Grêmio goleia o Novo Hamburgo e garante a liderança do Campeonato Gaúcho

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O Grêmio massacrou o Novo Hamburgo e goleou o rival por 6 a 1, na Arena, na noite desta sexta-feira (24), sendo cinco gols só no primeiro tempo. Os gols foram marcados por Vina, Kannemann, Bitello, Cristaldo, Bruno Alves e Suárez para o Imortal. Matheus Lagoa fez o de honra dos visitantes. Com o resultado, o Tricolor gaúcho chegou aos 25 pontos e não pode mais ser alcançado pelo Internacional, garantindo assim o primeiro lugar do Estadual.

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A primeira etapa do Grêmio na Arena foi um atropelo diante do Novo Hamburgo. Aos 2 minutos, Vina abriu o placar após cruzamento de João Pedro. Aos seis, Kannemann aproveitou rebote do goleiro e tocou de cabeça para as redes.

Pouco tempo depois, Bitello encontrou Cristaldo, que avançou livre para anotar o terceiro em apenas sete minutos.

O quarto demorou um pouco mais, aos 19. Em bela troca de passes no ataque, Cristaldo ajeitou para Bitello entrar livre na área e anotar o tento. Para fechar no primeiro tempo, Bruno Alves marcou aos 27, desviando chute de Suárez. 5 a 0 para o Imortal.

Confira a tabela do Campeonato Gaúcho no Lance!

Na volta do intervalo, o confronto voltou mais morno, com o Grêmio administrando melhor o resultado. Carballo tentou uma bomba de longe e só não fez o sexto por conta de grande defesa de Lucas Maticoli.

Mais tarde,Suárez dividiu com o zagueiro e a bola sobrou com Cristaldo, que serviu Vina. O chute tocou na trave e no goleiro, mas não entrou.

Aos 35 minutos,Lagoa apareceu no rebote para empurrar para o gol e marcar para o Novo Hamburgo. Em seguida,Cristaldo cruzou da direita e a bola chegou em Suárez, que bateu de primeira para marcar o sexto do Grêmio e fechar o placar.

FICHA TÉCNICA DA PARTIDA:
Grêmio 6 x 1 Novo Hamburgo
Local: Arena do Grêmio, Porto Alegre-RS
Data/horário: 24/02/2023 – 20h (de Brasília)
​Árbitro: Douglas Schwengber da Silva
Auxiliares: Mateus Olivério Rocha e Artur Avelino Birk Preissler
Quarto árbitro: Jonathan Giovanella Vivian
​Cartões amarelos: –
Cartões vermelhos: –
GOLS: Vina (1-0) (2’/1T), Kannemann (2-0) (6’/1T), Cristaldo (3-0) (7’/1T), Bitello (4-0) (19’/1T), Bruno Alves (5-0) (27’/1T), Matheus Lagoa (35’/2T) (5-1), Suárez (37’/2T) (6-1)

Grêmio – técnico: Renato Portaluppi
​Brenno; João Pedro (Thaciano – intervalo), Bruno Alves, Kannemann e Reinaldo; Carballo (Lucas Silva 37’/2T), Pepê (Diego Souza 27’/2T), Bitello (Villasanti 37’/2T), Cristaldo e Vina (Gustavinho 27’/2T); Suárez.

Novo Hamburgo – técnico:Edinho Rosa
Lucas Maticoli; Itaqui, Kesley, Guilherme Mattis e João Vinicius (Assis 15’/2T); Zé Vitor, Filipe Fraga, Dionathã (Tcharles – intervalo), Fabrício e Santiago; Lucas Gaúcho (Matheus Lagoa – intervalo).

Will Tom Brady & Birmingham seek another ‘name’ after Wayne Rooney flop? Ex-Blues star explains how lessons are being taken from Wrexham ‘fairytale’

Tom Brady and Birmingham saw their fingers burned by Wayne Rooney, but will the Blues seek another managerial “name” at some point?

  • Rooney lasted just 83 days at the helm
  • Blues now pushing towards Premier League
  • Ambitious plans drawn up for the future
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    In the wake of Knighthead Capital’s takeover at St Andrew’s, Manchester United legend Rooney was surprisingly appointed as head coach in October 2023. He lasted just 83 days and 15 games at the helm, with a questionable experiment in the West Midlands being brought to a close in January 2024.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Birmingham went on to suffer relegation out of the Championship in that campaign, but bounced back in style last season when claiming the League One title under Chris Davies with 111 points – fending off Wrexham in the process.

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    The Blues are looking to build their brand, with a documentary series dropping on Amazon Prime Video, and suggestions that they may look to another household name for inspiration in the dugout at some stage.

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    WHAT JEROME SAID

    Quizzed on whether that will happen, former Birmingham striker Cameron Jerome – speaking in association with best crypto sports betting sites – told GOAL: “When you are putting money in, the vast sums that they are putting in, they are going to want full control of who they are bringing into the football club – whether that is playing staff or managerial appointments or ambassadors, whatever role they see fit.

    “Perhaps they have learned from that [Rooney] a little bit. That is the learning curve for them, being in charge so early and wanting to go in their own direction, then realising this is not working for us so let’s reset and they got a bright young manager in Chris Davies who managed to achieve promotion last season, which we all expected them to do but ultimately you have to go out and win football matches and achieve your goals. They did that emphatically.

    “Looking at Wrexham, Birmingham is a little bit different in terms of the ownership group and what they are trying to do and where the football club has been. Wrexham is more of a fairytale story. It’s a success story in its own right, but I think Birmingham will look at that and try to mirror it to some extent but also look to kick-on and improve on that.”

Cole Palmer's panic-inducing injury scare underlines the price Chelsea may end up paying for their Club World Cup success

The Blues' talisman is already facing a short spell on the sidelines after a strenuous summer where he was overworked in the pursuit of silverware

There was always a sense that Chelsea's Club World Cup triumph would come back to bite them at some stage, with fatigue and injuries potentially the biggest obstacles on the road to a successful season. Few, however, would have predicted it would be so soon.

With the new campaign a little over a week old, the Blues are already sweating on the fitness of their key player Cole Palmer, who, it transpires, has been carrying a groin injury ever since the tournament in the United States.

They will pray that the problem is nothing serious, but there is little doubt that Chelsea are already paying the price for their summer success in gruelling conditions, and if they aren't careful, this could be a recurring theme throughout what was supposed to be a season where they re-established themselves among England and Europe's elite.

AFPPlaying through the pain

Rather concerningly, this is an injury that Palmer has been carrying for some time, which means it may well have been exacerbated by Chelsea going all the way at the Club World Cup and the scaled-back pre-season that followed, with the gruelling summer tournament only reaching its conclusion in mid-July.

Following his last-minute withdrawal before the thumping victory over West Ham on Friday, apparently after painkillers failed to have the desired effect, head coach Enzo Maresca admitted his talisman had already been playing through the pain barrier in the season opener against Crystal Palace five days prior, where the attacker was criticised for a subdued performance in the goalless draw. The decision to start him there deserves some scrutiny if Palmer's absence proves to be a lengthy one.

"Cole in the last four or five days was not 100 per cent,” the Italian tactician revealed. "He tried the warm-up but he felt something. We preferred not to take any risks. We will see if it's something important or not. [It's in the] groin. For the Crystal Palace game, he was not 100% but he tried to make a big effort for the club, the fans and the team. He tried tonight, but it was not very good."

AdvertisementGettyWorst-case scenario

Palmer was underwent a scan on Tuesday, although it remains to be seen when the results of those tests will be revealed with Chelsea not due to play again until Saturday lunchtime when they host neighbours Fulham, by which time eight days will have passed since he pulled out of the West Ham clash.

According to Chelsea reporter , the attacker could be sidelined for up to six weeks, although there is optimism that his layoff will be shorter and that he might even be available immediately after the upcoming pause for World Cup qualifying action.

Although England almost certainly won't have Palmer at their disposal, Chelsea will consider the international break to be well-timed as their players prepare to disperse after the Fulham game. However, their key man could still miss Premier League clashes against Brentford, Manchester United and Brighton in September, while the Blues will be desperate to have him available for the visit of champions Liverpool on Saturday, October 4, in just under six weeks' time.

Having played such a key role in getting the club there, the 23-year-old may also miss out on the Blues' first two fixtures back in the Champions League in mid- and late September, as well as the third round of the Carabao Cup.

Getty Images SportNear ever-present

Whatever the result of the scan, this injury is a crushing blow for Chelsea at such an early stage of a season that had offered renewed hope. It's common knowledge that Palmer has been a revelation since joining the Blues less than two years ago, emerging as a creative and goal-scoring force, but his durability is an underrated attribute.

Since his arrival from Manchester City, you can count the number of games he has missed at club level on one hand; in 2023-24 he only missed the 5-0 defeat at Arsenal through illness, and there was some strange symmetry last season as he sat out the same fixture due to a hamstring problem.

His international record is strangely more patchy; after being sidelined for two England games following the defeat at the Emirates in March, Palmer has only featured in three of his country's last 10 games, having withdrawn from two squads during Lee Carsley's interim reign following Euro 2024, and he is now set to miss another camp.

The attacker's club might think the international break comes at a good time, but this could still be his longest absence since joining Chelsea, and his most significant since a serious foot injury he suffered during his time at City in 2022.

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AFPPaying the price

There is little doubt that this is an injury that Palmer could have avoided or would have been less severe if it wasn't for Chelsea's run to unexpected glory at the Club World Cup, where the 23-year-old was their hero once again as he dismantled European champions Paris Saint-Germain almost singlehandedly in the final. Ironically, it was a performance that led to much of the optimism around Stamford Bridge at the start of the new season, which has now been diminished in light of Palmer's setback.

Despite the west Londoners often coming up against relatively weaker opposition in the U.S., Palmer was only rested for the clash against Morocco's Esperance – clocking up more than 550 minutes in six games over the course of just under a month. It is believed that this groin problem flared up at some point during the tournament, where matches were invariably played in excruciating and physically draining heat and humidity.

It's easy to forget that he was involved in the completely misguided post-season England camp in June, too, needlessly playing in what should have been a routine win over Andorra before warming the bench against Senegal.

In normal circumstances, Palmer would have had ample time in pre-season to recover, but going all the way at the Club World Cup has come at a cost. After the final on July 13, the squad was afforded just three weeks off before reporting back for training in early August as part of their scaled-back warm-up plans, with Palmer playing more than 100 minutes across their two friendlies against Bayer Leverkusen and AC Milan on the same weekend when, evidently, he wasn't fully fit.

Pep Guardiola is betraying his principles by signing Gianluigi Donnarumma – but Man City needed to go back to basics after Ederson's decline

The Catalan coach brought ball-playing goalkeepers back into fashion, yet the gigantic Italian can help him solve a huge problem

Victor Valdes will never forget his first conversation with Pep Guardiola. He had been Barcelona's goalkeeper for years and had already won a Champions League and a couple of La Liga titles, but the new, rookie coach immediately challenged everything Valdes thought he knew about football.

The legendary Barca goalkeeper told the documentary 'Take the ball, pass the ball': "He [Guardiola] had a tactics board with two small magnets on either side of the goal, just outside of the box. He said 'Do you know which players these two are? These are your centre-backs.' I had no idea what he was talking about; it sounded like he was talking Chinese. And he said 'When you’ve got the ball, this is where I want them to be. You’ll pass to them, and it’s from here that we’ll build the play'. I thought he was crazy.'"

Valdes put Guardiola's play-out-from-the-back ideas into practice and even when it led to him conceding costly goals against Real Madrid, he kept doing it, earning praise from Xavi Hernandez for "not forgetting our philosophy". Valdes' inferior shot-stopping qualities meant he never overhauled Iker Casillas as Spain's No.1, but he helped Guardiola conquer the world with Barcelona. When the coach left for Bayern Munich, he took the same approach with Manuel Neuer, who was even better with his feet as well as being a more reliable shot-stopper than Valdes.

When Guardiola joined Manchester City in 2016, he was so convinced he needed a ball-playing goalkeeper that he rooted out club legend and fan favourite Joe Hart, at first with disastrous consequences as his replacement, Claudio Bravo, flopped, but then for the better when Guardiola landed Ederson.

The Brazil international is now set to leave the Etihad Stadium after eight seasons and with six Premier League winners medals around his neck, but Guardiola's choice to replace Ederson with Gianluigi Donnarumma has turned heads across football, with many observers wondering whether the coach has abandoned his principles.

  • Getty Images Sport

    Constantly evolving

    Guardiola shook up football by making Barca play in a way that hadn't been seen in a quarter of a century, when he was a midfielder in Johan Cruyff's 'Dream Team'. He continued with the same blueprint at Bayern and with City, soon changing the way football was seen in both Germany and England. But contrary to popular opinion, Guardiola has constantly evolved his style of play. 

    He has gone from playing high-flying full-backs like Dani Alves and Joao Cancelo to fielding a back four entirely comprised of centre-backs at City. He has lurched from playing without a natural centre-forward to later building his team around Erling Haaland, the most clinical striker in the world but whose build-up play is limited. He has even modified how he uses his goalkeepers, as Ederson has mixed his short passes with long launched balls deep into the opposition half, leading to him providing eight assists during his City career, including four last season. 

    Guardiola explained his methods to last year: ”It's because otherwise I get bored. Always doing the same thing for eight years would be very boring. Secondly, when you do something and it goes well, they [opponents] watch you and create an antidote. If you go too inside, they close in. If we open up the field too much, they'll open it up more. Anything we do and they respond to us, we have to respond again. The third reason is the players we have. What specific qualities they have and when they adapt best to the way you want to play."

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    Different profile

    Turning to Donnarumma, though, feels like an evolution too far for Guardiola given his usual demands on goalkeepers. Just two weeks ago, the coach told the podcast: "It's difficult for me to find one 'keeper that is not brave with their feet. It is so difficult to find. Now I'm not saying be like Ederson and have the ability to put the ball 60 yards in the pockets. He has an incredible ability to do that, and Stefan Ortega has this ability as well. But all of them have to be a minimum to play."

    Donnarumma, though, is not a goalkeeper who would usually be described as being brave with his feet or who fits the profile Guardiola tends to look for. Indeed, Paris Saint-Germain forced him out this summer at the behest of coach Luis Enrique, even after Donnarumma had helped them win a clean sweep of trophies, including their first ever Champions League, due to the difficulties he faced with the all at his feet. 

    The Italy No.1 was instrumental in taking PSG to the final in Munich, saving two penalties in the shootout win over Liverpool in the last 16, averting a late comeback from Aston Villa in the quarter-finals before making eight saves in the semi-final tie with Arsenal, after which team-mate Vitinha described Donnarumma as the 'MVP'. 

    And yet the club decided to sign young upstart Lucas Chevalier and excluded Donnarumma from training as well as leaving him out of the squad for the UEFA Super Cup in a bid to force his departure. His stalling on a contract over a salary dispute may have played a part in that call, but Luis Enrique owned the decision, saying he was looking for "a goalkeeping profile that is different". 

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    Not Barca enough

    Chevalier is certainly bolder with the ball than Donnarumma. Last season for Lille, he completed far more long passes (158-62) and 'launches' (61-16), which are defined by as 'high balls into space or an area for players to chase or challenge for the ball', than the man he has replaced at Parc des Princes. Chevalier also out-performed Donnarumma in more traditional goalkeeping metrics, as he kept seven more clean sheets than the Italian in Ligue 1 last season (11-4) and boasted a better save percentage (71.65-66.22) despite Lille finishing fifth while PSG romped to the title.

    The fact that Luis Enrique wanted to sell Donnarumma while Guardiola wanted to buy him is telling. Both coaches played and managed Barcelona, and when Luis Enrique was in charge of the Catalans he refused to sell Marc-Andre ter Stegen to City, instead letting Bravo move to the Etihad Stadium so the ball-playing German could become his No.1. 

    When he was in the Camp Nou dugout, Luis Enrique was sometimes accused of veering from the 'tiqui taca' style Guardiola perfected as boss, but when his PSG side met a Barca team coached by Xavi in 2024, he cheekily declared that his team played far more like the Barca of old than the current team. And by choosing to move on from Donnarumma due to his limitations with the ball, it seems Luis Enrique is even a stricter apostle of Barca style than the man who originally brought it back into fashion.

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    Changing his ways

    That is not to say that Donnarumma is particularly bad with his feet when compared to his peers. His passing accuracy was 85.4 percent in Ligue 1 last season, lower than Ederson's 86.3% but higher than City's other two goalkeepers, Ortega (79.4%) and James Trafford (70%). He also ranked third among the four when it came to his save percentage, which was 66.2%, as Trafford led the way with an insane 84.5%, albeit in the Championship. 

    Donnarumma's reluctance to play out from the back might well stem from one of his worst-ever mistakes, when he was mugged by Karim Benzema inside his own six-yard box as Real Madrid sensationally came from two goals down on aggregate to knock PSG out of the Champions League in 2022. Donnarumma also infamously gave away a goal in Ligue 1 by passing straight to Monaco's Takumi Minamino, while he made two tremendous errors with his feet during his time at AC Milan, as he  allowed a Gabriel Paletta back-pass straight into his net while also gifting a goal to Sampdoria when dribbling inside his penalty area.

    Those errors contributed to Donnarumma taking a more conservative approach, playing closer to his goal-line than many other top keepers. But it also led to him being renowned as one of the top shot-stoppers in the business, although his 6'5 frame clearly helps.

    "He's massive, but his positional awareness in his box is excellent," former England goalkeeper Paul Robinson told the . "That's down to the depth perception he has when he is reading a through-ball and his understanding of where his line is. A lot of goalkeepers get sucked into rushing off their line to try to close down the angle and to close down the shot, and they think they are in a better position further away from the goal. It is something I did myself sometimes, and you find the shot is past you before you are ready. What Donnarumma does instead, very cleverly, is stay closer to his line, maybe two or three yards away. Because of his size he knows he can cover most of his goal from there anyway."

Cesc Fabregas to succeed Mikel Arteta is 'written in the stars' as ex-Arsenal star eyes Premier League return after Como adventure

Former Arsenal star Cesc Fabregas has set his sights on managing his former club and is willing to wait to replace current incumbent Mikel Arteta.

Fabregas wants top Arsenal roleWilling to wait for manager's jobArsenal and Chelsea are fans of FabregasFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

The former Arsenal midfielder has been cutting his managerial teeth in Italy with minnows Como for the last two years but has grand plans to return to the Emirates and the Gunners are big fans of the Spaniard. Fabregas guided Como to tenth last season but sees his future back in north London, where he began his career in the academy before enjoying an eight-year spell in the senior team, winning the FA Cup in 2005.

AdvertisementGetty Images SportTHE BIGGER PICTURE

While Arsenal are big admirers of Fabregas they are sticking with Arteta, having invested heavily again this summer after he led the Gunners to three second-place finishes in row. Fabregas is enjoying life at Como and has turned down offers from Bayer Leverkusen, Inter Milan and Roma, according to The Sun.

DID YOU KNOW?

Como players have not made a secret of their admiration for Fabregas, with some claiming he's the best boss they have ever worked with. He was vital to their promotion to Serie A in 2024 as while Osian Roberts was listed as the head coach, Fabregas was the main man but hadn't yet obtained his UEFA licence.

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AFPWHAT NEXT FOR ARSENAL?

Arsenal face a stern test away at Liverpool on Sunday, where they haven't won a league game since September 2012. But the Gunners' recent form against the champions is good. They haven't lost to the Reds in the last six Premier League matches, drawing four and winning two.

Botafogo luta para ter Diego Hernández; conheça as características do jogador

MatériaMais Notícias

O Botafogo demonstrou interesse na contratação deDiego Hernández, atacante que pertence aoMontevideo Wanderers, do Uruguai. A negociação é considerada difícil, mas os dirigentes alvinegros não desistiram do jogador. A informação foi publicada primeiramente pelo “ge” e confirmada pelo LANCE!.

A primeira proposta do Botafogo não foi aceita pelos uruguaios. O Montevideo Wanderers não quer cedê-lo nesta janela de transferências. Apesar do jogo duro, o Glorioso vê a contratação com bons olhos e não quer abrir mão da negociação, mesmo que seja para contratá-lo no meio do ano.

+Sul-Americano sub-17 rolando: veja quem é quem entre os convocados da Seleção Brasileira

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+Botafogo tem maratona de jogos previstos para abril; confira

CONHEÇA DIEGO HERNÁNDEZ

Convocado recentemente para Seleção Olímpica Uruguaia, Diego Hernández atua como ponta esquerda e chegaria para brigar por posição no ataque alvinegro. O atacante é canhoto e se notabiliza pelo drible e velocidade.

+Botafogo encerra mês de março com uma derrota; relembre os jogos

O jogador seria uma boa alternativa para Luís Castro em jogos contra adversários retrancados, pois ele tem uma enorme facilidade em quebrar linhas e realizar jogadas individuais. O uruguaio tem apenas 22 anos e é formado nas categorias de base do Montevideo Wanderers.

Yoane Wissa FINALLY joins Newcastle! Magpies complete £55m deal to sign forward from Brentford after chasing Alexander Isak replacement all summer

Yoane Wissa has finally sealed his £55 million ($74m) move to Newcastle, with Eddie Howe landing his new No.9 after a summer-long chase for an Isak replacement.

Newcastle complete deal for WissaHave spent months chasing Brentford forwardSigns amid Liverpool's bid for Alexander IsakFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Newcastle have confirmed the signing of Wissa from Brentford, bringing to an end a long-running pursuit. Reports suggest the Magpies have paid £55 million ($74.5m) to secure the signature of the DR Congo international. The 28-year-old forward has signed a four-year contract at St. James’ Park.

AdvertisementAFPTHE BIGGER PICTURE

Eddie Howe endured a frustrating summer after failed moves for Liam Delap, Joao Pedro, Hugo Ekitike and Benjamin Sesko. Wissa’s arrival, alongside record signing Nick Woltemade, finally gives Newcastle two new attacking options. Both forwards are expected to share the responsibility of replacing Alexander Isak, who joined Liverpool for £130m.

DID YOU KNOW?

Wissa departs Brentford after scoring 49 goals in 149 appearances for the West London club. His relationship with the Bees soured in pre-season when he left their training camp and later removed all club references on social media. The forward hit 19 Premier League goals last term, underlining his ability to deliver at the highest level.

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Getty Images SportWHAT NEXT FOR WISSA?

The Congolese star will link up with his new teammates immediately as Newcastle gear up for their Premier League clash with Wolves on Saturday, September 13. Howe will hope the DR Congo striker can adapt quickly and bring goals to ease the loss of Isak. For Brentford, the challenge now is to find a suitable replacement before the next transfer window.

Com nome de ídolo e querendo conquistar espaço, Raí Ramos é apresentado no São Paulo: 'Quero fazer história'

MatériaMais Notícias

Com a camisa 34, Raí Ramos foi apresentado no São Paulo. O jogador falou sobre a homenagem a um grande ídolo tricolor em seu nome e sobre a vontade de conquistar seu espaço – mesmo com a alta concorrência na lateral-direita.

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O nome de Raí surgiu após uma homenagem feita por sua mãe,Nice Ramos, que era uma grande fã do ex-jogador do São Paulo. Durante sua apresentação, o lateral afirmou que ‘é uma honra carregar este nome’, mas ressaltou que ‘da mesma forma que Raí fez história, ele também quer’.

Saiba o ranking dos clubes com maiores médias de público em 2023

Veja tabela do Campeonato Paulista

-Carregar esse nome é uma honra para mim, minha mãe fez essa homenagem porque quando eu nasci, Raí estava no auge, grande período do São Paulo. É um motivo de muito orgulho, muita honra, carregar esse nome – disse:

-Minhas características são diferentes do Raí, tenho minhas virtudes, sou rápido, gosto de chegar ao ataque, finalizar, o Raí é um grande ídolo, quero fazer minha história também – completou.

O reforço chega como mais uma opção para a lateral direita do São Paulo. Além do jogador, o Tricolor conta com mais seis nomes para o setor. O reforço falou sobre a concorrência e afirmou que pretende buscar seu espaço.

– Para mim, estou muito feliz em estar chegando. Nessa questão dos laterais, temos 3 machucados, surgiu a oportunidade, com muito trabalho e dedicação iremos procurar espaço no elenco – disse o atleta.

Neste Campeonato Paulista, Raí foi essencial na campanha do Ituano, sua ex-equipe. O lateral foi o responsável pelo gol contra o Corinthians, nas quartas de final, que levou a decisão para as penalidades, e mais tarde foi responsável por eliminar um grande rival do Tricolor.

Ainda durante a coletiva de imprensa, relembrou o feito e falou sobre a importância da sua campanha na série B do último ano para as negociações com o Tricolor.

-A gente teve um ano bom no ano passado no Ituano, batemos na trave para subir para a série A. Quando surgiu a oportunidade, não pensei duas vezes, quem me comunicou primeiro foi meu agente. Quando soube fiquei muito feliz, foi um momento marcante na minha vida, estar aqui é uma grande honra – contou.

-Esse gol foi muito importante, pude contribuir para a equipe passar de fase, foi histórico, marcante, recebi muitas mensagens, agora espero fazer mais gols e contribuir para a história do São Paulo – completou, lembrando do gol contra o Corinthians.

Raíassinou contrato com o São Paulo até 31 de dezembro de 2025.O lateral começou nas categorias de base do Bahia, mas foi negociado com o Londrina sem ser promovido ao profissional. Desde então, passou por Operário-PR, Toledo, Portugal, Geórgia e Oeste antes do Ituano.

Victor Lindelof to join Man Utd's Premier League rivals! Aston Villa close in on free transfer for defender

Ex-Manchester United defender Victor Lindelof is about to make a swift return to English football with Aston Villa after spending the summer without a club.

  • Lindelof to join Villa until 2027
  • Centre-back left Man Utd in June
  • Could thrive under Emery
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  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Transfer specialist Fabrizio Romano has applied his 'here we go' catchphrase to Lindelof's proposed move to Aston Villa. The centre back is said to be undergoing a medical that will pave the way for a free transfer on a two-year contract – with the option of a third. Everton and Fiorentina also showed interest, but Villa's offer was most appealing.

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    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Lindelof has been a free agent since being released at the end of his last Manchester United contract on June 30. He had spent eight years at Old Trafford, making 284 appearances and winning two trophies. The 31-year-old, whose 2017 arrival from Benfica was met with great hope and optimism, played less than he would have liked after 2022 due to injuries and competition for places. But moving to Villa, where Unai Emery has transformed Ezri Konsa into a Champions League and international-calibre defender in recent years, could be a late career rebirth for Lindelof.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    Lindelof was a product of little known Swedish team Vasteras, a lower league club. He made his first-team debut aged 15 and travelled to England at 16 for what proved to be an unsuccessful trial with Stoke City's academy. It was then that the teenager was picked up by Benfica.

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    WHAT NEXT?

    If Lindelof completes his move to Villa as expected, he will have the opportunity to get his feet under the table uninterrupted without games, due to the international break and not being selected by his country while he didn't have a club.

Dangerous nostalgia at heart of rivalry

South Africa’s Test battles with Australia have been reliably hard-fought. But an overdue victory on home soil is important to the hosts for numerous reasons

Daniel Brettig in Durban28-Feb-20182:19

Why do Australia win so often in South Africa?

One of the first things that strikes the eye about Kingsmead in Durban is how little the ground has changed over the past 25 years.Players walk the same path to and from the middle as they did back in the day, meaning that at some stage Steven Smith will follow literally in the footsteps of Allan Border after his final Test innings in 1994. Josh Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc will attempt to mimic the spells of Peter Siddle and Mitchell Johnson in 2009 with more or less identical approaches and breezes off the Indian Ocean, and David Warner would doubtless love to hammer sixes to the same grass bank as Phillip Hughes in his twin hundreds in that same match.Inside the stands, the walls are adorned with fading pictures of past great players and moments: Jonty Rhodes’ dive to demolish the stumps and run out Inzamam ul-Haq at the 1992 World Cup; the vicious, wrong-footed action of Mike Procter, and the keen followthrough of Malcolm Marshall. A mural of the ground under lights for a 2016 ODI between South Africa and Australia could have been taken at any one of the eight matches played between the two countries here since 1994, so little changed is the venue.More broadly, the contest between South Africa and Australia brings with it a sense of continuity and shared history. These two sides were most evenly matched in a drawn series in 1994 that carried many of the same variables as this time around – two top quality pace attacks, high standards of fielding, and a level of on-field hostility summed up by the Wanderers outbursts of Shane Warne and Merv Hughes that brought heavy fines for the pair.Moreover it is possible when South Africa and Australia play one another to simply sit back and enjoy the contest unfolding in the middle, without worries about schedules, pitches, cultural differences or the creeping barrage of Twenty20 and its attendant financial rewards. Put simply, these two teams routinely serve up the best that Test cricket has to offer, helped in no small part by the fact that the conditional differences between Australia and South Africa are so minimal as to make this the game’s most even playing field.As Faf du Plessis, South Afirca’s captain, put it: “I would say its the most competitive series that you play. We’re both very passionate, competitive cricketing nations and we try and leave it all out on the field. So it’s certainly great entertainment for the people watching, so we’re all raring to go and I’m sure the Australian cricket team is excited to start this series as well.”In many ways, the competitiveness of South Africa against Australia is one of the game’s great wonders. Cricket in South Africa is a comparatively small business when lined up against Cricket Australia’s participatory and financial heft – no South African, however much they love cricket, would think it plausible to adopt CA’s goal to make the game “Australia’s favourite sport”. A reminder of this can be found on the journey into Durban, which takes drivers past the mighty Moses Mabhida football stadium (capacity: 62,760) and the cacophonous Kings Park stadium (52,000) before turning right towards Kingsmead’s more homely ground, with room for 25,000.Where CA has been able to push boisterously for ever larger audiences and television rights fees, South Africa’s administrators have had to strike a careful balance between the demands of transformation, the realities of a changing nation and the typical conservatism of the players. For this reason, none of the four Tests of this series will be played under lights, despite the third Test of the preceding encounter between the sides down under taking place with a pink Kookaburra ball at a packed Adelaide Oval.That leads to another element of the game in South Africa that remains unchanged – Test cricket’s place as an acquired, niche taste for small audiences rather than the mainstream entertainment it has managed to become in Australia. Given the quality of the cricket itself, sparsely attended Test matches in this part of the world have been a source of mystification for many, not least the former Australian selection chairman Rod Marsh, who devoted a significant portion of his 2015 MCC Cowdrey lecture to the topic.”How can the Test match crowds in South Africa be so poor?” Marsh asked. “They have a magnificent team with arguably the best fast bowler in the world and possibly the best batsman in the world. Yet no one goes to watch them play at home. Come on you guys, get active, there will be a time when your product isn’t that good and you’ll struggle to exist.”As captain of Australia, Smith has become well acquainted with his dual requirements to win Test matches for his country and also to entertain, even if his tactical instincts are not quite so cavalier as those of his predecessor, Michael Clarke. When asked about how he viewed the health of Test cricket and his team’s responsibility to grow it, Smith spoke pointedly of the day/night variant, about which the Australians overcame early reticence and have now played four such fixtures.”We try and entertain as much as possible, that’s for sure,” Smith said. “I think there’s been some terrific innovations in Test cricket, the pink-ball games that we’ve played, the crowds have been unbelievable, the television ratings have been unbelievable and just the product’s been terrific, so we’re always trying to improve the game as much as we can to keep Test cricket as relevant as possible. I feel like it’s going quite strong at the moment and I hope it continues to do so.”The one occasion South Africa did experiment with a floodlit Test against Zimbabwe, the match was over in less than two days and no-one turned up. An unsuccessful outcome to that experiment seems to have left the long game in a holding pattern, much as the postponement of plans for a new franchise-based South African T20 tournament have caused a similar sense of inertia about the shorter format. What goes on all the while is the movement of players out of the Test side, from Kyle Abbott last year and Morne Morkel this week to AB de Villiers and Hashim Amla in the near future.This series is, therefore, a kind of valedictory event for many in the current South African team, both for those unlikely to face Australia again and also the rest knowing they will never again share quite the same dressing room. Much as Graeme Smith had hoped in 2014, du Plessis’ team are eager to overturn another tradition of these encounters – Australia having never lost a series in South Africa since readmission. An Australian bowling attack of Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood, Pat Cummins and Nathan Lyon is a formidable obstacle to that goal, as is Smith’s undisputed place as the world’s leading Test batsman.Holes in the South African team are slowly being filled by the burgeoning pool of black talent coming through the system, including Temba Bavuma (injured this week), Kagiso Rabada and the Durban product Lungi Ngidi. It is hoped, ultimately, that a team more reflective of the demography of the nation will finally bring cricket the South African audience that it deserves. A World Cup win after so many near-misses would not go astray either, and the looming Test Championship will also help bring a sense of wider purpose.But the unchanging visage of Kingsmead stands largely to remind visitors that the pace of change is slower than required. All the while this brings South African cricket closer to a dangerous phase in which the current well of talent runs dry due to outside forces, before it can be replenished by the good works being done within the game. World cricket has already lost one great Test team in the form of the West Indies due to shifting cultural and economic tides – to lose another would be damaging to all concerned.So it is that the history and familiarity of walking in the footsteps of Border, Warne, Hughes and Johnson is a great one for Smith’s team, yet the comfortable nostalgia of Australia’s meetings with the Proteas would do well to be swept away in the future by the emergence of a team for all South Africans. A team capable not only of regularly filling Kingsmead, but Moses Mabhida too.

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