Tag: Sevilla

  • Ejuke elated over  match-winning goal for Sevilla

    Ejuke elated over  match-winning goal for Sevilla

    Super Eagles winger Chidera Ejuke has expressed  delight  after his match-winning goal secured Sevilla’s latest three La Liga points on Tuesday night.

    The Nigerian breakthrough came in a thrilling 2-1 victory over Real Valladolid at the Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán Stadium, where his late-game winner sealed the deal for Sevilla.

    The goal  saw Ejuke becoming the first Nigerian player to achieve such a significant milestone for the Spanish club in a La Liga match.

    In his sixth appearance under manager García Pimienta, the forward finally opened his La Liga scoring account in style. The  decisive moment arrived in the 85th  minute when Ejuke pounced on a defensive slip by Valladolid before he coolly slotted  the ball past the visitors’ goalkeeper.

    Reflecting on this achievement, the former Heerenveen winger described the experience as  ‘incredible’, expressing his joy over both the victory and the personal milestone.

    Read Also: Super Eagles: Shortlisted  coaches  may lose out as NFF name new handler      

     “It’s an incredible feeling, and it’s also incredible to win. I’m very happy,” Ejuke told the club’s media ,clearly still buzzing from the unforgettable moment in front of the passionate Sevilla fans.

    Ejuke, who joined Sevilla from CSKA Moscow after a successful loan spell at Royal Antwerp, is already making waves in La Liga and will be eager to build on this success.

    Alongside fellow Nigerian Kelechi Iheanacho, who featured as a substitute in the match, Ejuke is paving the way for Nigerian talents at Sevilla.

    With Sevilla’s next clash against Athletic Bilbao on Sunday afternoon, Ejuke will be looking to continue his fine form, while Iheanacho will be hoping to make his own impact as he settles into his role, as well.

  • UCL: Preview, team news of Arsenal Vs Sevilla

    UCL: Preview, team news of Arsenal Vs Sevilla

    Arsenal will face Sevilla at the Emirates stadium in North London, as they are a step away from reaching the UEFA Champions League knockout stages. The Gunners will advance to the knockout rounds if they defeat Sevilla and Lens win the other match.

    The London team will go into the game following a controversial defeat to Newcastle this past weekend, which ended their unbeaten run of the season.

    Sevilla, on the other hand, played a 1-1 draw against 10-man Celta Vigo at the weekend.

    Arsenal Team News

    Arsenal’s Gabriel Jesus, Thomas Partey, and Emile Smith Rowe will all be missing for the next few weeks at least, while Jurrien Timber remains a long-term casualty. Martin Ordegaard could make a return after missing the game against Newcastle United on Saturday.

    Read Also: Colombia 2024: Danjuma picks ‘killer squad’ to face Tanzania

    Eddie Nketiah will also be assessed ahead of the game as he missed the last training session.

    Sevilla Team News

    Sevilla will be without Segio Ramos, Orjan Nyland, and left-back Marcos Acuna, who didn’t travel with the squad. Midfielder Fernado is available for the game after making a return from injury.

  • Sevilla directors boycott Barca fixture over bribery charges

    Sevilla directors boycott Barca fixture over bribery charges

    Sevilla’s directors boycott Friday’s LaLiga match against Barcelona on Friday after the Catalan club were charged with suspected bribery.

    The charges relate to payments worth more than €7 million ($7.3m) made to companies linked to the former vice president of the refereeing committee, José María Enríquez Negreira, according to court documents revealed on Thursday.

    Former Barça presidents Josep María Bartomeu and Sandro Rosell also stand accused of the same charges, as do Negreira and his son, Javier Enríquez Romero.

    “We express our complete outrage and condemnation of the actions carried out by the former officials of Barcelona who are indicted in the Negreira case, actions that are allegedly considered criminal by a court, as stated in the court order disseminated in the media,” Sevilla said in a statement.

    “We reject the behavior of Barcelona during the periods in which these alleged crimes took place.”For this reason, we have suspended the normal protocol corresponding to the LaLiga match scheduled for Friday between Barcelona and Sevilla and will have no representation in the Montjuic stadium’s VIP box.

    “We want to express our deepest respect for the Barcelona members and season ticket holders, as well as for their current employees and officials who work daily at Barcelona and who are indirectly implicated in this matter.

    “We respect the Spanish justice system, the presumption of innocence, and any decisions that may be made in any direction by the relevant courts and disciplinary bodies.

    Read Also: Sports Minister rallies support for Osimhen

    “We hope that, for the sake of the competition, all events in the Negreira case will be clarified in light of the judge’s recent considerations.”

    Barça are also facing charges of corruption in business, false administration and the falsification of commercial documents after the payments came to light in February.

    The Blaugrana paid Negreira’s companies more than €7m between 2001 and 2018 while he was the vice president of the refereeing committee. He had previously been a referee in the Spanish top flight.

    Current Barça president Joan Laporta has said the payments were for “technical reports about referees” and denied the club has ever “bought referees or influence.”

    However, prosecutors accused Rosell and Bartomeu of having an agreement with Negreira in which “he would carry out actions aimed at favouring Barca in the decision-making of the referees in the matches played by the club and thus in the results of the competitions.”

    That led to a court opening an investigation in March, which eventually brought about the latest developments on Thursday.

    Rosell was Barca president from 2010 to 2014 before Bartomeu replaced him. After six years at the helm of the Catalan club, Bartomeu resigned in 2020, with Laporta elected as his replacement in 2021.

  • 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.

  • Sevilla coach diagnosed with leukaemia, but to continue working

    Sevilla coach Joaquin Caparros revealed after his side’s 2-0 win at Real Valladolid on Sunday that he had been diagnosed with leukaemia but vowed to continue in his job.

    “Everyone knows I have Sevilla in my blood, but there has been a problem with my white and red blood cells and I have been told that I have chronic leukaemia,” Caparros, 63, told a news conference.

    “It does not impede me from doing my job and I’m carrying out a normal life day to day. I am not receiving any treatment. So, everyone should remain calm.

    “I want to keep enjoying my job and I thank the club for allowing me to continue with this opportunity. I’m not going to talk any more about this.”

    Caparros took charge of Sevilla for the third time last month by switching role from sporting director to head coach after Pablo Machin was sacked.

    His side climbed to fifth place in La Liga after the win at Valladolid which lifted their hopes of qualifying for the UEFA Champions League.

    It took them to within one point of fourth-placed Getafe.

    Argentine coach Eduardo Berizzo was diagnosed with prostate cancer when he was in charge of Sevilla in November 2017.

    • He underwent successful treatment but was sacked by the club one month later following disappointing results.(Reuters/NAN)
  • Real Madrid vs Sevilla: Bernabéu fans remain positive

    Real Madrid host Sevilla today (Saturday) and the fans at the Estadio Santiago Bernabeu can feel confident about Los Blancos’ chances, even if the visitors are currently ahead of them in the LaLiga Santander table.

    That’s because Sevilla have a really poor record at the Estadio Santiago Bernabeu, where they’ve lost on each of their past 11 visits – nine league matches and two Copa del Rey games.

    Not since a 4-3 victory in 2008 have they tasted victory away at the capital city side, while they only have two other wins against them at the ground this century – a 5-3 win in 2007 and a 1-0 win in 2004.

    There was also a victory in the 2007 Copa del Rey final, although this was against Getafe.

    Interestingly, you’d have to go back to 1993 for the last time a match between these two sides at the Bernabeu ended as a draw.

    Since the beginning of 2018/19 LaLiga Santander campaign things have changed considerably on both sides ahead of Saturday afternoon’s reverse fixture at the Santiago Bernabeu.

    Sevilla’s 3-0 win over the reigning Champions League holders was a huge result early in Pablo Machin’s term as rojiblanco coach, with the game also seeing then recent arrivals like goalkeeper Tomas Vaclik, defender Sergi Gomez and especially forward Andre Silva showing fans at the Sánchez-Pizjuan just what they were capable of.

    Meanwhile, the heavy defeat was also a dramatic moment for then Real Madrid coach Julen Lopetegui, who never really recovered from such a score line and was replaced in the job just a few weeks later.

    The rematch now comes on Saturday with both sides having had ups and downs over the first half of the LaLiga Santander season, reaching this midway stage locked on 33 points from their first 19 games. Sevilla have nudged just ahead of Real into third due to the ‘head to head’ record.

    With Santiago Solari now on the Real Madrid bench, the former Castilla youth team coach has steered the team up the rankings in recent months with last weekend’s hard fought 2-1 victory at Sevilla’s city rivals Real Betis a sign of the spirit and quality that still resides within the Los Blancossquad.

    One thing which has not changed so much for Real Madrid is bad luck with injuries. They were missing key first teamers for September’s game in Seville including Dani Carvajal and Isco and the situation is even worse now with Solari possibly without seven senior players for Saturday’s game, including attackers Karim Benzema, Gareth Bale and Marco Asensio.

    Read Also: Sevilla challenge for Ahmed Musa

    Such misfortune can often bring opportunity for others however, and a big talking point from 2018/19 so far has been the emergence of 18-year-old Brazilian starlet Vinícius Junior. The teenager only arrived in the Spanish capital last summer but has quickly won over Bernabeu fans and pundits. Fellow youngsters Sergio Reguilon and Fede Valverde have also taken their chance to shine and were impressive in the win at Betis last weekend.

    Meanwhile, Sevilla have continued to ride high in the table through the first half of 2018/19. Portugal international Silva’s two goals in September’s 3-0 victory helped him to the top of the early ‘pichichi’ LaLiga topscorer standings, while more recently it has been strike partner Wissam Ben Yedder who has been in red hot form in front of goal.

    Just two points from their last three LaLiga Santander games have seen Machin’s side slip behind leaders Barcelona and second-placed Atletico Madrid in the title race, while Madrid have caught them going in the other direction. The Andalusians have also lost on each of their last eight LaLiga visits to the Bernabeu.

    The 2018/19 LaLiga campaign has, however, taught us to expect the unexpected and more twists and turns are almost certain when two of the competition’s big guns meet on Saturday.

  • Barca handed Copa final rematch with Sevilla, Real Madrid face Girona in quarter-finals

    Copa del Rey holders FC Barcelona were paired with Sevilla in Friday’s quarter-final draw, setting up a re-run of last year’s final match, while Real Madrid will face Girona.

    Barca, who thrashed Sevilla 5-0 in the 2018 final match, escaped a potential expulsion from the competition moments before the draw was made.

    The Spanish football federation (RFEF) announced on Friday it had rejected Levante’s complaint that the 30-times Copa winners fielded an ineligible player in their last 16 first leg game.

    Barcelona break billion dollar revenue barrier

    Barca overcame a 2-1 deficit from the first leg against Levante by winning the second leg 3-0 for a 4-2 aggregate victory.

    Real Madrid, who beat Leganes 3-1 on aggregate, will have to get past Girona.

    Girona knocked out 10-times winners Atletico Madrid on away goals rule following a thrilling 3-3 draw in their last 16 second leg that resulted in a 4-4 aggregate scoreline.

    Getafe will play against Valencia, and Real Betis will face Espanyol in the other ties in the round.

    The first leg games will take place from Jan. 23, with the deciding fixtures being played from Jan. 30.(Reuters/NAN)

  • Isco leaves hospital after appendicitis surgery

    Real Madrid playmaker Isco has left hospital after successfully undergoing an operation to treat appendicitis, the European champions said on Wednesday.

    “Our player Isco has been discharged from hospital.

    “He will start his recovery process now under the supervision of the Real Madrid medical services,” said a statement from the club which did not state how long Isco was expected to be out for.

    Reports in the Spanish media, however, said the Spain international would be unable to play for around a month and was targeting a return in time for Real’s crunch match away to arch-rivals Barcelona on Oct. 28 in La Liga.

    Read Also: Live Update! Real Madrid Win Champions League

    Isco was taken to hospital on Tuesday after arriving at training complaining of stomach pains.

    He is set to miss a total of six games for Real, including Wednesday’s testing league trip to Sevilla and Saturday’s city derby against Atletico Madrid.

    He will also have to sit out Champions League games against CSKA Moscow and Viktoria Plzen, as well as Spain’s friendly against Wales and their UEFA Nations League game with England.

  • Spanish federation delays approval of Girona-Barca match

    La Liga’s plans to move Girona’s fixture with Barcelona on Jan. 26 to Miami hang in the balance, after the Spanish soccer federation (RFEF) declined to authorise the move until it received more information on the game.

    “We have received a letter from the RFEF requesting more information about our proposal to play a La Liga competition match in the USA.

    “We will provide that information,” La Liga’s head of communications Joris Evers told Reuters on Tuesday.

    According to world governing body FIFA’s statutes, any domestic competition played outside the league’s usual home must be approved by the home federation.

    The approval of European governing body UEFA, the federation where the game is taking place, and the regional confederation – in this case the United States Soccer Federation and CONCACAF would be required.

    “They are not saying no, they are asking for more documentation. “Evidently, they are not very keen on it, but I’m still optimistic,” La Liga president Javier Tebas told reporters gathered outside the organisation’s headquarters on Friday.

    In August the Spanish federation took the Spanish Super Cup outside of Spain for the first time, as Barcelona met Sevilla in Tangier, Morocco.

    “The federation may not like the idea of us playing this game.

    “But the president of the RFEF has to resolve this legally, with the precedent of having taken a game to Tangier after everything that has been said about adulterating the competition,” Tebas added.

    Read Also: Tebas: 90 percent chance Girona against Barcelona in U.S

    “The game (in Miami) is still alive, without a doubt. We believe we are in the right and we will respond to all the doubts expressed in the letter.

    “This isn’t about us wanting to play a game in Miami, it’s a strategic plan to promote our brand amid the relentless competition for broadcasting rights,” he said.

    Girona and Barcelona declined requests from Reuters to comment.

    In August, La Liga announced a landmark 15-year promotion deal with U.S. Entertainment Company Relevent, the organiser of the annual International Champions Cup tournament played across the United States, Asia and Europe.

    The agreement included plans to play one game a year stateside.

    The plans were initially rejected by the Spanish Footballer’s Union, the AFE, who said they were prepared to go on strike in order to prevent the match from going ahead.

    Earlier this month, Barca spokesman Josep Vives said the club supported the idea of playing abroad, but would only do so if all parties in Spanish football agreed.

    “We’re interested in playing in the United States because it’s a strategic market, but we want it to be done consensually, in agreement and in harmony with the players and the Spanish soccer federation,” he said.

    Last week Real Madrid coach Julen Lopetegui said he was opposed to the idea, telling a news conference: “I don’t agree with this game, all the teams should play in the same stadiums.”

  • Angry Mourinho shows plenty of defiance but has few answers

    Manchester United Manager, Jose Mourinho stormed out of his news conference, following Monday’s 3-0 home defeat by Tottenham Hotspur.

    Mourinho was ranting about the three titles he won with Chelsea and demanding “respect” from reporters present.

    The conference came shortly after he had stood at length in front of a mainly empty Stretford End applauding United’s fans.

    It added to a somewhat bizarre epilogue on another miserable night for the 20-times English champions.

    “We lost against Sevilla (last season in the Champions League last 16) and we were booed because we deserved it.

    “Today the players left the pitch after losing at home and they were applauded because they deserved it, so we keep trying, trying, trying,” Mourinho said.

    “What was the score? This (holding three fingers up). What is this also? Three Premierships I have won, more Premierships than the other 19 managers put together.
    Me three, the two,” he said. “Respect, respect, respect.”

    Perhaps the performance for the media was intended to show his defiance in the face of two defeats from the opening three games of the season.

    Read Also: EPL: United beaten 3-2 as Brighton add to Mourinho’s woes

    Maybe he felt that a display of passion would go down well with the supporters at Old Trafford, who, it should be noted, showed no sign of turning against him.

    Or was Mourinho just deflecting from the fact that he lacks any answer to the most obvious question facing him.

    The question is: how to sort out a defence that has leaked six goals in two games and was opened up with ease by Spurs after the break?

    Mourinho had made it clear during the off-season that he wanted to sign at least one new centre-half and the performances of the five he has employed this season have amply demonstrated he was right.

    Eric Bailly was not even on the bench against Spurs; Victor Lindelof came on for the injured Phil Jones and made a series of mistakes.

    Also Chris Smalling, who had made a key tackle in the first half to deny Dele Alli, was left standing by Lucas Moura for the third goal.

    Exactly why United did not bring in a new player in that department, whether it be Leicester City’s Harry Maguire, Tottenham’s Toby Alderweireld or Bayern Munich’s Jerome Boateng.

    The players were all linked with the club and their absence in that department remains unclear.

    Mourinho has denied there is a rift with united chief executive Ed Woodward about the lack of transfer activity.

    But there is no straight answer from either party about why the club failed to bring in a new central defender.

    What the former Chelsea manager is clear about is that he doesn’t have a clue what combination can sort out the mess, “No,” he said.

    “Because in the first game Lindelof and Bailly, now Jones and Smalling but now Jones is injured and in the next match will be Smalling with another one.

    “When Marcos Rojo comes he will also be an option. I don’t know my best back four.”

    There isn’t much time for Mourinho to find the right solutions — United are already six points behind the Premier League’s top four — Spurs, Liverpool, Chelsea and Watford who all have 100 percent records.

    It is hard to see this united team challenging for the title but there is a real danger that their poor start could turn into a much deeper slump.