EURO 2024
The masked man: Mbappé set to join list of masked soccer stars
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)
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.
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)
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)
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.
EURO 2024
Spain inflicts pain on serial cup losers, England
Again, football is not going home as serial cup losers, England failed on Sunday to win the European championship after losing 2-1 to Spain.
Fantastic Spain! They set a record by being the first four-time winner of the trophy and did it in beautiful fashion, winning all their seven matches.
They controlled the final match from kick-off to final whistle and are worthy winners.
And yet another positive, Yamal Lamine, the Moroccan born kid star has become the youngest player at age 17 and a day, to win a major trophy, sending into the archives, the feat by Pele in the 1958 World Cup.
For England, it is yet another cup loss. In two years’ time, it will be 60 years since they won a major trophy, the World Cup.
Even then, their 1966 World Cup win is still shrouded in controversy. Great Spain, they have extended the long wait of England for major football victory.
Mikel Oyarzabal’s 87th-minute goal clinched the 2-1 victory for Spain.
He slid in to poke home Marc Cucurella’s cross, just when the game at Berlin’s Olympiastadion seemed destined for extra time after the latest show of resilience by England at the tournament.
Substitute Cole Palmer equalized for England in the 73rd minute to cancel out Nico Williams’ opener in the 47th from 17-year-old prodigy Lamine Yamal’s pass.
Spain also won the title in 1964, 2008 and 2012.
EURO 2024
Player of the Euros, Lamine Yamal is 17 today
The most exciting player on the most exciting team at Euro 2024 – Spain’s Lamine Yamal – turns 17 on Saturday, but the birthday celebrations will have to wait while he prepares for Sunday’s European Championship final against England in Berlin.
“I’ve told my mum that if we win I don’t want any presents, I just want to celebrate in Madrid with my mates,” Lamine, as he prefers to be called, said in an interview with Spain’s Marca outlet on Saturday.
“That would be crazy, to celebrate with people on the streets all the way from the airport. Everyone would go crazy! We would arrive with incredible euphoria.”
Yamal has been breaking records since making his professional debut for Barcelona less than 15 months ago, the last one becoming the youngest goalscorer in Euros history with a stunning curled long-range shot against France that helped his side reach the final.
The youngest to play, start and score for his club and his nation are other records he has broken since. Against England at Berlin’s Olympiastadion he may have the chance to reach even higher ground if he helps his side win a record fourth European Championship title.
It would strengthen his case as the most productive young player in Europe and surely put him in the frame to be named player of the tournament.
Lamine fever has set in, with his father making headlines last week by publishing on social media a December 2007 photo of his baby son in the arms of former Barcelona forward Lionel Messi.
Messi, 20 at the time and starting a career which would take him on to win the Ballon D’Or eight times, was posing for a charity calendar, and just happened to be cradling in his arms a baby who 17 years later would take the European Championships by storm.
His father told Spanish TV La Sexta it was “just a life coincidence”. The reporter suggested maybe Messi’s blessing had somehow given Yamal his remarkable talent, to which his mother fired back: “What if it was the other way around?”
Yamal, born in Spain to a father from Morocco and a mother from Equatorial Guinea, is the latest wonderkid to make headlines in a country that has become one of European soccer’s most fertile production grounds for world-class players.
Following in the footsteps of Barca academy teenage sensations Pedri, Gavi and Ansu Fati, Yamal has established himself as an important part of Barca’s forward line.
He has also been highly influential for Spain in Germany as the player with most assists (3), key passes (16) and clear chances created (6).
He has been a nightmare for opponents, running up and down the right channel and showing great technique and vision to deliver key passes, making him one of Spain’s most dangerous weapons.
He was close to scoring several times in Spain’s first five games in Germany, but it wasn’t until their sixth – the semi-final against France, that he finally made his mark with a candidate for goal of the tournament.
“We have seen genius from a genius,” Spain coach Luis de la Fuente said. “We are very lucky that he is Spanish and that we are going to enjoy him for many years to come.”
-Reuters
EURO 2024
Spain and England’s paths to the Euro 2024 final
Spain and England have experienced very different journeys to Sunday’s Euro 2024 final. We look at their path to Berlin below.
ENGLAND
England 1 Serbia 0
An early header by Jude Bellingham rewarded England for a good first half in their first game but they went off the boil and ended up hanging on for the win as manager Gareth Southgate’s gamble of starting with Trent Alexander-Arnold in midfield backfired.
The tally of 11 shots – six by Serbia, five from England – was the lowest in a European Championship match since 1980, but within weeks England fans would have seen five shots as wild entertainment.
England 1 Denmark 1
England led through Harry Kane but struggled for control all game and Denmark deservedly equalised with a 30-yard pile-driver by Morten Hjulmand after a wild pass from Kane, who spent more time around his own box than the opposition’s. Results elsewhere later meant that England were guaranteed progress on four points.
England 0 Slovenia 0
A dull game where England managed three shots on goal ended with them nevertheless top of their group on five points, though it was the Slovenian players and fans celebrating at the end as they progressed to the knockout phase for the first time.
Round of 16: England 2 Slovakia 1 after extra time.
Ivan Schranz put outsiders Slovakia ahead in the first half and England seemed unable, almost unwilling, to do anything about it in another toothless display. They were rescued by Jude Bellingham’s brilliant bicycle kick in the 96th minute and won it with a Kane goal in extra-time – their only shots on target.
Southgate was widely criticised for his inactivity, with the focus on his decision to throw on striker Ivan Toney with one minute of stoppage time remaining.
Quarter-final: England 1 Switzerland 1. England win 5-3 on penalties
In a tight game Breel Embolo put Switzerland ahead after 75 minutes, with Bukayo Saka levelling with a great shot 10 minutes later as England improved, but were still shot-shy.
It went to penalties, but what for so long had been England’s weakness suddenly looked a strength as Cole Palmer, Bellingham, Saka, Toney and Alexander-Arnold all scored confidently and Jordan Pickford saved from Manuel Akanji.
Semi-final: England 2 Netherlands 1
For the third knockout game in a row England fell behind, to a superb Xavi Simons shot, but they responded brilliantly with an exhilarating first-half display that was unrecognisable from the stodge previously served up.
They equalised with a VAR-awarded Harry Kane penalty and went close several times. The second half was quieter but exploded in the 91st minute when substitute Ollie Watkins scored to take England into their second successive European Championship final.
SPAIN
Spain 3 Croatia 0
Spain set their Euros stall out with an impressive opening match demolition of Croatia with first-half goals by Alvaro Morata, Fabian Ruiz and Dani Carvajal.
Spain 1 Italy 0
A 1-0 win secured by an own goal might sound close but Spain totally outclassed the defending champions, firing in 20 attempts on goal, to gain revenge for their elimination by Italy in Euro 2024.
Spain 1 Albania 0
Already through, Spain made 10 changes for the game but were still comfortably in charge and won it with a superb early Ferran Torres strike.
Round of 16: Spain 4 Georgia 1
Despite the shock of going behind via Robin Le Normand’s own goal, Spain delivered another emphatic display.
Rodri equalised and second-half goals by the impressive Fabian Ruiz, Nico Williams and Dani Olmo saw them home.
Quarter-final: Spain 2 Germany 1 (aet)
After the Georgia cruise, Spain faced a considerable step up against the host nation but were deserved winners.
Olmo put them ahead early in the second half but Germany levelled a minute from time via Florian Wirtz.
The game was into the 119th minute and looked set for a penalty shootout when substitute Mikel Merino headed the winner.
Semi-final: Spain 2 France 1
Randal Kolo Muani put France ahead but two goals in five first-half minutes settled another deserved victory.
At 16, Lamine Yamal became the youngest scorer in a Euro or World Cup – and Spain’s 10th different scorer at the tournament – with a lovely curler, before Olmo scored for the third successive knockout game.
-Reuters
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