Connect with us

International Football

FINAL LAP TO 2018 WORLD CUP FINALS BEGINS

blank

Published

on

Twenty two teams are already through to the World Cup Russia 2018, leaving 16 other teams struggling for the remaining nine spots to complete a field of 32 finalists.

From this Thursday through to next week Wednesday, 26 matches are on the card to complete the projected 874 matches of the 2018 World Cup qualifying series. Not all the 26 matches hold significance.

Some like the Algeria versus Nigeria as well as the Ghana versus Egypt are mere formality fixtures as winners in the respective African qualifying groups have emerged. So also are other six matches involving 12 African teams that are already eliminated.

So, of the 52 countries engaged in the final days of the qualifying series, only 16 are jostling for qualification.

The 16 are made up of the eight teams in Europe battling for four spots, six from Africa battling for three tickets while four others in intercontinental playoff are battling for the last two slots.

Advertisement

The battle begins this Thursday when Croatia hosts Greece and Switzerland will be away to Northern Ireland in the first leg of their European play-off. Both matches hold simultaneously at 8:45pm Nigerian time.

The two matches are to be followed by four other matches across three continents on Friday. By next week Wednesday, all qualifiers would have emerged.

Sports Village Square takes a look at the two-leg European and intercontinental playoffs matches, and the possible three other World Cup bound teams from Africa.

 

Thursday 9 November – NORTHERN IRELAND vs. SWITZERLAND

Advertisement

Northern Ireland last qualified for the World Cup at Mexico ’86. But hopes are high as they host Switzerland this Thursday.

The Irish reached the playoff after placing second in a group where reigning World Cup holders, Germany emerged.

Switzerland players are still rueing the 2-0 loss to Portugal which relegated them to second in the group and now struggling in a European play-off.

According to Associated Press, Switzerland coach Vladimir Petkovic was still looking back to the 2-0 loss at Portugal last month, saying he had imagined playing a “nice friendly” game this week. He acknowledged his team was too passive against Portugal, and challenged players he did not identify to take more responsibility now.

The Swiss need to forget about that match before the first leg against Northern Ireland at Windsor Park, where only Germany has beaten Northern Ireland in a competitive match in the past four years.

Advertisement

Switzerland has a nine-game winning streak at home in tournament qualifiers, and hosts the return on Sunday in Basel.

 

 

Thursday 9 November – CROATIA vs. GREECE

 

Advertisement

Greece will be without defender Kostas Manolas, who is banned from the first leg which is away to Croatia.

The return match will hold on Sunday. FIFA banned Manolas because he tried to manipulate his disciplinary record by deliberately earning a yellow card against Cyprus on October 7.

The decision compounded problems for Coach Michael Skibbe, who is missing midfielder Petros Mantalos and striker Tasos Donis because of injury.

Croatia is set to miss defensive midfielder Milan Badelj for both matches against Greece.

The Croatians and the Greeks were in the playoffs for the 2014 tournament in Brazil. Croatia eliminated Iceland 2-0 on aggregate, while Greece beat Romania 4-2 on aggregate.

Advertisement

___

Friday 10 November – SWEDEN vs. ITALY

If Italy fails to survive the play-off with Sweden, it will be the first time that the four-time World Cup winners will be absent at the World Cup.

The only other time Italy failed to feature was at Sweden 1958.  Incidentally, Sweden is the hurdle the Azzuris must cross to get to Russia 2018.

According to AP, Italy has showed poor form recently, ever since a 3-0 loss to Spain in September. After that match, Italy edged Israel 1-0, drew 1-1 with Macedonia and beat Albania 1-0.

Advertisement

While Sweden didn’t qualify for the last two World Cups, it impressed in qualifying with a win over France and finished ahead of the Netherlands.

“We are winners just by being here,” Sweden coach, Janne Andersson said.

The first leg will be in Sweden on Friday, with the return match on Monday in Italy.

Sweden went unbeaten at home in qualifying at Friends Arena and striker Marcus Berg scored eight times in nine matches.

 

Advertisement

Friday 10 November – HONDURAS vs. AUSTRALIA

This is the scenario Australia aimed to avoid when it switched from Oceania to the Asian Football Confederation after the 2006 World Cup: A last-ditch intercontinental playoff in the Americas for a spot at soccer’s marquee event.

Australian players travelled from three continents to assemble in Honduras this week to prepare for Friday’s first leg. The return match will be in Australia on Wednesday.

It was a similar scenario when the Australians played Uruguay for a place at the 2006 tournament. Uruguay won 1-0 in Montevideo, and Australia levelled it up with a 1-0 win in Sydney before advancing 4-2 on penalties.

It ended a long drought for the Socceroos, who had failed to advance from the last playoff stage in 1986 (against Scotland), in 1994 (against Argentina), in 1998 (against Iran), and in 2002 (against Uruguay).

Advertisement

Tim Cahill, the only player still active from that playoff series in 2005 and now Australia’s all-time leading scorer, is in doubt because of an ankle injury.

Friday 10 November – SOUTH AFRICA vs. SENEGAL

This is a potentially explosive encounter that could be described as ‘thunder and blood’. The number of qualified teams can rise to 23 this Friday if Senegal beat South Africa in Polokwane.

The match is the replay of an earlier one that was cancelled owing to match manipulation by the Ghanaian referee.

A win by Senegal makes the reversed fixtures irrelevant. It also turns into mere formality, the other Group D encounter of Burkina Faso and Cape Verde.

Advertisement

 

Friday 10 November – ALGERIA vs. NIGERIA

This ordinarily should have been a clash of two continental giants who were the last African teams standing at the Brazil 2014 World Cup.

Of the five African teams in Brazil, Algeria and Nigeria were the only ones to make it to the second round where both crashed out on the same day.

But with the Group B already decided, Algeria may not put up spectacular performance as there is virtually nothing for the troubled side to fight for. It had prosecuted virtually every match of the final qualifying round with new coaches.

Advertisement

The legendary Rabah Madjer is the latest man on the saddle. In the six-match series of the final round that began last year’s October, Algeria secured just one point from the 1-1 draw it played against Cameroon in Match Day 1.

The team lost all others. Friday’s match may not be an exception. On the other hand, Nigeria has had almost a stress-free flight in the final qualifying series.

The Super Eagles were, expectedly, only stretched to almost breaking point in the last match with Zambia last month where both teams nervously have everything to fight for.

But the side facing Algeria may slightly be a different one as Coach Gernot Rohr could be tempted to try new options as he focuses on his final World Cup squad. Besides, some regulars have been unavailable owing to varying degrees of injury.

But all the same, the team will try to maintain its World Cup qualifying unbeaten run which could be stretched to an all-time African record of 35 matches.

Advertisement

On Friday, it would be 13 years, four months and 21 days (4,891 days) since Nigeria last lost a World Cup qualifying match.

It is a record good to be carried over to the qualifying series of Qatar 2022.

 

Saturday 11 November – DENMARK vs. IRELAND

Ireland is on a familiar terrain as being in the playoff in major tournaments is not new to the country.

Advertisement

Easily recalled is the controversial loss to France in the playoff to South Africa 2010 when Thierry Henry clearly handled the ball in the build-up to the crucial goal.

Ireland is involved in playoff for the ninth time and had lost five in the past. Ireland will host the second leg on Tuesday.

Ireland will likely rely on the counterattacking tactics that worked so well in Cardiff.

While there are no real stars in the Ireland team, Denmark has a standout in Christian Eriksen — one of European soccer’s best playmakers over the past few years at Tottenham.

He scored eight times from midfield in qualifying.

Advertisement

The Danes’ 4-0 win over Poland in group play highlights their potential and they are also higher in the FIFA rankings, at No. 19 compared to Ireland’s No. 26.

The managers — Martin O’Neill and Age Hareide — are former teammates at English club Norwich.

 

Saturday 11 November – NEW ZEALAND vs. PERU

New Zealand will return to the scene of one of its greatest triumphs when it hosts Peru on Saturday.

Advertisement

In 2009, New Zealand beat Bahrain 1-0 in front of a crowd of 35,000 at the Wellington Regional Stadium to qualify for the World Cup for the second time.

It had previously qualified in 1982, the same year in which Peru made its last World Cup appearance. The return leg will be in Peru on Wednesday.

Rory Fallon, who scored New Zealand’s winning goal in that match eight years ago, has been recalled to the All Whites after a one-year absence.

He is currently playing for Dorchester in the seventh tier of English soccer. That win over Bahrain briefly put soccer centre-stage in a rugby-mad country and Saturday’s match will likely do so again. The match is a sell-out.

Peru, ranked No. 10, starts as the overwhelming favourite against 122nd-ranked New Zealand but have a significant setback, with striker Paolo Guerrero ruled out after failing a doping test. Guerrero scored six goals in qualifying.

Advertisement

 

Saturday 11 November – Cote d’Ivoire vs. Morocco:

It is advantage Morocco which requires just a draw in the away match to pick the ticket. But in encounters of this nature, nothing is decided until the final whistle.

Morocco with nine points leads the group. The results of Group C have largely fallen within predictions as it was expected that the final outcome would be decided in the last match pitching the two giants.

There is a common denominator – Coach Herve Renard who is leading Morocco having in the past led Cote d’Ivoire. His ambition is simple – terminating the aspirations of his previous employers!

Advertisement

 

 

Saturday 11 November, Zambia vs. Cameroon:

For a different reason, this is another formality match.  Both teams are already eliminated from the race and had virtually nothing to fight for.

Zambia would had hoped it picked maximum points last month in Uyo when it faced Nigeria and possibly fire full cylinder against a hapless Cameroon this weekend.

Advertisement

But after strong resistance coupled with sporadic offensive, the Zambians finally caved in when Alex Iwobi scored the decider for Nigeria.

The possibly scenario in Lusaka on Saturday is that Cameroon may not travel with their best of stars and in the best of spirits for a mere formality match.

 

Saturday 11 November, DR Congo vs. Guinea:

This is a match the hosts may like win. But owing to the possible outcome of the corresponding match in group where Tunisia will be facing the weak Libyan side, there may not be anything to fight for in the DR Congo versus Guinea encounter.

Advertisement

That may lead to both not putting in their best, but with the hosts still trying to maintain their prestige and hope for a possible slip in the Tunisia – Libya encounter.

The possibility exists as it happened in 2009 when Tunisia’s advantage was lost six minutes to end their South Africa 2010 World Cup qualifier in Mozambique.

 

Saturday 11 November, Gabon vs. Mali:

A formality match as both teams are out of contention. Their result will also not impact on that Group C of the contenders – Morocco and Cote d’Ivoire who will be involved in epic battle in Abidjan.

Advertisement

 

Sunday 12 November, Ghana vs. Egypt:

Flash back to the last qualifying battle to Brazil 2014. Ghana were high riding, beating Egypt 6-1 in Kumasi. The result put Ghana in vantage position for the eventual qualification. Time has changed.

Even if Ghana achieves any victory of any kind on Sunday, it is a labour in vain as the Egyptians are through to the World Cup.

But for that, this should be a heavyweight clash of two of Africa’s strongest teams.

Advertisement

So inconsequential is the outcome of the match that star player, Mohamed Salah asked to be excused from the fixture.

 

Sunday 12 November, Congo vs. Uganda:

The encounter is better relegated to the realms of a friendly match as both have been eliminated from the World Cup.

 

Advertisement

 

 

 

Kunle Solaja is the author of landmark books on sports and journalism as well as being a multiple award-winning journalist and editor of long standing. He is easily Nigeria’s foremost soccer diarist and Africa's most capped FIFA World Cup journalist, having attended all FIFA World Cup finals from Italia ’90 to Qatar 2022. He was honoured at the Qatar 2022 World Cup by FIFA and AIPS.

Continue Reading
Advertisement

International Football

Players’ union, FIFPRO, wants 20-minute halftimes, more cooling breaks amid extreme heat

blank

Published

on

blank

Global players’ union FIFPRO is exploring whether extending halftime to 20 minutes and introducing more frequent cooling breaks could better protect players from extreme heat.

Nine of the 16 host cities for the 2026 World Cup face conditions considered “extreme risk” for heat-related illness.

Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Guadalajara, Houston, Kansas City, Miami, Monterrey and Philadelphia are expected to face dangerous levels of heat and humidity, posing player safety concerns and fuelling calls for mandatory cooling aids or schedule changes.

FIFPRO’s heat risk assessments are based on wet bulb globe temperature (WBGT), a measure combining temperature, humidity, solar radiation and wind speed to estimate how environmental conditions affect the body’s ability to cool itself.

Under FIFPRO guidelines, a WBGT reading above 28 degrees Celsius indicates conditions in which matches should be postponed or rescheduled to protect players’ health.

Advertisement

By comparison, world soccer governing body FIFA’s own guidelines set the extreme risk threshold higher, at 32 degrees Celsius WBGT – but even by that standard, six of the nine cities are still projected to exceed safe limits.

Major League Soccer in the U.S. has a threshold of 29 degrees Celsius WBGT.

“Cooling breaks at the 30th minute and 75th minutes are quite traditional, but from a physiological point of view it does not make sense,” said Vincent Gouttebarge, FIFPRO’s Medical Director.

“Even if you ingest more than 200 millilitres of fluid, you already cannot take it all. So I would definitely like to see some project where we look at the efficacy of perhaps more frequent but shorter cooling breaks – every 15 minutes, rather than only one during each half.”

LONGER HALFTIMES

Advertisement

Gouttebarge also questioned whether the traditional 15-minute halftime interval is sufficient when matches are played in extreme heat.

“You can imagine that halftime of 15 minutes might not be enough in order to decrease the core temperature,” he said.

“It could be a halftime of 20 minutes which would be significant. That has been shown in the laboratory and FIFPRO, together with the national union in Portugal in August, we are going to test this kind of mitigation strategy.”

The urgency of stronger heat protocols became clear at this month’s Club World Cup where two matches — Benfica-Bayern Munich in Charlotte and Chelsea-Esperance in Philadelphia exceeded the WBGT threshold FIFPRO considers unsafe.

“According to our position, those games should have been postponed later that day or rescheduled,” Gouttebarge said.

Advertisement

FIFPRO officials acknowledged that FIFA has responded constructively during the tournament by lowering thresholds for mandatory cooling breaks and improving pitch-side hydration, but stressed that proactive planning is critical.

“FIFA have been quite responsive once the tournament was under way,” said Alex Phillips, FIFPRO General Secretary.

“They have actually modified how they’ve been dealing with heat during the matches based on FIFPRO’s input, which is credit to the work of the team. Obviously, it would have been better if that happened in advance, but it’s better that they have adapted.”

FIFPRO warned that the risks highlighted at the Club World Cup are a preview of what players could face at the expanded 2026 World Cup.

“This is not just affecting the Club World Cup, but also future tournaments either in the U.S. or elsewhere in the world,” said Alexander Bielefeld, FIFPRO Director of Policy & Strategic Relations.

Advertisement

“We need a better balance between commercial interests and the health and safety of players,” he added, referring to earlier kick-off times to accommodate European television audiences.

-Reuters

Join the Sports Village Square channel on WhatsApp: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vaz7mEIGk1FxU8YIXb0H

Continue Reading

International Football

Former England and Man Utd midfielder Ince charged with drink-driving

blank

Published

on

blank
Championship - Norwich City v Reading - Carrow Road, Norwich, Britain - December 30, 2022, Reading manager Paul Ince applauds fans after the match Action Images/Matthew Childs/File Photo 

Former Manchester United and England midfielder Paul Ince has been charged with drink-driving, police said on Monday.

Ince, who earned 53 caps for England and won two Premier League titles during his six years at United, has been released on bail and will appear in court on July 18.

“The incident involved a black Range Rover which had collided with the central reservation barrier. Officers attended the scene and arrested a 57-year-old man,” the Cheshire police said in a statement.

“Paul Ince, of Quarry Road, Neston, has since been charged with drink-driving.”

Reuters has contacted Ince’s representative for comment.

Advertisement

After retiring as a player, Ince led Milton Keynes Dons to a League Two title in 2007-08. He most recently managed Reading during 2022-23.

-Reuters

Join the Sports Village Square channel on WhatsApp: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vaz7mEIGk1FxU8YIXb0H

Advertisement
Continue Reading

International Football

From garbage collector to Starman of Ancelotti’s Brazil team: the story of Ribeiro

blank

Published

on

blank

I was without a team for a year and a half, doing trials… and no club in Brazil wanted me.!” Alex Ribeiro

Alexsandro Victor de Souza Ribeiro (Rio de Janeiro, 1999) was, until a few days ago, a semi-unknown to the general public in Brazil. 

However, Carlo Ancelotti, impressed by his strong performance against Real Madrid in the Champions League, insisted on calling up the Lille centre-back… and giving him his debut.

Not only that. He started alongside Marquinhos against Ecuador (0-0) and Paraguay (1-0) and helped the Seleçao keep two consecutive clean sheets for the first time in the qualifying rounds.

Alex, as he likes to be called, impressed with his 1.92 meters (6′ 1″) frame and confidence. According to ‘R10Score’, he was the Brazilian player who completed the most actions with the ball (186) and the second with the most cuts (11).

He completed 154 of the 166 passes he made (92% accuracy) and won 12 of the 16 duels he was involved in: 5 of 7 at ground level and 7 of 9 in the air. “A gentleman defender,” boasted the official Ligue 1 Portuguese account.

Advertisement

His path to the elite wasn’t easy. “I don’t think you know this, but this is my first game as a professional in Brazil. Strange, isn’t it? There’s nothing better. To debut in Brazil like this, with a win and qualification,” he boasted after defeating Paraguay.

These first few days with Ancelotti have been unique; I’ll remember them for the rest of my life. I’ve responded well not only to myself, but also to the coach and the Brazilian people.  I was able to demonstrate my ability to those who had doubts. Few people give me the opportunity that the manager has given me,”  he insists

The Lille centre-back took his first steps in Flamengo’s youth system, where he even met Vinicius. 

“When we played against Real Madrid, Vini came up to me and hugged me. He said, ‘I’m glad to see you here, brother.’ That inspired and motivated me even more,” he told ‘Globo Esporte’.

‘Fla’ cut him off. He had to make a living as a street vendor. He also collected trash, especially cans. “I was without a team for a year and a half, doing trials… and no club in Brazil wanted me, so I went to Europe to play in Portugal’s Third Division.”

Advertisement

Praiense (2018-20), Amora (2020-21), and Chaves (2021-22)—the latter already in the Second Division—were his springboard to Lille. The Bulldogs signed him in 2022-23 for €2 million. He has become a more than worthy successor to his compatriot Gabriel Magalhaes.

Little by little, my name is spreading. My football is reaching everywhere. This includes Brazil,” he said before making his debut with the Seleçao. Now that he’s made it, he has another challenge: I want to continue it.”

-Marca

 Join the Sports Village Square channel on WhatsApp: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vaz7mEIGk1FxU8YIXb0H

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Most Viewed