Showing posts with label World Cup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World Cup. Show all posts

Sunday, September 15, 2024

Mauricio Pochettino Instills Hope That The USMNT Can Win The World Cup In Fiery Press Conference

USMNT Coach Mauricio Pochettino

BY MARK HARRIS, OUTKICK

Mauricio Pochettino isn't just looking for the U.S. men's national team to play in the 2026 World Cup and perhaps make a little noise in the tournament, he was brought in to do far more than that. He and the U.S. Soccer Federation have their sights set on winning the World Cup on U.S. soil, and Pochettino isn't shying away from letting the entire world know it.

Pochettino was formally introduced as the USMNT's newest manager on Friday, and when asked what he's hoping to accomplish between now and the start of the World Cup in less than two years, he laid out the loftiest of goals.

"We are winners. We are going to compete, and compete is completely different than to play…We have time, and we need to really believe in things, in big things," Pochettino explained. "We need to believe that we can win all the games, that we can win the World Cup."

That brief quote personifies the change in culture that the U.S. men's team must undertake if it wants to not only perform well in the World Cup, but be taken more seriously on the global stage.

You could take any former managers of the USMNT and ask them what they are hoping to accomplish in the World Cup, and everyone would deliver some form of coach-speak about ‘playing to our highest level.’ Not Pochettino, he actually said the words "win the World Cup."

Words, of course, are only words, and legitimately contending for a World Cup in 2026 is the loftiest goal imaginable, but Pochettino, not shying away from said goal, is already instilling excitement among U.S. supporters. The first item on the list to get the American squad moving in the right direction is to re-gain confidence.

"Of course the confidence was a little bit low after the Copa América," Pochettino said, referring to the U.S. being bounced from the group stage of the tournament this summer "I think it's a very good generation of players. We need to show that we play like a collective on the pitch."

Pochettino has never coached at the international level, but he brings more accolades to the USMNT managerial position than anyone else who has manned the role before. The 52-year-old managed Chelsea last season, took Tottenham to the Champions League final in 2019, and previously won a league title with Paris Saint-Germain.

Monday, September 09, 2024

‘Equivalent To Winning A World Cup!’ Did Cristiano Ronaldo Issue A Message To Lionel Messi After Scoring 900th Career Goal?

Christiano Ronaldo (Facebook)

BY RITAYAN BASU

Cristiano Ronaldo had a message for Lionel Messi after reaching 900 career goals. The five-time Ballon d’Or winner made history after scoring against Croatia in the UEFA Nations League. The landmark goal also enabled Portugal to win the fixture 2-1 against Croatia. After the match, Ronaldo was asked about the prospect of playing in the upcoming edition of the FIFA World Cup. The former Real Madrid and Manchester United footballer insisted that the World Cup did not bother him much since he had already lifted the European Championship in 2016. “Portugal winning Euros is equivalent to winning a World Cup,” Ronaldo said, as per multiple outlets.

Cristiano Ronaldo remained unhinged about the prospect of finishing his career without a FIFA World Cup title. The Portuguese icon would be 41 years old should he choose to compete in the next edition of the FIFA World Cup, scheduled to be held in the United States in 2026. Speaking in the post-match conference after defeating Croatia, Ronaldo did not reveal if he was going to feature in the next edition of the FIFA tournament. But he voiced his contentment in a couple of titles he won with Portugal. “I’ve already won two trophies for Portugal that I really wanted. I’m not motivated by that. I’m motivated by enjoying football and the records come naturally,” he said.

Cristiano Ronaldo also spoke about the landmark 900th goal he scored against Croatia. As per multiple outlets, he said, “Only me, and the people around me know how difficult it is to work daily to be physically and psychologically well and reach goal 900. It’s a unique milestone in my career and it was with a lot of emotion I celebrated that goal. It represents a lot. It was the number I wanted to achieve for a long time and I knew I would achieve it because, as I continue to play, it would happen naturally.”

The FIFA World Cup trophy is a major crown that has eluded Cristiano Ronaldo’s trophy cabinet. The farthest Ronaldo has managed to reach in the tournament was the semi-finals in 2004. They were eventually knocked out by France back then. Portugal failed to crack the Round of 16, in the following edition and lost 0-1 to Spain.

In 2014, Portugal could not get past the group stage whereas Lionel Messi’s Argentina went on to play in the final. Portugal were eliminated by Uruguay in 2018 thanks to a brace from Edinson Cavani. In Qatar, two years back, Portugal conceded a defeat to Morocco in the quarter-finals. Meanwhile, Argentina completed a dream run to win the FIFA World Cup title in 2022.

READ ORIGINAL STORY HERE

2026 World Cup: How Nations From Around The world Can Qualify



BY DALE JOHNSON, GENERAL EDITOR, ESPN FC

Qualifying for the 2026 FIFA World Cup began on Oct. 12, 2023, when minor nations from the Asian confederation played their first round of matches. Myanmar's Lwin Moe Aung scored the very first goal in a 5-1 win over Macau.

Most confederations now have qualifying well underway, but we're a long way from discovering who will join hosts United States, Mexico and Canada.

Here's where we're at around the globe.

EUROPE(UEFA)
12 AUTO + 4 VIA CONFEDERATION PLAYOFF

There are 55 European nations, and qualifying will run from March to November 2025. However, Russia remain suspended due to the invasion of Ukraine and are unlikely to compete, leaving 54 nations.

There will be 12 groups of four or five teams, playing home and away matches. The group winners will qualify directly for the World Cup.

There is no date for the draw as yet, but it's likely to be in November or December. The seeded teams will be the top eight nations from the current edition of the UEFA Nations League, which ends on Nov. 19, plus the top four by FIFA World Ranking who aren't yet seeded. Despite being in Nations League B, England are almost certain to be in Pot 1 on World Ranking.

The final four places at the World Cup will be determined via confederation playoffs, to be played in March 2026. There is no path to the World Cup through FIFA's intercontinental playoffs.

The UEFA playoff involves 16 teams: the 12 runners-up plus the four best-ranked group winners from the UEFA Nations League, who did not finish in the top two in World Cup qualifying. This creates four routes, each with four teams featuring a semifinal and a final for a place at the World Cup.

SOUTH AMERICA (CONMEBOL)
6 AUTO + 1 ENTERS PLAYOFF

As in recent qualifying competitions, all 10 nations play each other home and away. The top six nations qualify directly to the finals. The seventh-placed team will go into the intercontinental playoffs in March 2026.

The first qualifiers took place in September 2023, with the league phase to be completed in September 2025.

NORTH AMERICA, CENTRAL AMERICA , CARIBBEAN (CONCACAF)
3 AUTO + 2 ENTER PLAYOFF

Usually, Concacaf would have six automatic places in qualifying -- but for the 2026 finals three of the six are taken up by the hosts. That leaves three places to be won, plus two spots in the intercontinental playoffs.

Concacaf saw 32 nations enter the race to make the finals.

Round 1: The four lowest-ranked Concacaf nations battled it out in two-legged ties. Anguilla and British Virgin Islands eliminated Turks and Caicos Islands and U.S. Virgin Islands respectively, both on penalties.

Round 2: The top 28-ranked nations, plus the two winners from Round 1, were drawn into six groups of five teams. The six group winners and six group runners-up will move on to Round 3. This stage will be played in two blocks, with the first held in June 2024 and the second in June 2025.

Round 3: The 12 remaining teams will be drawn into three groups of four teams. The group winners will qualify for the World Cup, with the two runners-up with the best record going on to take part in the intercontinental playoffs. This phase will be played in September, October and November 2025.

AFRICA (CAF)
9 AUTO + 1 ENTERS PLAYOFF

There were 54 FIFA-affiliated nations in the draw, but Eritrea subsequently withdrew.

Round 1: The 53 teams are in eight groups of six nations, and one group of five. The nine group winners qualify for the World Cup,

This stage began in November 2023 and will be completed in October 2025.

Round 2: The four best runners-up will enter playoffs (two semifinals and a final) to decide which one country will go to the intercontinental playoffs. This stage will be played in November 2025.

ASIA (AFC)
8 AUTO + 1 ENTERS PLAYOFF

This is by some distance the most complicated route to the World Cup, with a layered qualifying process which creates a dual group stage to find the eight automatic qualifiers.

Round 1: The 20 lowest-ranked nations played two-legged ties in October 2023. Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Chinese Taipei, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Singapore and Yemen advanced.

Round 2: Those 10 winners joined the 26 best-ranked nations. The 36 teams were drawn into nine groups of four teams, with the top two nations going through to Round 3. This stage began in November 2023 and was completed in June 2024.

Advanced: Australia, Bahrain, China, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Japan, Jordan, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, North Korea, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan

Round 3: We're now left with 18 nations, who have been drawn into three groups of six teams. Matches began in September 2024 and will run through to June 2025

The group winners and runners-up will take the first six places at the 2026 World Cup.

The six nations who finished in third and fourth move on to round 4.

Round 4: The six teams in this stage will be drawn into two groups of three. They will play each other once, so two matches, on neutral ground in October 2025.

The group winners take the final two automatic places at the World Cup.

The runners-up continue on to Round 5.

Round 5: The two runners-up will play a two-legged tie in November 2025 to earn the place in the intercontinental playoffs.

OCEANIA (OFC)
1 AUTO + 1 ENTERS PLAYOFF

All 11 members of the OFC region take part.

Round 1: The four lowest-ranked nations play a knockout format (two semis and a final) in September 2024 for a place in round two. The games will be played in Samoa.

American Samoa, Cook Islands, Samoa and Tonga are in this round.

Samoa beat Tonga 2-1 in the final to move on to Round 2.

Round 2: Samoa join the seven top-ranked nations.

The eight nations have been drawn into two groups of four nations, with matches played in October and November 2024. Games will be held in New Zealand, Papua New Guinea and Vanuatu.

Group A: Solomon Islands, Fiji, New Caledonia and Papua New Guinea
Group B: New Zealand, Tahiti, Vanuatu and Samoa

The top two countries in each group go on to Round 3.

Round 3: Four countries remain, and will play a knockout format (two semis and a final) in March 2025.

The winners of the final qualifies for the World Cup, with the losers playing in the intercontinental playoff.

INTERCONTINENTAL PLAYOFFS (2 PLACES)

The playoffs, to be held in March 2026, will determine the final two qualifiers.

Six countries will take part. Each of the five confederations (apart from UEFA) will have one country in the playoffs. The host confederation (so for this edition Concacaf) receives a second slot.

1 Africa
1 Asia
2 Concacaf
1 Oceania
1 South America

The two nations with the best FIFA World Ranking will be seeded and go straight into one of the two finals.

The four other countries will be drawn to play a semifinal, feeding through to play a seed for one of the two places at the World Cup.

The playoffs are due to be held in one of the World Cup host nations as a test event.

Tuesday, January 09, 2024

Remembering Football Legend Franz Beckenbauer, His Career Stats And Records

West Germany's Gerd Muller, (centre) is mobbed by team-mates, (Muller had scored the winning goal for the Germans) against Holland in Munich, West Germany, in the World Cup Final July 7, 1974. Left-right, Jurgen Grabowski, Franz Beckenbauer. Image: Rolls Press/Popperfoto via Getty

BY UDDIPTA BANER JEE

It was the year 1974. With the blow of the final whistle, an army of Germans decked in white shirts and black shorts threw their arms in the air and exalted in jubilation. The Dutch, arguably one of the greatest football teams of all time led by the talismanic Johan Cruyff, sat on the ground with their heads hung low. As the glittering FIFA World Cup trophy was handed over to the German captain Franz Beckenbauer, the world saw ‘Der Kaiser’ (German for ‘The Emperor’) take his throne. Today, it pains every football fan to say the king is no more.

One of the greatest legends of the sport, Beckenbauer is often considered to be the inventor of the modern sweeper (libero) role of a defender. The German maestro led his country to yet another World Cup glory in 1990, this time as a manager. He is one of the only three individuals in football’s history, alongside Brazil’s Mario Zagallo and Frenchman Didier Deschamps, to win the FIFA World Cup as a player and as a manager.

The German legend, aged 78, breathed his last on 7 January 2024. “We ask that we be allowed to grieve in peace and be spared any questions,” read a statement by his family. Although Beckenbauer’s cause of death is undetermined to date, reports suggest that he was ailing from heart-related issues.

In the wake of his unfortunate demise, we take a moment to look at Franz Beckenbauer’s career stats, records, the dates he joined Bayern Munich and the German national team, and all his achievements and accolades as we honour the maestro’s incredible legacy.

Everything to know about Franz Beckenbauer’s career stats, records, trophies and more.
His time with Bayern Munich in club football

Franz Beckenbauer made his debut for Bayern Munich in a Bundesliga promotion play-off match against FC St. Pauli on 6 June 1964. Over the next few years, the Munich-based club became a formidable force in Germany, winning the German Cup in 1966-67 and the UEFA Cup Winners’ Cup in 1967.

For the 1968-69 season, Bayern Munich named Beckenbauer the captain of the club. In his first season as the skipper, he led the team to its first-ever Bundesliga title. It was also around this time that the German started experimenting with the sweeper defender role. He eventually redefined the role of a defender and became the greatest exponent of the attacking sweeper game.

Beckenbauer earned his moniker of ‘Der Kaiser’ whilst playing for Bayern Munich. The origin of this title, however, is debated to date. According to a popular theory, on the occasion of a friendly match in Vienna, Austria in 1968, the footballer posed for a photo session right beside a statue of the former Austrian emperor Franz Joseph I. The media started calling him ‘Der Kaiser’ soon after.

However, there is an alternate theory explaining the roots of Beckenbauer’s nickname. On 14 June 1969, the German fouled the opposition captain, Reinhard Libuda from Schalke 04. While the fans were upset with this challenge on the field, Beckenbauer took the ball in front of the opposition fans and balanced it for half a minute. Libuda was known as ‘Konig von Westfalen’ (the king of Westphalia), so the press came up with an even more dramatic title for Beckenbauer in the form of ‘Der Kaiser’.

During Beckenbauer’s time with Bayern Munich, the club won three consecutive league titles from 1972 to 1974. In addition, they also secured a hat-trick of European Cup (now known as the UEFA Champions League) victories (from 1974 to 1976), which prompted UEFA to permanently award the trophy to Bayern Munich. Franz Beckenbauer’s stats and records for the Munich-based side rank him in the pantheon of greats in European club football.

Beckenbauer’s exploits in international football

Arguably the greatest German defender of all time, Franz Beckenbauer made his international debut on 26 September 1965 and represented his nation in three FIFA World Cups (in 1966, 1970 and 1974).

In the 1966 World Cup, he had a stellar run as he scored four goals and ended as the tournament’s joint-third top goal scorer. However, the Germans fell short of winning the title by the narrowest of margins, losing to Bobby Charlton’s England in the final at the Wembley Stadium in London.

The Germans exacted revenge on the Englishmen in the 1970 World Cup as they defeated the defending champions in the extra time of the second-round encounter after overcoming a 2-0 deficit. And, it was Beckenbauer who scripted this famous comeback after opening the scoring for the Germans in the second half of the match.

In the semi-finals, they faced Italy in what would be known as the ‘Game of the Century‘. Beckenbauer dislocated his shoulder after being fouled but continued playing on carrying his arm in a sling as his side had already used the two permitted substitutions. The match eventually went on to extra time, and the Italians won by a margin of 4-3 to advance to the finals.

Beckenbauer became the captain of the national side in 1971, and under his astute leadership, West Germany won the 1972 European Championships after defeating the Soviet Union by a margin of 3-0 in the title clash. He went on to lead his side to a World Cup win in their backyard in 1974, defeating Johan Cruyff’s fabled Dutch side in the final by a 2-1 scoreline. Beckenbauer became the first captain to lift the new FIFA World Cup trophy (which is used to date) after Brazil had retained the Jules Rimet Trophy in 1970.

As a result of this World Cup win, West Germany created the record of being the first team in history to become the reigning champions of both the European Championship and the World Cup simultaneously (France and Spain achieved the feat after that). Beckenbauer came tantalisingly close to winning a second consecutive European Championship with West Germany but failed to live his dream as his side was beaten by Czechoslovakia in the final.

His time as a football manager

Franz Beckenbauer replaced Jupp Derwall as the manager of West Germany on 12 September 1984. He helped the team reach the final of the 1986 FIFA World Cup where they lost to the Argentine team led by the legendary Diego Maradona.

However, he did exact revenge on Argentina in the 1990 FIFA World Cup when his German side defeated them by a margin of 1-0 to win the world title. In the process, Franz Beckenbauer joined an elite club of men who won the World Cup both as a player and as a manager and scripted the record for being the first man to win the trophy as a captain and a manager (Didier Deschamps is the only other individual to achieve this feat in 2018).

Beckenbauer accepted the role of managing Olympique de Marseille in 1990, but he left the club within a year. He returned to Bayern Munich, this time as the club’s manager, and was in charge of the side from 28 December 1993 until 30 June 1994, and from 29 April to 30 June 1996. During his two brief spells managing the club, Beckenbauer helped Bayern Munich win the Bundesliga title in 1994 and the UEFA Cup in 1996.

Summing up Franz Beckenbauer’s career stats

There is no shred of doubt that Franz Beckenbauer’s name is written in the history of football as one of its finest ambassadors. Be it as a player, a leader, a manager or an administrator, his contributions to the sport are hardly rivalled by many.

Franz Beckenbauer’s stats and records are almost unthinkable for a defender to achieve in a lifetime. He has scored 75 goals in 584 matches for Bayern Munich, and 98 goals in 754 matches in his club football career. For West Germany, the maestro has scored 14 goals in 103 matches.

Besides winning multiple honours with his club and national teams, Beckenbauer has won a host of personal accolades as well. He won the coveted Ballon d’Or in 1972 and 1976, besides being named the Footballer of the Year in Germany four times (in 1966, 1968, 1974 and 1976). He also won the FIFA World Cup Best Young Player Award in 1966, and the FIFA World Cup Silver Ball in 1974.

Franz Beckenbauer was awarded the FIFA Order of Merit in 1984 and won the FIFA Centennial Player and Football Personality Award in 2004. In 2007, he was presented with the Laureus Lifetime Achievement Award.

Beckenbauer was also included in the Ballon d’Or Dream Team in 2020.

READ ORIGINAL STORY HERE

Franz Beckenbauer Was A Player Out Of Time Who Made Football Evolve With Him

West German captain Franz Beckenbauer raises his arms in celebration as they become World Champions for the second time in history, beating Holland 2-1 in the 1974 World Cup Final in Munich, West Germany. Image: Popperfoto via Getty Images.

BY JONATHAN WILSON

Germany and Bayern Munich could not quite fathom where to play the young Beckenbauer, so he effectively invented a role for himself

“For me,” Helmut Schön said of Franz Beckenbauer in February 1965 after calling him up to the West Germany team for the first time, “he is the player of the future. Maybe not in midfield, perhaps up front.”

People were always looking at Beckenbauer and seeing in him a being from another age, and that meant that, for a long time, nobody really knew what to make of him. He was handsome, charismatic and languid, a player of effortless elegance guaranteed to enrage those who believed the game was about industry, sweat and graft. He was technically gifted. He saw things others didn’t. He had grace and intelligence.

From his teens it was obvious Beckenbauer would be a player of the highest level. But in what position? Nobody could work it out. And so he effectively invented a role for himself. Beckenbauer is now considered the great example of the libero, but he was not a libero in the Italian sense, sitting behind a tough-man marker and initiating attacks with long-range passes. As he himself said, if he resembled anybody in Helenio Herrera’s great Internazionale side that popularised the idea of a libero by winning two European Cups with their catenaccio, it was the left-back Giacinto Facchetti, a fine defender who would surge forward to create angles in midfield and join the attack.

Beckenbauer’s early career was a tale of a player seeking a role. When he made his Bayern debut in 1964 as an 18-year-old, in the promotion playoffs against St Pauli, he operated on the left wing. In his next game, against Tasmania Berlin, he dropped back to play as a centre-half when Rainer Ohlhauser was pushed up front as Bayern chased an equaliser and did well enough to play there again against Borussia Neunkirchen. In the second group game against St Pauli, he started as a half, then dropped in to the defence to help deal with the threat of Guy Acolatse, and ended up as a forward as Bayern chased a winner.

West German sides in those days tended play an adaptation of the W-M, in which one of the halves would drop back behind the centre-half to play as an Ausputzer – literally, a cleaner – but he had no creative brief as he would have done in Italy. Rather, the centre-half picked up the opposing centre-forward but had a limited licence to step forward, knowing he had cover behind him. Beckenbauer took that far further than anybody had before.

Bayern missed out on promotion by a point that season, but cruised into the Bundesliga the following campaign with Beckenbauer as the regular centre-half despite constant newspaper talk that he might be better deployed as one of the more creative midfielders.

Zlatko Cajkovski, the Bayern coach, seemingly had similar doubts and, that summer, signed the combative Dieter Danzberg to operate as his centre-half, allowing Beckenbauer to move further forward. But Danzberg was sent off in the opening game of the following season, a derby against 1860 Munich, and banned for eight weeks. Beckenbauer stepped into his position and never left it, the crowning glory of a fine first top-flight campaign coming against SV Meiderich in the 1966 German Cup final.

Beckenbauer’s forward surges had been restricted by having to deal with centre-forward Rüdiger Mielke, but with eight minutes remaining and Bayern leading 3-2, Ohlhauser won the ball back and suddenly became aware Beckenbauer had set off. He picked him out, Beckenbauer ran on and scored the decisive goal from the edge of the box. His role as a libero was confirmed and, with Georg Schwarzenbeck an essential but largely unsung stopper alongside him, would go on to underpin all Bayern’s success in the 1970s.

For the national team, Beckenbauer’s role was more contested. For that first game, in February 1965, an unofficial friendly against Chelsea, Beckenbauer operated in midfield as Schön experimented with a back four. Other than two games on a tour of South and Central America in 1968, when Willi Schulz was used as a man-marker and Beckenbauer had to take his role in the back four, that was where he remained until 1971 when Schön finally agreed to allow Beckenbauer to play as the libero.

The following year, Beckenbauer was at the heart of the West Germany side that, in beating England 3-1 at Wembley in the first leg of the Euro ‘72 quarter-final, produced a mesmerisingly brilliant half hour. It was, L’Équipe said, “football from the year 2000”. This, at last, was Beckenbauer’s age.

The truth, though, was however advanced West Germany appeared by comparison with Alf Ramsey’s fading England, it was football of the early 70s. Trying to keep the game in the shade of the main stand in the heat of Léon during the 1970 World Cup, it’s said, had taught West Germany how possession could be manipulated, and the freedom Beckenbauer had in stepping out of the backline, offering an extra man, was critical in allowing them to operate like that. The style, a sort of Total Football without the pressing, brought both the 1972 Euros and the 1974 World Cup.

Time eventually caught up with the man from the future. As a coach Beckenbauer was a conservative. “A defensive stance,” he said, “corresponds to Germany nature ... we get stuck in, we story the opponent’s game and the force our game onto him.”

When Klaus Augenthaler suggested switching to a back four, Beckenbauer insisted “our character, our system” was a libero plus markers. It brought two World Cup finals in 1986 and 1990, the latter of them won, but probably delayed the advent of pressing, leading to the lost decade of the 90s (the weird outlier of winning Euro 96 notwithstanding) and subsequent reboot.

But why would Beckenbauer have been a great theorist? Why would he, as a manager, have been part among the tactical avant garde? As a player, by being who he was, without having to conceptualise it, he had changed the way the game was played. He emerged as a player out of time, and made football conform to him.

READ ORIGINAL STORY HERE

Thursday, July 13, 2023

Africa's World Cup Qualifying Draw Launches New Format And At Least 9 Teams Towards 2026 Event

Moroccan players celebrate their victory over Spain during the World Cup Round of 16 soccer match between Morocco and Spain, at the Education City Stadium in Al Rayyan, Qatar, on Dec. 6, 2022. Image: Martin Meissner/Associated Press

BY GERALD IMRAY

ABIDJAN, IVORY COAST (AP)
-- Nigeria and South Africa were drawn in the same World Cup qualifying group on Thursday in a re-shaped African competition that will lead to at least nine teams at the 2026 showpiece in the U.S., Canada and Mexico.

The enlarged 48-team World Cup in three years’ time means Africa’s places are up from five to nine, with the possibility of a 10th African team making it through an inter-continental playoff.

In the new African format, just the winners of the nine six-team groups are guaranteed a place at the World Cup. The four best second-place teams enter African playoffs and the one that comes through those makes it to an inter-continental mini-tournament, where the two final teams at the World Cup will be decided.

World Cup semifinalist Morocco, the first African or Arab team to make the last four after its surprising run in Qatar last year, is in a group where its sternest tests will likely come from 2012 African champion Zambia and Niger.

The African qualifiers will be played from November to October 2025.

Benin, Zimbabwe, Rwanda and Lesotho are the other teams in Group C with Nigeria and South Africa. Zimbabwe was included in the draw after FIFA lifted an international ban on the country on Tuesday. Zimbabwe was suspended in February 2022 because of government interference in its soccer federation.

Morocco, Zambia and Niger are in Group E with Republic of Congo, Tanzania and Eritrea, which is ranked 200 out of FIFA’s 211 teams.

The draw followed the Confederation of African Football’s general assembly in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, the West African country that will host the next African Cup of Nations in January-February.

Defending African champion Senegal will play Congo, Mauritania, Togo, Sudan and South Sudan in Group B. The Sudanese neighbors will play each other in World Cup qualifying having split into independent states in 2011 after decades of civil war.

Egypt is in Group A and is expected to be pushed by Burkina Faso for the qualifying place there. Egypt played at the 2018 World Cup in Russia after a 28-year absence but missed Qatar.

Morocco, Senegal, Tunisia, Cameroon and Ghana were the five teams from Africa to qualify for the World Cup last year. While Morocco made history to get to the semis, Senegal lost in the last 16 and the other three didn’t get past the group stage.

Ghana faces a tough qualifying path in Group I against Mali, Madagascar, Central African Republic, Chad and Comoros, the tiny island archipelago that beat the Ghanaians in the group stage of the last African Cup and sent them to an early and embarrassing elimination.

Tunisia is with Equatorial Guinea, Namibia, Malawi, Liberia and Sao Tome and Principe in Group H.

Cameroon faces Cape Verde, Angola, Libya, Eswatini and Mauritius in Group D.

Algeria is with Guinea, Uganda, Mozambique, Botswana and Somalia in Group G.

At CAF’s general assembly, FIFA president Gianni Infantino announced a new African Football League featuring eight clubs from across the continent would kick off on Oct. 20.

The African league was meant to be launched in August with 24 teams and prize money of $100 million but was delayed and has been reduced to a much smaller competition.

Infantino said it would eventually evolve into a “big version” but didn’t give any details on which clubs would initially take part or if it would still be the richest tournament in Africa, as CAF president Patrice Motsepe promised at last year’s general assembly in Tanzania.

AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/Soccer and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

Wednesday, December 14, 2022

Morocco World Cup Wins Stir Mixed Feelings In Western Sahara

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Moroccans celebrate their World Cup victory against Portugal in the Morocco-administered Western Sahara city of Laayoune, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2022. (AP Photo/Noureddine Abakchou)

LAAYOUNE, WESTERN SAHARA (AP) — After the final whistle of every match Morocco won in its history-making World Cup run, crowds poured out of homes and cafes in the biggest city of Western Sahara, celebrating for hours.

The revelers included some Sahrawi people, members of an ethnic group that has sought independence for Western Sahara since Morocco annexed the disputed territory in 1975. Other Sahrawis rooted for Morocco’s defeat on the soccer field or refused to take part in the celebrations.

They accuse Moroccan authorities of increasingly cracking down on independence activists, and of touting the World Cup team’s success in Qatar to distract the population from economic challenges.

But the presence of some Sahrawi fans cheering for Morocco in the streets of Laayoune illustrates the unifying power of the first Arab or African team to advance so far in the world’s biggest sporting event. Morocco’s national team, known as the Atlas Lions, faces defending champion France in Wednesday’s semifinal.

Al-Salik Al-Yazid, a young Sahrawi in Laayoune, said “the historic success of the Moroccan national team” has created a collective feeling of “overwhelming joy that included all Arabs and Africans, despite the constant discontent with the Moroccan state.”

He called it a sign of gradually shifting mindsets among younger Sahrawis who grew up under Moroccan rule and under a 1991 cease-fire that ended a 16-year conflict between Moroccan forces and Algeria-backed Polisario Front independence fighters.

“With the growth of generations merging and coexisting in one common environment, it has become natural to find Sahrawi individuals celebrating the victory of the Moroccan national team,” Al-Yazid said. “Many Sahrawis have overcome the problem of identity caused by decades of political struggle.”

However, a long-promised referendum on the territory’s future never took place. Low-intensity hostilities have reignited, leaving the truce at risk of unraveling in Morocco-controlled Western Sahara.

Sahrawi people make up a minority of the estimated population of 350,000 in the territory, a Colorado-sized region rich in phosphates and fishing grounds. The rest, following nearly a half-century of resettlement efforts are mainly Moroccans. Other Sahrawis live in the sliver of Western Sahara ruled by the Polisario, or in refugee camps in Algeria.

On World Cup game nights, the atmosphere is festive but complex.

In past tournaments, Sahrawis generally supported the Algerian team. Activists accused Moroccan police of violently suppressing celebrations of Algerian victories. Algeria didn’t qualify for this year’s World Cup.

When Morocco played Spain last week, some Sahrawis welcomed Morocco’s win and others wore T-shirts supporting Spain, the Western Sahara’s former colonial ruler. Some threw stones at people celebrating the Moroccan victory.

Mohamed El-Yousefi, a Moroccan resident of Laayoune, said he understands the resentment, calling it “closely linked to the conflict in the desert.”

Some Sahrawi people, he said, rejoice in good faith, and others “hate everything that comes from Morocco.”

“Happy Moroccans also sometimes fall into the trap of politics and chant phrases such as ‘We won out of spite against the enemy’ in reference to Sahrawis who are dissatisfied with Morocco’s victory,” El-Yousefi said.

Sahrawi independence activists say it’s not possible to separate the Moroccan team from the Kingdom of Morocco itself.

The team represents the Royal Football League and by extension the monarchy, “which for us is the cause of the tragedy of our people through its forceful occupation of Western Sahara,” said Mubarak Mamine, a Laayoune-based Polisario Front activist.

“Football is a tool used by the Moroccan regime to divert the attention of the Moroccan people from their basic issues, especially in light of the deteriorating economic and social conditions in the country,” Marmine said.

Morocco denies there is an armed conflict in what it calls its “southern provinces,” and has grown increasingly assertive in defending its claim over the Western Sahara in recent years.

The kingdom received a major boost – and independence activists suffered a major blow – when the United States in 2020 recognized Morocco’s sovereignty over the territory in exchange for Morocco normalizing ties with Israel.

Morocco’s climb up the World Cup ladder has taken fans everywhere by surprise, including in Western Sahara.

Sports journalist Balfater Abdel-Wahhab said the celebrations he covered in Laayoune were unlike any the city had seen.

“All the masses in the city of Laayoune came out” as Morocco beat rival after rival to make it to the semifinal. He called it a “wonderful celebration of sportsmanship, decorated with national (Moroccan) flags and traditional (Sahrawi) desert costumes.”

___

AP World Cup coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/world-cup and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

Sunday, November 27, 2022

On Outskirts Of Doha, Laborers Watch World Cup They Built

Laborers cheer at a fan festival at the Asian Town cricket stadium in Doha, Qatar, Friday, Nov. 25, 2022. Far from the luxury hotels and sprawling new stadiums emblematic of Doha during the World Cup, scores of soccer-mad South Asian workers poured into a converted cricket stadium in the city's desert outskirts to enjoy the tournament they helped create. (AP Photo/Jon Gambrell)

BY ISABEL DEBRE

DOHA, QATAR (AP)
— Far from Doha’s luxury hotels and sprawling new World Cup stadiums, scores of South Asian workers poured into a cricket ground in the city’s sandy outskirts to enjoy the tournament they helped create.

Unlike the official FIFA fan zone near Doha’s pristine corniche, this one has no $14 beer or foreign tourists. There are few food options beyond deep-fried Indian snacks, scant soccer jerseys in the crowd and even fewer women.

Instead, the grassy pitch in Asian Town, a neighborhood of labor camps, is packed with migrant workers from some of the world’s poorest countries. They power Qatar, one of the world’s richest, and helped accomplish its multi-billion-dollar stadium-building effort.

Their treatment has been the controversial backstory of the 2022 World Cup, ever since Qatar won the bid to host the soccer championship. They can face low wages, inhospitable housing and long hours, often in the scorching heat.

But on Friday night as the Netherlands played Ecuador, the bleachers of the cricket stadium heaved with workers reveling on their one day off of the week.

The lucky ones scored a small number of World Cup match tickets that went on sale for just 40 riyals ($10) — a special cheaper ticket category for Qatar residents. But for those who can’t afford to go to gleaming stadiums, the giant screens in Asian Town have become a key glimpse into the tournament that has reshaped the tiny emirate.

“Who can afford to go? I keep 400 riyals ($109) a month in my pocket,” said Anmol Singh, an electrician, who sends the rest of his $600 salary to his parents and grandparents in Bihar, eastern India. “I work to give it all to them.”

Even if meager by Western standards, the salaries of migrant workers in Qatar and across the oil-rich sheikhdoms of the Persian Gulf often exceed what they could make back home and serve as lifelines for their families in India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.

Workers in the fan zone who spoke to an Associated Press journalist on Friday said they coveted their jobs in the country, which has strict laws on speech. The yearslong boycott of Qatar by four Arab nations also stoked nationalism among the migrant workforce that makes up some 85% of the country’s population.

Kaplana Pahadi, a 21-year-old cleaner from Nepal, strolled through the crowded cricket stadium with three co-workers she called “my family.”

Decked out in a maroon Qatar jersey, scarf and cap, she said she moved to the energy-rich emirate over four years ago to pay medical fees for her mother, who developed heart problems after her father’s death. “She’s always sick,” she said. “I want to help her.”

At half-time, the floodlit stadium became a riot of music and dance. A celebrity Indian emcee whipped up the crowds as Hindi pop blared.

Some men hoisted themselves up on the shoulders of their friends. Others jumped up and down with excitement. Most wore jeans and T-shirts, or cream shalwar kameez — a knee-length shirt with a pair of loose-fitting trousers common in South Asia.

Hundreds took out their phones to film the reverie, smiles spreading as women in LED-lit white dresses traipsed onstage.

It was a stark respite from the daily grind.

“These are people from companies doing hard work,” said Imtiaz Malik, a 28-year-old IT worker from Pakistan, gesturing to the crowds of men. “But any kind of work is good.”

He said he misses his family back in Lahore, Pakistan, and wishes he could hear their voices more often. Despite the difficulties, he said, Qatar has become his home, too.

“This country is becoming better,” he said.

The glaring spotlight of the World Cup has compelled Qatar to overhaul its labor system. The country scrapped the kafala system that tied workers’ visas to their jobs and set a minimum wage of 1,000 riyals ($275) a month, among other changes. Still, rights groups argue more needs to be done. Workers can face delayed wages and rack up debt paying exorbitant recruitment fees to land their jobs.

Imran Khan, 28, said many young men in his hometown of Kolkata, India, dream of working in Qatar. He left his parents and brothers behind to search for work in hospitality during the World Cup. But he has yet to find a job.

The competition is fierce and work harder to come by now that the tournament is underway, he said. In the meantime, he spends his days watching matches on the big screens at the cricket stadium next to the mall.

The fan zone allows Khan and legions of other migrant workers to enjoy the World Cup atmosphere just a short walk from their dormitories. It also means they’re not taking the bus into downtown Doha, which is now filled with foreign fans watching games and celebrating.

“I can’t explain the excitement,” Khan said. “It’s unreal.”

___

Follow Isabel DeBre on Twitter at www.twitter.com/isabeldebre.

Tuesday, November 22, 2022

Loss For Messi And Argentina Among Biggest World Cup Upsets

 
Argentina's Lionel Messi, top right, leaves the pitch as Saudi Arabia's Mohammed Al-Burayk celebrates after his team's win in the World Cup group C soccer match between Argentina and Saudi Arabia at the Lusail Stadium in Lusail, Qatar, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2022. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)

BY GERALD IMRAY

DOHA, QATAR (AP)
— The staggering loss for Lionel Messi and Argentina against Saudi Arabia at the World Cup is right up there with the biggest upsets in tournament history.

Messi, who had given Argentina the lead before the Saudis came back to win 2-1, is playing at what likely is his last World Cup and chasing the one major title that’s eluded him.

Messi and his highly-rated team, one of the favorites in Qatar, now have an unwanted place on a very different list after losing to a team ranked 48 places below them. Saudi Arabia had won only three games previously at the World Cup, and only one in the last 28 years before Tuesday’s shocker over the two-time champions.

Here is a look at some of the other major World Cup surprises through the years:

CAMEROON 1, ARGENTINA 0 (1990)

Diego Maradona, another Argentina great, led his country to the 1990 World Cup tournament in Italy as the defending champion. Maradona was established as the best player in the world and Argentina was favored to retain the title.

A little-known Cameroon team that was playing at only its second World Cup had other ideas in the tournament’s opening match against Argentina. Francois Omam-Biyik scored with a second-half header for the African team, which was also down to 10 men at the time after a red card. Cameroon eventually finished the game with nine men after another sending off but kept Argentina and Maradona out.

Argentina did recover to reach the final — something that may raise Messi’s spirits slightly in Qatar — but lost to West Germany in that deciding game.

SENEGAL 1, FRANCE 0 (2002)

France was also World Cup champion when it came up against another African underdog at the start of the 2002 tournament in South Korea and Japan.

France’s team was packed with some of the best players in the world and no one thought they could lose the game. But Papa Bouba Diop bundled in a goal in the 30th minute and Senegal kept its nerve for a famous win on its World Cup debut.

France ended up exiting in the group stage. Senegal went on to reach the quarterfinals, just as Cameroon did in 1990.

SOUTH KOREA 2, ITALY 1 (2002)

The 2002 World Cup threw up another eye-opener when co-host South Korea made a run to the semifinals.

South Korea had beaten Portugal in the group stage but bettered that upset with a 2-1 win in extra time over Italy in the last 16. Italy was a three-time champion at the time while South Korea had never won a World Cup game before the tournament.

Ahn Jung-hwan, who was playing his club soccer in Italy at the time, headed in a golden goal three minutes from the end of extra time to send the Italians home and reward a fanatical home crowd with a lasting World Cup memory.

UNITED STATES 1, ENGLAND 0 (1950)

Haitian-born Joe Gaetjens was the unlikely hero for the United States in a 1-0 upset over England at 1950 World Cup in Brazil.

The American team was basically made up of part-timers and the result reverberated across the game as one of the first big World Cup upsets.

NORTH KOREA 1, ITALY 0 (1966)

Italy was on the wrong end of another upset in 1966 in England, when North Korea beat the Azzurri 1-0 in the first World Cup it ever played in. The result eliminated the Italians and sent the North Koreans to the quarterfinals.

North Korea wasn’t even expected to qualify for the tournament and didn’t play at another World Cup until 2010.

___

AP World Cup coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/world-cup and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

Monday, November 07, 2022

Qatar’s Promise Of ‘Carbon-Neutral’ World Cup Raises Doubts

Solar panels sit in front of Khalifa International Stadium, also known as Qatar's National and oldest Stadium, which will host matches during FIFA World Cup 2022, in Doha, Qatar, Saturday, Oct. 15, 2022. Organizers of the 2022 World Cup in Qatar have said the event will be soccer’s first “carbon neutral” event of its kind. FIFA and Qatari organizers say they will reduce and offset all the event's carbon emissions, which will be calculated once the games are over. (AP Photo/Nariman El-Mofty)

BY SUMAN NAISHADHAM

WASHINGTON (AP)
— In the 12-year run-up to hosting the 2022 men’s World Cup soccer tournament, Qatar has been on a ferocious construction spree with few recent parallels.

It built seven of its eight World Cup stadiums, a new metro system, highways, high-rises and Lusail, a futuristic city that ten years ago was mostly dust and sand.

For years, Qatar promised something else to distinguish this World Cup from the rest: It would be ‘carbon-neutral,’ or have a negligible overall impact on the climate. And for almost as long, there have been skeptics — with outside experts saying Qatar and FIFA’s plan rests on convenient accounting and projects that won’t counteract the event’s carbon footprint as they advertise.

“It’s not very helpful for this type of event to market itself as carbon-neutral,” said Gilles Dufrasne, a researcher at the Brussels-based non-governmental organization Carbon Market Watch, which authored a report questioning Qatar’s sustainability plan. “It gives the impression that we can build massive state-of-the-art stadiums ... and fly people from all over the world to watch football matches and that’s somehow compatible with reaching climate targets.”

COUNTING EMISSIONS

In an official report estimating the event’s emissions, Qatari organizers and FIFA projected that the World Cup will produce some 3.6 million metric tons of carbon dioxide from activities related to the tournament between 2011 and 2023. That’s about 3% of Qatar’s total emissions in 2019 of roughly 115 million metric tons, according to World Bank data.

Qatar famously moved the tournament to the winter to protect players and spectators from extreme heat. Even so, the gas-rich nation will air condition seven stadiums that are open to the sky. For water, it will mostly rely on energy-guzzling desalination plants that take ocean water and make it drinkable to satisfy the more than 1.2 million fans expected to touch down for the monthlong event. The Gulf Arab sheikdom is normally home to 2.9 million people.

Qatar and FIFA say the largest source of emissions will be travel — mostly the miles flown from overseas. That will make up 52% of the total. Construction of the stadiums and training sites and their operations will account for 25%, the report said. Operating hotels and other accommodations for the five weeks, including the cruise ships Qatar hired as floating hotels, will contribute 20%.

But in its report, Carbon Market Watch said those figures are not the whole story. It said Qatar vastly underestimated the emissions from building the seven stadiums by dividing the emissions from all that concrete and steel by the lifespan of the facilities in years, instead of just totaling them.

“This is problematic,” Carbon Market Watch said, questioning the likelihood that Qatar, which is smaller than the U.S. state of Connecticut, would have erected seven large stadiums without the World Cup.

Qatar defended its math and said it has worked hard to avoid creating “white elephant” venues that often sit idle in host countries after a tournament has ended. It says it has developed plans for each stadium after the games are over.

“No other country has engaged so deeply with its citizens to ensure a sustainable legacy is left behind after a FIFA World Cup,” a spokesperson for the Qatari Supreme Committee for Delivery and Legacy said.

But last-minute hiccups continue to undercut the country’s climate promises. For years, Qatar said the country’s small size would reduce the amount of travel needed between stadiums and games. But despite all the construction, the country is still short of hotel rooms and thousands of fans who are unable to find lodging in Qatar will sleep in nearby Dubai — 45 minutes away by plane — and other Gulf cities.

Qatari organizers did not respond to a request for comment about whether they will count the flights in pollution totals, instead saying in a statement that any discrepancies would be explained after the World Cup.

A spokesperson for the Supreme Committee for Delivery and Legacy called the methodology behind Qatar’s carbon-neutral pledge “best in practice.”

CARBON OFFSETS QUESTIONED

Central to Qatar’s plan to reduce World Cup emissions are carbon offsets. Sometimes called carbon credits, these promise to cancel out or absorb the same amount of greenhouse gases emitted by a company or event, so that it’s as if the event emitted nothing.

In theory, that would mean every mile flown into the country and every construction project related to the games would be countered by an equal amount of carbon dioxide reduced by planting trees or improvements made elsewhere.

So far, Qatari organizers have pledged to buy 1.8 million carbon offsets from the Global Carbon Council, a Doha-based carbon credit registry where renewable projects are verified and listed. One carbon credit is equal to one metric ton of carbon dioxide avoided or removed from the atmosphere.

But carbon analysts have said the credits issued by the registry are of dubious quality because it’s unclear that they are “additional,” or fund carbon-reducing projects that would not have otherwise existed. As renewable energy infrastructure grows cheaper and more common across the world, it becomes less likely that investing in them through carbon credits is actually benefitting the environment, experts say. Approved projects registered to Qatari World Cup organizers so far include wind and hydropower energy projects in Turkey and Serbia.

“They’re relying on arguably some of the lowest quality credits that exist today,” said Danny Cullenward, an energy economist and lawyer who directs policy at CarbonPlan, a California-based nonprofit that evaluates climate programs. He said there are “severe problems with additionality” with the credits Qatar and FIFA are using, which he evaluated.

Cullenward and other experts say carbon credits often promise more than they deliver. The global carbon credits market remains largely unregulated.

“It’s not clear that the strategy of carbon offsetting is actually meaningful,” Cullenward said.

QATAR’S EFFORTS

Still, Qatari organizers insist the country is on track to host the first carbon-neutral World Cup. They point to the visibly green elements of Qatar’s clean purchases: 800 new electric buses, 16,000 trees and nearly 700,000 nursery-grown shrubs, plus a new 800-megawatt solar power plant that was recently connected to the grid.

“It’s really enhanced the energy basket for Qatar,” said Saud Ghani, an engineering professor at Qatar University who designed the stadiums’ air-conditioning systems. “Before we only burned gas to generate power.”

Organizers have repeatedly said the country’s decision to offset the event’s carbon emissions “should be recognized rather than criticized.”

Karim Elgendy, a fellow at London’s Chatham House think tank who previously worked as a climate consultant for the World Cup, said Qatar’s efforts at ‘greening’ the tournament “show a positive trend for a sporting event.”

It indicates that Qatar, one of the world’s top natural gas exporters, is taking steps to improve its climate credentials, Elgendy said. Even if the country is “doing that in a way that works with them.”

Follow Suman Naishadham on Twitter: @SumanNaishadham

AP World Cup coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/world-cup and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

Tuesday, November 01, 2022

The First FIFA World Cup In The Arabian Gulf Region

BY IBRAHIM ADEFAJO

The fact that Qatar will host the 2022 FIFA World Cup as the first country in the Middle East to do so among the countries of the Arabian Gulf is no longer breaking news. Exports of hydrocarbons account for the majority of Qatar’s GDP. It is one of the leading oil producers and has one of the world’s natural gas reserves. Natural resources have greatly aided Qatar’s economic development and stability. From the bidding stage to the evaluation and approval of stadium requirements, accommodation, among other things, hosting a FIFA World Cup is a significant challenge. In the history of the FIFA World Cup, which began in 1930 and has been played on five different continents, there have been 21 host nations. The world’s largest and most renowned competition takes place once every four years. The event has a unique feeling of a lifetime full of memories thanks to the excitement, the commotion, the uniting of nations, and the spectators from all races and walks of life. Without a doubt, Qatar is a good location with a population of less than 3 million boasting of available resources and capacity to host a top-notch FIFA World Cup. Statista estimates that Qatar has spent over $220 billion, exceeding Brazil’s previous record of $15 billion, making this the most expensive World Cup ever.

Flowing from the above, the FIFA World Cup was originally scheduled to take place during the European off season in June. Consequently, the aforementioned would have led to a lot of queries. Undoubtedly, given the complete disruption of European league football, it was a difficult decision for FIFA and other parties. The reason for this is not unconnected to the average high temperature of 108F in the summer which poses health risk for the game especially for players and supporters. Truly, the Winter World Cup in Qatar in 2022 will create a number of firsts in the long history of the event which will live long in the minds of men.

What will the weather be like in Qatar given that temperatures are predicted to be a major factor during the tournament? The decision by FIFA to transfer the tournament from June/July to November/December was made because of the sweltering temperatures in Qatar during the summer months. The average temperature in November/ December are 26 -20 degrees celsius. Interestingly, to keep players and spectators cool during games, the organisers ingeniously installed air conditioning system in all the appropriate venues to be utilized for the tournament. To accommodate for the sun’s passage over Qatar and to maximise the amount of shade on the field and in the stands, the stadiums were deliberately positioned on their East-West axes. The stadiums are constructed so that heat cannot enter them at all. Their exterior façade surfaces and designs have been created to reflect heat and deflect warmer winds. The stadiums have retractable roofs for the most part. These greatly increase cooling efficiency when closed, there less water and energy will be used for the air conditioning system as a result.

Without doubt, the World Cup provides the host country with attention, pride, and prestige on a global scale, as well as long-term economic benefits that foster business growth and employment rate. It has been contested whether the costs borne by the host country genuinely balance the gains in economic prosperity. It has been argued that FIFA receives a significant portion of the World Cup’s income, including through telecast rights and ticket sales. The host nations pay a direct and significant price for stadiums. FIFA stipulates that the host nation must have at least 12 contemporary stadiums spread throughout several cities, while costing an enormous amount to maintain. Following the World Cup, the nation’s focus will probably shift from infrastructure improvement to tourism.

Tourism has been described as one of the major benefits of hosting the world cup with overwhelming contribution to economic development. The average number of visitors and spectators increased by 50 per cent after the World Cup demonstrating how the iconic influence is to a host the nation’s tourism industry. The non-sports infrastructure that develops around stadiums are increased in transit networks and new commercial districts which are intended to improve after the tournament. It was reported that Russia made additional $14 billion as a result of hosting the tournament in 2018. The World Cup had profound impact on the German economy during the 2006 FIFA World Cup with over 50,000 more jobs created and the GDP increased by 0.3 per cent. According to Nasser Al Khater, the chief executive of the FIFA World Cup 2022, Qatar is expected to draw 1.2 million tourists, compared to an earlier estimate of 1 million. There is a growing indication of economic growth by 3.4 percent after the World Cup after the tournament according to Forecasts.

Can the FIFA World Cup return to Africa? The 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa was an epoch-making history for the African continent. It was a well run and thrilling tournament was ultimately won by Spain in Johannesburg. The unforgettable recollections serve as a turning point in African greatness and accomplishment, of which the continent is still justly proud. Vuvuzela and the Waka Waka song by Shakira which has been viewed billion times are still bringing back indelible memories of the event for people all over the world. The South Africa 2010 FIFA World Cup serves as a focal point for arguments in favor of holding another World Cup on African soil. Few years ago, Morocco launched a strong bid to host the second FIFA World Cup on the African soil. However, by a vote of 132 to 65, it lost the vote at the FIFA Congress in Russia. This is not a sign of doom for African countries. Rather, it presents an opportunity to make a strong bid in the future with all necessary facilities in place to satisfy FIFA regulations.

The North African region is still a potential host for the FIFA World Cup with Morocco and Egypt being two of the top contenders. There is no reason the renowned football competition cannot be conducted on the continent once more in the light of the success of the 2010 World Cup.

Africa is the ideal location to host the tournament in the future because of the love and enthusiasm that Africans provide to the world. It is stated that football has the power and ability to unite people from all walks of life, and this is never more evident than during the World Cup that bring all races and nationalities together for the love of the game. The World Cup will remain the most popular sporting events because it is the most watched sport in the world. Qatar is leaving a lasting impact by hosting the event. The long-term vision of sustainable development is on track in accordance with Qatar’s sustainability strategy for the FIFA World Cup 2022 through infrastructure, education, human, economic, as well as football for development and support for regional innovation.

Sunday, September 04, 2022

Thousands Of Senegalese Fans Expected For World Cup: Envoy

Sadio Mane

BY AYENI OLUSEGUN

Senegal fans are relishing the possibility of the African champions surpassing the success of its 2002 World Cup team when they take to the field in Qatar for the 2022 FIFA World Cup, Ambassador of Senegal to Qatar H E Dr. Mohammed Habibo Diallo told The Peninsula.

The envoy said thousands of fans from Senegal and the diaspora are expected to be in Qatar to cheer on the West African giants who beat Egypt in the playoff to book a spot in the historic Finals which will run from November 20 to December 18.

In an exclusive interview, Dr. Diallo said,” I’m honoured as a Senegalese to be a part of this historic World Cup, which is being held in the Middle East for the first time. Like every Senegalese fan, I hope my national team will progress far into the tournament and perhaps even play in the semi-final and final. We are African champions, and it isn’t impossible considering our players.

“The Senegalese fans in Qatar and those coming from abroad for the World Cup, of which we expect at least 3,000, have been anticipating this event with great eagerness. They’ll be the ‘12th Lion’.”

The Teranga Lions are in Group A alongside hosts Qatar, Ecuador and The Netherlands.

With around 250 resident Senegalese in Qatar and the expected support from around the world, several activities are planned to entertain them, including veteran singer Youssou N’Dour.

“We are planning a host of cultural and touristic activities in the run-up to and during the World Cup with the support of the Supreme Committee to bring international Senegalese artists like Youssou N’Dour, Baaba Maal, Ismael Lo and others. There’ll also be various Senegalese segments, presentations, art exhibitions and famous Senegalese meals. We want to make a ‘little Senegal’ in Qatar to showcase African culture, heritage and beauty,” Dr. Diallo added.

Senegal will make their third appearance at the World Cup and have arguably the strongest team from Africa with the reigning African Footballer of the Year — Sadio Mane. Dr. Diallo stressed that the Bayern Munich forward has inspired the country and other young footballers with “his simplicity, patriotism and love for his country and hometown.”

Meanwhile, the ambassador praised Qatar’s preparations for the tournament. “I congratulate Qatar authorities for the facilities for the World Cup and for building the country to this height. This World Cup is a big challenge, especially for an Arab country, and so far, I have been impressed with the growth. Also, I congratulate Qataris and urge everyone to participate positively to make the tournament successful.”

SOURCE: THE PENINSULA

Indigenous Coaches Lead Africa’s World Cup Campaign

Ghana Black Stars Coach Otto Addo

BY JUDE OBAFEMI

At the first-ever World Cup to be hosted on Arab soil, there is another unprecedented topic of near-equal significance especially for the African representation at football’s most prestigious event. When Morocco parted company with national team coach Vahid Halilhodzic last month, three months before the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, the country’s football federation (FRMF) said it was a decision reached because of internal disagreements on how to prepare the Atlas Lions for the Mondial. However, that decision created an opportunity to appoint a coach whose ideals aligned perfectly with the FRMF’s preparation strategies for the country’s senior men’s national football team. The Federation eventually settled for Walid Regragui, a former Moroccan international, who played as a defender for club and country, garnering no fewer than 46 caps during an active career that spanned 13 years. That decision to pick Regragui has historic significance for the African continent because it means that, for the first time, all five African representatives that have secured tickets for the quadrennial spectacle will be led by native, indigenous coaches.

THEWILL looks at the pedigree of these coaches, Walid Regragui of Morocco, Rigobert Song of Cameroon, Otto Addo of Ghana and Aliou Cisse of Senegal, all of whom played international football for their different countries, and Jalel Kadri, who will be in charge of Tunisia at the Qatar tournament to identify what they bring to their teams. Herein, it shall also be established what this significant occurrence means for the continent and the immeasurable benefits that will accrue to the continuous development of the local game if they are successful in carrying their teams to making exploits when hostilities kickoff in Group F for Morocco, Group G for Cameroon, Group H for Ghana, Group A for Senegal and Group D for Tunisia.

The choice of Regragui by the Moroccan Football Federation to manage the Atlas Lions at Qatar was a no-brainer for those conversant with football competitions on the continent. If there was confidence in any homegrown talents to improve on the coaching of Halilhodzic, the 46-year-old Regragui fitted the bill. He had the experience to organise a winning team through the rigours of an international competition and the marathon of a local league. The 69-year-old Halilhodzic who took charge of the North Africans in August 2019, led the Moroccan team to the quarter-finals of this year’s TotalEnergies Africa Cup of Nations in Cameroon and then secured World Cup qualification in March following a 5-2 aggregate win over DR Congo before the disagreements that led to the two parties amicably parting ways.

Regragui has the record to match the confidence reposed in his capacity to take this team progress to a level befitting their participation in Qatar. He was born on September 23, 1975 in Corbeil-Essonnes, France meaning he was eligible to represent Les Bleus but he elected to stick with his country of origin, Morocco. As a right-back, there was not much in terms of standout records from his playing career. In between representing the Moroccan national team, he was a player for Racing Santander, Toulouse, Grenoble, and AC Ajaccio. In the summer of 2009, Regragui transferred from Moroccan club Moghreb Tétouan to Grenoble for the last move of his active days as a player before making the switch to football management.

In September 2012, Regragui started working as an assistant football coach for Morocco’s national team. On October 1, 2013, Rachid Taoussi was fired as head coach, and, as assistant, Regragui’s contract was also terminated. He accepted a head coaching position at Fath Union Sport for the 2014/2015 season on May 8, 2014 and, by mutual accord, he left the team on January 22, 2020 after leading the team to life the Moroccan Throne Cup in the 2013/2014 season and the Botola Pro trophy in the 2015/2016 campaign. Regragui was named the Wydad AC head coach on August 10, 2021. He guided Wydad AC to its third CAF Champions League championship in May this year, defeating reigning champions and African football powerhouse Al Ahly in the final as only the second Moroccan manager to win the African Champions League after Hussein Ammouta’s triumph with Wydad in 2017. It is this winning mentality he hopes to incite in the team as they head to Qatar.

Alongside the Moroccans, Cameroon’s coach Song is no stranger to the high stakes of World Cup competitions, as he takes charge of their challenge for the title in November. Born July 1, 1976, he was a constant feature for the national team between 1993 and 2010 before transitioning to become coach of his country’s Under-23 national team. Renowned for his defensive prowess, he was irreplaceable in the defense line and participated in a record eight Africa Cup of Nations competitions, captained five of them (apart from South Africa 1996, Burkina Faso 1998, and Angola 2010) and holds the record for the most consecutive games played in the competition with 35 first team games. He was part of their triumphant teams at the 2000 and 2002 AFCON competitions, where his contributions were vital to their victories.

Professionally, Song started at Metz where he won the Coupe de la Ligue in 1996 before joining Salernitana, newly promoted to Serie A two years later. In 1999, he had successive stints with Liverpool, West Ham United and 1. FC Köln, but after failing to hold down a first-team place, he returned to France to play for Lens until 2004 when he moved to Turkey with Galatasaray to win two Süper Lig titles and the Turkish Cup. In 2008, he switched to Trabzonspor in 2008, won the Turkish Cup and stayed until 2010. Song is the only player, aside from Zinedine Zidane, to have been dismissed in two different World Cups, once against Brazil in 1994 and once against Chile in 1998. He was 17 years old when he become the youngest player ever to be dismissed from a World Cup. But, it is hoped that he will bring a solid disciplinary arc and indomitable winning mentality to the team going to Qatar.

In line with the theme of being born abroad but choosing to represent one’s country of origin, Ghana’s coach Addo was born on June 9, 1975 in Hamburg, West Germany. Playing as an attacking midfielder and winger, he spent all of his playing career in the German football scene with stints in clubs like VfL 93 Hamburg, Hannover 96, Borussia Dortmund, Mainz 05 and Hamburger SV, where he finished his active career. At the highpoint of his Bundesliga days, he won the 2001/2002 Bundesliga trophy with Dortmund, the club’s third in their history. He also turned up for the Black Stars of Ghana during the period for seven years beginning in 1999. In his debut, Ghana walloped Eritrea 5-0 in February 28, 1999. He rose to prominence on the global stage when he served as the nation’s captain during the 2000 AFCON.

In 2009, Addo began his coaching career with his old team, Hamburger SV first as a youth team coach and then, as assistant manager. Prior to the 2014 FIFA World Cup and the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations, Addo was appointed head scout of the Ghana national football team, succeeding Ibrahim Tanko. In April 2019, became “talent coach” for former side Dortmund after serving in a same capacity at Borussia Mönchengladbach. As an interim assistant to Edin Terzić, he won his first trophy as a coach after Dortmund defeated RB Leipzig in the finals of the 2020–21 DFB-Pokal. In February this year, he was made interim coach of the Black Stars and helped them qualify for Qatar on the away-goal rule against favourites Nigeria and will be hoping to give the Ghanaian team their best World Cup outing ever.

Of all the African coaches, Cisse is the oldest at the job who also played for the national team. The most recent recipient of the CAF award for best coach led the Senegalese team to their first ever victory at the AFCON in the Morocco-hosted edition to the jubilation of a grateful country. It was redemption for the coach who was born on March 24, 1976, as 20 years ago, when Cameroon defeated Senegal to win AFCON, Cisse missed the decisive penalty attempt in the shootout. But, the Teranga Lions recovered from that sad loss months later to shock France at the 2002 World Cup, defeating the tournament’s defending champions 1-0 in their opening match. They advanced quickly to the quarterfinals of the Korea/Japan event but were eliminated by Turkey through a “golden goal” in the final eight fixture.

Having played for Paris Saint-Germain between 1998 and 2002, Birmingham City and Portsmouth, in his active days, he in the defensive midfielder and occasionally as a centre back positions, he retired at Ligue 2’s Nîmes in 2009. He soon ventured into management and started off as the assistant coach of the U-23s in 2012 and 2013. Fortunately, in 2015, he replaced Frenchman Alain Giresse as the Teranga Lions coach after they crashed out of that year’s AFCON at the group stages and had gradually built the team to the level of champions that they finally attained this year and demonstrated when they beat Egypt again to pick the ticket to Qatar. He will be closely watched as Senegal look to improve on their world cup record this year.

Of the five indigenous coaches only Tunisia’s Kadri, born December 14, 1971, did not play football before taking up managerial duties. This possibly allowed him the luxury to have managed at no fewer than 20 teams in a coaching career spanning the years from 2001 to the present. With the experience coaching clubs as diverse as EGS Gafsa, Jendouba Sport, US Monastir, Al-Ansar FC, Al-Nahda Club, CA Bizertin, Emirates Club, Al Ahli Tripoli amongst others, his appointment as Tunisian coach still had the hand of good fortune with Nigeria’s Super Eagles playing a big role in the process. At the knockout stage of this year’s AFCON in January, Tunisia met Nigeria and Kadri had to replace the first coach, COVID-19 infected head coach Mondher Kebaier in leading the team. They beat Nigeria, regarded as the best team in the tournament, 1–0 to progress instead. By the end of January, he was made head coach and qualified Tunisia for Qatar with a 1-0 aggregate over two legs against Mali.

The five African coaches’ participation in the FIFA World Cup in Qatar is a significant step in the growth of African football. This is sufficient evidence that, when and if given the chance, local expertise can also work effectively. The entire world will have the chance to learn about the skills of African tacticians. The benefits are numerous, and one of them is that the money spent on the coaching staff will support economic growth in the nation. Furthermore, it means that, should they succeed in Qatar, they would offer a realistic model that other nations will be urged to use for the ongoing advancement of football on the continent.

SOURCE: THE WILL

Friday, August 16, 2019

Samson Siasia: FIFA Bans Former Nigeria Coach For Life





GOAL

The ex-Super Eagles star and handler was slapped with a life ban for agreeing to receive bribes for match fixing

Fifa has banned former Nigeria coach Samson Siasia from all football activity for life after being found guilty of accepting to receive bribes in order to manipulate matches.

Siasia who led Nigeria U20 and Nigeria U23 teams to second-place finishes at the 2015 Fifa U20 World Cup and the 2008 Beijing Olympics was also fined CHF 50,000.

According to the world’s football ruling body, the 52-year-old breached the 2009 edition of the Fifa Code of Ethics after investigations began on February 11 this year.

“The adjudicatory chamber of the independent Ethics Committee has found Mr Samson Siasia, a former official of the Nigeria Football Federation, guilty of having accepted that he would receive bribes in relation to the manipulation of matches in violation of the Fifa Code of Ethics,” wrote Fifa in a statement.

“This large-scale investigation was conducted by Fifa via its competent departments and in cooperation with the relevant stakeholders and authorities.

“In its decision, the adjudicatory chamber found that Mr Siasia had breached art. 11 (Bribery) of the 2009 edition of the Fifa Code of Ethics and banned him for life from all football-related activities (administrative, sports or any other) at both national and international level. In addition, a fine in the amount of CHF 50,000 has been imposed on Mr Siasia.

“The decision was notified to Mr Siasia today, the date on which the ban comes into force.”

Siasia is the second Nigerian tactician after Salisu Yusuf to have been punished as a result of involvement in bribery.

Sunday, July 07, 2019

‘I Still Get Tweets To Go Back In The Kitchen’ – The Enduring Power Of Sexism In Sports Media

Journalist Jemele Hill speaks on stage during the 2017 Hashtag Sports Conference in New York City. Steve Luciano/APImages for Hashtag Sports.
BY MICHAEL SERAZIO
The story of the 2019 U.S. women’s national soccer team is not yet written, but its opening chapter – a 13-0 drubbing of Thailand – has inspired American fans hoping for a championship repeat.

The U.S. women’s soccer team has long been the envy of the world. And yet, thanks to a scheduling “oversight,” should the squad make the Women’s World Cup final on July 7, they’ll have to complete for viewers with the Copa America and Gold Cup finals, which will be held on the same day.

In other words, two regional men’s soccer tournaments might upstage a signature worldwide women’s sporting event.

To me, this scheduling “oversight” is just a microcosm of the way women are treated in the world of sports. And it isn’t just relegated to the playing field.

In my new book, “The Power of Sports,” I draw upon dozens of interviews to look at the barriers female athletes and journalists face.

It’s worse than you think.

Lack of interest or lack of coverage?
Almost every single survey of sports media over the years – irrespective of the sport or outlet – finds female athletics wildly underrepresented relative to men’s.

For example, one 25-year-long study showed that local news outlets spend only 3% of their airtime covering women’s sports, with ESPN allocating a mere 2% of its coverage.

Not until the 1990s did women’s sports begin receiving – barely – more attention than sports involving horses and dogs. Of course, that didn’t prevent Serena Williams’ 2015 selection as Sports Illustrated’s “Sportsperson of the Year” from igniting a debate over whether Triple Crown thoroughbred American Pharaoh deserved the honor instead.

The typical rebuttal to the lack of coverage is an alleged lack of interest.

But this obscures the circular logic that bedevils women’s sports: The way in which sports media outlets market and cover games partly determines how much fan interest they’re able to gin up. In other words, ratings are often generated by hyping the games. When ratings go up, it justifies the use of those resources.

So when a WNBA game gets punted to an obscure cable channel and has a low production value, it sends a message about priorities to audiences.

Networks like to claim they’re just responding to market forces when they ignore these games. But it’s never been a level playing field: Women’s sports rarely receive the media attention lavished on men’s, so the comparison seems unfair.

When I asked ESPN’s executive vice president for programming and production about this problem, he shrugged. “Any media entity,” he said, “tend[s] to focus the majority of [its] coverage on the topics that are most interesting to your viewers, right?”

In other words, ESPN claims to be amoral on questions of gender equality. Its obligation is to simply give the audience what it thinks it wants.

All men, all the time

Meanwhile, sports media remains an overwhelmingly male field.

More than 90% of anchors, commentators and editors are men. Not until 2017 did a woman announce a men’s March Madness or Monday Night Football game.

Might this color the way female athletes are portrayed? One 2013 review highlighted some notable disparities. When talking and writing about female athletes, commentators tend to focus more on their emotions. They tend to downplay their physical prowess on the field and sexualize their bodies off the field.

Conditions aren’t much better for women working in the media.
Lesley Visser was a sportscaster across multiple networks for four decades. In the late 1970s, as a young reporter for The Boston Globe, she received – and ignored – a media credential stipulation that forbade “women or children in the press box.”

She assumed that waves of women would have followed her lead. But she can’t believe how little progress has been made.

“I go to the NFC Championship, and in the press box there are maybe three women out of 2,000 credentials,” she told me. “I think we’re at the same percentage as in the 1980s.”

Social media mobs swarm

The few that do break through can expect to be targeted on social media.

“I still get tweets to go back in the kitchen,” Tina Cervasio, a sports reporter for Fox’s New York affiliate, told me. “They’re worried about color of hair and how a woman looks. … If I was as fat and bald as [some male sportscasters], I would not have that job.”

Kim Jones of the NFL Network concurred. “I’ve gotten tweets that the only reason I have a job is because of my looks; I’ve also gotten plenty more tweets that, you know, I’m an unattractive reporter who shouldn’t be on television.”

This highlights the double bind that female sports journalists face: They feel the pressure to look good for the cameras. But then they’re also denigrated by some who say they only have their jobs because of that attractiveness. It’s tough to imagine a handsome male sportscaster having the same charge leveled against him.

And when mistakes get made – as any human is liable to do – the female sports reporter feels like she’s given less leeway than her male counterpart because he doesn’t have to prove that he really belongs there.

As former ESPN anchor Jemele Hill explained to me, whenever she makes an honest error,

“The immediate reaction from a still-too-large segment of the public is going to be, ‘That’s why women shouldn’t talk sports.’ Even though most guys that are in [my] position probably would make a similar mistake, but it’s never going to be about their competence. It’s never going to be about their gender, where it will be for me.”

In 2016, an award-winning public service announcement featured male fans reading actual tweets that had been directed at prominent female sportscasters.

“I hope you get raped again,” one read. Another: “One of the players should beat you to death with their hockey stick like the whore you are.”

One of those targeted on social media, Chicago sports talk radio host Julie DiCaro, weighed in poignantly this past April.

“It always seems to come down to this idea that men have a proprietary interest in sports that women don’t have,” she told The Chicago Tribune. “As if we aren’t the daughters of Title IX. As if some of my earliest memories aren’t sitting on my dad’s lap watching the Bears and Cubs. … Sports belong to all of us.”

They should. They just don’t – yet.


KNOCK, KNOCK

By issuing subpoenas to five Times journalists, the Trump administration reveals its first response to unwanted national security coverage: ...