Tag: FC Barcelona

  • LaLiga EA Sports: African stars show muscle in tightest title race

    LaLiga EA Sports: African stars show muscle in tightest title race

    After 25 Matchdays, only one point separates FC Barcelona, Atlético de Madrid and Real Madrid, the top three, on the LaLiga EA Sports table. You have to go back 32 years for the last time it’s been that close at this stage of the title race.

    Interestingly, each of the top three clubs has some African influence in their squads that will have a say in there the title goes this year.

    Morocco international Brahim Diaz, who has played a part in 80% of reigning champions Real Madrid’s LALIGA matches this season, has been used to great effect as a scorer as well as a provider, and he will have an important role to play on all fronts in the run-in for Los Blancos.

    Reinildo Mandava, meanwhile, has been a key contributor as a left back in Diego Simeone’s famous defensive system at Atlético de Madrid. It’s the Mozambican’s fourth season at the club and it could end with his first LaLiga title in Spain.

    FC Barcelona’s teenage superstar Lamine Yamal, who has African heritage from both of his parents (his father is from Morocco and his mother is from Equatorial Guinea), has been the best provider in the league with 12 assists this season.

    The Blaugrana currently sit on the top of the pile and could pull away further if either (or both) of the Madrid teams drop points this weekend.

    Read Also: NFF to name Super  Eagles’ coaching crew at Chelle’s unveiling today 

    Both Real and Atlético have tough opponents in Real Betis and Athletic Club respectively, which gives Matchday 26 the potential to be a key one in the title race.

    Real Betis and Athletic Club both have African stars that could have an impact and shake up the LaLiga EA Sports title race.

    But who will win LaLiga EA sports this season is anyone’s guess? One thing you can be sure of is that an African will play a key role in determining where the trophy will end up.

    Below  are three exciting stars  that is pulling their weights  in the on-going campaign.

    Cedric Bakambu: Real Betis have shot up the table with only one loss in their last five games in a run that started with Cedric Bakambu’s injury-time winner after coming off the bench against RCD Mallorca.

    The forward from DR Congo backed up being picked as a starter the next week with an assist in a 2-2 draw against high-flying Athletic Club.

    This weekend, Bakambu’s side will be at home against Real Madrid – a club he scored against when he last played against them back in 2017 when he was at Villarreal CF.

    Iñaki Williams: Lying six points behind the leaders, Bilbao-based side Athletic Club could really announce themselves as proper title contenders if they can pull off a win at Atlético de Madrid.

    If they are to get a great result at the Riyadh Air Metropolitano, Iñaki Williams will surely have a huge role to play. The Ghanaian international has made five goal contributions in seven league games including a goal and an assist last week in a 7-1 thrashing of Real Valladolid.

    Behind the great Cameroon striker Samuel Eto’o, Williams is the second all-time record African scorer in LaLiga EA Sports with 81 goals, five of them coming in past league meetings against Atleti.

    Youssouf Sabaly: The defence of Real Betis has been bolstered by the return of Youssouf Sabaly from muscle injury and it showed in his first game last week with a win against Getafe.

    The Ivorian was part of the club’s famous Copa del Rey triumph in 2021/22 and can be relied upon at right back as they compete for a European spot this season.

    Sabaly has also offered an attacking threat down the right flank in the past, but he hasn’t really shown that this season. But with the exciting Brazilian winger Antony steadily cementing his place in the team and making Betis look dangerous in attack, the best of their combination is all to come.

  • Sports is serious business

    IS sports truly “play play” as one governor once described it? Who will challenge us to see sports as a  platform to bolster the country’s revenue? Doesn’t the government know that sports is the best vehicle for massive employment?

    Spain’s economy, a growing one like Nigeria’s, relies greatly on the volume of cash generated from the sports sector. FC Barcelona, Real Madrid, Atletico Madrid, Sevilla, Villarreal, Valencia are not all about football. They have basketball clubs, volleyball clubs, athletics clubs etc, which are professionally run. But football serves as the fountain where others seek succour, considering its followership as the king of sports.

    Little wonder the hefty taxes on defaulting players and coaches, such as Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, Jose Mourinho et al, which enhance revenue for the Spanish economy. Of course, without taxes, countries will suffer as they need to further develop. Consider Ronaldo’s $20m fine (avoided two-year jail term), Messi’s $2.2m fine (avoided two-year jail term), Xabi Alonso’s $2.8m fine, Mascherano’s £611,000 fine and Jose Mourinho’s €2.2m  and a one-year suspended prison sentence, Radamel Falcao’s €9m fine and Neymar Jr’s  £1.9 million to Brazil tax authorities.

    La Liga’s contribution in Spain’s national economy is no less than any other top-run industry in the country. The two elite division football leagues in Spain generate 185,000 jobs, €4.1 billion ($4.66 bn) in taxes and a turnover equal to 1.37% of the national GDP. This is one sport – football. Others are also run as businesses. Sample: Vuelta a España, a race around Spain and one of cycling’s biggest events.

    Europe’s ‘big five’ leagues spent a record £5billion on players this summer despite Premier League clubs, usually the continent’s most active shoppers, slightly reining in their spending, Deloitte has revealed.

    According to analysis from the professional services company’s Sports Business Group, Spanish clubs spent £1.24billion, breaking the 1bn-euros mark for the first time and more than doubling their expenditure from just two years ago. But there were also summer spending records set in Italy (£1.06billion), Germany (£670million) and France (£605million).

    Premier League clubs still led the way, though, with £1.41billion, although the net spent was only £575million, the lowest since 2015. That net-spend figure also fell by £50million since the league shut its transfer window on August 8, more than three weeks earlier than many of its European peers. Guess what, the English teams, having learned from their folly, are moving to revert to the old order in the transfer market by November, having seen what they lost as revenue to the early closure of the transfer market on August 8.

    I’ve chosen Spain, being a developing economy like ours, to illustrate how the citizenry’s passion for soccer can be exploited to fund other sports without ‘killing’ football, which provides a big chunk of the cash. Nigerians love soccer as much as the Spaniards, but their administrators are driven by the landmarks for growth they put in place than what comes into their pockets, the bane of Nigerian administrators.

    In Spain, the government’s role is purely advisory, ensuring that nobody is above the law, as we have seen with high profile players and coaches being made to face the law. The Sports minister should persuade the National Assembly’s leadership to prioritise the enactment of the National Sports Commission (NSC) Bill and the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) Bill, if we hope to have the Spanish template, which isn’t necessarily the best, but a starting point. No corporate body will fund sports, if the government continues to dictate what happens there. But with the NSC Bill and the NFF Bill, the two parastatals can sue and be sued in the law court in the event of breaches in business transactions.

    The biggest and cheapest Public Relations (PR), tool which the country can use to change people’s perception of Nigeria, is sports. I always recall what happened in Atlanta in 1996, after Chioma Ajunwa won the women’s long jump event. An elated Ajunwa did the victory lap of honour ‘naked’ (not having the Nigerian flag around her neck as it is traditionally done on such an occasion). She saw a little American girl in the crowd holding Nigeria’s flag.

    Ajunwa ran towards the little girl, took the flag and completed the lap of honour – fulfilled. Nobody thought Ajunwa would win the triple jump, with football crazy officials opting to travel that day to watch the Dream Team I in training ahead of its next game. At that time, Nigeria was a pariah nation due to the jackboot era of the late Sani Abacha. Yet, American newspapers splashed Ajunwa on their cover the next day. Ajunwa dominated the airspace, granting interviews. Dream Team I, Nigeria’s soccer team at the Atlanta ’96 Olympic Games, shook Georgia the night it lifted the gold medal, beating Argentina 2-3 in the finals. I recall how security operatives reeled out the names of Nwankwo Kanu, Austin Jay Jay Okocha et al after the games when they realised we were Nigerians.

    Nigeria couldn’t build on the window of opportunities available to our winners, especially the football side because we had a minister who ruled that the team shouldn’t be beaten. What a reason. This minister ensured that all requests from the countries that we beat for a rematch were rejected on spurious grounds. Had Nigeria accepted those games, our football would have gained immensely. Such needless intervention by the minister deters sponsors from identifying their goods and services with the industry. Twenty- three years on, nothing has changed. I sincerely hope that the new minister’s tenure will be different.

    It is unethical to gauge the country’s soccer growth from the prism of our foreign legion, especially where a higher percentage of this foreign-based players are Nigeria-born lads – no disrespect to their contributions to our growth in the last three decades. The domestic league is lying prostrate, with those charged to run the place bereft of ideas. Minister Sunday Dare will need to meet with the real owners of the clubs – governors – to appeal to them to constitute their management bodies, which should be peopled by technocrats who are adept in football administration, not cronies who see the clubs as another avenue for the boys to “chop-and-clean-mouth”.

    At the meeting with the governors, the minister should appeal to them to see the clubs as business concerns capable of increasing their states’ GDP and creating jobs, if the administrators know their onions. A club, which is properly run, can be effectively used to mobilise the people and keep youths off social vices. Governors can use these clubs as their Public Relations (PR) tools to influence people’s perception of their administrations, just as they can be used as the rallying point for government to educate the people on their actions – and inaction.

    The European transfer season ended on September 2. Clubs from the five big leagues splashed five billion pounds on recruitment of players to strengthen their teams. This is just a pointer to how much some of these clubs are worth. No club or even the body running the leagues can tell us how much clubs are worth. This is why our clubs can’t be taken to the Nigeria Stock Exchange (NSE). The league’s organisers, I dare say, are full of sycophants who won’t tell the leadership the truth – that the game is dead.

    It is sickening to read that the domestic league cannot throw up good players, simply because we have a league body that is indifferent to what happens to the senior side. Football crazy countries celebrate the emergence of new kids on the bloc, not the recycling of aged or forgotten stars on the altar of giving the coaches free hand to do their jobs.

    It is tragic that our local league competition has not begun, making the clubs vunerable to mass exodus of players whenever the transfer windows of serious-minded leagues open in January. This explains why our teams fumble during continental assignments, since they wouldn’t have played enough matches to become formidable sides that can fight for honours. We need to invigorate the operations of the league body, beginning with fresh elections into the league board. Parameters for voting into offices should be adhered to. The chairman of the league board should be a club boss, not what we have now.

    The minister will need to meet with firms who have embraced sports to know what problems they have with the federations. At that meeting, the firms should be told what they stand to benefit from sports sponsorship. After that, a dinner with the President, essentially for sports friendly firms, preferably early January.

    All sports federations should inform the minister how much they get as grants from their continental and international bodies. And this should include the Nigeria Olympic Committee (NOC). The era when administrators did what pleased them is gone. Grants should be effectively utilised by those who bring us glory – athletes and coaches.

  • Barcelona held to surprise draw at Osasuna

    Sixteen-year-old Ansu Fati became Barcelona’s youngest ever La Liga goalscorer on Saturday but could not prevent his side stumbling to a surprise 2-2 draw at promoted Osasuna.

    The result left the champions with only four points after three games.

    Roberto Torres’ thumping volley gave Osasuna the lead in the seventh minute to send the boisterous El Sadar crowd into a frenzy.

    Read Also: Barcelona didn’t work out for me, Coutinho admits

    Barca struggled to cope with the home side in a first half in which they failed to have a single shot at goal.

    Coach Ernesto Valverde turned to Fati at the start of the second period and the teenager needed only six minutes to get off the mark, rising to head home a cross from fellow academy graduate Carles Perez.

    Barca took the lead in the 64th minute through a superb strike into the bottom corner from Arthur Melo.

    However, Osasuna were given a way back when Gerard Pique handled in the area and Torres made no mistake from the spot to equalise in the 81st minute.

    NAN

  • Breaking: Valencia beat Barcelona to win Copa Del Rey

    Valencia on Saturday defeated Spanish giants FC Barcelona to win the Copa Del Rey.

    The defending champions lost 2-1 in a match that may be the last for the under-fire Coach Ernesto Valverde.

    The defeat denied Barcelona a fifth consecutive Copa Del Rey victory.

    When superstar Lionel Messi pulled one goal back in the second half, many expected a comeback.

    But the Valencia players held on for a memorable victory, even missing two open chances to kill off the game.

    Details shortly…

  • Liverpool’s victory hailed as the `Miracle of Anfield’

    Liverpool’s stunning 4-0 Champions League demolition of Barcelona naturally dominated the front and back pages of British newspapers on Wednesday with most going on a similar theme to the Daily Mail’s splash: “Miracle of Anfield”.

    “An Anfield miracle transcribed from the pages of pure fantasy,” read the headline of the match report in The Independent, while The Guardian led with “Out of this world”.

    The Merseyside club’s sensational victory over what some pundits described as one of the best sides of the modern era allowed them to overturn a 3-0 deficit from the first leg of their semi-final.

    There were some suggestions that Liverpool had topped the ‘Miracle of Istanbul’, when the club similarly overturned a three-goal deficit to beat AC Milan in the 2005 Champions League final to win their fifth European title.

    European fixtures at Anfield have had a special atmosphere going back a lot further than that and some suggested the noise generated by a packed house combined with Juergen Klopp’s aggressive side had unsettled the Spanish champions.

    “This is Liverpool’s gift: to rip up what you thought you knew about football and footballers, to take you — mentally and physically — to a place you don’t know and never wanted to go,” Jonathan Liew wrote in The Independent.

    There was plenty of praise for the spirit and self-belief that Klopp has fostered in his team, the German even forgiven for using an expletive when praising his players after the match.

    “Juergen Klopp makes Liverpool believe they can do the impossible,” wrote Matt Dickinson in The Times. “No one minded when Juergen Klopp dropped the f-bomb live on television.

    “After this, he could have stripped off and run around Anfield with his pants down and it would all have seemed part of his manic Germanic charm. With that grin and this football, he can get away with anything.”

    There was plenty of praise as well for Trent Alexander-Arnold’s quick-thinking from a corner that caught the Barcelona defence napping and set up the decisive fourth goal for stand-in striker Divock Origi.

    “With 79 minutes gone, the most celebrated team of the modern age had been reduced to bunch of mooching, stumbling yellow-shirted spectators,” Barney Ronay wrote in The Guardian.

    “A Champions League season that had seemed to be zeroing in on another coronation for Lionel Messi had been wrenched, gleefully, the other way.

    It will instead be Liverpool in Madrid on the first day of June for another shot at the ultimate.”

    The website of Spanish sports daily AS led with a quote from Argentine forward Messi in their headline “It was a horror movie”, while rival publication Marca’s edition splashed “Barcelona fail epically at Anfield”.

    After Klopp and his players had stood, some in tears, in front of The Kop to celebrate the win with a rendition of the club anthem ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’, it was left to The Daily Mail’s Martin Samuel to point out that the job was not yet done.

    “One had the feeling this was the moment he had been working towards since the day he set foot on Merseyside,” he wrote of Klopp.

    “This spirit. This togetherness. This performance. This passion, this emotion: it was all here, every last drop of what he wanted to achieve.

    “And yet, there is still such a long way to go.”

    Liverpool face either Tottenham Hotspur or Ajax Amsterdam in the final on June 1.

    Reuters/NAN

  • Breaking: Barcelona vs Liverpool first X1

    Spanish giants FC Barcelona and Liverpool FC have released players that will defend their colours in tonight’s Semi Finals first leg.

    The match, which begins in another one hour at the Camp Nou, is the most anticipated contest in global football community.

    Barcelona

    • Ter Sergen
    • Pique
    • Lenglet
    • Jordi Alba
    • Sergio Roberto
    • Busquets
    • Ivan Rakitic
    • Vidal
    • Coutinho
    • Messi
    • Suarez

     

    Liverpool

    • Allison
    • Gomez
    • Matip
    • Van Dijk
    • Fabinho
    • Milner
    • Wildnajum
    • Keita
    • Mane
    • Salah

     

  • UCL: Five reasons why FC Barcelona should beat Manchester United tonight

    FC Barcelona host Manchester United in the second leg of the quarter-finals match of the UEFA Champions League in less than two hours.

    The Catalans go into the fixtures with a 1-0 aggregate lead knowing that a draw at the Camp Nou is enough to secure them a semi-final place for the first time since 2015.

    Barcelona on paper is widely adjudged to win on paper, as they are favourites to win virtually every game and also among the favourites to win every title. Five reasons listed below show clearly why the Spanish side should emerge winners over the Red Devils.

    1. Messi factor

    Lionel Messi alone gives any team an upper hand and he will be very essential in Barcelona’s goal to win not just this game but also the UEFA Champions League this season.

    The 31-year old already has 43 goals this season whilst providing 18 assists, more than any other player by far.

    Messi will be a menace for the Manchester United defence.  He is very dangerous, can score, dribble and create from basically all angles.

    1. Home advantage

    The great battle between both sides will take place in Camp Nou in few hours. Records have it that the Spanish sides progress in knockout games when they play the second leg at home. In their last eight quarterfinal ties, they’ve played away first they progressed in six and so expected to be a torrid time for Man. United in the Nou Camp.

    Read Also: Messi succeeds Iniesta, named new FC Barcelona captain

    1. Technical superiority

    Although it is not exactly a golden ticket for the better team to progress but in this case it is very glaring that Barcelona possess a lot more quality in their squad compared to the Reds.

    They are better than Man United in almost all positions and also looking from the team-play perspective. Barcelona are more tactically sound and balanced in both defense and attack with their transition fast and smooth enough to break any team down.

    1. Hunger for UCL trophy

    Barcelona have been champions of La Liga in seven of the last ten seasons and are on course to  winning this year’s edition as they top the table leading second place Atletico Madrid with 8 points. They’re also on course to win their fifth consecutive Copa Del Rey title but have failed to win the UEFA Champions League, a trophy they last handled in 2015.

    Watching Real Madrid win three editions in a row after 2015, they are desperate to clinch the title, now that their rivals are out of the competition. Messi already promised fans at the beginning they will try to bring the UCL home.

    5. Midfield duel

    FC Barcelona will definitely win the midfield war against Manchester United. They have a balanced midfield with Sergio Busquet in defensive midfield role and controller Arthur holding onto possession and resisting press.  Arturo Vidal could also feature, doing the tackling and making life difficult for the Red Devils.

  • Barcelona extend Alba’s contract

    FC Barcelona have agreed to extend left full-back Jordi Alba’s contract until 2024, the La Liga leaders said in a statement on Thursday.

    The club also said they have included an eye-watering buy-out clause of 500 million euros (428 million pounds).

    Spain international Alba has played 282 games for Barca since re-joining from Valencia in 2012 after being released by the club as a teenager.

    He has won 14 trophies, including four La Liga titles, four Copa del Reys and the 2015 UEFA Champions League.

    Read Also: Barcelona fan sheds tears of joy for Messi

    The 29-year-old Alba has been capped 67 times by Spain and was part of the side that won the 2012 European Championship.

    The full-back has grown in importance to the team since Ernesto Valverde took over as coach in 2017 and has a good understanding with Lionel Messi.

    He has provided 20 assists for the Argentine forward.

    NAN

  • Barcelona break billion dollar revenue barrier

    FC Barcelona announced it has become the first sports club to post annual revenues exceeding $1 billion.

    La Liga champions Barcelona presented their annual accounts on Tuesday, showing earnings of $1.05 billion for the 2017/18 fiscal year, breaking its own income record for the fifth successive year and posting a profit for the eighth consecutive year.

    Barca said the rise in revenue was driven by increased income from television rights from the Champions League and the August 2017 sale of Brazilian forward Neymar to Paris St Germain for a record 222 million euros ($257 million) transfer fee.

    Read Also: Pique’s mistake helps lowly Leganes shock Barcelona

    The club also announced a record budget of $1.105 billion for this season, which needs to be approved at a general assembly on Oct. 20.

    The club added that its debt amounted to $181.3 million as of June 30.

    “The extraordinary income from payment of Neymar Jr’s buyout clause has been compensated in next year’s budget through improved commercial and sponsorship revenue, media rights, exploitation of the stadium and transfer of players,” the club said in a statement.

    “This is the first time that revenue has surpassed $1bn, a huge step up from 2016/17.”

  • Messi succeeds Iniesta, named new FC Barcelona captain

    FC Barcelona on Friday named Argentina’s Lionel Messi the club’s captain, following the departure of long-serving midfielder Andres Iniesta.

    Defenders Gerard Pique and Sergi Roberto were also named new vice-captains in a statement by the La Liga champions.

    Messi, Barca’s all-time top goalscorer, has been a vice-captain since 2015.

    The Argentina captain takes the club’s armband from Iniesta, who succeeded Xavi Hernandez as captain in 2015 but left for Japanese club Vissel Kobe in June.

    Midfielder Sergio Busquets was named first vice-captain, followed by Pique, who has been at FC Barcelona since 2008.

    Read Also: Messi trains with dog ahead of new season

    It’s the first time Pique has been named a vice-captain at the club.

    Academy graduate Roberto took the final position, vacated by Javier Mascherano who left earlier this year for Chinese outfit Hebei China Fortune.

    Roberto’s elevation is in spite of his only being a first team regular for three seasons.

    It is the first time since the 2014/2015 season that all the club’s four captains have come through the club’s famous La Masia youth academy.

    NAN