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EURO 2024

The masked man: Mbappé set to join list of masked soccer stars

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Kylian Mbappé is always a marked man. At the European Championship, he’s set to be known as the masked man.

The France superstar broke his nose in his team’s opening game of Euro 2024, a 1-0 win over Austria on Monday, and is likely to be fitted with a carbon-fiber mask if he is to play again in the tournament.

He wouldn’t be first soccer player needing to wear a mask, as Mbappé himself has pointed out.

The Associated Press looks at some others to have used this type of protective equipment on a soccer field:

Son Heung-min (South Korea)

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Son broke his eye socket while playing for Tottenham in the Champions League about three weeks before the 2022 World Cup and required surgery, meaning he had to don a mask for South Korea’s games in Qatar. “It’s more comfortable than I was expecting,” Son said about the mask at the time. “Although it does feel different from when I tried it on in the U.K. because of the weather. I think it was more comfortable there because I sweat more here due to the heat. I kept touching my mask during training to adjust it. I am still getting used to it but I was surprised at how comfortable it was.” Son said the mask was lighter than he expected.

Josko Gvardiol (Croatia)

Son wasn’t the only masked player at that World Cup. Gvardiol, the Croatia center back, had to wear one after suffering a broken nose when clashing heads with then-Leipzig teammate Willi Orban in a German league match. Doctors decided that he could play for Croatia as long as he had a mask on. He was one of the best defenders at the World Cup — apart from when he came up against Lionel Messi in the semifinal against Argentina.

Paul Gascoigne (England)

Gazza, as he was fondly known, needed face protection after being on the receiving end of an elbow from Netherlands midfielder Jan Wouters at Wembley Stadium in 1993. It broke his cheekbone and, invariably, the carbon-fibre protector he donned was nicknamed the “Gazz-mask.” He wore it for games for Lazio in the Italian league and for the first time for England against Poland in a World Cup qualifier in Chorzow.

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Antonio Rudiger (Germany)

Rudiger wore a face mask at Euro 2020 after receiving a blow to the face while playing for Chelsea, his club at the time, against Real Madrid, the Spanish team where he now plays. That happened in April and he wore the mask for the remainder of the season for Chelsea and then at the Euros — perhaps a sign of how long Mbappé might be needing to use one.

Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang (former Barcelona player)

Aubameyang was playing for Barcelona in the second half of the 2021-22 season when his home was burglarized, while he and his family were inside. The attackers broke Aubameyang’s jaw, leading to him wearing a personalized protective mask when he joined Chelsea for the following season.

Victor Osimhen (Napoli and Nigeria)

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Osimhen suffered multiple facial fractures in a clash of heads with Inter Milan defender Milan Skriniar during a game in November 2021.

The surgeon who oversaw for Osimhen’s subsequent operation detailed needing three plates and six screws to carry out the procedure.

“That injury was like a near-death injury,” Osimhen later told Wazobia FM, via Football Italia, discussing a surgery that forced him out of the 2022 Africa Cup of Nations and is said to have taken three and a half hours. “I am the only one that felt it and I can only speak about how I felt because it was my face and body.

“When the scan came out, I fractured many bones, which they had to remove and fix inside again. I have, like, 18 screws under my jaw. I went through a lot.

Paolo Maldini (AC Milan/Italy)

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Suave Italian defender Paolo Maldini wasn’t looking so stylish in 2003 after breaking his nose against Inter in the Milan derby. The AC Milan legend was laid low for a couple of weeks before returning to the field for the club’s Champions League quarter-final second leg against Ajax wearing a protective mask.   

 

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.

EURO 2024

Bellingham, Kane send England to Euro 2024 quarterfinals after comeback 2-1 win over Slovakia

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England advanced to the quarterfinals of the European Championship after Jude Bellingham scored a stunning overhead kick in the fifth minute of stoppage time to spark a comeback 2-1 win after extra time against Slovakia on Sunday.

Bellingham’s acrobatic overhead kick leveled the round-of-16 game at 1-1 with seconds remaining at the Veltins Arena.

Harry Kane headed in the winner in the first minute of extra time as England avoided one of the biggest shocks in the history of the Euros.

Ivan Schranz scored in the first half for Slovakia and his goal looked like being enough to eliminate England, which was one of the pre-tournament favorites and runner up at the last Euros.

But Bellingham’s wonder goal sent the game to extra time and Kane sealed the win and a place in the quarterfinals where England will play Switzerland in Duesseldorf.

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-AP

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EURO 2024

The Germans are back after rare lean spell

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 Euro 2024 - Round of 16 - Germany v Denmark - Dortmund BVB Stadion, Dortmund, Germany - June 29, 2024 Germany's Jamal Musiala celebrates scoring their second goal REUTERS/Bernadett Szabo

BY ANDREW CAWTHORNE, REUTERS.

With mosquitoes plaguing their preparations, lightning flashing over the match, and an early goal disallowed, the Germans must have wondered half-way into their Euro 2024 last-16 game against Denmark if the gods were against them.

But as the storm clouds passed, so their fortunes changed and Germany deservedly ran out 2-0 winners in Dortmund to reach a first major tournament quarter-final in eight years.

That is a long time by the standards of a nation whose name became synonymous in football with serial winning.

The Germans’ disappointing run has included first-round exits at the 2018 and 2022 World Cups and a last-16 elimination in the 2021 Euros.

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Saturday’s triumph has belatedly ignited Germany’s fans who were notably downbeat about their prospects in the run-up to the tournament and had not created an atmosphere to match the famous summer party of 2006 when they hosted the World Cup.

That may change, as fans poured on to the streets after Saturday’s games, tooting horns and waving flags.

The victory was vindication for Germany coach Julian Nagelsmann. First and foremost of his decision to stick with Kai Havertz alone up front and keep big Niclas Fuellkrug on the bench despite his two goals at the tournament from substitute appearances.

Havertz, goalless in the group stage, looked the part, tormenting Denmark with his runs and clever movement and netting the first goal from the penalty spot with a pinpoint shot beyond goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel’s reach.

His fortune contrasted with Rasmus Hojlund at the other end, who looked shorn of confidence as his goal drought with Denmark continued to eight games.

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Germany are starting to look very good at the Euros where in the group stage they humiliated Scotland, controlled Hungary and showed fighting spirit against a strong Swiss team.

Versus the Danes, they had an impressive 55% possession, 58 attacks and 14 attempts on goal, Jamal Musiala curling home their second and match-winning goal

They had the video assistant referee (VAR) to thank, however, for two game-changing decisions that will be a recurring nightmare for Danish defender Joachim Andersen.

He thought he had scored, only to see it chalked off for a narrow offside by a team mate, then shortly afterwards committed the handball for Germany’s penalty.

With Spain, Portugal, France and Belgium still in their side of the draw, however, Germany’s new-found confidence may soon be put to a severe test.

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-Reuters

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EURO 2024

Italy’s Euro reign comes to an end!

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Euro 2024 - Round of 16 - Switzerland v Italy - Berlin Olympiastadion, Berlin, Germany - June 29, 2024 Italy's Andrea Cambiaso, Davide Frattesi and Alessandro Bastoni look dejected after the match REUTERS/Angelika Warmuth

A pair of superb strikes for Switzerland by Remo Freuler and Ruben Vargas sent defending champions Italy crashing out of Euro 2024 in the round of 16 after a sloppy, rudderless display by Luciano Spalletti’s side ended in a 2-0 defeat.

Though the Swiss defended well, the Italians made their job all the easier with bad passing and poor-decision-making, giving the ball away cheaply in central positions and failing to press with any vigour as they headed for the exit.

After a slow, tenuous start on a sweltering evening in Berlin, Switzerland should have taken the lead in the 24th minute when Breel Embolo was played in, but his attempt to wait out Gianluigi Donnarumma didn’t succeed and the Italian goalkeeper comfortably parried his curled shot.

It was an early warning of what was to come, however, and the Italians could not hold on to the ball at all in the first half with even the most perfunctory passes finding a red shirt, rather than a blue one.

The only bright spot for the Italians was Stephan El Shaaraway, who had a golden chance of his own in the 26th minute with a typical jinking run, but despite doing well to get the ball back onto his right foot, his shot was blocked for a corner and, bafflingly, he was withdrawn at halftime.

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Looking far more like defending champions than their sluggish opponents, the Swiss breakthrough came in the 37th minute with brilliantly-worked goal as they pulled the Italians apart.

Michel Aebischer roamed into the middle of the pitch, opening space on the left for Vargas, and though his pin-point pass tested Freuler’s first touch, the midfielder hammered the ball home to send his side in ahead at the break.

Whatever Spalletti said at half-time did not have the desired effect and his side were two down within a minute, with Italy’s ponderous, flat-footed defence taking on a spectator’s role as Vargas curled a stunning shot into the top corner.

The Swiss almost threw the Italians a lifeline in the 51st minute as Fabian Schaer’s glancing defensive header wrong-footed his own keeper Yann Sommer, leaving him to watch helplessly as the ball bounced up and kissed the far post before being cleared.

With the clock ticking ominously, the Italian players seemed paralysed in the face of the stout Swiss defence, resorting to speculative long shots that did little to trouble Sommer.

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The woodwork intervened again in the 74th minute as Gianluca Scammacca scuffed the ball onto the near post from close range but that was as close as Italy came, and their fans were streaming out of the stands long before the final whistle, with those left in their seats dumbstruck by their team’s insipid performance.

“That goal at the start of the second half cut our legs, we weren’t very incisive,” said Italian coach Spalletti after the game.

“What made the difference is the pace, we had a pace that was too inferior to them in the first half. Even in the individual players there was a different pace.”

As the game concluded, the Swiss fans bounced and sang, knowing that their side would be going on to meet the winner of Sunday’s tie between England and Slovakia in Duesseldforf next Saturday.

“The feeling is great because we showed a really good performance. We showed from the first second that we really wanted to win this game,” Swiss midfielder Fabian Rieder said.

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“The spirit is incredible; everyone is happy, everyone runs for everyone else, and I think we showed that on the pitch,” Rieder added, a lesson the Italians would do well to learn as they limp out of the tournament.

-Reuters

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