Category: Football

  • Liverpool glory would boost Salah’s Ballon d’Or chances: Slot

    Liverpool glory would boost Salah’s Ballon d’Or chances: Slot

    Arne Slot says Mohamed Salah will have a “far better chance” of winning the Ballon d’Or if runaway Premier League leaders Liverpool win silverware this season.

    The Egyptian superstar, 32, is favourite to win the award, regarded as the top individual prize in football, after a sensational campaign so far.

    Salah, who is yet to sign a new deal to keep him at Anfield beyond the end of this season, has scored 30 goals and provided 21 assists in all competitions during the current campaign.

    But Liverpool manager Slot said Tuesday that despite those stellar numbers, the club need to win major trophies to help their forward win his first Ballon d’Or.

    “It’s a good thing that Mo is in the discussion because it means he does well and it means we are doing well,” the Dutchman said on Tuesday.

    “But for him to stay in that discussion, he should bring in the same performances as he’s done for seven or eight months now.

    “And I think, in general, someone that wins the Ballon d’Or needs to win something as well, so it’s a great challenge that is in front of us, but also in front of him.”

    Liverpool, who host Newcastle on Wednesday, are 11 points clear of second-placed Arsenal at the top of the Premier League with 11 games to go but Slot said he does not fear complacency.

    “We all know these players are so long in this competition, even much longer than me, so they know how difficult every single game is, and if you have to play 11, it’s still a long way to go,” he said.

    Liverpool are also in the final of the League Cup, where they will face Newcastle again, and will meet Paris Saint-Germain in the last 16 of the Champions League.

    Slot was asked at his pre-match press conference whether Salah’s current form could be compared with that of Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi at their peak but he shied away from direct comparisons.

    “He (Salah) has had some outstanding seasons here at Liverpool, and we hope he can continue this for a longer period of time, but to do that he first has to extend his contract of course,” he said.

    The Liverpool boss was also asked whether Salah’s red-hot form would make it easier or more difficult for the club to agree a new deal.

    “You can look at it in both ways,” he said. “You can say the better he does, the more expensive he might become, and if he would do really worse, we would have second thoughts if we wanted to extend his contract.

    “So I think for everyone it’s the best that he brings in the performances he does now. Maybe only for the one that has to pay him it’s not the best, but for everyone else it’s the best.”

  • Real Madrid doing well despite ‘absurd, unsustainable’ schedule – Ancelotti

    Real Madrid doing well despite ‘absurd, unsustainable’ schedule – Ancelotti

    Real Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti said Tuesday his team were doing a good job given their packed fixture list, describing the football calendar as “absurd” and “unsustainable”.

    If Madrid progress as far as possible in the Champions League and Copa del Rey, as well as the Club World Cup in the summer, they could play 72 games this season.

    Madrid have already won the Intercontinental Cup and the European Super Cup, but lost against Barcelona in the Spanish Super Cup final in Saudi Arabia.

    “Taking into account the absurd calendar we have to deal with, that all teams have to, not just us, we’re doing very well,” Ancelotti told reporters.

    “All teams that are fighting and battling in these moments are doing very well, because it’s an unsustainable calendar.”

    Los Blancos face Real Sociedad in a Copa del Rey semi-final first leg clash in the Basque country on Wednesday.

    “In the span of 52 days, tomorrow will be our 17th game,” continued Ancelotti.

    “If I look back to my time (as a player), in a season we’d play 30 league games, so we’d already be in the second half of the season.”

    Real Madrid demolished Manchester City 6-3 on aggregate in the Champions League play-off round to reach the last 16 and are level on points with Barcelona at the top of La Liga.

    Ancelotti said he, his staff and players needed a break.

    “I am tired and I imagine you (reporters) are tired too, from what I see and hear, you are tired. You need rest… we need rest,” he added.

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    Kylian Mbappe did not take part in the club’s training session on Tuesday due to a dental problem, but Ancelotti said he would be travelling to San Sebastian and could feature.

    Ancelotti praised Mbappe’s attitude since arriving in Spain from Paris Saint-Germain.

    “Mbappe arrived with humility and keeping a low profile,” said the Italian coach.

    “He improved the dressing room atmosphere, there’s a lot more confidence because one of the best players in the world arrived… (and) in terms of ego, absolutely nothing has changed.”

    Ancelotti also fired a barb at La Liga president Javier Tebas, who called Madrid a “cry-baby” club following their recent complaints about Spanish referees.

    “He talks too much about Real Madrid, since I’ve been here,” said the Italian.

    “There are more important issues and he should focus more on solving the problems of Spanish football.”

  • Is Salah set for greatest individual Premier League season?

    Is Salah set for greatest individual Premier League season?

    There seems no stopping Liverpool or Mohamed Salah this season.

    The Reds are 11 points clear of Arsenal at the top of the Premier League as they look to become champions for the 20th time.

    Egypt forward Salah has been integral in that success and again played a starring role with a goal and an assist in Liverpool’s 2-0 win at reigning champions Manchester City on Sunday to continue his incredible form in 2024-25.

    But is the 32-year-old on course for the best individual campaign since the Premier League era began in 1992?

    We take a look at the stats to see how he compares to other great strikers and what records he could break.

    More than a goalscorer

    Salah has won the Golden Boot as the league’s top scorer three times (outright in 2017-18 and shared in 2018-19 and 2021-22) and is leading the race this season.

    His best campaign featured 32 goals, but he could beat that in the next few months.

    He has 25 goals in 27 games – six clear of Newcastle’s Alexander Isak and Manchester City’s Erling Haaland, the player who won the award in the past two seasons.

    Haaland’s 36 goals two seasons ago is a Premier League record, although no-one will probably ever pass Dixie Dean’s incredible 60 league goals for Everton in 1927-28.

    Only Arsenal’s Thierry Henry has been top scorer in four seasons of the Premier League, while only Jimmy Greaves at Chelsea and Tottenham in the 1950s and 60s (six) and Derby County’s Steve Bloomer in the 1890s and 1900s (five) have been top more often in the English top flight.

    In the ‘big five’ leagues (Premier League, La Liga, Serie A, Bundesliga and Ligue 1), Salah is again top, four goals ahead of Bayern Munich’s Harry Kane and Atalanta’s Mateo Retegui and five clear of Barcelona’s Robert Lewandowski.

    But Salah is more than just a goalscorer.

    He is well clear in assists too with 16 – six more than anyone else in the Premier League and five more than Barcelona’s Lamine Yamal, who is next across Europe’s big five leagues.

    Salah has 11 games to break the single-season Premier League assists record of 20 shared by Henry in 2002-03 and Manchester City’s Kevin de Bruyne in 2019-20.

    When you combine goals with assists, Salah has 41 goal contributions. The Premier League record is 47 – shared by Blackburn’s Alan Shearer and Andrew Cole at Newcastle, although they did that in 42-match campaigns.

    In a 38-game season, the best is 44 by Haaland two years ago (36 goals, eight assists) and Henry in 2002-03 (24 goals, 20 assists).

    Since 2006-07 only four players in England, Spain, Italy, Germany or France have reached 50 goal contributions in a single season: Barcelona’s Lionel Messi and Real Madrid’s Cristiano Ronaldo (three), Barcelona’s Luis Suarez (one) and Paris St-Germain’s Zlatan Ibrahimovic (one).

    Messi’s best league total came in an incredible 2011-12 season with 66 goal contributions (50 goals and 16 assists).

    Salah has scored and assisted a goal in 49 league matches in his career in Europe’s big five leagues.

    Since Opta has recorded data (from 2006-07), only Messi (102) and Ronaldo (65) have scored and assisted more often.

    Lethal home and away

    Salah has scored in six league games in a row. If he gets a goal against Newcastle on Wednesday it would match his best run at Liverpool after scoring in seven consecutive matches earlier this season and also in 2021-22.

    Jamie Vardy holds the record of scoring in 11 successive Premier League games.

    Salah has four more games in which to set records for most Premier League goals away from home as well as most assists away from home.

    He has 16 league goals on his travels, a figure matched only by Kevin Phillips at Sunderland in 1999-2000 and Harry Kane at Tottenham two seasons ago.

    Salah has the joint most away Premier League assists in a season, level with Cesc Fabregas’ 11 that he set in his first campaign with Chelsea in 2014-15.

    Salah has 182 Premier League goals and sits sixth overall. Manchester City’s Sergio Aguero is fifth with 184 and Cole fourth with 187, while Shearer is top with 260.

    Asked on Sunday if he was playing better than ever, Salah told Sky Sports: “It is opinion. Maybe people prefer my first seasons, but I prefer now because winning the league, helping the young players, it is special.”

    The big concern for Liverpool fans will be whether this is Salah’s last season at the club. He is out of contract this summer and talks about his future remain ongoing.

    ‘We’re talking Ballon d’Or now’

    It is no surprise that Salah is being talked about as a potential winner of the Ballon d’Or, awarded to the best footballer in the world.

    Liberia striker George Weah is the only African to win the award – in 1995 at AC Milan – while Salah came fifth in 2019 and 2022.

    “Mo Salah is having a Messi and Ronaldo season,” former Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher said on Sky Sports. “This is going to end up being the greatest season we’ve seen from an individual, I have no doubt about that.

    “It’s not whether he will finish above those players in terms of [goal contribution] numbers. It’s how far he can go and can he set the bar so high in future no-one can ever get there again?

    “We’re seeing something special. This is now an all-time season. When you talk about the Premier League, you put Thierry Henry on top, but for me Mo Salah is definitely second. If he signs a new contract that will be a fight to the finish.”

    Daniel Sturridge, a former team-mate of Salah, said: “We’re talking Ballon d’Or now. We have to start putting him in that conversation.

    “What Mo is doing season in, season out is ridiculous. It’s mind-blowing. When he came to the club nobody thought he would be close to a guy that scores 25 goals a season.

    “His motivation is there and his professionalism. In the summer he comes back in unbelievable shape every single season. He wants to be the best and be recognised as the best in the world.

    “I know from having conversations with him in the dressing room, he wants to be the best player in the Premier League and the best player in the world.”

  • Spain stronger after battles on & off pitch – Codina

    Spain stronger after battles on & off pitch – Codina

    Spain defender Laia Codina says the world champions have become stronger because of their battles both on and off the pitch over the past few years.

    The most notable of those was the furor and subsequent repercussions caused by former national football federation boss Luis Rubiales kissing Spain player Jenni Hermoso without her consent.

    Rubiales was found guilty of sexual assault last week in a case in which Codina testified in support of Hermoso.

    “As a group, for sure, I can feel it – we are all so much stronger. We, all of us, have suffered a lot off the pitch,” Codina told TodayPriceNG Sport.

    “A good example is against Belgium [last week when they came from 2-0 down to win 3-2]. Two years ago, I think we would have lost that game.”

    The assault occurred as Spain’s players received their medals after defeating England to win the 2023 Women’s World Cup, with Rubiales grabbing Hermoso by the head and kissing her on the lips.

    A group of 81 players boycotted the team afterward and Codina, 25, appeared at the trial in Madrid in February to give testimony in support of Hermoso’s account of feeling overwhelmed.

    She returned to London the same day and was an unused substitute in Arsenal’s Women’s League Cup semi-final defeat by Manchester City on 6 February.

    “The week that I had to go to Madrid as a witness was a difficult week. It was tough for me obviously personally,” added Codina.

    “A lot of my team-mates at Arsenal could see that there were a lot of emotions. I was up and down. There was a feeling of everything again.

    “But that week is done and I feel good. I feel I did what I had to do in that moment and I’m always supporting Jenni [Hermoso] and my teammates and the women.

    “It is something that made me proud, so I’m happy. I don’t feel like it affects us right now in the team because we don’t speak about it. It is not something we can control, so why should we speak about it.”

    ‘They have to see us as football players’

    Codina says she hopes now the case is over, people will talk about Spanish players’ achievements in football.

    After becoming world champions in 2023, Spain went on to win the Women’s Nations League the next year, and they are currently preparing for Euro 2025.

    “I just hope that everything now goes well and we speak about football finally,” she said.

    “We speak about this team that has been World Cup winners, Nations League winners. We want to speak about football because it is why we are here.

    “It is our job and that is something that is going to be better for us and everyone in women’s football. I hope that – for Spain in general and for society.

    “They have to see us as football players – as women’s football players – and they have to feel that they are proud of us. Just this.”

    Spain – who face England at Wembley on Wednesday (20:00 GMT) – came from 2-0 down to beat Belgium 3-2 in their Women’s Nations League opener on Friday.

    Wednesday’s opponents England have voiced their support for the Spanish players throughout the Rubiales trial.

    Last Thursday, England defender Lucy Bronze described them as “incredibly brave” for speaking out.

    “I saw some words from Lucy Bronze and [England manager] Sarina Wiegman. I’ve heard them and it’s really nice to be honest. I really want to thank them,” said Codina, who is one of the first Spanish players to speak publicly after the verdict, following captain Irene Paredes, who discussed it last week.

    “Feeling that super [kindness] from them, from a big national team like them… England in general, how they work for women’s football, is something that we have to look for.

    “It’s nice that we receive those words. I’m really grateful for that.”

  • Ampadu faces surgery in blow for Wales and Leeds

    Ampadu faces surgery in blow for Wales and Leeds

    Ethan Ampadu is expected to undergo knee surgery and is a major doubt for the start of Wales’ World Cup qualifying campaign at the end of March.

    Leeds United manager Daniel Farke says his captain will miss their upcoming Championship games with a second serious leg injury of the season.

    The 24-year-old was sidelined for 10 weeks after injuring his left knee against Coventry in September, and was forced to miss Monday’s 3-1 win at Sheffield United with a similar problem on his other leg.

    “It’s probably a serious injury,” said Farke.

    “It’s a different knee. It’s a bit too early to assess it but it looks like a cartilage injury and it’s pretty clear he will need to have surgery in the upcoming days.”

    Ampadu, who plays both in defence and midfield, missed four matches of Wales’ autumn Nations League campaign and sat out 12 Leeds games.

    He now faces missing crucial matches in Leeds’ title run-in, plus qualifiers at home against Kazakhstan on 22 March and in North Macedonia three days later for Craig Bellamy’s national team.

    “It’s a bit too soon to give a time frame for how long he will be out for,” added Farke.

    “It depends a bit on how it works, but he definitely won’t be available for the next upcoming games at least and it’s a big blow for us.

    “What are the chances of two big injuries in one season after not missing a minute last season?”

    Despite missing Monday’s top-of-the-table encounter at Bramall Lane, Ampadu took a full part in celebrating Leeds comeback victory which extended their Championship lead over Sheffield United to five points.

    Farke’s side are now seven points clear of third-placed Burnley with 12 games to go in their bid to return to the Premier League after two seasons out of the top flight.

    They host West Bromwich Albion on Saturday, their only remaining game this season against a side currently in the top six.

    After March’s opening two games, Wales’ next qualifiers for the 2026 World Cup are in June when they host Liechtenstein before travelling to Belgium.

    Their four remaining matches in Group J come at the start of the 2025-26 season.

    Better news for Bellamy has been the form of Leeds’ Welsh winger Dan James.

    The 27-year-old former Swansea City and Manchester United forward provided two assists as the Championship leaders scored three late goals to beat Sheffield United.

    James has scored 10 goals for Leeds this season, including two in the 4-0 win at Watford on 11 February.

  • Sheffield United  1 3  Leeds United

    Sheffield United 1 3 Leeds United

    Leeds United produced a remarkable late comeback for the second week running to win at second-placed Sheffield United and move five points clear at the top of the Championship.

    The hosts took the lead in the first half when Leeds goalkeeper Illan Meslier palmed the ball into his own net after tipping Callum O’Hare’s header on to the bar and then seeing Tyrese Campbell’s follow-up hit the post.

    The Whites improved after the break and deservedly levelled when Junior Firpo’s thumping header from Dan James’ cross flew past Michael Cooper in the home goal.

    Ao Tanaka then headed Leeds into the lead in the 89th minute after Firpo had flicked on a corner, and with the Blades still stunned Joel Piroe thumped home a superb third from 20 yards moments later.

    Leeds, who also came back from a goal down late on at home to Sunderland last week, are now unbeaten in 16 Championship games and seven points clear of third-placed Burnley.

    This chastening defeat means Sheffield United remain two points ahead of the Clarets as their own run of four successive wins comes to an end.

    With manager Daniel Farke in the stands serving a one-match ban for being booked for the third time this season amid the celebrations of his side’s winner against the Black Cats last week and skipper Ethan Ampadu out with a knee injury, the away side made a very uncertain start.

    Meslier nearly turned the ball into his own goal from a Sydie Peck corner and was caught under a long throw in the opening 10 minutes.

    The Frenchman then made a super save from O’Hare’s deft header after Ben Brereton Diaz’s cross, but his luck quickly turned as he knocked the loose ball into the corner of his net after Campbell headed the rebound against the post.

    Leeds twice got in behind the home defence in the closing minutes of the first half, but both times Manor Solomon was unable to take advantage.

    Meslier made a good stop to keep Campbell out at the start of the second half and left-back Firpo then missed a good chance when he miscued a header from Tanaka’s cross.

    The Dominican made no such mistake a few minutes later, powering home an excellent header from James’ cross to spark pandemonium in the away end.

    Vini Souza drew a save from Meslier as the Blades looked to retake their lead in both the game and the title race, before substitute Willy Gnonto forced a smart save from Cooper from 18 yards.

    The reprieve was brief for the home side.

    Tanaka headed in at the back post from the subsequent corner and in the blink of an eye it was 3-1, Leeds top scorer Piroe collecting James’ pass from the right before hammering a beauty into the top corner from 20 yards.

    Both managers spoke before and after the game about how this match would not be defining in the promotion race, but it is hard to see past Farke’s side taking the title now after two victories in which they showed the mentality and quality of champions.

    Leeds, who have not lost in the Championship since 30 November, welcome play-off-chasing West Bromwich Albion on Saturday (12:30 GMT), while Sheffield United must pick themselves up for a trip to Queens Park Rangers (15:00) on the same day.

    Reaction: Farke proud after ‘worst possible start’

    Sheffield United manager Chris Wilder:

    “It was a tight game. Congratulations to Daniel [Farke] – they’re a top side and put in a great performance.

    “We started well. We wanted to make it difficult for them, which we did, and we lost a bit of control at the back-end of the first half.

    “They’re top for a reason and we said at half-time we might have to suffer a little bit.

    “They were chucking people forward and maybe we could have done better, but to find a left-back in the middle of the goal and him to score how he did…

    “I think we’d have all shook hands on a draw at 89 minutes, so to concede the second from a set-piece was disappointing.”

    Leeds United manager Daniel Farke:

    “I’m proud of the boys – this is one of the toughest places you can go, and it was the worst possible start.

    “The reaction the boys showed was outstanding. We were able to find not just another gear but another two or three.

    “It was a tight win but a deserved one. It was a really good night for us and a priceless three points.

    “Each and every point brings us closer to where we want to finish, but you have to keep going.

    “We were seven points clear of third before this round of matches and we are seven points clear now. In this league the momentum can change quickly and you can need some luck.”

  • Man Utd to make up to 200 more staff redundant

    Man Utd to make up to 200 more staff redundant

    Manchester United will make up to 200 jobs redundant to “return the club to profitability”.

    About 250 members of staff were made redundant last year in a first wave of cost-cutting measures by co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe.

    In a meeting with staff on Monday, United chief executive Omar Berrada informed employees that there would be a fresh round of redundancies as part of a “transformation plan”.

    The club said: “The transformation plan aims to return the club to profitability after five consecutive years of losses since 2019.”

    It added that “approximately 150-200 jobs may be made redundant, subject to a consultation process with employees”, with the process expected to take between three and four months.

    As of 30 June 2024, Manchester United had 1,140 employees, so 450 redundancies would be 39% of the club’s workforce.

    Last week the club revealed a loss of £27.7m in their second quarter financial results and the Red Devils have lost more than £300m over the past three years.

    United are on course for their lowest finish in the Premier League era as Ruben Amorim’s team are 15th in the table after Saturday’s 2-2 draw at Everton.

    The club added that additional measures are being taken to “improve the club’s financial sustainability and enhance operational efficiency.

    “This will create a more solid financial platform from which the club can invest in men’s and women’s football success and improved infrastructure”.

    Berrada said: “We have a responsibility to put Manchester United in the strongest position to win across our men’s, women’s and academy teams.

    “These hard choices are necessary to put the club back on a stable financial footing.

    “We have lost money for the past five consecutive years. This cannot continue.

    “Our two main priorities as a club are delivering success on the pitch for our fans and improving our facilities. We cannot invest in these objectives if we are continuously losing money.”

    Man Utd braced for more redundant

    What other changes will there be?

    United also announced the appointment of Marc Armstrong as the club’s chief business officer on Monday.

    The transformation plan will include some staff moving from Old Trafford to the club’s Carrington training base and a reduced presence will be maintained in London, but all the club’s leadership will be Manchester-based, including Armstrong.

    Free lunches will no longer be provided for staff at Old Trafford, saving more than £1m a year, while the catering arrangements at Carrington will be unchanged for the remainder of the season.

    The club’s annual donation to the Manchester United Disabled Supporters Association (MUDSA) will remain at £40,000 and the club is in talks with the Manchester United Foundation (MUF) about its level of contribution.

    Ratcliffe has announced a string of cost-cutting measures since his investment in United, with the club saying at the time that the first round of redundancies would save between £40m-£45m.

    In December, Ratcliffe warned more “difficult and unpopular decisions” would be taken to get the club to where he wants it to be. Matchday ticket prices have been increased to £66 per game, with no concessions for children or pensioners.

    Ratcliffe is still to decide whether to rebuild Old Trafford, which could cost £1.5bn, or build a new ground, which would likely cost more than £2bn.

    Ratcliffe’s impact on Man Utd’s football operations

    Ratcliffe’s Ineos group completed a deal worth about $1.6bn (£1.25bn) for a stake in Manchester United in February 2024.

    Ineos then took over football operations at Old Trafford and quickly began a restructure with Ashworth appointed sporting director, Berrada as chief executive and Jason Wilcox as technical director.

    In June, Ineos opted to keep Ten Hag as manager but then sacked him and his coaching staff, at a cost of £14.5m.

    United paid Sporting £11m to bring in coach Ruben Amorim as Ten Hag’s replacement in November, and they also paid £4.1m to hire and then fire Ashworth.

    United’s latest accounts showed a net loss of £113.2m in the year to 30 June 2024.

    It follows losses of £28.7m in 2022-23 and £115.5m in 2021-22, with total losses across the past five years exceeding £370m.

    During Ratcliffe’s first full season as co-owner, United could finish in the bottom half for the first time since 1989-90, when they were 13th in the old First Division.

    According to last season’s ‘merit’ payments from the Premier League, if United remain in their current 15th position they will receive £16.9m – almost £20m less than the £36.7m they earned for finishing eight last term.

    Winning the Europa League is the team’s only realistic avenue of qualifying for next season’s Champions League and should they fail to do so, they will suffer a £10m annual drop in their sponsorship deal with Adidas.

    That is likely to put further pressure on United’s chances of bolstering Amorim’s squad in the summer and will bring greater scrutiny on the wisdom of so many of United’s recent transfer dealings.

  • Galatasaray accuse Mourinho of making ‘racist statements’

    Galatasaray accuse Mourinho of making ‘racist statements’

    Galatasaray said they would “initiate criminal proceedings” against Fenerbahce manager Jose Mourinho after claiming he made “racist statements” following the teams’ 0-0 draw on Monday.

    It was not clear which statements Galatasaray were referring to.

    Speaking in the news conference after the Istanbul derby, Mourinho said the home bench had been “jumping like monkeys” and also repeated his criticism of Turkish referees, saying it would have been a “disaster” to use an official from the country.

    Monday’s match was refereed by Slovenian Slavko Vincic after both clubs requested a foreign official take charge of the fixture.

    As well as the threat of legal action, Galatasaray said they would submit “official complaints” to football’s governing bodies.

    Mourinho – a former Chelsea, Manchester United and Tottenham manager – and Fenerbahce are yet to responded to the accusations.

    After the game Mourinho was asked about the performance of 19-year-old defender Yusuf Akcicek and said: “I have to thank the referee. After the big dive in the first minute and their bench jumping like monkeys on the top of the kid… with a Turkish referee you would have a yellow card after one minute and after five minutes I would have to change him.”

    He added: “I went to the referee’s dressing room after the game, of course the fourth official was there, a Turkish referee. I told him ‘thank you for coming here, you come for a big match’ and I turned myself to the fourth official and I said ‘if you were a referee this match would be a disaster’.”

    In a statement, Galatasaray said: “Since the commencement of his managerial duties in Turkey, Fenerbahce manager Jose Mourinho has persistently issued derogatory statements directed towards the Turkish people. Today, his discourse has escalated beyond merely immoral comments into unequivocally inhumane rhetoric.

    “We hereby formally declare our intention to initiate criminal proceedings concerning the racist statements made by Jose Mourinho, and shall accordingly submit official complaints to Uefa and Fifa.

    “Furthermore, we shall diligently observe the stance adopted by Fenerbahce – an institution professing to uphold ‘exemplary moral values’ – in response to the reprehensible conduct exhibited by their manager.”

    On Tuesday Fenerbahce’s vice president Acun Ilicali denied what Mourinho said was racist.

    “We will [stand] with our coach,” he told Sky Sports News. “Jose Mourinho is very important for us – we are happy to be with him. We can clearly say [we are] behind our coach and supporting him 100%.

    “It is nothing to do with racism. In this situation [Galatasaray are] trying to manipulate, it’s simply just resembling [animals]. You use animals [such as] ‘running like a rabbit’. So many things. ‘You are like a snake,’ we say. This is giving examples of animals for behaviours not a person.”

    Two-time Champions League winner Mourinho, 62, was appointed Fenerbahce manager last summer and was banned and fined earlier this season for condemning refereeing standards in Turkey.

    Before Monday’s game he had welcomed the decision to use a foreign official after previously describing the environment in the country as “toxic”.

    “I think it’s important for the credibility, for the image of the match,” Mourinho said.

  • ‘I’m not the worst’ – but is Nunez too wasteful for Liverpool?

    ‘I’m not the worst’ – but is Nunez too wasteful for Liverpool?

    “I wasn’t the best three weeks ago, and I’m not the worst now.”

    That is how Darwin Nunez framed the disappointment he experienced as Liverpool missed the chance to go 10 points clear in the Premier League title race in Wednesday’s 2-2 draw at Aston Villa.

    The Uruguay striker’s wastefulness in front of goal, a persistent concern since he joined for an initial £64m in 2022, again reared its head as he blazed over from six yards with the target gaping at Villa Park.

    It is only one month, though, since Nunez produced stoppage-time heroics with a late double to clinch a 2-0 win at Brentford and strengthen the Reds’ grip in top spot.

    But his miss, which had an expected goals value (xG) of 0.75 – meaning he would be expected to score 75% of the time in that scenario – was described as “one of the worst we’ve seen this year” by ex-Liverpool striker Robbie Fowler on TNT Sports.

    It also left head coach Arne Slot with his head in his hands as he later lamented the loss of two points.

    ‘If I fall, I get up’ – but what do stats say about Nunez?

    On Thursday, Nunez posted on social media: “If I fall, I get up. You’ll never see me give up. I’m going to give it my all until the last day I’m here in Liverpool. Resilience!”

    But do the numbers suggest the Uruguay international can still play a pivotal role for Liverpool going forward?

    Nunez, who was heavily linked with a move to the Saudi Pro League in January, is now in his third full season at Anfield since joining from Portuguese side Benfica on a six-year-deal.

    In that time he has scored 39 goals in 131 appearances – an average of one every 182 minutes

    But the data suggests he has 13 fewer goals than would be expected, with an overall xG of 52.4.

    Nunez has missed just short of one big chance per Premier League game (0.99) since his debut in the competition, according to Sky Sports.

    Liverpool signed Nunez following an excellent 2021-22 campaign in which he scored 34 times in 41 appearances for Benfica, including against the Reds in both legs of their Champions League quarter-final.

    But that remains an outlier in the 25-year-old’s career to date as the only season in which the striker has overperformed his xG in league competition.

    His tally of 26 league goals in 2021-22 was eight more than expected, achieved with an impressive – and since unmatched – shot conversion rate of 30.6%.

    Last season, Nunez had an xG underperformance of -5.4 in the Premier League, a decline on -2.4xG in his first campaign.

    While he has four league goals from an xG of 4.0 this season, his shot conversion rate of 10.3% across all competitions is vastly inferior to that of Liverpool’s other established forward players such as Mohamed Salah (22.3%), Cody Gakpo (22.2%) and Luis Diaz (21%), who have each also made at least 35 appearances in 2024-25.

    In terms of his performance compared to other Premier League strikers this season, Nunez ranks outside the top 20 in a number of key areas.

    His shot conversion rate of 15.4% ranks tied 22nd and he is 24th for minutes per goal (223), while 30 players have bettered his xG performance (0.0) following Wednesday’s miss.

    For comparison, Chris Wood is setting the standard with a shot conversion rate of 39.1% and his 18 goals a significant overperformance of his 10.4 xG.

    ‘I cannot see him being there past the summer’

    Darwin Nunez is a frustrating player.

    When he came in, he became a fans’ favourite just because of the work-rate that he gives.

    But, on the flip side, his composure in front of goal has never been good. When you are at a big club, it is what you are measured on. Is he good enough to be in a Liverpool team that is competing on all fronts? Probably not.

    It showed against Aston Villa – that was a huge miss. At a team like Liverpool, you are expected to finish that.

    Nunez does not have that composure. His mind is going one hundred miles an hour and he cannot slow down his thought process, that was what happened. That miss could be costly come the end of the season.

    There is still a lot of talk around the future of Mohamed Salah. But, even if he leaves, I do not think Nunez will be the backup ready to step in. If I am being honest, I cannot see him even being there past the summer.

    How do Liverpool fans feel?

    Ruhel: Nunez’s missed chances probably cost Jurgen Klopp’s team a league title last season. His abysmal finishing will probably cost Slot’s team a league title this season.

    Ray: Nunez is a big disappointment. His stats showed he wasn’t good enough for Liverpool but Liverpool still bought him. Speed of thought is crucial when playing at this level and he hasn’t got it. He tries hard but this is not enough. He will be gone at the end of the season.

    Ryan: Really, really tired of Nunez now. Not just based on Villa. Yes, he ‘works hard’, but he’s playing for Liverpool in the Premier League. That shouldn’t be a brag, it’s mandatory. He’s a very poor finisher and has been the star of his own catalogue of missed opportunities. He needs offloading and replacing this summer.

    Liam: I just cannot understand the persistence and logic behind playing Darwin Nunez. That miss tonight is one of the worst I have seen all season and I have seen nothing so far that indicates he has the ability to play for a club top in the Premier League.

    Pete: Trying to make sense of the Nunez agenda on here. Diogo Jota missed an absolute sitter and Marcus Rashford was ineffective yet again but the narrative is Nunez.

    The Anfield Wrap Sports journalist Mo Stewart: I think he knows the narrative around him, and I think that’s part of it, it almost feels like he’s playing for his Liverpool career. He knows that he needs to have at least one or two big moments, big contributions if he wants to stay here.

  • ‘They had biggest moment of their careers stolen’ – what next for Spain?

    ‘They had biggest moment of their careers stolen’ – what next for Spain?

    A total of 550 days after a kiss that shook Spanish and global football, Luis Rubiales has been found guilty of sexual assault.

    On Thursday, Spain’s High Court found that the former president of the Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) kissed Jenni Hermoso without consent during the medal ceremony after Spain won the Women’s World Cup in August 2023.

    Rubiales, who has always maintained the kiss was consensual, was fined €10,800 (£8,942). He was also banned from going within a 200m radius of Hermoso and from communicating with her for one year.

    Rubiales was acquitted of coercion – for allegedly trying to pressure Hermoso into saying publicly that the kiss was consensual.

    “Such a conviction seemed unimaginable until four or five years ago,” Spanish football journalist Guillem Balague told the BBC Euro League’s podcast.

    “For that we must thank Jenni and her team-mates, who got the biggest sporting moment of their careers stolen from them.

    “Something good came out of that sad moment.”

    TodayPriceNG Sport explores the key issues in one of the darkest chapters in the history of women’s sport.

    How did we get here?

    Rubiales kissing one of the biggest stars in women’s football and the fallout that followed was the culmination of years of discontent behind the scenes.

    Jorge Vilda, Spain’s coach at the World Cup, was only the second person to manage La Roja since 1988.

    His predecessor, Ignacio Quereda, was in post for nearly 27 years and was sacked only when his entire squad called for his dismissal after their poor performance at the 2015 World Cup. Several players had reportedly refused to play for the national team while he was in charge.

    In September 2022, less than a year before their World Cup win, Spain’s players led a ‘revolt’.

    The RFEF released a statement stating 15 players had submitted identical emails saying they would not play for Vilda unless “significant” concerns over their “emotional state” and “health” were addressed.

    ‘Las 15’ – as the players became known – denied claims they had asked for Vilda to be sacked, but tension followed amid reports of concern over training methods and inadequate game preparation.

    Only three of ‘Las 15’ were in the Spain squad for the World Cup in Australia and New Zealand.

    Spain defied the odds to win the competition for the first time in their history – but then came the kiss.

    ‘Society is polarised – and trial reflected that’

    ‘It’s over’ – protests in support of Hermoso and against Rubiales took place in Spain

    David Menayo Ramos, a journalist at Marca, said the trial was broadcast on YouTube, reflecting what a huge moment it was in Spanish society.

    “The verdict is something that everyone is waiting for,” he told BBC Sport before the verdict was announced.

    “Society is polarised and the trial is a reflection of that.”

    It was an incident that went beyond football, with BBC News journalist Guy Hedgecoe describing it as “Spain’s ‘me too’ movement”.

    The phrase ‘se acabo’ – ‘it’s over’ – became the rallying call in Spain in the hours and days after the incident.

    Protests were held across the country. Fifa, the United Nations and countless players and clubs condemned Rubiales’ behaviour. And 81 one Spain players – including all 23 World Cup winners – said they would not play for the team again while Rubiales remained in charge.

    Rubiales initially said he would not resign, but stepped down three weeks after the incident. It was announced in May 2024 he would stand trial, and proceedings began in early February.

    “You can find flaws in the judgement, flaws that have left people with a bitter-sweet taste,” Balague said.

    “It still feels like those in power can get away with things.”

    ‘Players went through an ordeal’

    In her testimony earlier this month, Hermoso said the incident had “stained one of the happiest days of my life”.

    Speaking shortly before the verdict was announced, England and Chelsea defender Lucy Bronze, who played in the 2023 World Cup final, praised the bravery of Hermoso and her Spain team-mates.

    “I am good friends with a lot of the players involved around it. It’s been incredible that these players have had to go through that,” Bronze said during an England news conference.

    “Not only winning the World Cup and the media on the outside of it, but they are in the court case and speaking out. It’s incredibly brave of all the individuals and the team collectively.

    “They are fighting for change, not just in that court case but in their federation. I have been there last season at Barcelona – watching players go through the ordeal after the World Cup was challenging.

    “They are incredible people and unbelievable players as well. We stand by the Spanish players and we wish them the best.”

    Spain captain Irene Paredes, who testified in support of Hermoso, said she respected the court’s ruling, adding: “What I find somehow striking and strange is that there is no conviction for coercion”.

    Paredes added that this opinion reflected the views of the Spain locker room.

    What next for Rubiales?

    Rubiales has said he will appeal against the verdict.

    The court said prosecutors had requested a custodial sentence of two and a half years for Rubiales – one year for the kiss and 18 months for coercion.

    “He is not going to prison but he has always insisted he did nothing wrong,” Hedgecoe added.

    “During the trial he said maybe he got a little bit carried away during the medal ceremony and he wasn’t behaving in the way he should have done as an institutional figure, but he said there is a big difference between that and committing a crime.”

    Spain play Belgium in Valencia on Friday (kick-off 17:45 GMT) in their Women’s Nations League opener.

    England then host Spain at Wembley on Wednesday, 26 February (kick-off 20:00 GMT) as the sides meet for the first time since the 2023 World Cup final.