' said Ibrahimovic. 'He will not go behind your back, he will tell you. I prefer it like that.

'Wherever Guardiola has gone he has won and he has been very successful.

'How he works today I don't know and I don't care because he is not my coach.'

Guardiola — who has also had to contend with barbs from Ibrahimovic's outspoken agent Mino Raiola this week — kept his decorum and refuted any suggestions by the Swede that he shut him out.

Guardiola said: 'I was clear, I spoke with him always face to face, always.

'I never used the media to explain what I wanted from Zlatan on the pitch. I was so clear and direct to him.'

Forget Jose Mourinho vs Pep Guardiola... watch out for Zlatan Ibrahimovic in the Manchester derby!

Saturday 3 September 2016

Retirement surely not a barrier to wonderful skills, as arsenal beats AC Milan

 The Nigerian striker was in impressive form as Arsenal comprehensively beat a Milan side which featured the likes of Christian Vieiri and Cafu.
A Nwankwo Kanu hat-trick and goal from Robert Pires gave Arsenal Legends a 4-1 win over Milan Glorie in a charity match at Emirates Stadium.

The Gunners attempted to start the match with 12 men when Nigerian striker Kanu didn’t realise he had been named as a substitute, but the 40-year-old made up for his mistake when he scored a header from Emmanuel Petit’s cross on 27 minutes, before Milan’s Christian Vieri equalised with a scrappy effort five minutes before the break.

Kanu scored a second on 72 minutes before Pires got in on the act just a day after playing at the Wembley Cup, while Vieri netted a late consolation for Milan when he rebounded in a penalty which was well saved by David Seaman.

Highlights included Martin Keown begging Arsene Wenger to bring him on throughout the match and Nigel Winterburn squaring up to Paolo Di Canio in a mock incident of when the Italian confronted a referee against Sheffield Wednesday in September 1998.

Robert Pires, Freddie Ljungberg and Kolo Toure all featured for the home side while Wenger and Fabio Capello took charge of the respective squads in a match which is expected to raise £1 million for the Arsenal Foundation’s mission to build pitches for children in London, Jordan and Somalia.

Source: goal.com

Thursday 1 September 2016

Okiki Afolabi joins Argentinian club side Atletico cordobar on loan.

 13 goals Sunshine Stars FC ace, Okiki Afolabi has joined Argentine club Atletico Cordoba on a season-long loan with an option for a permanent deal.

The second leading goal scorer in the Nigeria professional league said he is thrilled to have secured the deal following uncertainty over his football career in almost a year.

Okiki was quoted as saying by completesportsnigeria.com, " I'm happy that the move has been completed because at some point I was having doubts. It's time for me to repay my new coach for believing in me and I pray I score many goals for the club."

Prior to this move, there was an uncorfirmed news that the  has been duped by an unnamed agent who took him to Argentina inorder to help him secure a deal with a club in the country.

All completed deals in the EPL.

As it is expected, the final day of transfers is always nail biting and suspense packed.

So we have decided to come up with all concluded deals in the EPL.

ARSENAL 

IN

Granit Xhaka (Borussia Monchengladbach, £35m)

Rob Holding (Bolton, £2.5m)

Lucas Perez (Deportivo La Coruna, £17m)

Shkodran Mustafi (Valencia, £35m)

OUT

Isaac Hayden (Newcastle United, undisclosed)

Serge Gnabry (Werder Bremen, £4.5m) 

Mikel Arteta (released)

Tomas Rosicky (released)

Mathieu Flamini (released) 

Joel Campbell (Sporting Lisbon, loan)

Jack Wilshere (Bournemouth, loan) 





 
BOURNEMOUTH

IN

Jordon Ibe (Liverpool, £15m)

Brad Smith (Liverpool, £6m) 

Lewis Cook (Leeds United, £6m) 

Lys Mousset (Le Havre, £5.4m)

Marc Wilson (Stoke City, £2m)

Mihai Dobre (Viitorul Constanta, undisclosed) 

Emerson Hyndman (Fulham, compensation)

Nathan Ake (Chelsea, loan)

Jack Wilshere (Arsenal, loan) 

OUT

Matt Ritchie (Newcastle United, £12m) 

Tommy Elphick (Aston Villa, £3.6m)  

Lee Tomlin (Bristol City, £2.75m)

Shaun MacDonald (Wigan Athletic, undisclosed) 

Eunan O'Kane (Leeds United, undisclosed) 

Sylvain Distin (released)

Stephane Zubar (released)

Josh Carmichael (released)

Josh Wakefield (released) 

Glenn Murray (Brighton & Hove Albion, loan)

Matt Butcher (Yeovil Town, loan) 

Baily Cargill (Gillingham, loan) 

Tokelo Rantie (Genclerbirligi, undisclosed)


 
BURNLEY

IN

Jeff Hendrick (Derby County, undisclosed) 

Steven Defour (Anderlecht, £7m) 

Johann Berg Gudmundsson (Charlton Athletic, £2.5m)

Nick Pope (Charlton Athletic, £1.1m)

Jon Flanagan (Liverpool, loan) 

Patrick Bamford (Chelsea, loan) 

OUT

David Jones (Sheffield Wednesday (undisclosed) 

Joey Barton (Rangers, free) 

Matt Gilks (Rangers, free)

Steven Hewitt (Accrington Stanley, free)

Lloyd Dyer (Burton Albion, free) 

Matt Taylor (Northampton Town, free)

Michael Duff (retired)

Chris Long (Fleetwood Town, loan) 

Lucas Jutkiewicz (Birmingham, loan) 

Daniel Lafferty (Sheffield United, loan) 


 
CHELSEA 

IN

Michy Batshuayi (Marseille, £33m) 

N'Golo Kante (Leicester, £32m)

David Luiz (Paris Saint-Germain, £32m)

Marcos Alonso (Fiorentina, £23m) 

Eduardo (Dinamo Zagreb, £2m) 

OUT

Mohamed Salah (Roma, £16m)

Papy Djilobodji (Sunderland, £8m)

John Swift (Reading, free) 

Nathan Ake (Bournemouth, loan)

Tomas Kalas (Fulham, loan)

Tammy Abraham (Bristol City, loan) 

Bertrand Traore (Ajax, loan)

Izzy Brown (Rotherham United, loan) 

Patrick Bamford (Burnley, loan) 

Loic Remy (Crystal Palace, loan)

Juan Cuadrado (Juventus, loan) 

Christian Atsu (Newcastle United, loan) 


 
CRYSTAL PALACE 

IN 

Christian Benteke (Liverpool, £32m) 

Andros Townsend (Newcastle United, £13m)

James Tomkins (West Ham United, £10m) 

Steve Mandanda (Marseille £1.5m) 

Loic Remy (Chelsea, loan) 


OUT 

Yannick Bolasie (Everton, £30m) 

Dwight Gayle (Newcastle United, £10m)

Mile Jedinak (Aston Villa, £4m) 

Alex McCarthy (Southampton, undisclosed)

Jerome Binnom-Williams (Peterborough United, undisclosed)

Jake Gray (Luton Town, free) 

Emmanuel Adebayor (released)

Marouane Chamakh (released)

Brede Hangeland (released)

Adrian Mariappa (released)

Paddy McCarthy (released)

Freddie Ladapo (Oldham, loan) 

Jonny Williams (Ipswich, loan) 


 
EVERTON 

IN

Yannick Bolasie (Crystal Palace, £30m) 

Ashley Williams (Swansea, £9m) 

Idrissa Gana Gueye (Aston Villa, £7.1m) 

Maarten Stekelenburg (Fulham, undisclosed)

Dominic Calvert-Lewin (Sheffield United, £15.m) 

Enner Valencia (West Ham United, loan) 

OUT

John Stones (Manchester City, £47.5m)

Steven Pienaar (Sunderland, free) 

Tony Hibbert (released)

Leon Osman (released)

Luke Garbutt (Wigan Athletic, loan)

Aiden McGeady (Preston North End, loan) 



 
HULL CITY 

IN

Will Mannion (AFC Wimbledon, compensation) 

David Marshall (Cardiff, undisclosed)

Ryan Mason (Tottenham, undisclosed)

James Weir (Manchester United, undisclosed) 

Dieumerci Mbokani (Dynamo Kiev, loan) 

Markus Henriksen (AZ Alkmaar, loan) 

OUT

Mohamed Diame (Newcastle United, £4.5m) 

Sone Aluko (Fulham, free)

Calaum Jahraldo-Martin (Oldham Athletic, free) 

Ryan Taylor (released) 



 
LEICESTER CITY 

IN

Islam Slimani (Sporting Lisbon, £29.7m) 

Ahmed Musa (CSKA Moscow, £18m) 

Nampalys Mendy (Nice, £13m) 

Bartosz Kapustka (Cracovia, £7.5m)

Ron-Robert Zieler (Hannover 69, undisclosed)

Luis Hernandez (Sporting Gijon, undisclosed)

Raul Uche Rubio (Rayo Vallecano, undisclosed)

OUT

N'Golo Kante (Chelsea, £32m)

Liam Moore (Reading, £1m) 

Gokhan Inler (Besiktas, undisclosed) 

Andrej Kramaric (Hoffenheim, undisclosed)

Joe Dodoo (Rangers, compensation)

Paul Konchesky (Gillingham, free) 

Ryan Watson (Barnet, free) 

Dean Hammond (released)

Harry Panayiotou (released)

Mark Schwarzer (released)

Michael Cain (Blackpool, loan) 

Tom Lawrence (Ipswich, loan) 



 
LIVERPOOL 

IN 

Sadio Mane (Southampton, £30m)

Georginio Wijnaldum (Newcastle United, £25m) 

Ragnar Klavan (Augsburg, £5m)  

Loris Karius (Mainz, £4.7m) 

Joel Matip (Schalke, free)

Alex Manninger (Augsburg, free)

OUT 

Christian Benteke (Crystal Palace, £32m) 

Jordon Ibe (Bournemouth, £15m)

Joe Allen (Stoke City, £13.5m)

Brad Smith (Bournemouth, £6m)  

Martin Skrtel (Fenerbahce, £5m)

Luis Alberto (Lazio, £4.3m) 

Jerome Sinclair (Watford, £4m)

Sergi Canos (Norwich City (£2.5m) 

Lawrence Vigouroux (Swindon Town, £400,000)  

Jordan Rossiter (Rangers, £250,000)

Mario Balotelli (Nice, free) 

Jose Enrique (released)

Kolo Toure (released)

Samed Yesil (released)

Jon Flanagan (Burnley, loan) 

Danny Ward (Huddersfield Town, loan)

Adam Bogdan (Wigan Athletic, loan)

Ryan Kent (Barnsley, loan) 

Andre Wisdom (Red Bull Salzburg, loan) 

Lazar Markovic (Sporting Lisbon, loan) 



 
MANCHESTER CITY 

IN

John Stones (Everton, £47.5m)  

Leroy Sane (Schalke, £42m)

Gabriel Jesus (Palmeiras, £27m) 

Ilkay Gundogan (Borussia Dortmund, £21m)

Claudio Bravo (Barcelona, £17m) 

Nolito (Celta Vigo £14m)

Marlos Moreno (Atletico Nacional, £4.5m) 

Oleksandr Zinchenko (Ufa, undisclosed)

Aaron Mooy (Melbourne City, swap deal)  

OUT

Marlos Moreno (Deportivo La Coruna, loan) 

Aaron Mooy (Huddersfield, loan) 

Martin Demichelis (released)

Richard Wright (retired) 

Sinan Bytyqi (Go Ahead Eagles, loan)

Joe Hart (Torino, loan) 

Wilfried Bony (Stoke City, loan) 

Samir Nasri (Sevilla, loan)

Eliaquim Mangala (Valencia, loan) 

Jason Denayer (Sunderland, loan) 



 
MANCHESTER UNITED 

IN

Paul Pogba (Juventus, £100m) 

Eric Bailly (Villarreal, £30m)

Henrikh Mkhitaryan (Borussia Dortmund, £26m)

Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Paris Saint-Germain, free)

OUT

Donald Love (Sunderland, combined £5.5m)

Paddy McNair (Sunderland, combined £5.5m) 

Ashley Fletcher (West Ham United, £700,000) 

Tyler Reid (Swansea City, undisclosed)

James Weir (Hull City, undisclosed) 

Victor Valdes (Middlesbrough, free)

Nick Powell (Wigan Athletic, free) 

Guillermo Varela (Eintracht Frankfurt, loan)

Adnan Januzaj (Sunderland, loan)

James Wilson (Derby County, loan) 

Andreas Pereira (Granada, loan) 

 
MIDDLESBROUGH

IN

Marten De Roon (Atalanta, £12m)

Viktor Fischer (Ajax, £3.8m)

Antonio Barragan (Valencia, £3m)

Fabio da Silva (Cardiff City, undisclosed)

Adama Traore (Aston Villa, undisclosed) 

Victor Valdes (Manchester United, free)

Brad Guzan (Aston Villa, free) 

Bernardo Espinosa (Sporting Gijon, free) 

Jordan McGhee (Hearts, loan)

Alvaro Negredo (Valencia, loan) 

OUT

Albert Adomah (Aston Villa, undisclosed)

Adam Reach (Sheffield Wednesday, undisclosed) 

Rhys Williams (Perth Glory, free)

Jordan Jones (Kilmarnock, free) 

Jonathan Woodgate (released)

Damia Abella (released)

Connor Ripley (Oldham Athletic, loan) 

Albert Adomah (Aston Villa, loan) 


 
SOUTHAMPTON 

IN

Sofiane Boufal (Lille, £16m) 

Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg (Bayern Munich, £12m)  

Nathan Redmond (Norwich City, £11m)

Alex McCarthy (Crystal Palace, undisclosed)

Jeremy Pied (Nice, free) 

Stuart Taylor (Unattached, free) 

OUT

Sadio Mane (Liverpool, £30m)

Graziano Pelle (Shandong Luneng, £13m) 

Victor Wanyama (Tottenham Hotspur, £11m) 

Gaston Ramirez (released)

Kelvin Davis (retired)

Jason McCarthy (Walsall, loan) 

Paulo Gazzaniga (Rayo Vallecano, loan)

Sam Gallagher (Blackburn Rovers, loan) 



 
STOKE CITY 



Joe Allen (Liverpool, £13.5m) 

Ramadan Sobhi (Al Ahly, £5m)

Cameron McJannett (Luton Town, undisclosed) 

Ryan Sweeney (Wimbledon, loan) 

Lee Grant (Derby County, loan) 

Wilfried Bony (Manchester City, loan)

Bruno Martins Indi (Porto, loan) 

OUT

Marc Wilson (Bournemouth, £2m) 

Steve Sidwell (Brighton, free) 

Peter Odemwingie (released) 

 
SUNDERLAND 

IN   

Didier Ndong (Lorient, £13.5m) 

Papy Djilobodji (Chelsea, £8m)

Donald Love (Manchester United, combined £5.5m)

Paddy McNair (Manchester United, combined £5.5m)

Steven Pienaar (Everton, free) 

Adnan Januzaj (Manchester United, loan) 

Javier Manquillo (Atletico Madrid, loan) 

Jason Denayer (Manchester City, loan) 

OUT 

Younes Kaboul (Watford, £3.5m) 

Emanuele Giaccherini (Napoli, £2m)

Jordi Gomez (Wigan Athletic, undisclosed) 

Liam Bridcutt (Leeds United, undisclosed)

Danny Graham (Blackburn Rovers, free) 

Steven Fletcher (Sheffield Wednesday, free) 

Wes Brown (released)

Steve Harper (released)

Mikael Mandron (released)

Liam Agnew (released)

Will Buckley (Sheffield Wednesday, loan) 

Adam Matthews (Bristol City, loan) 

Jeremain Lens (Fenerbahce, loan)



 
SWANSEA CITY 

IN

Borja Baston (Atletico Madrid, £15.5m) 

Leroy Fer (QPR, £3.5m)

Mike van der Hoorn (Ajax, £2m)

Tyler Reid (Manchester United, undisclosed)

Fernando Llorente (Sevilla, loan) 

George Byers (Watford, free)

Mark Birighitti (Newcastle Jets, free) 

OUT

Andre Ayew (West Ham United, £20.5m)

Ashley Williams (Everton, £9m) 

Alberto Paloschi (Atalanta, £6m) 

Eder (Lille, £4m)

Daniel Alfei (released)

Lee Lucas (released)

Bafetimbi Gomis (Marseille, loan) 

Matt Grimes (Leeds United, loan) 

Kyle Bartley (Leeds United, loan) 

Liam Shephard (Yeovil Town, loan) 

Kenji Gorre (Northampton Town, loan)

Adam King (Southend United, loan)

Josh Sheehan (Newport County, loan) 

Franck Tabanou (Granada, loan)

Marvin Emnes (Blackburn Rovers, loan) 



 
TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR  

IN

Moussa Sissoko (Newcastle United, £30m) 

Vincent Janssen (AZ Alkmaar, £18.5m) 

Victor Wanyama (Southampton, £11m)

Georges-Kevin Nkoudou (Marseille, £10m)

Pau Lopez (Espanyol, loan) 

OUT

Nacer Chadli (West Bromwich Albion, £13m) 

Alex Pritchard (Norwich City, £8m)

Dominic Ball (Rotherham United, undisclosed) 

Ryan Mason (Hull, undisclosed) 

Federico Fazio (Roma, loan) 

Clinton Njie (Marseille, loan)



 
WATFORD

IN

Roberto Pereyra (Juventus, £13m) 

Isaac Success (Granada, £12m) 

Christian Kabasele (Racing Genk, £5.8m)

Jerome Sinclair (Liverpool, £4m)

Brice Dja Djedje (Marseille, £4m)

Younes Kaboul (Sunderland, £3.5m) 

Stefano Okaka (Anderlecht, undisclosed) 

Juan Zuniga (Napoli, loan)

Adrian Mariappa (Crystal Palace, free) 

OUT

Ikechi Anya (Derby County, £4m)

Allan Nyom (West Bromwich Albion, undisclosed) 

Gabriele Angella (Udinese, undisclosed) 

Jurado (Espanyol, undisclosed)

Almen Abdi (Sheffield Wednesday, undisclosed)

Daniel Pudil (Sheffield Wednesday (undisclosed) 

George Byers (Swansea City, free) 

Joel Ekstrand (released) 

Josh Doherty (released)

Steven Berghuis (Feyenoord, loan) 


 
WEST BROMWICH ALBION 

IN

Nacer Chadli (Tottenham Hotspur, £13m) 

Matty Phillips (QPR, £5.5m)

Allan Nyom (Watford, undisclosed) 

Hal Robson-Kanu (Reading, free) 

Brendan Galloway (Everton, loan) 

OUT

Rickie Lambert (Cardiff City, undisclosed) 

Anders Lindegaard (Preston North End, free) 

Victor Anichebe (released)

Stephane Sessegnon (released)

Tyler Roberts (Oxford United, loan) 

Cristian Gamboa (Celtic, undisclosed)

Sebastien Pocognoli (Brighton, loan) 


 
WEST HAM UNITED 

IN

Andre Ayew (Swansea City, £20.5m)

Arthur Masuaku (Olympiacos, £6m) 

Edmilson Fernandes (Sion, £5.5m)  

Toni Martinez (Valencia, £2.4m)

Ashley Fletcher (Manchester United, £700,000)

Sofiane Feghouli (Valencia, free)

Havard Nordtveit (Borussia Monchengladbach, free)

Gokhan Tore (Besiktas, loan)

Jonathan Calleri (Deportivo Maldonado, loan)

Alvaro Arbeloa (Real Madrid, free) 




OUT

James Tomkins (Crystal Palace, £10m) 

Elliot Lee (Barnsley, free)

Joey O'Brien (released) 

Jordan Brown (released)

Leo Chambers (released)

Diego Poyet (released) 

Stephen Hendrie (Blackburn Rovers, loan) 

Kyle Knoyle (Wigan Athletic, loan) 

Josh Cullen (Bradford City, loan)

Lewis Page (Coventry City, loan)

Enner Valencia (Everton, loan)


 

Source: daily mail.

Saturday 2 July 2016

Confirmed! Watford signs Nigerian twenty year old Isaac success for a club record fee.

Watford has payed a club record fee  £12.5 for the Nigerian Under 23 striker Isaac Success from the Spanish outfit Granada.

Success whom was named Granada player for the season the last season has agreed a five year deal with watford.

He made 56 appearances and could only manage 7 goals.

The twenty year old Nigerian international will meet up with fellow compatriot odion ighalo.

Friday 1 July 2016

Impressive Wales matches on to semifinals after a convincing win against Belgium. To set up a bale v Ronaldo show down.

The spirit of Johan Cruyff lives on. Of all the players that would embody it at this European Championship, however, few were expecting Hal Robson-Kanu.

The Wales striker doesn’t even have a club right now. Released by Reading, no takers so far. There will be after this. The greatest goal in Welsh history – in both senses of the word? Probably. Robson-Kanu put Wales into the semi-final of their first tournament since 1958, so no goal has been more significant.

And the quality – well it’s up there, too, a Cruyff turn in the penalty area of such perfect execution that Thomas Meunier needed his passport to get back in the country. It is a short trip to the Belgium border and Meunier and several team-mates were well on the way before they realised Robson-Kanu had changed direction.

Radja Nainggolan smashes the ball goalwards from distance, a blistering strike that flew into the top corner to give Belgium the lead

Wales goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey opted to go for the ball two-handed, and although he got fingertips to the ball he could not  stop it

Wales captain Ashley Williams rises, almost unmarked, seven yards out to meet Aaron Ramsey's corner and head in the equaliser

Kevin De Bruyne tries to clear the ball off the line, but having come off his post the Manchester City midfielder could not prevent the goal

Williams shows his delight after the equaliser that Wales had thoroughly deserved, and he sets off in celebration with Bale behind him

Robson-Kanu, without a club after being released by Reading at the end of this season, celebrates his quite brilliant goal to make it 2-1
Sam Vokes rises above Toby Alderweireld to sublimely head Chris Gunter's cross  over Courtois to wrap up the win for Wales

MATCH FACTS

Wales (3-4-2-1): Hennessey 7.5; Chester 7.5, A Williams 8.5, Davies 7.5; Gunter 8, Allen 8, Ledley 8 (King 78 mins), Taylor 8; Bale 8 Ramsey 9 (Collins 90); Robson-Kanu (Vokes 80) 8

Subs not used: Fon Williams, George Williams, Edwards, Richards, Cotterill, Jonathan Williams, Vaughan, Church, Ward

Manager: Chris Coleman 9

Booked: Davies, Chester, Gunter, Ramsey

Goals: Williams 30, Robson-Kanu 55, Vokes 85

Belgium (4-2-3-1): Courtois; Meunier 7.5, Alderweireld 6, Denayer 5, J Lukaku 5.5 (Mertens 76); Nainggolan 7, Witsel 6; Carrasco 6 (Fellaini 46 5), De Bruyne 6, Hazard 6.5; R Lukaku 6

Manager: Marc Wilmots 5

Subs not used: Mignolet, Origi,Kabasele, Dembele, Benteke, Ciman, Gillet

Booked: Fellaini, Alderweireld

Goal: Nainggolan 13

Referee: Damir Skomina (Slovenia) 7

Ratings by Laurie Whitwell

Belgium were on top of the time, and had probably grown complacent. Aaron Ramsey was allowed to carry the ball upfield untroubled, find Robson-Kanu in a tight space. First he battled to keep Meunier off, then he twisted and pulled the ball inside as the Dutch master would.

And in one leap, he was free. Alone. Only Thibaut Courtois to beat. Don’t let anyone tell you that, by then, Robson-Kanu had done the hard part. It would have been so easy to miss from there. So easy to panic and rush the shot, or hit it straight at Courtois.

Robson-Kanu placed it, beautifully, and with the same effect as Iceland’s second goal in Nice. Belgium, from there, looked done. Scared. Jittery.

They knew this was their match – their tournament maybe – to win. This is their golden generation.

It’s funny how nobody ever says that of Wales. Maybe that is the secret. Maybe that is what is pushing this team to greater and greater heights.

Certainly, the denouement was unimagined. A Belgium fightback? A Welsh Alamo? Hardly. With four minutes to go, Chris Gunter crossed from the right and Sam Vokes met his head in a way a succession of Belgian giants – Romelu Lukaku, Marouane Felaini – could not.

Courtois was beaten and so were the tournament’s dark horses. Beaten by the darkest horses of all. The one man team that is, in reality, about anything but one man.

It will have come as some surprise to those who blame English lethargy at tournaments on the absence of a winter break to see this, arguably the most exhilarating opening 45 minutes of tournament football so far.

Of the 22 players that started, 15 are based in England, yet there was little sign of tiredness on either side, as both went at it hammer and tongs.

Belgium were outstanding from the off and deservedly went ahead, but Wales responded magnificently, got a goal back, forged more chances, particularly from set pieces and went in at half-time deservedly level.

Indeed, far from sitting back and soaking up pressure as many expected, they were as comfortable having the ball as chasing it. When the possession statistics flashed up on the board after 37 minutes, Wales had 55 per cent.

As with Iceland, it is patronising to suggest they are a team without attacking ambition.

SUPER STAT

10 - Sam Vokes’ header was Wales’ 10th goal of the tournament. No one has scored more than them in this Euros.

Belgium are second with nine, France, Iceland, Germany and Portugal areon six.

No team with Gareth Bale in it is ever boring and with three of Belgium’s first-choice defenders missing, there was always the chance he would get on the ball and cause Belgium a significant problem.

That is what he did when Wales defeated Belgium last year and it was clear they feared a repeat here.

Jordan Lukaku – younger brother of Romelu, the striker – was required to deal with Bale, but he invariably had reinforcements. The only time Bale got away in the first-half was on the counter-attack after 34 minutes, a breakaway that saw him pursued and closed down by three Belgian defenders, before aiming a lot shot which Thibaut Courtois easily mopped up.

The biggest problem for Wales in the first-half was the number of bookings they racked up – three in the first 25 minutes, the majority of Chris Coleman’s defence.

The game was just five minutes old when Ben Davies fouled Kevin De Bruyne, receiving a yellow card from Slovenian referee Damir Skomina. Davies knew from then he would miss the semi-final, if Wales could get that far.

It should have served as a warning – instead Wales continued to make silly, and costly, fouls. James Chester blatantly tripped Romelu Lukaku after 16 minutes, and was rightly booked, before Gunter very obviously pulled back De Bruyne in an innocuous position nine minutes later.

By then, Wales must have known Skomina was not scared to produce a card for a first offence, which he  surely did.

Only a superb reaction save from Courtois to deny Neil Taylor prevented Wales levelling on 25 minutes, but it didn't keep them out for long

Williams' header found the corner of the net, as clever movement and an excellent delivery allowed him the perfect opportunity

Throughout this period, Belgium were in the ascendancy and Wales were fortunate not to go behind sooner.

From one move alone, Belgium spurned three chances to score.

There were seven minutes gone when Lukaku senior broke down the left flank and put in a cross that should have created Belgium’s first goal. It fell to Yannick Carrasco at the far post, but slightly behind him, and he needed time to bring it under control. When he did, Wales goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey was already diving full length to smother his shot, which he did, brilliantly.

The ball flew out to right back Thomas Meunier who returned it with venom, only for Neil Taylor to block on the line. Out it came again, this time to Eden Hazard, and smashed goalwards again – but between them Taylor and Hennessey somehow diverted it over the bar.

Hazard then swung in the corner which Romelu Lukaku failed to meet at the far post, unmarked. Wales were living dangerously indeed.

In the 13th minute, Belgium took the lead. Joe Allen gave the ball away in midfield, allowing them to attack. Jordan Lukaku went down the wing, found Hazard inside and he slipped the ball into the path of Radja Nainggolan.

It was a goal almost as soon as it left his boot – one of those positions where the audacity of trying the shot is the first thought, quickly erased by the excellence of the goal.

It went in like a rocket, Hennessey getting no more than fingertips to the ball and with no chance of altering the trajectory.

For Nainggolan, it was redemption of sorts, having been blamed for the mistake that allowed Wales to win the last meeting between the sides.

For Hazard, it was his fourth assist of the tournament – overtaking the number he recorded for Chelsea through the entire Premier League season. One would like to be a fly on the wall at Jose Mourinho’s holiday resort.

Jason Denayer can only watch on as Robson-Kanu, having tricked his way past a static defence, slots the ball past Courtois

Robson-Kanu's goal saw Wales take the lead against the tournament's highest-ranked side, and put them on course for the last four

Wales could have crumbled – England probably would – but Coleman’s team is made of sterner stuff. From that reverse, they carved their best chance of the match, and an eventual equaliser.

Courtois in Belguim’s goal hadn’t had much to do until that point, but he pulled off the save of the match after 26 minutes.

It came from a cross by Aaron Ramsey, cut back from the right by-line and met by the unlikely figure of Taylor, already on the scoresheet at these championships, much to everyone’s amazement.

He hit it first time, but Courtois somehow got a hand to it recovering his position across goal, diverting it for a corner.

Yet set pieces are where Wales are dangerous – and five minutes later that was confirmed. It looked like a rolling maul in the centre of the area before Ramsey’s corner came in, but that was all part of the diversionary plan. When the smoke cleared, there was captain Ashley Williams, unmarked.

Jason Denayer recognised the danger but too late, and Williams gave Courtois no chance with his header.

De Bruyne, on the line, might have been able to do something about it – but he had come out slightly, and couldn’t get boot to ball in time.

From there, the action swung to the other end. Now it was Belgium’s turn to try to retrieve the advantage. Carrasco crossed and Hennessey’s fingertips took the ball from Romelu Lukaku’s head at a vital moment. Meunier crossed and Lukaku steered a free header wide.

On the left, Hazard cut inside – his trademark move – and curled a shot out of reach of Hennessey and just wide of the far post.

The crowd at the Stade Pierre Mauroy, predominantly Belgium having popped over the border, must have felt a goal was bound to come.

Wales, and Robson-Kanu had other ideas.

Wales celebrate in front of their delighted fans as Vokes header confirms their place in the last four, where they  will meet Portugal.

Monday 27 June 2016

Spain's reign ends in pain. As Italy advances to the last eight in there expense.

QUARTER-FINAL DRAW

Poland vs Portugal

Wales vs Belgium

Germany vs Italy

France vs Iceland

Not just the end of a tournament for Spain but the end of an era. In all likelihood this meek defeat to a terrific and emerging Italian team will spell the end of coach Vicente del Bosque too.

This was a crushing defeat for Spain, the European champions of 2012 and 2008. Del Bosque’s team were outplayed and out thought by a magnificent Italian side led by the incredible life force that is the incoming Chelsea coach Antonio Conte.

It was a two goal margin but it could have been more.

Goalkeeper David de Gea was Spain’s best player and they only created one good chance all game, Italian totem Gianluigi Buffon saving brilliantly from Gerard Pique in the very last minute of normal time.

Who would have thought we would ever say such a thing about Spain? As usual, they had much of the ball but this time they did nothing with it.


Graziano Pelle fires the ball past David De Gea in the dying stages of the match to make sure of Italy's knockout victory over Spain


MATCH FACTS

Italy (4-4-2): Buffon 8, Barzagli 6, Bonucci 8.5, Chiellini 7, Florenzi 7 (Darmian 84), Parolo 6, De Rossi 6 (Motta 54, 6), Giaccherini 7.5, De Scigilio 7, Pelle 7.5, Eder 7 (Insigne 81)

Subs not used: Ogbonna, Candeva, Zaza, Immobile, Sirigu, Marchetti, Stuaro, Bernadeschi, El Shaarawy

Booked: De Sciglio, Pelle, Motta

Scorers: Chiellini 33, Pelle 90

Manager: Conte, 7

Spain (4-4-2): De Gea 8, Juanfran 6, Pique 5.5, Ramos 5, Alba 5.5, Fabregas 5, Busquets 5, Iniesta 6.5, Silva 6, Morata 4.5 (Vazquez 70, 5), Nolito 4 (Aduriz 45, 5, Pedro 81)

Subs not used: Casillas, Azpilicueta, Bartra, Koke, Bellerin, Alcantara, San Jose, Bruno, Rico

Manager: Vicente Del Bosque, 6

Booked: Nolito

Referee: Cuneyt Cakir, 5

While Italy looked youthful and energetic and hungry, Spain looked like a team short of inspiration and ideas, like a team that knew there was a plane home waiting. They looked like a team that needs the change of direction that will surely now come with a change of coach.

Del Bosque has done his bit, that’s for sure. Two European Championships and one World Cup. His team taught the world a few things in South Africa in 2010 and we shall never forget that. They played football in that tournament that most teams reserve for the five-a-side pitches in training.

Here in France, though, Del Bosque has looked a little like the struggle to maintain impossible standards has finally caught up with him and it has been reflected in his team’s football over their last two games. Maybe, on refection, this was a tournament too far for the 65-year-old.

Yesterday in Paris Spain were caught on the back foot by Italy’s purposeful start and never really recovered. De Gea kept his country in it early on but he is a goalkeeper not a brick wall. Eventually even he had to roll over.

Italy were excellent, surprisingly so. Really they were. Conte’s team have only conceded one goal in the whole tournament but here we saw more than clichéd Italian stubbornness. We saw a team with imagination, dexterity and confidence.

In the Bologna midfielder Emanuele Giaccherini Italy had the game’s best player. The galloping left-wing back Mattia De Sciglio was terrific, too, as was Southampton’s Graziano Pelle in attack. When Pelle’s goal arrived in added time, nobody deserved it more.

Earlier on in the game, as the rain poured down, the signs of what was to come were there, if not the goals.

Italy sprang from the blocks and De Gea was required to make two really good saves in the first eleven minutes. The first, from a Pelle header, was instantly recognisable, a plunge low to the left. Then another followed, this time from a Giacceherini scissor kick.

As Spain struggled to settle and began to visibly ask each other questions, we wondered when they would find themselves.

Cesc Fabregas had a chance but struck the shot poorly and then previous service resumed, Marco Parolo heading a De Sciglio cross wide and another cross from the Milan full-back being sliced over his own bar by a nervous Ramos
Ramos and Pique were awful all game, just as they had been against Croatia last week. Theirs looks less like a partnership and more like an arranged marriage. It will be interesting to see what the next Spain coach makes of it and pretty soon the two of them were reflecting on the first Italian goal.

A free-kick conceded by Ramos was struck fiercely by Parolo and when De Gea couldn’t hold it defender Giorgio Chiellini hacked the ball over the line.

The lead was fully deserved and Giaccherini would have extended it had De Gea not saved his curling shot just before half-time.

Beyond that, Spain did improve but they were never convincing. A beautiful Pelle flick released Eder in the 56th minute only for De Gea to block and Italy then retreated in an attempt to draw the Spaniards’ sting.

Buffon, 39 next season, had not been over-employed but perhaps knew what was coming. First, he repelled two strong shots from distance from Andres Iniesta and Pique before producing the kind of save of which he is still eminently capable as the clock ticked towards full-time.

Italy conceded a needless free-kick in their own half and when a flick-on dropped over the blue rear guard, Pique turned it goalwards. It was not a sweet contact from the Barcelona player but it looked like being enough until Buffon dropped to his right and pawed the ball away with his bottom hand.

In terms of importance, it was the save of the tournament so far and Italy made good on it by breaking quickly. Lorenzo Insigne spread the ball to Matteo Darmian and when the substitute’s pass was deflected up in to Pelle’s path he crashed the ball past De Gea to settle the argument.



FIXTURES & RESULTS GROUP TABLE KNOCKOUT STAGE


Group APPts

Group BPPts

Group CPPts

Group DPPts

Group EPPts

Group FPPts

Hodgson resigns as England's boss after humiliating defeat.


Roy Hodgson has resigned as England manager after his team were beaten 2-1 by Iceland to seal their humiliating exit from Euro 2016.

The embarrassing defeat to the tournament minnows was one of the lowest points in the nation's footballing history as goals from Ragnar Sigurdsson and Kolbeinn Sigthorsson meant it was a night of yet more abject failure for the dejected Three Lions.

It left Hodgson, who was England's highest-paid manager, earning £3.5million a year on his bumper FA contract, unable to continue as manager. Iceland manager Lars Lagerback, in contrast to Hodgson, is paid just £346,000 a year.

The 68-year-old quit in the immediate aftermath of the post-match press conference after the Iceland defeat
Hodgson's team were humiliated 2-1 by Iceland on Monday night on an evening of abject failure in France

NEXT ENGLAND MANAGER ODDS

Gareth Southgate 6/1

Gary Neville 8/1

Alan Pardew 10/1

Brendan Rodgers 16/1

Sam Allardyce 20/1

Eddie Howe 20/1

Arsene Wenger 20/1

Stewart Baxter 25/1

Jose Mourinho 25/1

David Moyes 25/1 

BAR 33/2


Hodgson, clearly dejected at the performance his team had put in, announced his resignation immediately after the final whistle.

The 68-year-old entered the post-match press conference and gave a short statement before exiting the media circus.  

Ray Lewington and Gary Neville, Hodgson's assistants with England, will also leave their positions with immediate effect. 

'I'm extremely disappointed, of course, about tonight's result and ultimately our exit from the competition,' Hodgson said. 

'We haven't progressed as far as I thought we were capable of, and that's obviously not acceptable. I am actually proud of the work that my coaching staff and I have achieved in our time at the helm with England.' 

 Hodgson realises his time with England is all but over as the Three Lions are humiliated by minnows Iceland

Captain Wayne Rooney receives Hodgson's congratulations despite his team going down to a 2-1 defeat

Joe Hart and the rest of the England team reflect on the defeat which has ultimately cost Hodgson his job

Hodgson added: 'The transition from a squad whose average was 30 to now being the youngest in the tournament is both remarkable and exciting for the future of English football.

'I would have loved to stay on for another two years, however I am pragmatic and know that we are in the results business.

'My contract was always up after the Euros so now is the time for someone else to oversee the progress of this young, hungry and extremely talented group of players.

'They've been fantastic and they have done everything that has been asked of them.

'When I arrived I was told that players didn't turn up to play for their country or that they pull out at the last minute. But I have not seen any of that.

'These players love to play for their country and their commitment has been unquestioned.

'Ray and Gary have asked me to speak on their behalf. They arrived with me as part of my coaching team and they'll leave with me.

'I'd like to thank them for their dedicated support and for the major part they've played in our team preparation.

'Finally I'd like to thank all the support staff, players, the FA and of course the fans.

'It's been a fantastic journey these four years and it's one I'll look back on or remember with pride.

'Finally I'd like to thank you, the media, for the support that you've given me over the four years.

'I am sorry it's had to end this way with another exit from the tournament but these things happen. 

'All I can do is wish everybody all the very best and hope that you will still be able to see an England team in a final of a major tournament fairly soon. 

'We've been unable to deliver. Thank you very much.' 

England were truly awful against Iceland, a country with a total population equivalent to the city of Leicester

Hodgson's England career is now at an end after he failed to secure big tournament success once again

The Football Association insisted Hodgson had composed his resignation statement in the dressing room after the match, rather than having prepared his exit speech before the Iceland result.

But his quitting of the biggest job in English football means the FA must start again in the wake of yet more tournament failure.

A statement released by the FA following their team's disappointment read: 'Like the nation, we are disappointed to lose this evening and that our run in Euro 2016 has come to a premature end. 

'We had high hopes of progressing through to the latter stages of the competition and accept that we have not met our own expectations or those of the country.

'We back Roy Hodgson’s decision to step down as England manager and will discuss the next steps imminently. For now, we congratulate Iceland for reaching the quarter final and wish them well against France at the weekend.

'Finally, our sincere thanks go to the travelling fans for their incredible support tonight and to everyone back home for getting behind the team.'  

Hodgson's departure - alongside that of assistants Lewington and Neville - is the icing on the cake of yet another disastrous few weeks for the national side. 

Failure to win their group at Euro 2016 saw England paired with Iceland in the last 16 but even that proved too much for captain Wayne Rooney and his team of abject disappointments. 

Rooney had opened the scoring with an early penalty but Sigurdsson soon equalised after some shocking England defending from a throw. 

Sigthorsson then put the smallest team in the tournament, a country with a population of the size of Leicester, ahead for an advantage they were to eventually hold on to. 

England huffed and puffed as they tried to get back into the game but they never really looked like scoring in what was a woeful team performance. 

Iceland looked the more organised side as England struggled to string five-yard passes together. 

The result was a night of ignominy and when the dust settles, there will be serious questions to be answered for all of those involved.

England disgracefully bows out of euros.


A lot of people in England have been trying to turn back time over the last few days – and Roy Hodgson managed to get it all the way back to Belo Horizonte in 1950.

Not since a distant World Cup, 66 years ago, have England suffered a humiliation as great as this. Beaten by Iceland – a nation with a population the size of Leicester, playing in their first international tournament. For Hodgson, this was the bitter end. His players were booed, individually and collectively, and there was none of the residue of goodwill felt at the end of the 2014 World Cup.

He will go now, as he should have then, the signs of progress that the Football Association demanded sadly absent in a display as confused and ineffectual as any England have delivered at a major tournament to date. Beaten by the United States in 1950, England at least had mitigation. It was their first tournament, and in South America. These were unfamiliar circumstances.

Iceland goalkeeper Hannes Halldorsson dives the right way but he fails to keep out Rooney's low right-footed driven penalty

England were awarded a penalty when Manchester City winger Raheem Sterling was brought down by the Iceland custodian
Sterling goes down under an early challenge by Halldorsson to concede a penalty and hand the early initiative to the Three Lions

MATCH FACTS 

ENGLAND XI (4-3-3): Hart 4; Walker 4, Cahill 4.5, Smalling 4.5, Rose 6; Dier 5 (Wilshere 46mins, 6), Alli 4.5, Rooney 4 (Rashford 86, 6.5); Sturridge 4.5, Kane 4, Sterling 5.5 (Vardy 60, 6.5)

Subs not used: Forster, Heaton, Milner, Lallana, Clyne, Henderson, Stones, Barkley, Bertrand 

Goal: Rooney 4

Booked: Sturridge

Manager: Roy Hodgson 3.5 

ICELAND XI (4-4-2): Halldorsson 7; Saevarsson 7, Arnason 8, R. Sigurdsson 9, Skulason 8; Gudmundsson 8.5, G. Sigurdsson 8, Gunnarsson 8.5, Bjarnason 7; Sigthorsson 8.5 (Bjarnason 77, 7), Bodvarsson 8 (Traustason 89, 6)

Subs not used: Hauksson, Hermannsson, Ingason, Finnbogason, Krintinsson, Jonsson, Sigurjonsson, Magnusson, Hallfredsson, Gudjohnsen

Goals: R. Sigurdsson 6, Sigthorsson 18

Booked: G. Sigurdsson, Gunnarsson

Referee: Damir Skomina (Slovenia) 6

Ratings by Rob Draper 

What are the excuses here? It was hot. It's England playing Iceland. It’s a young team? It's England  playing Iceland. England had a lot of possession? It's England  playing Iceland. England will  be better next time. Iceland, Iceland, Iceland.

England’s opponents were organised and defended magnificently, but this is a limited team who were thrilled to be involved in a knockout game at a debut tournament. All week they talked of their excitement at facing England – a team of players brought up on the Premier League. Yet there was no gulf in class on the night, no suggestion that England had the answers as they huffed and puffed their way through the second half.

Hodgson’s England, packed full of matchwinners we were told, had 70 minutes to equalise and could not. Joe Hart made the best two saves after half-time. There is no way back for Hodgson now. England will spend the rest of the summer looking for a new manager – and a way forward from here. 

It was hard to compute the feeling of shock inside this stadium when Slovakian referee Damir Skomina blew for half-time. Iceland jubilant in a way few can have imagined, England despairing and fearful. Any optimism was based on history and presumption, the inherent belief that there was no way England, this team that has been built up to be so full of promise and verve, could lose to Iceland, even on a bad day. 

Yet this was a very a bad day; a day gone bad beyond all expectation. England had the dream start, the early goal that it was felt would decide this match without doubt in their favour. Iceland would then have to come out of their shell, which is not their style, and attack, which is not their strength.

Bring it on. Ha ha. Two goals and 15 minutes later it transpired England’s defence are in no position to lay down that gauntlet to any opponent – even one built on resilience and cussedness as Iceland are. 

Before this tournament, Roy Hodgson scoffed when told England defence was weak. He pointed to a strong defensive record in a qualifying group that was not so much toothless as positively gummy; he flagged up a clean sheet against a Portugal team shorn of Cristiano Ronaldo and its 11th man before half-time in a friendly. Here was the dreaded reality. An England team unable to hold a lead against Iceland for, what, two minutes. 

An England goalkeeper now at fault for two goals in four games in a tournament. Hart, it transpires, is not as free of flakiness as his shampoo sponsors would have us believe.

Hodgson will have had a plan for this match and we can presume the first five minutes went to it. Daniel Sturridge cut inside from the right, where he is presently exiled, and hit a weak shot wide. A loosener, really. A statement of intent. This was going to be how the game unfolded. England having a go, Iceland establishing banks of resistance. 

Just two minutes later, Sturridge played a ball to his former Liverpool team-mate Raheem Sterling, and England were away. Out came Iceland goalkeeper Hannes Halldorsson – hero of the win over Austria that brought them here – and he clumsily took Sterling down. It was a silly foul, one of a player unused to the nerves that an occasion such as this can bring. Sterling was heading away from goal, going nowhere. Still, it was a penalty and Wayne Rooney stepped up to take it. Low, to the left, it was his 53rd goal in an England shirt, and the one intended to settle the nerves. England did not last long enough to even consider their emotional state.

Iceland levelled the scoreline just two minutes after England's opener as Ragnar Sigurdsson poked home from close range to make it 1-1

Sigurdsson's equalising goal came from Cardiff City midfielder Aron Gunnarsson's long throw-in which evaded England defenders.
Kari Arnason flicked the ball on from the initial Gunnarsson throw before the ball eventually fell at the feet of Sigurdsson to poke home

HOW LEE DIXON SLAMMED ENGLAND 

England’s defending at the long throw that let Iceland back into the game was slammed by former England and Arsenal defender Lee Dixon.

The ITV pundit savaged the way Ragnar Sigurdsson was allowed to equalise. ‘I don’t know where to start,’ said Dixon. ‘We knew we were going to get throw-ins. They (Iceland) set up the same way every single time. So you’ve got to mark properly.

‘Their two target men, one of them is being marked by Smalling and Kane. The other one, who they mainly throw to, at the edge of the box, Arnason, is marked by Rooney. Why? How is that right? How is Rooney picking up? And Kyle Walker can look at this and hang his head in shame. The fact is you’ve got to go with runners.’

OUR BIGGEST EMBARRASSMENTS  

USA 1-0 England (1950 World Cup)

A result that shocked the world as America’s amateurs inflicted a humiliating defeat on England’s professionals. It remains England’s worst-ever result at the World Cup.

England 0-1 Republic of Ireland 1 (Euro 1988)

Ray Houghton’s early strike gave Ireland victory in their first-ever tournament match. Bobby Robson’s team then lost their next two group games before heading home humiliated. 

Norway 2-1 England (World Cup qualifier, 1981)

Defeat by the part-timers generated one of the most famous soundbites of all time as Norwegian commentator Bjorn Lillelien hollered: ‘Maggie Thatcher? Your boys took one hell of a beating!’

N Ireland 1-0 England (World Cup qualifier, 2005)

England stunned at Windsor Park when David Healy handed Sven-Goran Eriksson his only qualifying defeat in charge.

It was like watching Arsenal trying to defend against Stoke’s Rory Delap. That same confusion, the same frustration that good players were so totally flummoxed by such a simple tactic. Aron Gunnarsson delivers a throw-in as Delap once did, flat, fast, accurate. Like a decent cross. Yet England’s defenders deal with decent crosses all the time. What is it about this that so scrambles their minds?

Kari Arnason won the header, flicking it on for Ragnar Sigurdsson, who had completely lost his man Kyle Walker. He has been brilliant in this tournament going forward, Walker, but there have always been questions about his defensive smarts. Sigurdsson had space, a proper run at the ball and left Hart no chance from close range. Nobody can say England were not warned. Hodgson had mentioned Gunnarsson’s throws as a principal line of attack in his press conference on Sunday – while Iceland joint coach Heimir Hallgrímsson had flagged up that his team were dangerous from set pieces. What did England’s defenders need? A five minute warning? Written notice?

England were rocked, obviously, but the night was young, and there would be opportunity aplenty to put this right. Still, it took them another 10 minutes to have a crack at Iceland’s goal, when Dele Alli returned a clearance from outside the area. Soon after, Harry Kane held the ball up on the left, before turning inside to hit a shot. And then the unthinkable happened.

It was a neat interchange of passes by Iceland, around the edge of England’s area before Gylfi Sigurdsson threaded it through to Kolbeinn Sigthorsson. Yet there was little pressure on the ball and Iceland’s No 9 had the sight of goal to try his luck. What followed was a small catastrophe for goalkeeper Hart. 

He got a hand to the ball, but not with the force to repel it, and it trickled away from him, over the line. Iceland’s players celebrated wildly, Hart smacked his forehead repeatedly, his team-mates looked haunted. Again, it took them 10 minutes to regroup. Yet now, there was a sense of panic in the play. Passes going astray, moves breaking down at crucial moments.

Kane met a Sturridge cross on the volley after 30 minutes, tipped over by Halldorsson – sheer instinct over-riding any nerves – and a deep free-kick by Kane was just too much for Alli at the far post, but it wasn’t a case of England dominating and Iceland meekly hanging on. 

Ari Skulason had one go wide from 30 yards after 35 minutes – and another sloppily defender set piece after 55 minutes ended with Ragnar Sigurdsson attempting an ambitious overhead kick which Hart kept out from seven yards. Had that gone in, it would have been all over.

Arsenal midfielder Jack Wilshere replaced Eric Dier at the half-time interval as Hodgson and his  coaching staff tries to tweak things a little.

Leicester striker Jamie Vardy was given half an hour to prove his worth to the England national team but failed to make a difference
The former Fleetwood Town striker went down under a challenge by Sigurdsson in the penalty area but the Iceland defender won the ball

Roy Hodgson quits as England manager after embarrassing Euro 2016 exit at the hands of Iceland in last-16 tie