Sports
2010 W/Cup: Italian Players Show Their Age In S’Africa
The Italian team coach, escorted by about a dozen police cars with sire such a rush to leave Cape Town on Monday night that it forced several vehicles off road as it hurtled past us at high speed.
Having witnessed them labour to a draw against Paraguay a couple of hours earlier, one was hardly surprised Marcello Lippiand his players wanted to make a speedy exit and put a difficult evening behind them. They might have been in the fast lane on the road, but on the pitch they had been pretty pedestrian for most of the evening.
Yes, they survived atrocious weather, picked up a point, avoided an embarrassing defeat and should still qualify out of Group F with relative ease, but the defending champions did not begin this World Cup in a manner which suggests they are going to prove any of their detractors wrong and there are plenty of those, especially back in their homeland.
If you think the English press is hard on their national side, spare a thought for Lippi.
Despite being a World Cup-winning manager four years ago, he and his squad have been written off by their media this summer and are variously seen as being over the hill (half his players), out of form (the whole team) and devoid of ideas (Lippi himself) . The knives were out for the 62-year-old again in the papers, judging from conversation with some of the disgruntled Italian journalists present in South Africa.
Words failed one of them when asked about Lippi’s inclusion of 36-year-old Fabio Cannavaror victorious and inspirational skipper in 2006, but looking very much past his prime here when he allowed Antol” Alcaraz to leap above him and nod Paraguayahead but one still got the message loud and clear from his horrified facial expression and repeated shaking of his head.
As well as defensive uncertainty, one other thing stood out to everybody to see, ‘Italy’s shocking lack of creativity.
With Andrea Pirlo nursing a calf injury, only the energetic Simone Pepe seemed able to add any flair and finesse to a side whose only form of attack often seemed to be the footballing equivalent of banging your head against a brick wall. Until the final few minutes when Paraguay tired, all of Italy’s best chances came from set-pieces and even then they were obviously reliant on Justo Villar’shorrific gaffe to gift them their only goal of the game.
As things stand, Lippi’s strategy of relying upon veterans of his memorable triumph in Germany 2006(five of the team which beat France in the final started against Paraguay, and there are four other survivors of the last Warld Cup in his squad this summer) undoubtedly looks misguided, despite him declaring himself “very satisfied with the performance”. Maybe the torrential rain misted up his glasses at some point during the match because that did not tally with the display.
But Italy are clearly not the only side to have sturnbled while taking their first steps in South Africa)” only Gernany have looked completely convincing so far- and past tournaments show they are a country that has a horrible habit of showing the irrelevance of early form when it comes to World Cup finals, even if can’t help thinking that the history books are where some of their side already belong.
From what I said, though, many Italian fans have lost faith in Lippi, too, although I didn’t get a cha ce to speak to any of them afterwards as planned, the torrential rain meant that by e time I left the stadium, the concourse was deserted save for a huge squadron of police (who had acted as stewards on the night after an impromptu strike from the regular staff).
I’d be interested to hear what any Azzurri supporters think but, for a more objective view of Italy’s prospects, I grabbed Clarence Seedorf who, as weIl as being part of the furniture at the SSC studios in Cape Town where I am based, has been a regular fixture in Seric A for most of the past 15 years with Sampdoria and both Milan clubs. He knows most of the Italy players well and also understands the nation’s psyche better than most.
He laughed off the pessimism surrounding Lippi and his side as “typical”, adding: “Italian fans rarely say they are going to win anything because they are very superstitious – they definitely expect them to do well, even if they say otherwise!”
Seedorf also dismissed the view that too many of Lippi’s key players are too old, although that’s probably not surprising seeing as he is 34 himself and is reaping the benefits of AC Milan’s famed Milan lab (known for extending the longevity of many a player’s career)along with three of Italy’s surviving stalwarts from 2006: Gianluca Zambrotta (33), Gennaro Gattuson (32) and the much-missed Pirlo (31).
“Age is not a factor,” Seedorf told me. “Performances are all that matter. If Lippi had better younger players, then he would have picked them. If these are the best players, then so be it.
“I hear it all the time about how when players get past 30 that they are past it but it’s not true. In general, people die 10 years later now because of better food, medicines and science. In sport, it is the same thing. If 32 was old for a footballer in the 1980s, then now it is normal to be playing at a high level when you are 35, especially if you have looked after yourself well.
“I look at the Italy squad and I see older players that might not be the same as they once were physically but who now have the mentality and the experience. To do well any team needs a mix of older and younger players and I think there is a good blend in the Italy squad. They are not playing well but I’m actually expecting them to click soon because they usually save their best form for major tournaments.”
Whether that happens or not, nothing less than a win will do against outsiders , New Zealand in Italy’s next group game on Sunday and, although their other Group F opponents Slovakiamight put up more of a fight, I’d still back Italy to get the results they need to reach the last 16.
It’s after that that their progress looks less assured – especially if they go on to meet European champions Spain in their quarter-final as looks likely. To return to the story that I began this blog with, unless they make a huge improvement over the next couple of weeks, I can’t help thinking that it won’t be long until their journey comes to a juddering halt too.
Sports
Tottenham Fight Back To Hold Brighton
Tottenham fought back from two-goals down to secure a deserved point against Brighton.
The Seagulls were second best for much of the match but found themselves 2-0 up after 31 minutes thanks to Yankuba Minteh’s early strike and Yasin Ayari’s powerful drive.
However, Richarlison halved the deficit just before half-time when he stopped a shot by Mohammed Kudus before slotting in.
Spurs dominated the second half but their finishing let them down as Richarlison and substitute Xavi Simons were both unable to make the most of promising opportunities.
But the equaliser came eight minutes from time when Jan Paul van Hecke turned Kudus’ cross into his own net.
Spurs then pushed for a winner as they looked to continue their impressive start to the season, but Brighton held on for the point.
Bundesliga: Kane Continues Goal Harvest (5)
Harry Kane scored his second hat-trick of the season as Bayern Munich overcame a shaky start to win at Hoffenheim and continue their 100% start.
The England captain, 32, broke the deadlock on the stroke of half-time with a clinical first-time finish from a cleverly worked low corner, and doubled Bayern’s lead from the spot after Albian Hajdari was harshly penalised for a handball.
That broke Hoffenheim’s resistance and Kane completed his ninth Bundesliga hat-trick with another penalty, given for a foul on substitute Michael Olise after a video assistant referee (VAR) check.
This time Kane sent home keeper Oliver Baumann the wrong way for his 13th Bayern goal in seven matches across all competitions this season, adding to his Champions League double against Chelsea last Wednesday.
“Hat-trick Harry is what they called me in school,” Kane told Tidesports source after the match. “That one kind of stuck when I was younger.”
“Any ball in the box, whether penalty or not, I back myself to hit the target.”
Hoffenheim had the better of the first 45 minutes, Fisnik Asllani only able to hit the post after goalkeeper Manuel Neuer passed straight to the Kosovan.
They eventually got some reward for their efforts, former West Ham full-back Vladimir Coufal’s deflected free-kick beating Neuer to earn the Czech his first goal for the club.
Ex-Liverpool winger Luis Diaz hit the top of the bar late on as he failed to continue his record of scoring in every Bundesliga game this season, but Serge Gnabry added a fourth for Bayern with the last kick, converting a rebound from a tight angle after Baumann saved from Joshua Kimmich.
Nicolas Jackson made his first start since joining Bayern on an initial loan deal from Chelsea, but the Senegal striker had a very quiet game before being replaced in the 62nd minute.
In Italy, Lorenzo Pellegrini fired Roma into the Serie A top four as Lazio had two players sent off in a fiery derby.
The midfielder found the bottom corner in the 38th minute as Roma extended their unbeaten run to four games against their city rivals.
Lazio have lost three of their opening games of the season and had Reda Belahyane and former Arsenal midfielder Matteo Guendouzi dismissed in late drama.
Roma started well and Rome-born Pellegrini claimed the vital goal – his fourth in a Rome derby after being available for transfer in the summer – following good work down the right by Matias Soule.
But the hosts will rue missed opportunities as Boulaye Dia, Mattia Zaccagni and Alessio Romagnoli all had openings.
With four minutes left substitute Belahyane was shown a red card for a late studs-up challenge on Manu Kone.
Danilo Cataldi struck the outside of the post for Lazio in a last-gasp effort to snatch a point, while team-mate Guendouzi was sent off for dissent after the final whistle.
Sports
Zidane’s Son Switches Allegiance To Algeria
Luca Zidane, the son of France’s World Cup-winning playmaker Zinedine, has switched his international allegiance from France to Algeria.
Born just outside Marseille, the 27-year-old goalkeeper had appeared for France at various youth levels.
The move, which was approved by Fifa, may enable Zidane to follow in his father’s footsteps by appearing at a World Cup, with Algeria expected to secure a place at the 2026 finals in North America in their qualifier against Somalia next month.
Zidane, who is the second of four brothers, all of whom came through the Real Madrid academy, currently plays for Spanish second tier side Granada.
He played two matches for Madrid and has La Liga experience at Rayo Vallecano, but dropped a level in 2022 to play for Eibar before heading to Andalusia in 2024.
Zidane qualifies for the North African country through his father, whose parents hailed from the Kabylie region of Algeria.
Zinedine Zidane, who is regarded as one of the games greatest players scored twice for France in their 1998 World Cup final victory over Brazil, but was famously sent-off in the 2006 final, which was won by Italy after a penalty shootout.
Sports
Man Utd Beat Chelsea To Ease Pressure
Manchester United capitalised on Robert Sanchez’s fifth-minute red card to secure a crucial victory over Chelsea in torrential rain at Old Trafford.
The first match in Premier League history to see two or more goals, red cards and substitutions in the first half was settled by goals from United skipper Bruno Fernandes and Casemiro, who was the other player sent off before the break.
It was Sanchez’s dismissal that set the course of the game though.
The Spain international raced from his goal to meet Bryan Mbeumo as the striker ran beyond the Chelsea defence.
Sanchez then upended the forward outside his area rather than allow him past to tap the ball into an empty net.
Enzo Maresca’s response to the red card was to take off both Pedro Neto and Estevao Willian and, as Cole Palmer had to be replaced after suffering a recurrence of a groin injury, Chelsea had lost three attacking players in the space of 20 minutes.
Trevor Chalobah pulled one back for Chelsea with a header 10 minutes from time but United kept their nerves at bay to make it to the final whistle with their lead intact.
The victory was United’s second of the season and came in front of minority owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe, who gave head coach Ruben Amorim assurances over his future 48 hours earlier.
It also means Chelsea have still not won at Old Trafford since 2013, when Sir Alex Ferguson was United manager.
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