Tag: Real Betis

  • Chelsea vs Real Betis: Things to know about 2025 UEFA Conference League final

    Chelsea vs Real Betis: Things to know about 2025 UEFA Conference League final

    The UEFA Conference League will come to an end tonight with a final between Real Betis and Chelsea at the Stadion Wrocław (Tarczyński Arena) in Wrocław, Poland.

    This is the first time the two clubs will meet in a European final.

    Here’s everything you need to know about the 2025 UEFA Conference League final:

    Venue: The final will be played on Wednesday, May 28, 2025, at the Stadion Wrocław (Tarczyński Arena), the ground has a capacity of over 40,000 and is the third-biggest stadium in the country.

    Kickoff Time: 8pm

    How both teams reached the final:

    Real Betis

    Betis knocked out Gent, Vitória SC, Jagiellonia, and Fiorentina to reach the competition’s final.

    Read Also: Chelsea vs. Betis: GOtv to air Live  Conference League Final

    Chelsea

    Chelsea eliminated Copenhagen, Legia Warsaw, and Djurgårdens IF to reach the final.

    Where to watch: You can watch the game on SuperSport.

    Referee: Bosnia and Herzegovina’s Irfan Peljto will referee the 2025 Conference League final between Real Betis and Chelsea.

    Qualification: The 2024/25 winners also gain a place in the league phase of the 2025/26 UEFA Europa League, if they have not qualified via their domestic competition.

  • Real Betis fans shun defeat to hail rampaging Messi

     

    Real Betis fans chanted Lionel Messi’s name and gave him a standing ovation even as his sublime hat-trick sank their team their team 4-1 on Sunday.

    The chant of ‘Messi, Messi’ echoed around the stadium as it has so many times before but this was not the Camp Nou and it wasn’t only Barcelona’s small contingent of travelling supporters paying homage to the Argentinian.

    Betis supporters in the Benito Villamarin had just watched Messi score a hat-trick to destroy their team and all but wrap up the league for Barcelona, and what else could they do but join in the praise?

    Nostalgic old footballer supporters, of all club colours, will one day tell their grandchildren – once there was a player for whom being awarded a free-kick was just like being given a penalty.

    Messi scored his first goal of the night with his fifth direct free-kick of the season. He then scored his second from Luis Suarez’ pass and chipped in a third in a 4-1 win that leaves Barcelona 10 points clear of the field with 10 games left.

    It was Messi’s 27th, 28th and 29th goals of the season as Barcelona cruised over this potential speed bump on the straight flat road that will surely now lead to the title.

    By the time they play that first leg against Manchester United in the Champions League last eight next month it could be done and dusted domestically.

    Messi’s free-kick goal came on 18 minutes after Arthur Melo was awarded a debatable foul on the edge of the Betis are Betis had four men in the wall plus a fifth player lying down behind the wall in case Messi tried to roll it in.

    Instead he curled it left footed into the top left-hand corner of Pau Lopez’ goal. It was his 25th free-kick goal in La Liga in the last eight seasons.

    Cristiano Ronaldo, Roberto Carlos and Ronaldinho all had great set-piece strike rates but he leaves them all a long way behind.

     

  • La liga Matchday 3: Real Betis vs Sevilla FC Rivalry Rekindled

    The 2018/19 season may only have ‎reached Matchday 3 but it’s already time for one of the  LaLiga Santander’s blockbuster fixtures.

    Real Betis and Sevilla FC will ‎meet this Sunday evening (20:45 CEST) at Betis’ Benito ‎Villamarín Stadium for the first Seville derby of the new
    season. This will be the earliest these two teams have met ‎in a LaLiga‎ Santander season since they faced off over 30 years ago on ‎the opening weekend of the 1987/88 campaign.

    This makes an already spicy ‎derby even more mouth-watering, as the result could set the
    tone for the rest of the season.

    Both teams’ squads are ‎still getting used to playing with each other, but there’s ‎no such ‎thing as a dress rehearsal when it comes to ‘El Gran ‎Derbi.’ This derby match means everything to the fans, ‎who’ll demand, as always, that their heroes approach it ‎like a cup final.

    Real Betis, nicknamed Los ‎Verdiblancos (‘The Green and Whites’), finished ‎above their city rivals last year in sixth while Sevilla, ‎who also go by the name of ‎Los Rojiblancos (‘The Red and Whites’), finished ‎in seventh. Sevilla will be desperate to earn a first derby ‎victory since February 2017, especially after Betis’ ‎stunning 5-3 away win at the Sanchez-Pizjuan in January.

    El Gran Derbi sets to the ‎tone for the season ‎at this early stage in the ‎season, it’s too soon to know exactly what these club ‎ will be competing for come May. It is more than likely,
    though, that they’ll both be in the mix for European ‎qualification.

    Both ‎have had busy summers in terms of player acquisition and ‎there is an expectation amongst fans of both sides that ‎their teams are more than good enough to secure a European ‎spot once again.

    Betis will need a positive ‎result to start their campaign off on the right foot.

    They’re yet to score this season despite racking up an ‎average of 72.3% possession in their opening two games, and‎ were punished ‎on the counter attack in the home opener against Levante ‎before picking up a goalless draw at Alaves on Matchday 2.

    Sevilla’s start has been more ‎positive, winning 4-1 away at LaLiga Santander new boys Rayo
    Vallecano before a playing out a goalless draw with fellow‎ European contenders Villarreal.

    Pablo Machin’s side have ‎been ‎in Europa League qualification action since late July and
    their fitness levels are at a mid-season level. That said,‎ there’ll be no complacency ahead of a game as important as‎ this one.

    New faces, same old ‎rivalry‎ One position to keep an eye on‎ this Sunday is goalkeeper as both clubs signed new starting ‎shot-stoppers over the summer. Antonio Adan and Sergio Rico ‎last season’s first-choice keepers, have moved on.

    Betis ‎now how have Pau Lopez between the sticks, while Sevilla‎ brought in Czech international Tomáš Vaclík.‎

    Betis’ summer signing Takashi‎ Inui could also be important as the Japanese winger’s ‎dribbling ability provides them with a more direct option in ‎attack, while new Sevilla striker André Silva will surely ‎trouble‎ the Betis defence. Silva scored a hat-trick on his LaLiga ‎debut at Rayo Vallecano and he’ll be looking to make this
    a similarly happy away trip.

    Seville, a city ‎divided by ‎El Gran Derbi is so important to‎ Seville because the city is, curiously, split right down the ‎middle.

    Unlike in many other cities in Spain and across
    Europe, the two clubs boast a similar sized support, something‎ that only increases the stakes and, of course, the decibel
    levels!

    Both clubs have been in ‎existence for over a century, making this one of the ‎longest-running rivalries in football. Officially the first ‎derby took place in 1915, with Betis winning 1-0 thanks to a ‎goal from Alberto ‎Henke. The derby was already considered such a big deal ‎that the victors paraded through the city centre with the
    trophy they’d been awarded. Unofficially,
    though, these ‎two clubs have been at loggerheads even longer and an‎ earlier incarnation of ‎Betis first ‎took on Sevilla on Valentine’s Day, 1909. It may have‎ been a day of love, but there has never been any love lost‎ between these two clubs since then.

    Though there is resentment ‎between the two fanbases, there is also a good-natured and
    humorous side to this rivalry. Jokes, arguments and pranks ‎have always been part of the derby and the moment two ‎Betis-supporting
    builders emblazoned the Betis badge onto Sevilla’s ‎stadium during construction works will live long in the ‎memory of fans.

    From Seville to the‎ world ‎On an international level, the‎ profile of the derby is growing day by day. Sevilla have won ‎five Europa League titles since the turn of the century ‎while Betis have rolled out an exciting possession-based wstyle ‎of football under coach Quique Setien, piquing the ‎interests of football purists both at home and abroad. With ‎official supporter groups stretching from Scotland to New ‎York City, these clubs continue to grow in stature every‎day.

  • La Liga: Atletico held by Betis, Las Palmas relegated

    Atletico Madrid failed to break down Real Betis in a 0-0 draw on Sunday which further reduced their slim chances of catching FC Barcelona at the top of La Liga.

    Elsewhere, Las Palmas were relegated after a crushing 4-0 home defeat by Alaves.

    Diego Simeone’s Atletico moved 11 points behind FC Barcelona with four games remaining and the unbeaten leaders need one more point to win the title.

    With the Europa League semi-final first leg match at Arsenal on Thursday in mind, Simeone rotated key players and Betis tried to take advantage.

    Javi Garcia missed two excellent chances and Cristian Tello struck the post for the visitors, who extended their club record run of games without conceding a goal to six.

    However, Atletico’s defensive resilience ended Betis’ run of six wins in a row as they recorded their 11th consecutive home clean sheet.

    Aissa Mandi headed a Fernando Torres effort off the line and Saul Niguez struck the bar as Atletico also came close, but neither side could earn a victory.

    “The team is heading into Thursday’s game really well,” Simeone said. “We made important changes and the players responded. I had to rotate to ensure we had fresh players.”

    In a mostly-empty stadium at Canary Islands, Munir El Haddadi struck twice with Alvaro Medran and Ruben Sobrino also netting as four second-half goals from Alaves consigned Las Palmas to relegation.

    Paco Jemez’s side have 21 points from 34 games and are 13 short of Levante in 17th with only four matches left and they will join bottom side Malaga in the second division next season.

    Read Also: Barca records 39 La Liga games unbeaten!

    “Beyond the fact that this is a sad day, because we go down to the second division, it’s also sad because of the result. We went down in the worst way possible,” said Jemez.

    “We are as sad as ( the fans ). We didn’t want this moment to arrive but we will keep working because there are still a lot of things to fight for.

    “We must be responsible with the image of the club.”

    Alaves’ triumph confirms their safety, sitting 13th with 41 points from 34 games.

    It is an impressive feat masterminded by Abelardo Fernandez who took over in December with the Basque side bottom of the table.

    Malaga beat Real Sociedad 2-0 and Espanyol won 2-0 at Girona to damage their Catalan rivals’ dreams of finishing in a Europa League spot.

    The result left Girona ninth and Espanyol 16th in the standings, 11 points clear of the relegation zone.

    Las Palmas have gone 12 matches without a victory and this was their fifth straight defeat.

    NAN

  • Barcelona face team dilemma in visit to tiny Eibar

    Barcelona face team dilemma in visit to tiny Eibar

    FC Barcelona coach Ernesto Valverde faces a dilemma before his side’s potentially tricky trip to in-form Eibar on Saturday, having watched his side’s seemingly unassailable La Liga lead grow smaller.

    The lead has been cut to seven points from 11 in the last two weeks.

    The advantage would normally give the coach room to rotate his squad in order to keep his side fresh for the visit to Chelsea in the Champions League three days later.

    But tiny Eibar’s consistency means such a move risks his side falling closer to second-placed Atletico Madrid.

    Eibar hail from a town of 27,000 inhabitants in the Basque region and are the smallest team in the top flight.

    Five years ago they were in the 80-team regional third tier.

    They have overcome a rocky start to the season to grow into genuine contenders for a European spot, rising to seventh place in the standings by losing only one of their last 12 games.

    That run has included impressive 5-0 and 5-1 thrashings of Real Betis and Sevilla respectively, as well as victory over high-flying Valencia.

    They have also developed a knack for edging tight games, snatching a 1-0 win at Leganes in their last outing with an injury-time goal.

    It is a remarkable turnaround from their dismal form at the start of the season when they lost seven of their first 11 games.

    Read Also:Barcelona bids Mascherano emotional farewell

    However, Coach Jose Luis Mendilibar said his side had barely altered their style, which is based on pressing high, no-nonsense defending and frequent crosses into the opposing box.

    “We’ve changed nothing, we don’t care which team we play, we’ll keep doing what we believe we do well,” the coach said.

    “It’s easy for any analyst to see what we do in every game; we change hardly anything so it should be easy to play against us. It’s extraordinary to be in this position at this stage as no-one would have expected that when the season started.”

    Barca have found it easy to play against Eibar, winning all seven of their games since the side were promoted and thrashing them 6-1 at the Nou Camp last September.

    Lionel Messi seems to enjoy playing them too, having scored 12 goals in six meetings, including four in the last fixture.

    The Catalans remain the only unbeaten team in Europe’s top five leagues but head to the tiny, 7,000-capacity Ipurua stadium following unconvincing draws against Espanyol and Getafe.

    They will be boosted by the return of first-choice centre-backs Gerard Pique and Samuel Umtiti, however.

    Atletico Madrid have won their last three league games and will be looking to keep the pressure on Barca when they host Athletic Bilbao on Sunday, while champions Real Madrid visit Real Betis.

    NAN

  • El  Gran Derbi  Set For January 6

    El Gran Derbi Set For January 6

    The first El Gran Derbi of the 2017/2018 LaLiga Santander season between Real Betis and Sevilla FC is undoubtedly one of LaLiga Santander’s greatest clashes. Set to take place on the 6th of January, 2018, the rivalry between these two clubs from the city of Seville is a derby that is much more than just a game of football. The Seville derby is not just about the 90 minutes out on the turf, it is a duel that lasts an entire season. As soon as the fixtures come out in July, the two sets of fans take note of the dates and the city awaits the match days as the biggest sporting occasions of the year.

    Few matches in the world divide a city the way this derby does. The fourth most populous city in Spain lives and breathes football like no other. The atmosphere does not just permeate the stadium. It is also felt in bars, restaurants, office blocks, out on the street, in schools and universities, because it is a derby for all ages and sexes; a derby for the people of not just Seville, but Spain as a nation.

    Since the inception of LaLiga Santander, the rivalry between the two sets of fans means that they constantly keep an eye out for the ups and downs of each other’s other side in preparation of what for them, is without doubt the main event of the year: #ElGranDerbi.

    Speaking on the derby in an exclusive interview, was former Sevilla star Frédéric Kanouté, who said “I played in a lot of derbies in London, with West Ham, with Tottenham; but I’ve never seen a derby like the one in Seville”.

    “With all that goes surrounding that match, before the match; it’s crazy. And on the day of the match, the heat and the atmosphere is very different to any other match” he went on to say.

    It does not matter whether Sevilla’s objective is to achieve a place in the upcoming edition of the Champions League or whether Betis are looking to consolidate their position in LaLiga Santander and scale the table season by season as they seek to regain their status of years gone by. When the Big Derby comes around, the two teams only have one thing on their minds: beating their opponents, making their fans happy and ‘ruling supreme’ in the picturesque city of Seville – at least until the return fixture in the second half of the season.

    The fans are preparing for this match like no other during the season. For Seville and its two football clubs, winning the duel on 6 January will be the ideal way to kick off the New Year. The atmosphere inside and outside the stadium is always electric. The long-held and never-ending rivalry between these two teams can be felt out on the pitch and across the entire city. And it will not end with the final whistle. It will last all week, all month, all year.

    When ElGranDerbi starts, the city grinds to a halt. Only the game matters. Seville’s more than 700,000 inhabitants treat the match like a cup final. The streets are empty. The lucky ones are watching the action from the stands. The rest are glued to the television. But not a single soul in Seville misses either of the two crunch games that await them each year and which divide a city that lives for #TheBigDerby.

    Before the kick-off

    Just two games short of the halfway point, Sevilla are fifth in the table only two points shy of Real Madrid in fourth, meaning that they are potentially only one result away from leapfrogging into the places rewarded with Champions League football next season. Betis, meanwhile, have amassed 21 points and are midway between the relegation zone and the European spots, allowing one of LaLiga’s legendary teams to breathe easy.

    A little history

    Sevilla FC was founded in 1890 by a group of British and Spanish businessmen and engineers. It was the first club to be established in the city, followed by their big rivals, Real Betis, in 1907.

    The encounters between Seville’s two teams have always been marked by a strong rivalry, ever since they first locked horns in 1909. In LaLiga Santander, the two teams have faced each other on a total of 93 occasions, with Sevilla having taken 43 victories to Betis’s 28, and the other 22 games ending all square. Historically the balance falls in Sevilla’s favour, and the same applies in modern times. In the last ten seasons when they have faced each other in LaLiga Santander, #ElGranDerbi has ended in 11 victories for Sevilla, 5 draws and 4 wins for Los Verdiblancos. In those 20 league derbies, Sevilla have scored 34 goals to Betis’s 16, making for a total of 50 at a rate of 2.5 goals a game.

    In recent seasons, Sevilla have consolidated their position as one of the big clubs in Spanish and European football, winning three of the last four editions of the Europa League. Real Betis, on the other hand, have experienced relegations and promotions in recent decades. They last achieved promotion to LaLiga Santander in the 2014/15 season and have remained one of Spanish football’s top flight teams since then.

  • WITH LOVE FROM MALLORCA FINIDI LIVING THE DREAM

    WITH LOVE FROM MALLORCA FINIDI LIVING THE DREAM

    HE was at a point considered the best right winger in the world during his playing days. And It is not just about the manner he weaved and twirled his way down the flanks to deal the crisp passes but the ease and majestic way with which he achieved it that awed fans and football commentators.

    Now 43 and calling the shots as head coach of Mallorca of Spain U-16 team, former Nigerian international, Finidi George, has hinted that all he knew as a footballer was inspired by street-soccer in Port Harcourt, the ever busy capital of Rivers State.

    Speaking in a telephone conversation with The Nation Sport& Style from his base in Spain, the former Ajax star, who had a brief coaching spell with Real Betis before moving on to Mallorca, says but for his mother he would not have been able to convince his father to play football at a professional level.

    Above all, Finidi says he’s living his dream to help and push up and coming youngsters on their way to football stardom in Mallorca, Spain.

    He says: “I love working with the young ones because they are indeed the future of the game. That is how I started and the best in the world today started off like this.”

    Like many Nigerian kids, George, who helped Ajax Amsterdam to win the Champions League in 1995, says his parents disagreed over his future as a professional footballer and it took the open mindedness of his mother to resolve it.

    Hear him: “My father did not like the fact that we (My older brothers and I) always go out on the streets of Port Harcourt to play football and he would speak up against it. But my mum did not mind; it did not bother her that we might get injured but would tell me that if I enjoyed doing what I was doing I should just go on and do it. And that was exactly what she told my father and he just accepted the philosophy.

    “The catch, however, was that I must get good grades in my academics for me to continue to play football. My father was adamant about this and I had no choice but to work hard to excel in both.”

    Born into an elitist and egalitarian home, George relives his upbringing as a thing that helped him to become a hard-working and free-minded person later in life. “My older siblings were so much into football and my father used to listen to the BBC a lot and we got to know much about English football then. I also read a lot about English players in football comics such as Match, Shoot, Tiger and the rest. We used to talk about the players we liked in the Premiership and I was particularly fond of the left-sided winger who played for Liverpool, John Barnes, and his combination with Ian Rush. Paul Gascoigne and Gary Lineker were also my heroes. But it was basically in the streets that I was taught the real lessons of football. As a youngster, football started for me on the streets. I started by playing football across the streets of Port Harcourt. I never felt I would go so far with the game because to be honest it was just a hobby for me back then.”

    Born into a family of 14, George discloses that he enjoyed good family ties while growing up and that helped his game to stabilise. “I enjoy family bond and we treat ourselves with great respect. I think that also helped my game because I was a stable kid. My father was not rich but life in Nigeria was good back in the 70s and 80s. There were no political problems. Now things are different; it’s difficult if you don’t have money in Nigeria. We just enjoyed playing on the streets; we weren’t thinking about actually making a lot of money out of football. We just played for the love of it. People like Adokie (Amiesimaka), (Segun) Odegbami and (Christian) Chukwu were big players that time and we were looking up to them. When I was 17, I began playing for Sharks of Port Harcourt, the same team I grew up admiring. We didn’t get paid like players in Europe. But we could manage because the economy was more or less OK then.”

    George has great respect for two coaches, who he said impacted immensely on his career. “One of them is Clemens Westerhof and the other is Louis Van Gaal, my coach then in Ajax. Westerhof brought me to the national team from Calabar Rovers and because he was a great disciplinarian, he told me to just give my best and leave the rest to him. He was a great coach and knew how to inspire a player to give even more than 100 percent of himself. He was also instrumental to my Ajax deal because he told me that I would be a great player one day because of my attitude.”

    When Finidi left Nigeria for Ajax, he must have packed ‘Mother Luck’ in his bag as providence smiled on him in his first season in Holland. “It was just sheer luck for me because I was not meant to be played in the first team that year, 1993, but someone got injured and Van Gaal had no choice but to play me. I stayed in and did very well and thereafter he told me if I kept my head down I would go places. Within three years, we were in the Champions League final against AC Milan and we beat them. That was a special night and it was like a dream to me. It remains the biggest night of my career because at that time Ajax didn’t really have any big names, only Frank Rijkaard, who had come back from Italy. But we played attacking football and had the mentality of winners. We believed we could beat any team; even Milan. That year we won against Milan three times. Van Gaal knew how to get the best out of us at Ajax.”

    If young George enjoyed his trophies – including Super Cup, Intercontinental Cup, Three Dutch Leagues and two Dutch Super Cups – it was in Spain that he truly enjoyed his game.

    He explains: “It was at Betis that I really enjoyed football. I was a more mature player when I joined the team and I brought all my experience to bear during that period. I really enjoyed my time in Spain. While in Spain, I played a lot of positions: in the middle, on the right or left or if needed upfront.”

    Back to the present, Finidi informs that he feels fulfilled molding the next generation of top players at Mallorca: “I take my job seriously and the club does too. This is where the future of the club is built and it is very impressive what we are doing here.

    “It is the same thing bigger clubs like Barcelona are doing and how players like Lionel Messi and Raul were discovered. It is a programme that Mallorca takes very serious and I’m glad to identify with it.

    “I am indeed living my dream here. I love working with the young ones because they are indeed the future of the game. That is how I started and the best in the world today started off like this,” Finidi adds, as he speaks on sundry issues. Excerpts…

    Family

    I have great kids and a great wife too and they are all doing fine here.

    Style and Philosophy

    I love to dress simply; shirt and Jean to match. Sometimes, I simply put on a T-shirt and Jean and I am okay. I think most players get use to dressing this way because during our playing career these are the dresses we usually wore. Even when I am home due to the tropical nature of our environment I prefer to stick to my shirt and Jean.

    My philosophy is to work hard at every given job or project. Even as a player, I realised that there is no short cut to success other than hard work and that is what I preach to my boys now.

    Keeping Fit

    I have always been slim and I love it that way. Of course, as a coach I still keep fit because I join my boys on the pitch and that helps me keep fit too.

    Stephen Keshi

    I have to thank Keshi for what he has been able to bring to the table. That is making Nigerians to know that we have capable Nigerians that can take our football to the highest level. We have played and made our mark out here and have attended the same coaching schools like our colleagues in Europe, so why are we not going to understand the game like they do? Keshi is doing the right thing and I wish him the best of luck at the World Cup. We just have to believe we can be the beat the best in the world and that is all we need to get there, of course we must work hard to achieve it too.

  • Granada vs  Real Betis: BEWARE OF ERRORS

    Granada vs Real Betis: BEWARE OF ERRORS

    • Betis coach warns Igiebor, mates

     

    Real Betis manager Gabriel Calderón has charged Super Eagles midfielder, Nosa Igiebor and mates to beware of errors in today’s La Liga tie at Nuevo Los Cármenes when they face Odion Ighalo’s Granada in a Andaluz derby at lunchtime.

    Calderón also made it clear that a victory against Granada will be even more valuable than just the points in play for his team.

    “The game on Sunday (today) is a six-pointer, because each game we have less margin for error, but trying to make calculations without winning the next game, serves no purpose,” he said.

    Accepting that the players are frustrated with last week’s heavy defeat away at Valencia, Calderón still remains positive about the level of effort they are offering.

    “The team feels wounded. In the situation we’re in, all the players are hurting and we need consistency to gain a balance and confidence. Despite the defeat at Valencia, the players are all aware that this game is a six-pointer. Forgetting the poor fifteen minutes and the game against Valencia, I’m happy with the work of the team.”

    A full house is expected at Nuevo Los Cármenes, as Granada and their fans also see the game against Betis as a key encounter in their season. Calderón isn’t concerned about the strong home support, just that his players remain enthusiastic and determined to get the points.

    “We have experience and know what it’s like to play at a full stadium, that doesn’t worry us. The players are keener than anyone to win this game. What concerns us most is being a solid block.”

    Having secured a good victory against Espanyol with a five-man back-line, Calderón was asked if that’s something he’ll repeat against Granada toay.

    “This week we’ve been working hard to achieve the balance we had against Espanyol. That doesn’t come from playing four or five defenders. It’s about having a solid block that can’t be taken apart so easily, that’s what matters. The details aren’t as important as the block.”

    Next week sees the return of Europa League action for Real Betis, with a tough challenge against Russian outfit Rubin Kazan, though the preference of Calderón is to forget about that for the moment, with victory at Granada the first priority.

    “Right now, all we’re focused on is what happens in Granada, which comes above anything else. That game will come later and we have to win each game. We cannot downplay the importance of it and we have to win,” he added.

  • Lawal Real Betis move crashes

    Lawal Real Betis move crashes

    Nigeria international Raheem Lawal may return to Turkey to join a Super League team after his move to Real Betis fell through.
    Lawal had on Tuesday told MTNFootball.com he has agreed a-two-and-a-half years deal with the La Liga side but the deal has since fallen through.
    Media reports in Turkey have now said Super league side Eskisehirspor are keen to land the Nigeria international as direct replacement for Senegalese midfielder Afred N’Diaye, who joined Real Betis.
    Lawal, an attacking midfielder who plays with both feet netted five goals in 15 games in Turkey division 2 for Mersin Idmuryurdu.
    He quit the club over unpaid wages.

  • Raheem Lawal joins Real Betis

    Raheem Lawal joins Real Betis

    Raheem Lawal has joined Spanish La Liga side Real Betis after he terminated his contract in Turkey.
    The former Adana Demirspor player told MTNFootball.com he has signed a deal with the Spanish team and he is delighted with it.
    “I am in Spain now, I have signed a deal with Real Betis. It is a two-and-a- half year deal that I signed. I am delighted with this and looking forward to playing for my new team in La Liga, Lawal told MTNFootball.com
    He terminated his contract with Mersin Idmuyurdu following unpaid wages.
    Incidentally, Lawal is heading back to Spain after he started out with lowly Spanish Atletico Beleares.
    The midfielder was linked with a move to Konyaspor and Genclirbirligi during this winter transfer.
    .