Saturday, August 13, 2016

Mourinho: I did not know about Pogba ban

The France international star will sit out the opening game of the season against Bournemouth, and the Portuguese even admitted he was surprised when he found out



Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho has revealed that he did not know about Paul Pogba's one-game ban when the midfielder signed for the Old Trafford club. 

Speaking to the media ahead of the club's Premier League opener, Mourinho confirmed that the France international will miss the clash with Bournemouth, due to a booking in the Coppa Italia final last season. 

But the Portuguese only found out after Pogba put pen to paper. 
"I found out two days ago,” he said.

“I knew the situation with the yellow cards but I didn’t know if an accumulation would bring a suspension.”
Nevertheless, the Portuguese has confirmed that the France international star will be able to make his debut at Old Trafford in the Red Devils' second match of the campaign.

Soure : Goal.com

Lionel Messi returns to Argentina squad

The Albiceleste captain announced he has reversed his decision to step down from international football, following a conversation with new coach Edgardo Bauza




Lionel Messi has confirmed in a statement his intention to return to the Argentina national team.
The Barcelona star made the decision to retire from international football after another heartbreaking loss in the final of the 2016 Copa America.
Having spoken with new Albiceleste boss Edgardo Bauza, Messi has now made the decision to represent his country once again.
"I see there are lots of problems in Argentine football and I do not want to create another," he explained through a statement released on Friday. 

"I do not want to cause any harm, I have always tried to do the opposite and help wherever I could. 
"We have to fix a lot of things in Argentine football, but I'd rather do that from the inside and not criticising from the outside."
The captain affirmed that it was his love of Argentina that had convinced him to come back for the next World Cup qualifiers after initially stepping down from the team. 

"A lot of things went through my head the day of the last final and I seriously thought about quitting, but I love this country and this shirt too much," he said.

Source : Goal.com

Surprise! Klopp’s Liverpool look to press all the right buttons to blow the league away

The Reds will want to turn possibility into achievement this season according to Goal's Liverpool Correspondent Melissa Reddy, who previews the club's approach to 2016-17
There will be an overflow of sniggers, but Liverpool will not care. There will be a mountain of evidence to suggest the contrary, but that will not deter the Reds. 
Jurgen Klopp’s side will open 2016-17 with only one conclusion in mind: success. Whether that entails winning a cup competition, clinching a Champions League spot or entering title contention is debatable, but what is not in question is the club will be determined to exert, as the manager put it, their “maximum” this campaign. 


Drilled during an intensive pre-season, and bolstered with surgical rather than seismic new additions, Liverpool should be better equipped to implement the German’s ‘full-throttle’ approach. Last time out, they proved unplayable on their day, but that didn’t come around often enough. 
The Anfield side demonstrated their mastery in the dismantling of both Manchester clubs, Chelsea, Borussia Dortmund and Villarreal. But equally, they displayed meek performances at Newcastle, Watford and the second half of the Europa League final against Sevilla. 
Inconsistency was the club’s nemesis in 2015-16, but that was largely owing to a congested fixture schedule, which led to fatigue and debilitating injuries. There was also the small matter of a managerial change after just eight Premier League games, with the final months of Brendan Rodgers’ reign soaked in toxicity. 
With no European football to contend with this season and no chance of upheaval in the dugout given Klopp’s fresh six-year deal, Liverpool will be expected to produce their very best regularly, not least by themselves. 


The contrast between now and August last year could not be greater. Back then, Rodgers, aware he’d lost the fanbase, lost his way. He shunned his expansive principles and adopted a risk-averse approach, which was always going to be unpopular. Moreover, it was unsuited to the majority of his squad, making the Northern Irishman’s sacking inevitable. Liverpool had forgotten who they were, what they were after, and how to attain it.
Now, they are in no doubt about what they need to do, and the process required to pull it off. Klopp has instilled a recognisable playing style at Anfield, a promise he made on his first day in charge, and every training session since July 2 has preached the fundamentals of his ‘fighting football.’ The methodology is so entrenched in the players, who have said the commands have become less of an order and more of a habit on the pitch. 
There will be no safety-first plan from the Reds. They inherently believe that they can be dominant in a game - whether in possession or out of it - and will look to “conquer the ball, each f***ing time.” The club’s sessions at their camp in California focused heavily on two important aspects: speedy transitions on the counter, and patient build-up to oust the deep defensive line most of their opponents will use in the league.
That will form the basis of Liverpool’s blueprint, with the inspiration still left up to the players.
“What we’ve done is given the guys a foundation to have the freedom with their skills,” Klopp explained to Goal in an exclusive interview.
“We have no influence on their skills - a little on their potential, maybe. You take a player, who you know is good in many things, and you bring him from this level to an even higher level. 
“I love this with the job, that you can work together and all become better.”


Improvement, individually and collectively, is non-negotiable for a Liverpool side that finished eighth in May. Klopp’s charges illustrated last season that despite having so many hinderances, they could still turn in some of the most striking displays of 2015-16, while also reaching two cup finals.
Bigger, better, bolder is now on the agenda.
“You need to give yourself the opportunity to surprise yourself by being the best you can be, and then doing anything you can imagine," the German has said. “Football is the perfect playground to show this.”
The manager has had his crash course in English football. A challenging pre-season, so often referenced as essential by Klopp, has been enjoyed. Seven new recruits have been added to the squad and with the exception of seasoned goalkeeper Alex Manninger, signed as cover, each provides an elevated level of competition for places in their respective positions. Several weaknesses have been rectified, with Sadio Mane adding much needed pace as one such example, and apart from being thin at full-back, there is sizeable depth for a domestic campaign. Klopp will also have the big bonus of extended time on the training field between fixtures. 


In the most competitive of Premier League seasons, Liverpool know they need to be at their most aggressive. Both Manchester clubs have spent in excess of £100 million to fortify their squads and have acquired two managerial heavyweights, with Pep Guardiola looking to build a dynasty at City and Jose Mourinho determined to restore United as the country’s pre-eminent force. Chelsea, meanwhile, are expected to be taxing opponents under Antonio Conte, given his focus on organisation and efficiency. Arsenal, despite seasonally being written off, always find themselves in the top-four discussion, while Tottenham will want to better last season’s efforts. Defending champions Leicester won’t want to be discounted, West Ham’s plan is to push on and there’s always room for surprises in England’s top flight…
But Liverpool start the season with the possibility - however marginal - of attaining something great, and a manager who has a history of turning opportunity into achievement. Make no mistake, they will begin the season looking at top spot, and thinking ‘why not?.’ You cannot succeed if you do not try, and the Reds will not be short of endeavour.

Source : Goal.com

Mourinho: Manchester United will not always attack

The Old Trafford faithful grew impatient with Louis van Gaal and his team's inability to hit the net, but the new manager warned all-out attack would not be his way
Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho says his team will not always deploy an attacking style – and does not think that represents a change to the club's identity.
The former Chelsea boss is preparing to take charge of his first Premier League match at his new team when they travel to play Bournemouth on Sunday.
Pep Guardiola – Mourinho's long-time rival and new manager of Manchester City – has insisted he will never sacrifice his style of play in order to achieve results, but 'The Special One' says he will do whatever it takes for United to achieve victories. 
"I have grown up in football as a manager since 2001 more or less and - especially when I came to England in 2004 - I saw Man United as a winning team, not as always an attacking team," Mourinho told reporters.
"I played sometimes against Man United and Man United was a defensive team. I played Real Madrid-Manchester United in Madrid and they crossed the midfield line twice and Wayne Rooney played outside left to defend my right back.
"I saw them always as a winning team with an attacking philosophy, yes, but a winning team and the winning team needs to score more goals than they concede. 
"That's the challenge for Man United - to try to be a winning team in a new era of the Premier League that is much more difficult than before.

"We want to win competitions. To win isolated matches you can play badly but to win competitions you need to play well."
Mourinho also warned not to expect a free-flowing United side from week one of the league campaign, with the modern demands of pre-season reducing the amount of preparation work a manager can do and making it impossible to start "as a train".
The 53-year-old added: "It's more difficult, especially because pre-seasons are shorter and pre-seasons are less football and more other areas.
"I want to go into the Premier League, day one, with 33 training sessions and half of these players are not here because the players I started with are the players that are going on loan, other players are going to the under-21 team and the under-18 team.
"Instead of 33 training sessions, which would be the normal situation 10, 15 years ago, I have guys who are going into Premier League day one with eight training sessions.

Source : Goal.com

Phelan: Hull showed character to beat Leicester

The home side's caretaker manager was delighted with his side's display as they put two past the reigning champions to take three points in their first game

Hull City caretaker boss Mike Phelan was delighted with the response his players produced to beat Premier League champions Leicester City 2-1 after being pegged back.
Adama Diomande gave Hull the lead in spectacular fashion in the dying seconds of the first half, but Riyad Mahrez converted a penalty two minutes after the interval to leave Phelan fearing the worst.
Robert Snodgrass eventually secured the three points for Hull, who endured a turbulent pre-season ahead of Saturday's game.
"I thought the players had it in them, we had to change a lot of things in order to get to this stage," Phelan told Sky Sports. "It was fingers crossed to make sure we had enough players, but full credit to them.
"When we conceded the goal like we did after half-time you think the floodgates may open, but they carried on and showed great determination and character.

"You have to master the ball, play with confidence and play with character and courage. Everything came out, but it's one game, roll on the next one.
"It's not often in the Premier League you have a 0-0 game, you have to score goals, our guys have to learn and learn quickly, it's difficult for them but they managed to keep going."
Phelan was named as caretaker boss following Steve Bruce's decision to step down, but it remains unclear whether he will remain in charge on a permanent basis.
"The situation has not changed. It may change, I don't know," he added.
"I was asked to take pre-season, I've done that, I was asked to take the game, I've done that. Now we are in to the politics, that's for other people to decide.
"Players may want to come here now, performances changes things."

Source : Goal.com

Coleman ruled out for 'several weeks'

Seamus Coleman is facing a lengthy stint on the sidelines with an ankle injury in a blow for Everton and the Republic of Ireland.

Everton defender Seamus Coleman will be out for "several weeks" with an ankle injury, manager Ronald Koeman has confirmed.
Koeman was also without star forward Romelu Lukaku (heel) for Saturday's Premier League opener against Tottenham at Goodison Park and, ahead of his first game in charge, the former Southampton boss stated that Coleman was set for a lengthy lay-off.
"We're disappointed Romelu can't start today and Seamus will be out for several weeks," he told Everton's official website.
"It's difficult because it means we have to change out plans, but it's still 11 against 11."
Coleman arrived at Goodison Park wearing a surgical boot and his condition will also be a concern for Republic of Ireland boss Martin O'Neill, as the 27-year-old must now be considered a major doubt for their opening 2018 World Cup qualifier in Serbia on September 5.
An ever-present during Ireland's run to the last-16 of Euro 2016, Coleman has 38 caps for his country.

Source : Goal.com

Tottenham goalkeeper Lloris forced off with hamstring injury

The Frenchman took a knock and was replaced by Michel Vorm late in the first half against Everton, with Mauricio Pochettino set to update on his condition after full-time

Tottenham goalkeeper Hugo Lloris has been forced off with a hamstring injury against Everton.
The Frenchman was subbed off late in the first half of the opening-day clash at Goodison Park with the Toffees ahead thanks to a Ross Barkley goal.

Spurs later tweeted that Mauricio Pochettino would update on Lloris' condition after the match, with Michel Vorm replacing him.

Lloris was given an extended break following his exploits at Euro 2016 with France, who he captained to the final only to be defeated by Portugal.

Source: Goal.com