فيديو | أسيست ميسي.. مبابي يسجل هدفًا رائعًا لـ باريس سان جيرمان أمام موناكو

قدم النجم الأرجنتيني ليونيل ميسي أسيست رائع في المباراة الجارية حاليًا بين فريقي باريس سان جيرمان وموناكو في بطولة الدوري الفرنسي.

ويلتقي الفريقان في إطار منافسات الجولة الثامنة عشر من بطولة الدوري الفرنسي على ملعب حديقة الأمراء.

وأحرز كيليان مبابي الهدف الثاني لصالح باريس سان جيرمان في الدقيقة 45 من عمر الشوط الأول.

الهدف جاء بعد انطلاقة أكثر من رائعة من ليونيل ميسي تجاه منطقة جزاء الخصم، ثم قدم تمريرة مميزة إلى مبابي، وسدد الأخير الكرة بباطن قدمه في شباك المرمى. هدف مبابي الثاني أمام موناكو

وتشير النتيجة حاليًا إلى تقدم باريس سان جيرمان بهدفين دون رد، سجلهما مبابي.

Why do Celtic need Tom Ince?

For Celtic, not even the possibility of a few new signings will help turn their fortunes this season.

They are considerably off the pace in the SPFL but Neil Lennon won’t leave his post as manager until he is sacked by the hierarchy. That means that for the time being, he and Nick Hammond can continue to plan their assault on the January market.

What’s the word?

According to Football League World, Celtic are interested in signing Stoke City winger Tom Ince this January.

The Hoops are looking at ways they can complete a deal for the 28-year-old who currently earns a salary of £27k-per-week at the Championship club.

It’s not known whether a deal would be permanent or temporary but it’s evident that the Bhoys are looking for solutions to improve their attack.

Ince has played just seven matches this term so a move would probably benefit him personally.

Replacing Forrest

When you look at Celtic’s squad, they have been particularly lacking in wide areas. With James Forrest out injured, their only real viable options have been Ryan Christie and Mo Elyounoussi.

Christie has scored just once in his last 16 and Elyounoussi is only on loan. As a result, they clearly need to bring in more depth.

Though, if they do sign Ince, it would surely spell bad news for Forrest, someone who has played only seven Premiership matches this term because of an ankle injury.

The winger hasn’t been seen since mid-September but despite making over 400 appearances for the Glaswegians, his place in the squad should be under threat.

After all, Ince is a winger too and would undoubtedly offer qualities that could improve Lennon’s ranks. For starters, the wide man is a quick player capable of stretching defences and his direct nature ensured he contributed to five goals last season.

Ultimately, that was an arduous term but it wasn’t helped by Stoke’s league placing of 15th. You only need to look at what he did in a more attacking-minded team such as Derby to understand his true qualities, however.

When the Rams finished fifth in the Championship during the 2015/16 season, Ince racked up 12 goals and eight assists. He managed 14 goals the following campaign.

That may have been a number of years ago but it goes to show what the attacker is capable of when a team caters to his strengths.

Considering how much Celtic have dominated Scottish football in recent years, there’s no reason he couldn’t rediscover his mojo at Parkhead in a team who like to attack far more than Stoke.

It would be a good move for player and club, but for their own winger in Forrest, it wouldn’t be positive news at all. He will struggle enough as it is to get back in the team without the addition of another flanker in January.

He should be running scared.

AND in other news, 1 goal in 16 games: Celtic star who lost possession 17x failed Lennon again on Wednesday…

Andre Gomes: Ancelotti let down by invisible Everton midfielder in Burnley draw

Andre Gomes badly let Carlo Ancelotti down during Everton’s 1-1 draw with Burnley on Saturday as the Portuguese midfielder offered an invisible display.

Ancelotti initially named Gomes among his substitutes for the Toffees’ trip to Turf Moor this weekend, but was forced to call on the 27-year-old following an early first-half injury to Fabian Delph.

Gomes had played just 23 minutes of Premier League football since starting Everton’s 2-1 loss at Newcastle United in an advanced role on November 1, yet slotted in on the left-flank with Everton without star full-back Lucas Digne after the Frenchman sustained ankle ligament damage in training.

Gomes recently admitted to the Liverpool Echo that he is still striving to regain full fitness after suffering a fractured dislocation to his right ankle against Tottenham more than a year ago, having returned to the field after just 112 days.

“The truth is, I am still trying to find my best feeling, to get fit, to get ready to be 100 per cent for all the game,” the £112,212-per-week maestro said. “In the past months, with the pandemic, it was hard for me physically. A lot of details can change, my body shape or how fit I feel.”

Former Premier League striker Darren Bent believes the signs of Gomes’ continued fight for fitness have been evident this season, with the Portuguese unable to get about the pitch in the fashion he could under Marco Silva.

“I’m a big fan of him and since he’s had the injury, he’s never quite been the same, which is understandable, it was a big, big injury,” Bent told Football Insider. “The quality on the ball, being comfortable in possession, that’s not what’s going to leave him.

“It’s obviously the physical attributes, getting around the pitch and stuff like that. I hope he stays with it. I hope he keeps working hard because eventually, his fitness will come, hopefully.”

Ancelotti will not be rushing to award Gomes his sixth start of the Premier League season when Everton host Chelsea at Goodison Park next week, after witnessing another tired performance from the former FC Barcelona midfielder.

Gomes was often invisible at Turf Moor on Saturday as the Toffees were held to a draw by Burnley, with the £21.6m-rated man registering fewer attempted passes (34) than goalkeeper Jordan Pickford (41) and completing just 29 of his efforts, per WhoScored.

The 29-time Portugal international further failed to direct either of his two shots on target, enjoyed a 50% dribble success rate, lost his only aerial duel, took possession with one of three attempted tackles, made one interception and offered zero clearances.

Ancelotti’s only positive from Gomes’ performance would have been in the 27-year-old completing each of his five attempted long passes and recording a key ball, though would have been greatly disappointed to see him lose six of nine ground duels and possession on nine occasions, per SofaScore.

AND in other news, Carlo Ancelotti could unearth his ideal James Rodriguez heir in an Everton sensation David Unsworth loves.

Sergio Reguilon endured a night to forget as Spurs beat Royal Antwerp

Tottenham Hotspur left-back Sergio Reguilon has indisputably been one of their standout performers so far this season, but on Thursday evening he endured a rare night to forget.

Jose Mourinho’s side defeated Royal Antwerp to leapfrog them into first place in Group J, meaning they’ll be seeded for the Europa League round of 32.

Whilst Spurs were victorious in north London, it wasn’t the most thrilling, entertaining or even best display and that much was summed up by the Spaniard’s performance.

Valued at €70m (£64m) by CIES, Reguilon was one of the few who kept his starting place from Sunday’s win over arch-rivals Arsenal, though by half-time, he was hauled off by the Portuguese boss.

Indeed, he received the lowest rating of any Spurs player (6.5) and was awfully lightweight in possession.

Per SofaScore, Reguilon won just 33% of his duels, lost the ball eight times and made just five passes. Even Joe Hart recorded more touches than the 23-year-old despite playing between the sticks, a role that shouldn’t see him more involved than the industrious left wing-back.

The Evening Standard graded him a five out of ten, claiming that Regulion “didn’t get forward enough” before he was replaced at half-time.

Whilst some will believe that the decision was down to keeping an eye on Crystal Palace this weekend, the former Real Madrid ace was still woefully poor for perhaps the very first time this season, and it would have left his manager fuming.

Reguilon has been a popular figure on and off the pitch as football.london’s Alasdair Gold revealed earlier in the season that “everyone loves him” in training whilst the £25m signing has quickly become a fan-favourite with supporters.

With Ben Davies pulling off an impressive display at left centre-back and then at full-back, it could give Mourinho plenty to ponder in terms of team selection, especially when coming up against Wilfried Zaha and then Mo Salah.

The Welshman would offer a more defensively-sound presence, that’s for sure.

AND in other news, Spurs could find their own Timo Werner in “stone-cold” EFL star…

Newcastle’s Ryan Fraser proves his importance to Steve Bruce with Scotland display

After arriving as a free agent following his spell at Bournemouth coming to an end, Ryan Fraser delivered the kind of performance on Sunday that would have left Newcastle boss Steve Bruce grinning from ear to ear.

The 26-year-old has only played a bit-part role for the Magpies since joining, completing the 90 minutes just once, and playing only twice in the Premier League.

But having been given the nod to start from the off in Scotland’s Nations League clash against Slovakia at the weekend, Fraser proved why he could be one of the bargains of the summer in the top-flight.

Despite not getting to the score-sheet, or even being credited with an assist, the former Cherries flier was voted as Scotland’s Man of the Match, and when you look at some of the underlying numbers behind his performance, it’s easy to see why.

As per Sofascore, he had a 100% dribble success rate, provided two key passes and sent in a whopping ten crosses, with a lovely piece of play down the left-hand side eventually seeing Oli McBurnie’s header cannon off the crossbar.

That snippet of action alone would have had one man on Tyneside salivating at the prospect of being his teammate over the course of this season: Andy Carroll.

The Englishman – like Fraser – has been in and out of the starting line-up, but there’s no doubting that if he’s fully fit and firing – and it is a massive ‘if’ – then he can be a real attacking weapon for Bruce.

Carroll thrives on service into the box, and instead of feeding off scraps, having an old-school winger like Fraser just simply get to the by-line before standing up a cross into the penalty area could see him feast on Premier League defences.

It’s no surprise that left-sided players like Aaron Cresswell, Stewart Downing and Jose Enrique all feature in the top ten when it comes to goal participations with Carroll.

Described as someone who gives Scotland that “little bit of spark” by manager Steve Clarke, Fraser appears to have all the makings of being Carroll’s dream teammate.

And in other news, Newcastle must surely regret selling this ace for just £650k.

Everton’s Jordan Pickford showcases the love/hate response he deserves

Everton maintained their unbeaten start to the season with a 2-2 draw at home to Stanley Park neighbours Liverpool on Saturday, but perhaps most impressive of all is that Carlo Ancelotti’s side were able to claim a point despite Jordan Pickford.

Yet at the same time, Pickford can also be heralded for Ancelotti’s side having claimed a point at home to a side the Toffees remain winless against in a decade, after producing a performance typical of who the 26-year-old has come to be over the past 18-months.

One second Pickford is brilliant and pulling out world-class saves, but the next he’s making a horrific blunder that makes you question why manager’s continually favour the former Sunderland man who has now started each of Everton’s last 119 Premier League fixtures.

The Toffees also continue to sit at the top of the table knowing they cannot be met for at least another week, and yet, for the wrecking ball between the sticks in Pickford, they came ever so close to seeing an early red card derail Ancelotti’s work over the opening weeks.

It has almost become what you now expect of Pickford, a panicky shot-stopper determined to get to the ball and make an impact on proceedings but without the thought of mind to realise when some scenarios are best left for other players to resolve.

No better example of this came when Pickford opted to dart from his line in the hope of blocking Virgil van Dijk from shooting at goal on Saturday, only to clatter into the Netherlands defender and raise fears over a serious knee injury that could have dire consequences on the Reds’ title hopes.

The incident could easily have led to referee Michael Oliver pointing to the spot or reaching to his back pocket for the red card, as well, but Pickford’s blushes were saved when Van Dijk was ruled to have been offside when the ball was initially played to him.

Pickford was able to put the clattering incident behind him and turn a corner with his performance to deny Trent Alexander-Arnold in sublime fashion, when the defender’s free-kick seemed destined for the top corner. His fast reflexes later denied Joel Matip, too, as the £23.4m-rated man was able to claw the Cameroon international’s header away.

The errant side of Pickford’s game is a brush continually now used to tarnish his reputation and raise questions over his continued place in Gareth Southgate’s England squad. Yet Three Lions icon Peter Shilton finds it mystifying that questions are even raised given the shot-stoppers efforts on the international stage.

“I’m a bit mystified, because I think he’s done well for England,” Shilton told talkSPORT earlier this month.

“Every game I’ve seen him play, he’s made vital saves. In the last game, he only had one save to make but it was at the right time and it was a terrific save.”

But Pickford’s place in Southgate’s squad became a topic of debate earlier this month after an error-strewn disaster against Brighton & Hove Albion, having gifted Neal Maupay possession yards from the goal line to equalise.

The 26-year-old regained his composure to help England beat the world’s top-ranked side Belgium, yet Pickford was far from perfect in a mostly quiet affair between the sticks by flapping at the occasional cross and was at it again against Denmark.

Rather than leaving Kyle Walker to contain Thomas Delaney, Pickford was panicky, rushing off his line and playing a key role in the incident which saw the Three Lions concede a penalty. And with goalkeepers, one crucial error can cost a side more heavily than others.

Luckily for Everton, that turned out not to be the case this Saturday against Liverpool, but Ancelotti’s side came ever so close to paying the price for Pickford’s panicky nature when the 26-year-old crunched into Van Dijk.

Ancelotti would have hoped not to see Pickford cause a controversial incident, though, and putting himself in those positions raises doubt over whether or not the ‘keeper is truly learning from his errors.

Pickford spoke publicly in December 2019 on how he needed to block out Newcastle United supporters whenever he faces the Toon for his Sunderland past, having bitten the bait earlier that year when his panicky nature took hold.

The jibes from supporters made Pickford feel a need to make an impact, but the impact he created should have resulted in a red card when he clattered into Salomon Rondon and conceded a penalty, which he would save before conceding three second-half goals.

“I was in my own world out there, I knew that last time I was here I let it all affect me,” Pickford said, via quotes by the Chronicle. “That was a big learning curve for me and it’s always been a tough place to play, especially for someone with my background.”

It appeared like Pickford was back in his own world this weekend when he clattered into Van Dijk in front of an empty Goodison Park, raising greater worry that he is not taking on board the ‘learning curve’ needed to see fans love him more than they will hate.

AND in other news, Carlo Ancelotti must regret starting a £21.6m-rated man vs Liverpool after his challenging performance.

How Arsenal could line up after dramatic deadline day swoop for Thomas Partey

Arsenal got their man as they ended the summer transfer window with a bang.

They left it late, very late, but the Gunners finally paid out Atletico Madrid midfielder Thomas Partey’s £45m release clause on deadline day.

He joins Willian, Gabriel and the returning Dani Ceballos as Mikel Arteta’s major signings this window.

But how will the Arsenal boss fit his new 27-year-old enforcer into the starting XI? Here’s how the north Londoners could soon look…

Arteta has often toyed with two formations but the addition of a Patrick Vieira type allows him to deploy a 4-3-3 to greater effect.

It means that Bernd Leno continues as the number one goalkeeper whilst he’ll be protected by Kieran Tierney, Gabriel, David Luiz and Hector Bellerin in a back four.

The Ghanian powerhouse takes a place just in front as the Gunners’ new anchorman, which could in turn allow both Granit Xhaka and £28.8m-rated loanee Dani Ceballos some freedom in the attacking transition.

Without Mesut Ozil or the signing of Houssem Aouar, Arteta lacks an out-and-out number ten so the addition of Partey could be a game-changer for the Swiss and Spaniard duo.

On the wings, Willian may well get the nod over Nicolas Pepe with Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang occupying the other flank.

£46.5m star Alexandre Lacazette remained at the club despite being linked with an exit, so he’ll lead the line for the Gunners.

It means there is no place for versatile 19-year-old Bukayo Saka, Mo Elneny or Eddie Nketiah, who all started against Sheffield United last time out.

AND in other news, Edu Gaspar heading towards inexcusable Arsenal mistake over £55m Arteta target “fans would love” …

Leeds news: Marcelo Bielsa suffers a blow as Arsenal set to hijack Draxler

In a rather surprising turn of events, Leeds United have been linked with Paris Saint-Germain’s Julian Draxler. No one really expected Marcelo Bielsa to be aiming that high but then again, it is in his nature to do so.

The Argentine coach is slowly but surely building a team worthy of competing in the Premier League and with the addition of the midfield star, his squad would be almost complete.

However, it seems that Bielsa has now suffered a heavy blow in the pursuit of the player’s signature as the latest report from L’Equipe suggests Paris Saint-Germain are set to offload Draxler to none other than Mikel Arteta.

In fact, the Parisiens want to sign Matteo Guendouzi and would then offer their player in return to get the deal over the line. Of course, this also means the Whites don’t exactly stand a chance in the race.

Arsenal want to offload Guendouzi anyway and the French titans are keen on bringing the 21-year-old back home. Seeing how the midfielder is out of favour at the Emirates, this deal should be more or less straightforward.

Still, nothing is set in stone and we will have to wait and see how Bielsa responds to this news. As of right now, it does seem like getting Draxler to Elland Road might be a task too tall for the Argentine coach.

But we should never really bet against El Loco and the transfer window can be extremely unpredictable at times.

Let’s wait and see what happens.

Verdict

Even though Leeds are on the rise, it would be fairly unexpected to see them land Draxler at this point in time. Now that Arsenal are reportedly in the race and have the upper hand, it might be a good time to look elsewhere.

After all, there are other targets that could still improve the Whites immensely.

Elland Road

Key Information about Elland Road

Elland Road is an iconic football stadium located in West Yorkshire, and it has been the home of Leeds United Football Club since their formation in 1919, having previously opened in 1897.

The ground is the 14th largest football stadium in the whole of England, as well as the fourth-largest outside of the Premier League with a massive 37,890 all-seated capacity. Elland Road is laid out with four famous stands; the Don Revie Stand, the Norman Hunter South Stand, the John Charles Stand, and the East Stand.

The record attendance of 57,892 was set back in 1967 during an FA Cup Fifth Round replay against Sunderland, and a modern record stands at just over 40,000 for a Premiership match against Newcastle United in 2001.

A history of Elland Road

The first occupants of Elland Road when it opened in 1897 were Holbeck Rugby Club of the rugby league, and the first competitive football match at the ground was the West Yorkshire Cup final in April 1898 between Hunslet and Harrogate. The rugby league club erected a new stand ahead of the 1898-99 season, and the ground eventually became known simply as Elland Road.

In October 1904, a new football club, Leeds City, came to an agreement to rent the ground for their upcoming season in the Football League. City experienced many financial difficulties, however, and a £1,000 offer was finally accepted for them to purchase the ground. Despite this, Leeds City were expelled from the Football League after just eight games after a scandal arose involving illegal payments to players during the war years. In 1919, Yorkshire Amateurs sold Elland Road to the newly formed Leeds United for just £250, and the rest as they say is history.

During the 1920s, a wooden roof was erected over the South Stand terrace, and another stand was built on the east side terracing called Lowfields. Floodlights were not installed until 9 November 1953, though this now meant that Leeds could play late-night fixtures in darker conditions. A fire destroyed the West Stand and parts of the pitch in the early hours of 18 September 1956, and the total damage cost was thought to have been around £100,000.

A public appeal to build a new stand with the assistance from Leeds City Council helped raise 60,000 which meant the new West Stand opened at the start of the following season. In the summer of 2017, the club announced a number of various improvements to Elland Road which enhance the cosmetics of stands, the roof, and more.

Tickets to Watch Leeds United at Elland Road

Single adult matchday tickets range from £26-37, concession tickets are available from £21, 16-18 from £16, under-16s from £10, and under-11s from £5 – all depending on the area chosen. Adult season tickets can be purchased from £508 whereas under-11s can attend every home match at Elland Road for just £72.

https://www.leedsunited.com/ – Official website of Leeds United

https://www.lufc.talent-sport.co.uk/PagesPublic/Home/home.aspx – Leeds United Ticket Office

Ivanovic unlikely to join Everton says Patrick Boyland

The transfer window is called silly season for a reason, and during this time you often get your fair share of eyebrow-raising rumours.

One story that did the rounds this week was about Everton’s supposed interest in former Champions League-winning defender Branislav Ivanovic after the Serbian left Zenit earlier this month.

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The 36-year-old coming to Goodison Park was quite an exciting prospect considering the fact that he’s worked alongside Carlo Ancelotti before at Chelsea, but it seems as though it’s not to be.

What’s been said then?

Patrick Boyland and Greg O’Keeffe were discussing Everton’s summer transfer activity on the latest edition of the Gwlad Tidings podcast on The Athletic, and they inevitably came on to discussing the Ivanovic rumour.

Boyland relayed what he had been told when he asked a source at the club about this move.

“We checked it out, what came back in private was that it didn’t look like there were any legs in it at all. In fact it was rubbished a bit wasn’t it?” Boyland said (Gwlad Tidings podcast 31/6/20 29:30)

“So there’s very little legs in that one I have to be honest.”

Probably a good thing

As much as Ivanovic would add some much-needed experience to the squad after the departure of Leighton Baines and Phil Jagielka over the past couple of seasons, this may be for the best.

Ivanovic is 36 now, and while he was a Champions League level defender back in the early 2010s, we’re almost a decade removed from Chelsea’s triumph in Europe, and the club would be better off going for a younger talent who Ancelotti can look to build the defence around for years to come, rather than Ivanovic who could easily be retired within the next two years.

You can never say never in football, but it looks as though we won’t be seeing Ivanovic at Goodison Park this summer.

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