Category: World Cup Russia 2018

World Cup 2018

  • Eagles to Arrive Friday after World Cup exit

    The team have officially checked out of their hotel rooms for a return back home according to schedule.

    The Nigeria side who narrowly failed to qualify after losing to Argentina left Russia aboard and an Emirates flight.

    Nigeria Football Federation’s (NFF) Second Vice President, Shehu Dikko, led the delegation along with some members of the NFF executive committee.

    Not all the 23 players traveled with the team as some have already left to join their families.

    NationSport understands that head coach Gernot Rohr will meet with the NFF leadership sometime next-week to discuss the Africa of Nations Cup qualifiers against Seychelles in September.

  • World Cup: Germany arrive home to angry supporters

    Germany national team have started facing the music for their poor outing in Russia as they were held hostage by an army of Germany reporters and photographers just as they landed home on Thursday.

    Germany became the third successive champions to be eliminated at the group stage after a shambolic performance in Russia culminating in a 2-0 defeat to Korea Republic in Kazan.
    The reporters in their numbers were asking questions just as the team landed at Frankfurt International Airport.

    Coach Joachim Low and captain Manuel Neuer were left to face the music as the Germans came to terms with their worst World Cup performance in 80 years.

    National newspaper Bild declared the campaign as ‘the biggest disgrace in German World Cup history’.

    Jerome Boateng wrote on Instagram: ‘Such a disaster. World Cup 2018 was not what we expected.

    ‘I’m still angry and disappointed and at the same time I feel sorry for all our fans who supported us in the stadiums

    ‘Four years ago we were on top of the world – now we’re on the bottom. These are the days in the life of a football player nobody envies you for. But that’s life.

    ‘All I can say is thank you to our fans that always support us. We will analyse what went wrong and carry on working as we always did. I promise we’ll be back strong!’

    An honest tweet was sent from the national team’s official Twitter account the morning after the game, admitting that they deserved to be heading home.

    It read: ‘Dear fans, we feel just as disappointed as you. The World Cup only comes around every four years and we expected so much more from us.

    ‘We’re sorry for not playing like world champions, and as painful as it is, we deserve to be out…’

    A follow-up tweet then said: ‘Your support across the globe was incredible. We celebrated together in 2014, but sometimes in football you have to accept defeat and admit that your opponents were better.

    ‘Congrats to Sweden and Mexico, and of course to South Korea on their win. Thanks to Russia for your hospitality

  • England 0-1 Belgium: Januzaj shoots Red Devils top of Group G

    Belgium have claimed top spot in World Cup Group G with a 1-0 win against England in Kaliningrad this evening, courtesy of a Adnan Januzaj strike early in the second half.

    The former Manchester United and Sunderland man produced the game’s only real moment of quality, working the ball onto his left and sending it past Jordan Pickford for the decisive moment.

    England would have finished at the summit had they held on for a draw, but they now face a last-16 tie against Japan, where as Belgium face Japan.

    However, the Red Devils are on course to face Brazil in the quarter-finals, while the Three Lions will have a more favourable last-eight tie against Switzerland or Sweden if they make it that far.

    Rashford squandered a glorious chance to level with an hour played, being denied by the fingertips of Thibaut Courtois – one of only two survivors for Belgium from their last outing – when played clean through on goal.

    Not until the final quarter of the match did the two managers start turning to their bench, with Vincent Kompany given a first run-out in a month after sustaining an injury in the build-up to the competition.

    Rashford dipped a free kick over the crossbar and Fellaini’s block flew past the upright as England chased an equaliser, but it was Belgium who came closest to a second as Pickford parried a long-range drive from substitute Dries Mertens.

  • Senegal, last African team crash out of 2018 FIFA World Cup

    Yerry Mina’s second-half header sent Colombia into the Round of Sixteen, condemning Senegal, and the whole of Africa out of the 2018 FIFA World Cup

    The Barcelona defender ensured his side’s progress with a towering second-half header from Juan Quintero’s corner.

    Senegal needed a draw to progress, to keep Africa’s hope alive, following Poland’s 1-0 victory over Japan in Volgograd, but they lost the place, conceding six yellow cards as against Japan’s four, after both sides conceded the same goal difference

    Colombia had to win to be sure of their progress, but with Poland beating Japan 1-0 in Volgograd, African representation at the World Cup was ended as Senegal failed to secure the point they needed.

    Read Also: Top goal scorers in FIFA World Cup history

    Senegal had a first-half penalty ruled out following a VAR review, while Colombia’s key man James Rodriguez was substituted before the break and could be a doubt for the knockout rounds.

    M’Baye Niang missed an early opportunity but the opening exchanges were cagey before referee Milorad Mazic awarded Senegal the penalty after 17 minutes.

    After consulting VAR, Mazic judged defender Davinson Sanchez to have won the ball before making any contact with Sadio Mane.

    Mane’s slip as he took a free-kick in the 64th minute, the Liverpool forward sending the ball wildly off-target, summed up the lack of quality in the match.

    The South Americans will face the runners-up from Group G, which will be either England or Belgium, in Moscow on Tuesday, while Japan await the winners in Rostov-on-Don on Monday.

  • Colombia win, Senegal out on fair play rule

    SENEGAL 0-1 COLOMBIA (FT)

    It’s all over! More drama in Russia as Colombia’s victory means they top Group H.

    It’s come right down to the wire for Senegal, who crashed out at the group stage because their disciplinary record is worse than Japan’s.

    It all means Japan qualify for the last 16 and finish second in the group.

    MATCH STATS

    • Colombia have progressed past the World Cup group stages for only the third time, also doing so in 1990 and 2014.
    • Senegal have failed to keep a clean sheet in any of their last seven World Cup games, since beating France 1-0 in their first ever match in the tournament.
    • Colombia’s goal came from the first shot on target in the second half, and their only shot on target in the entire second period.
    • Senegal became the third team to be eliminated from the 2018 World Cup despite winning their opening game of the tournament (also Iran and Serbia). The last time as many as three teams failed to get through the group stages despite winning their opener was in 2002 (Argentina, Costa Rica and Russia).
    • Colombia are the only team to reach the knockout stages of the 2018 World Cup despite losing their opening match of the tournament.
    • Four of Colombia’s last six World Cup goals have come from set-piece situations.
    • Colombia had just four shots in this match, with no player having more than one.
    • Four of Yerry Mina’s five goals for Colombia have been headers.
    • Juan Quintero has been involved in three of Colombia’s five World Cup goals in 2018 (1 goal, 2 assists).
    • Colombia’s Juan Quintero has either scored (1) or assisted (2) a goal in each of his three World Cup games so far in 2018.

    GROUP H PERMUTATIONS

    • Japan need a draw against Poland to qualify
    • Japan can lose and still qualify if Senegal beat Colombia
    • Senegal need a draw against Colombia to qualify
    • Colombia will advance if they beat Senegal
    • Colombia can qualify with a draw if Poland beat Japan

    Colombia go top of the group!

    Japan have now moved back into the qualifying position – in second – while Senegal drop out.

    They MUST find an equaliser otherwise they’re going home…*

    *Unless Japan get two yellow cards or a red card*

    SENEGAL TEAM NEWS

    Senegal coach Aliou Cisse‘s key change for their final group game is the inclusion of Monaco striker Keita Balde, who starts up front, making his World Cup debut alongside Mbaye Niang.

    Kouyate and Gassama also come in for N’Diaye and Wague.

    COLOMBIA TEAM NEWS

    Colombia coach Jose Pekerman has kept faith with the attacking front line that thumped Poland 3-0 last time out.

    Juan Quintero and James Rodriguez are paired together again, whileCarlos Sanchez returns after his one-match suspension alongside Mateus Uribe to replace Abel Aguilar and Wilmar Barrios, who drops to the bench.

    COLOMBIA’S DANGERMAN

    James Rodriguez has been involved in 10 goals in seven World Cup appearances for Colombia (6 goals, 4 assists).

  • World Cup: Fans desert viewing centers in Kafanchan

    Football fans in Kafanchan, Kaduna State, have deserted viewing centres following Nigeria’s ouster from World Cup in Russia.

    Checks on Thursday in Kafanchan revealed that most of the viewing centres within the metropolis witnessed poor turnout, while the operators lamented low patronage.

    Mr Amos Sidi, who operates a viewing centre around Roundabout junction, said the premises had experienced a dramatic low patronage since after the defeat of the Super Eagles on Tuesday.

    “A lot of people had lost enthusiasm after Nigeria lost and crashed out of the competition and as such, patronage has also drastically reduced.

    “Before now, we used to make an average of N2, 000 to N3,000 daily, but now, one can hardly boast of N1, 000 a day,’’ he said.

    Also, Malam Mohammed Saleh, who operates a viewing centre on Bauchi Road, told NAN that football fans in the area had deserted the centre.

    Saleh said the fans felt that there was no need spending their money watching other Countries play, while Nigeria was already back home.

    Read Also: Russia 2018: Fans want Super Eagles to rise above defeat

    “I have heard some of my customers tell me they would rather stay at home and listen to news commentary, or follow updates on their android phones.

    “Only a few football enthusiasts and sports betting addicts still patronise the premises and even plead to watch for free,” he said.

    NAN reports that other viewing centres, including those around Yakowa Market road, Garaje and Katsit areas witnessed low patronage with their operators sharing similar experiences.

    Meanwhile, football analysts in Kafanchan have lamented the exit of the Super Eagles from the ongoing World Cup in Russia, describing the development as a clear case of marginalisation.

    Mr Solomon Ambukson of Jos Street told NAN that the Super Eagles deserved more than they got at the competition and described their last match against Argentina as “cheating”.

    “The officials should have called the referee to order which they failed suggesting a clear picture of conspiracy,” he said.

    Ms Asabe Musa of Lowcost area said if the situation as witnessed in the Super Eagles’ last match persisted, African teams might be left with no choice, but stop attending subsequent tournaments.

  • Complacency killed Germany’s World Cup hopes

    The reason lies not in numbers but in German football’s complacency in recent years.
    Every aspect of the national pastime, and that includes clubs, the top league, the national association (DFB) and the players themselves, has fed off this complacency for years.

    Ever since their brilliant 2014 World Cup victory the main actors of German football rested on their laurels, raked in the cash and thought the good times would last forever. But they didn’t.

    Two defeats and one last-gasp victory in the group stage meant an embarrassed Germany made their earliest World Cup exit in 80 years on Wednesday.

    Rewind to 2014 just before the world Cup, when four German clubs battled their way through the group stages and into the Champions League round of 16. This season it was just one.

    Back in 2013, Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund played out an all-German Champions League final. No German club has made it past the last four since.

    In 2011 and 2012 Dortmund won the league. Since then it has been a Bayern monopoly. The reasons for all this are simple: money.

    Read Also: Russia 2018: Fresh corn as added delicacy for fans

    The Bundesliga is eager to highlight its ongoing financial boom, but that boom has also brought with it a one-sided, boring and predictable competition where Bayern win every time.

    The lack of league competition, as the cash-rich DFB looks on without any interest of intervening, has meant that German players have seriously lost their competitive edge.

    Deals in China are more important than giving fans in Freiburg or Hanover a decent competition to watch.

    Even Bayern does not need to create its own players anymore. Its swelling savings account has meant it can just buy them, with Thomas Mueller being their truly home-grown player.

    Add to that Germany coach Joachim Loew’s own complacency, with the coach stubbornly insisting on fielding virtually the same core of players for almost a decade.

    “Why should I lose trust in them after one game,” he snapped after their opening defeat to Mexico.

    Players like Mueller, Jerome Boateng, Mesut Ozil, Sami Khedira and Manuel Neuer have long stopped chasing international success and are now quicker to show off their latest clothes, cars, houses, tattoos or shoes than their latest football achievements. Their collective last good season was back in 2014.

    Even the DFB’s own smugness was evident in its tournament slogan — ‘the Best Never Rest’ —, its constant marketing drive and sponsor photo shoots and its continuous demand to “bring back the fifth star” — a fifth world title.

    When two DFB employees stormed the Sweden bench after Germany’s last-second 2-1 victory to celebrate and gesticulate at their opponents, it was indicative of their complacency suddenly being replaced by pure panic.

    Until that point the DFB had no clue a disaster was looming.

    Whether Loew decides to stay on, the post-World Cup Germany coach must clean house and rebuild the team from the same source as the 2014 World Cup-winning team.

    The country’s outstanding youth work and its vast pool of talented players was the start of their decade-long exciting run in world football.

    It is there the coach must turn to, instead of players more interested in taking pictures of their latest sports cars or presidents.

  • World Cup: Germany apologise to fans after ouster

    The German senior national team has apologised to its fans following its group stage in Russia 2018 World Cup elimination.

    The defending champions lost 0-2 to South Korea in their last group F game to end with three points.

    “Dear fans, we feel just as disappointed as you,’’ the team said on its twitter handle @DFB_Team_EN.

    “The World Cup only comes around every four years and we expected so much from us.

    “We are sorry for not playing like world champions and as painful as it is, we deserve to be out,’’ it tweeted.

    Germany are the fourth defending champions to be eliminated from the Group Stage at the World Cup in the last five tournaments (also France 2002, Italy 2010, Spain 2014).

  • World Cup: Brazil beat Serbia to top group E

    • FT: Serbia 0-2 Brazil
    • Paulinho with the goal (36)
    • Thiago Silva header (68)
    • Brazil top Group E
    • Serbia go out, Switzerland through

    FT: Brazil eliminate Serbia and secure their place in the second round of the World Cup after a comfortable 2-0 victory in Moscow.

    Paulinho’s lob settled the nerves on 36 minutes and Thiago Silva’s second-half header (68) confirmed their passage as Group E winners, while ensuring Brazil didn’t become the second World Cup heavyweight to crash out on Wednesday following Germany’s shock exit earlier in the day.

    The victory means Tite’s side will play Mexico in Samara on Monday afternoon and could then potentially face the winner of England’s group in a quarter-final.

    Neymar shows off his goalkeeping credentials

    SERBIA TEAM NEWS

    Team to play Brazil: Stoikovic, Rukavina, Milenkovic, Veljkovic, Kolarov, Milinkovic-Savic, Matic, Tadic, Ljajic, Kostic, Mitrovic

    BRAZIL TEAM NEWS

    Team to play Serbia: Alisson, Fagner, Thiago Silva, Miranda, Marcelo, Casemiro, Paulinho, Coutinho, Willian, Jesus, Neymar,

     

    THREE CHANGES FOR SERBIA

    Branislav Ivanovic, Dusko Tosic and Luka Milivojevic have all been left out of the team that lost to Switzerland last Friday with Antonio Rukavina, Milos Veljkovic and Adem Ljajic coming in to replace them.

    Six of the Serbia squad have been booked and three of those players walking the disciplinary tightrope start this game; Sergej Milinkovic-Savic, Aleksandar Mitrovic and Nemanja Matic.

    NO CHANGES FOR BRAZIL

    Brazil coach Tite has stuck with the same side that left it late to beat Costa Rica last Friday. Danilo is out with a thigh problem and Douglas Costa has a hamstring injury, while Roberto Firmino still can’t get a start for his country at this World Cup.

  • World Cup: defending champion Germany crashes out

    • South Korea 2-0 Germany
    • Kim goal given after VAR (90+1)
    • Son makes it two in open goal (90+6)
    • Group F match

    T’S ALL OVER! Germany are out of the World Cup.

    What. A. Finish. Incredible.

    Germany did not look at the races from kick off and despite an improved second half performance, they could not get past a well drilled South Korea defence, with VAR handing South Korea the opening goal in the 91st minute before Son netted a second five minutes later, deep into injury time.

    The Germans – players and fans – are in tears and they have never exited at the World Cup group stages as we know them now. They have never really looked like defending their title and they will head home now.

    GERMANY TEAM NEWS

    Team to play South Korea: Neuer, Hector, Hummels, Sule, Kimmich, Khedira, Kroos, Ozil, Reus, Goretzka, Werner.

    Subs: Trapp, Plattenhardt, Ginter, Draxler, Muller, Rudiger, Rudy, Brandt, Gundogan, Gomez, ter Stegen.

    SOUTH KOREA TEAM NEWS

    Team to play Germany: Hyeon-Woo Jo, Yong Lee, Young-Sun Yun, Chul Hong, Young-Kwon Kim, Woo-Young Jung, Jae-Sung Lee, Seon-Min Moon, Hyun-Soo Jang, Heung-Min Son, Ja-Cheol Koo.

    Subs: Seung-Gyu Kim, Jin-Hyeon Kim, Seung-Hyun Jung, Ban-Suk Oh, Joo-Ho Park, Min-woo Kim, Yo-Han Go, Se-Jong Ju, Sung-Yueng Ki, Shin-Wook Kim, Seung-Woo Lee, Hee-Chan Hwang.

    MATCH STATS

    • Two of the three matches between South Korea and Germany have been at World Cup finals, with the Germans winning both contests (1994, 2002).
    • The most recent World Cup meeting between South Korea and Germany was at the Koreans’ home World Cup in 2002, with the hosts losing 1-0 in the semi-finals.
    • South Korea’s only victory against Germany came in a friendly match in 2004 (3-1).
    • Germany have won all five of their World Cup games against Asian opponents, scoring 19 goals in total and keeping clean sheets in each of their last three.
    • South Korea have lost their last four World Cup matches in a row, their joint-worst run – they also lost four in a row between 1986 and 1990.
    • Germany’s victory over Sweden was their first at the World Cup when conceding first since 1998, a 2-1 win over Mexico.
    • Son Heung-Min attempted eight shots in South Korea’s defeat to Mexico – three more than South Korea managed in their opening match against Sweden (five shots).
    • Germany have won 15 of their last 17 competitive matches (D1 L1) since losing 2-0 to France at Euro 2016.