The Côte d’Azur Derby: Where luxury meets local pride as Monaco and Nice battle for Europe

The Côte d’Azur Derby: Where luxury meets local pride as Monaco and Nice battle for Europe

Rivalries in football often thrive on geography, but few feel as uniquely intimate and complex as AS Monaco versus OGC Nice. This weekend’s derby is more than a meeting of neighbours. It’s a clash of philosophies, histories, and cultures distilled into 90 minutes with a Champions League spot on the line. Both are locked on equal points, and the stakes haven’t felt this high in years.


By David Skilling


The cities could hardly be more different despite sharing the shimmering coastline of the French Riviera, with just 22 kilometers separating the two stadiums. Monaco, the tax haven playground of billionaires, boasts yachts bigger than most apartment blocks and a royal family lending prestige to everything it touches. Nice, by contrast, is the heart of the region, gritty, working-class roots wrapped in Belle Époque beauty, where locals guard their identity fiercely against the creeping gloss of the Riviera’s wealth. 

Yet, on the pitch, their football stories overlap more than many realise. 

Only five teams have played more Ligue 1 seasons than AS Monaco and OGC Nice. The rivalry traces back to the 1950s when both clubs jostled for prominence in France’s top flight. OGC Nice were kings first, lifting four league titles between 1951 and 1959. Their success reflected the post-war optimism that swept through France, with local players and fans propelling them to national prominence. Back then, Nice was seen as the pride of the South. 

AS Monaco arrived soon after, securing their first league title in 1961. But unlike Nice’s localised energy, Monaco’s rise was fuelled by the principality’s growing ambitions to punch above its size on the global scene. The club became a magnet for stars and future legends. Later on, Arsène Wenger, Thierry Henry, and George Weah, to name a few, would all pass through Monaco, adding layers of prestige. 

Despite their proximity, this derby never quite became as venomous as the North London Derby or the Madrid Derby. Still, local pride simmers under the surface. Every meeting is a chance to prove who truly owns the Côte d’Azur, a battle not just for points but for identity. 

What makes this fixture so fascinating is the cultural tug-of-war it represents. AS Monaco feel like an outsider in football’s traditional landscape, playing in the half-empty Stade Louis II, perched between cliffs and the sea, more postcard than fortress. Yet, the club has built a reputation as an elite finishing school, producing and polishing stars like Kylian Mbappé, Henry, and Bernardo Silva before cashing in for massive transfer fees. 

Nice, on the other hand, is a city where football runs in the blood. Allianz Riviera echoes with ultras’ chants, tifos unfurling stories of working-class pride. For Nice supporters, beating Monaco is personal, it’s about showing that local passion and identity can outshine wealth and glamour.

This season’s first derby, won by Nice

Zoom out, and this derby reflects the contradictions modern football thrives on. Monaco, a city-state with fewer than 40,000 residents, playing in France’s top league. Nice, a regional capital battling for relevance in a game increasingly dictated by global money. 

Both clubs are, in many ways, success stories. Monaco’s ability to remain competitive at the highest level while exporting stars is impressive. Nice’s visits to European competitions in recent years are a testament to the club’s growing push to enter the Champions League conversation. 

This year, the Côte d’Azur derby lands with more than just local pride at stake; there’s a Champions League place hanging in the balance. Monaco sit third with Nice in fourth; both are locked on 47 points heading into the weekend. But it’s the congestion around them that makes this match feel even more decisive.

Just two points ahead of Monaco are Marseille, another Southern powerhouse, who hold second place. Two points behind are Lyon, while Lille lurk only three points back from the derby teams. The margins are razor-thin. One result could swing momentum entirely, shifting a club from leading the pack behind Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League race to the edge of missing out altogether. 

For both Monaco and Nice, this is about more than bragging rights on the Riviera. Automatic qualification for Europe’s top competition means millions in revenue, the ability to attract top players, and the validation of each club’s long-term ambitions. Slip now, and it could unravel an entire season’s work. 

That’s what makes this derby so perfectly timed. It’s not just a local rivalry; it’s a high-stakes battle playing out on the big stage, with the momentum of both projects on the line. Whichever way it goes, the outcome will ripple beyond the Riviera coastline. 

When the referee blows the whistle this weekend, it won’t just mean the end of a game. It will be another chapter in a rivalry that deserves more recognition, a derby defined by its subtlety, its culture, and its fight to remain relevant in a sport that often forgets the local in favour of the global. 

For Monaco and Nice, this is about more than Europe. It’s about proving there’s still magic and meaning in football’s regional rivalries. 


(Images from IMAGO)


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Posted by Bill Biss
FA Cup Preview: Looking ahead to an open quarterfinal draw

FA Cup Preview: Looking ahead to an open quarterfinal draw

The early exit of several big clubs has opened up this season’s FA Cup field ahead of this weekend’s quarter-finals.


By Graham Ruthven


Of the eight teams left in this season’s FA Cup, only one (Manchester City) have won it before this century. Four (Bournemouth, Brighton, Crystal Palace and Fulham) of them have never got their hands on the oldest trophy in club football. The FA Cup field is primed for an underdog to go all the way. 

Aston Villa and City remain in the competition and are the bookmakers’ favourites to add to their sizeable trophy collection, although the former last won the FA Cup in 1957. The safe money would be on Erling Haaland bludgeoning his way through the opposition to add a silver lining to Manchester City’s otherwise dull season.  

City, however, aren’t the force they were 12 months ago. Pep Guardiola’s team have already lost to Aston Villa this season. And Bournemouth. And Brighton. And Nottingham Forest. They have drawn against Palace too. In fact, the only teams left in this season’s FA Cup not to have taken points off City this season are Fulham and Preston North End. 

Forest surely fancy their chances of going the distance. Nuno Espírito Santo’s team have been the biggest surprise package of the Premier League season so far. The way things are going with Forest sitting third in the table, the famous Champions League anthem will be heard at the City Ground next season. 

FA Cup glory, however, would give Nottingham Forest their greatest day at Wembley for 65 years. Not even Brian Clough got his hands on the trophy during his time at Forest. Nuno can do something that not even the greatest manager in the club’s history achieved. Forest’s Premier League form shows they are genuine contenders.

Bournemouth are another underdog who have proved they have bite in the Premier League this season. Under Andoni Iraola, the Cherries have exceeded all expectations. They are capable of holding their own in possession, but are at their most dangerous when they have open space to attack at speed.

In Evanilson, Justin Kluivert, Antoine Semenyo and Marcus Tavernier, Bournemouth boast a fearsome frontline supported by the dynamic midfield duo of Tyler Adams and Ryan Christie. Any opponent that attempts to press high on the south coast outfit must be wary of the threat that could come at them in the other direction.

xG leaders in the FA Cup this season

Only Liverpool are averaging more shots per league match than Bournemouth this season, highlighting just how potent the Cherries are. If Iraola can balance his squad to balance the charge for European qualification and a FA Cup run, this season could culminate in something special on the south coast.

Brighton also have a good chance of bringing the trophy back to the south coast. While the Seagulls’ form has peaked and dipped at various points over the course of the campaign, Fabian Hürzeler’s side are capable of dismantling even the strongest of opponents on their day. They are on a run of just two defeats in their last 16 games in all competitions.

Brighton vs. Forest, recent form

Like Bournemouth, Brighton’s true potency is in the way they attack at speed. João Pedro and Kaoru Mitoma are their biggest difference makers in the final third, combining pace with the highest degree of technical ability. Danny Welbeck and Yankuba Minteh are also regular contributors to one of English football’s most watchable teams.

Crystal Palace can’t be discounted either. While the Eagles struggled to get going in the early part of the season, Oliver Glasner’s team now have some momentum behind them. Indeed, Palace have won nine of their last 11 games in all competitions and have fully unlocked the likes of Jean-Philippe Mateta, Eberechi Eze and Adam Wharton once more.

Then there’s Fulham who have flown under the radar somewhat this season despite sitting a lofty eighth in the Premier League table. Marco Silva’s team might not be as dynamic as the likes of Bournemouth and Brighton, but their effectiveness can’t be doubted. Raúl Jiménez could provide the firepower to make the Cottagers FA Cup winners for the first time in their history.

Jiménez’s impressive international break

In modern football, the FA Cup often struggles to find its place. Clubs at the elite level are more concerned with league and continental football. The game has moved on from the era when a day in the sunshine at Wembley was seen as the culmination of an entire season. Teams, players and managers are judged on much more than that. 

And yet the field in this season’s FA Cup means the competition surely matters more to many. Bournemouth, Brighton, Crystal Palace, Fulham and Nottingham Forest all have a legitimate shot at history. The league might be where these teams can truly prove their quality, but FA Cup glory would make them legends.


(Cover image from IMAGO)


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Posted by Bill Biss
Preview: Barcelona play rearranged fixture vs. Osasuna

Preview: Barcelona play rearranged fixture vs. Osasuna

Barcelona host Osasuna on Thursday evening in a highly controversial fixture that has prompted anger from both clubs.


By Graham Ruthven


Playing catch-up

This fixture was originally postponed earlier this month due to the death of Barca team doctor Carles Minarro Garcia.

The rearranged fixture was therefore always likely to congest the schedule for both teams, but neither are happy with the game being played so close to the international window when some players won’t be long back from national team duty.

Barca and Osasuna both failed in their appeals for the fixture to be moved, meaning the two teams faced the prospect of two games in just four days – Barcelona play Girona on Sunday with Osasuna up against Athletic Club.

Despite the scheduling controversy, Barca start the final stretch of the club season in excellent shape. They have won their last seven league games in succession and sit top of LaLiga. The Catalans are title favourites at this point.

For Osasuna, though, the hope is that the international break gave them the opportunity to reset after a six-game winless run across all competitions. 

While Vicente Moreno’s team have a six-point cushion on the relegation places, they must find form quickly to avoid being sucked into trouble near the foot of the table.

Key players

For club and country, Lamine Yamal is the brightest spark on the pitch. He proved this by scoring a crucial goal for Spain in their UEFA Nations League win over the Netherlands. The teenager will likely be Barca’s main threat against Osasuna too.

Nobody has scored more goals for Barcelona this season than Robert Lewandowski and the Polish striker is expected to lead the line for the Catalans on Thursday, although Ferran Torres could be a rotational option.

Barcelona’s top scorers in LaLiga, 2024/25

Pedri and Gavi will control the game in central midfield with Frenkie de Jong currently in good form as the midfielder who gives Barcelona a different dimension due to his eye-catching dribbling ability.

Osasuna have already beaten Barca once this season and will look to recycle the game plan that worked back in September by exploiting the Catalans’ high defensive line.

Ante Budimir netted in that match, and has 15 goals to his name in LaLiga this season. The Croatian will pose a threat once more at Montjuïc with Rubén García and Aimar Oroz two others to keep an eye on.

Team news

Ronald Araújo and Raphinha are expected to be back in the Barcelona squad, but after playing for Uruguay and Brazil respectively on Tuesday night it’s possible both players could start Thursday night’s game on the bench.

Pau Cubarsí is a doubt after picking up an ankle injury while playing for Spain in the UEFA Nations League quarter-finals. However, Iñigo Martínez is back in training after recovering from a knee issue. 

Osasuna will be without Bryan Zaragoza after the on-loan Bayern Munich winger was forced off against Getafe before the international break. 

Lucas Torro will serve a suspension while Enzo Boyomo will be in the same situation as Araújo and Raphinha having played for Cameroon earlier this week.

Prediction 

We’re expecting Barca to head in to the weekend with a three point advantage at the top of LaLiga, winning this game with a minimum of fuss, despite all the noise pre-match: Barcelona 2-0 Osasuna


(Cover image from IMAGO)


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Posted by Bill Biss in Barcelona, Osasuna, Preview, SendAsPush, team_8371, team_8634, World News
Why Liverpool are becoming Bournemouth’s most valued customers

Why Liverpool are becoming Bournemouth’s most valued customers

Are Bournemouth about to become the new Southampton? Perhaps, if Liverpool’s expected transfer business is anything to go by.


By Jack Lusby, ThisIsAnfield.com


Such was the frequency that Liverpool conducted business with Southampton in the mid-to-late 2010s that it was often joked that they should be given a loyalty card.

Five players were signed in the space of three summers, while another was attempted the next, only to be delayed by a public apology for tapping up and completed seven months later.

It may have become a running joke, but all but one of those six signings were successes, with Dejan Lovren, Adam Lallana and Nathaniel Clyne becoming important squad players and Sadio Mané and Virgil van Dijk among the best to ever represent the club.

Rickie Lambert stands out as an anomaly, the boyhood Liverpool supporter scoring three goals in 36 games in his one season at Anfield, but the club’s then-director of research Ian Graham has since described the £4 million signing as an “experiment” to test out Brendan Rodgers‘ “obsession” with signing a target man in Christian Benteke.

Nevertheless, the quips are starting again as the Reds are increasingly linked with a number of players from another south-coast club: this time, Bournemouth.

Arne Slot‘s second summer transfer window is expected to be decidedly busier than his first, when Federico Chiesa stood as the club’s only immediate signing while another deal was struck to bring Giorgi Mamardashvili in for 2025.

That includes interest in a new centre-back, a left-back and another wide forward, all of whom could feasibly be plucked from Andoni Iraola‘s Bournemouth squad.

As it stands, Liverpool’s chief target for the left-back role is Milos Kerkez, the 21-year-old Hungary international who is close friends with Dominik Szoboszlai, while there is mounting speculation over a move for Dean Huijsen, the 19-year-old Spain centre-back with a £50 million release clause.

There are further reports of interest in winger Antoine Semenyo – who terrorised Trent Alexander-Arnold in an eventual 2-0 win for Liverpool in February – amid doubts over the futures of Luis Díaz, Darwin Núñez, Diogo Jota and Mohamed Salah.

Clearly, there are similarities between the Southampton of the mid-2010s and this current Bournemouth iteration; both were upwardly mobile sides with one of the Premier League’s most talented young managers and an enviable recruitment structure.

Those at Liverpool will know that better than most, not least as Richard Hughes, their new sporting director, joined the club from Bournemouth last summer, having previously held the position of technical director at Dean Court since 2016.

Hughes brought with him chief scout Mark Burchill and Craig McKee, another scout, as part of a new-look transfer setup in the halls of Liverpool’s AXA Training Centre. Given those ties to Bournemouth, the ongoing links start to make more sense.

While Liverpool are not beholden to the opinions of only a handful of recruitment heads, instead employing a legion of scouts, analysts and data scientists to inform their decisions on signings and sales, it certainly helps that the background work has already been conducted once before on the likes of Kerkez and Huijsen.

There will be a conviction over each player’s character along with what they can offer to the side, and more so how they would fit into a particular system. Hughes, Burchill and McKee will also have a better understanding of the ceiling of those players, as Liverpool will be buying as much for the long term as they are the immediate term this summer.

The connection between the two clubs runs deeper than those new faces within Liverpool’s hierarchy, though, including a long-standing relationship between Bournemouth and Michael Edwards, now installed as Fenway Sports Group’s CEO of football.

Edwards fostered a strong bond with not only Hughes but also future Bournemouth coaches Eddie Howe and Gary O’Neil when he worked as chief analyst at Portsmouth and they were part of Harry Redknapp’s first-team squad.

The friendship remained beyond their playing days and, in their future roles as sporting director at Liverpool and technical director at Bournemouth respectively, it often saw Edwards and Hughes in contact over transfers.

That included the sales of Dominic Solanke, Jordon Ibe and Brad Smith to Bournemouth, as well as loans for Harry Wilson, Nat Phillips and Nathaniel Clyne, but also direct competition for a number of players both clubs wished to sign.

Hughes had hoped to sign Andy Robertson, Harvey Elliott and Joe Gomez only to lose out to Edwards’ Liverpool, while the latter saw interest in the likes of Lloyd Kelly, Lewis Cook and David Brooks fall short as they opted for Dean Court over Anfield.

Bournemouth may have lost the core of their recruitment setup in the summer but they are still enjoying the fruits of their labour, not least the appointment of Iraola as head coach and the squad Hughes and Co. helped build.

The Cherries sit 10th in the Premier League as the final international break of the campaign plays out, but they are only five points off fourth and can harbour genuine hopes of securing European football for the season to come.

It is an unfortunate reality that much of the squad that would lead them to the continental stage could be picked apart before they are able to experience it for the first time, but that could certainly benefit Liverpool.

Dean Huijsen player traits

In Kerkez and Huijsen in particular, Bournemouth possess two players who appear capable of making the step up to life at Anfield – and there will be testimonies to that effect on offer from those within the club.

So while there may be jibes from the outside about Bournemouth following Southampton as their next unofficial feeder club, there will be every confidence that any stamps on their new loyalty card will be a worthwhile investment for Liverpool.


(Cover image from IMAGO)


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Posted by Bill Biss
Bilal El Khannouss: One Leicester success story this season

Bilal El Khannouss: One Leicester success story this season

Leicester City got a fair few things wrong during the summer transfer window. 


By Sam McGuire


The Foxes appointed Steve Cooper to replace Enzo Maresca after the Italian tactician decided to move to Stamford Bridge to manage Chelsea. 

They also parted with a rumoured £20million fee to bring Oliver Skipp to the King Power Stadium from Spurs. We’re almost into April and the midfielder has started just seven Premier League games and has just 773 minutes to his name in the English top-flight. It wasn’t exactly money well spent. 

Caleb Okoli arrived from Atalanta, Abdul Fatawu made his loan spell from Sporting into a permanent move, while Odsonne Édouard and Facundo Buonanotte arrived on loan from Crystal Palace and Brighton respectively. The biggest deal of the summer for Leicester, though, was the one to bring Bilal El Khannouss to England. 

This one raised a few eyebrows.

Leicester’s current league position

The 20-year-old playmaker had caught the eye for KRC Genk in Belgium, the country of his birth. However, he hadn’t really done enough to justify the rumoured £21million that Leicester agreed to pay to secure his services. 

During his final season in Belgium, he scored three goals and chipped in with six assists across almost 2,200 regular season minutes. And then no further goal contributions in another 10 appearances following the league split. The Foxes weren’t paying for the finished product. They were paying for potential. It was risky on their part given they had a Championship standard squad for the most part and needed real quality if they were to retain their status as a Premier League club. 

It hasn’t gone to plan. Cooper was replaced by Ruud Van Nistelrooy and the former PSV coach appears to be out of his depth. He’s won just two matches in the Premier League in the dugout for the Foxes and they have lost 13 of their last 14 matches in the English top-flight.

El Khannouss player traits – comparison against similar players in top 5 leagues

Buonanotte and Ayew have been shrewd additions with a combined 10 goals between them. However, it is El Khannouss who is the most intriguing Leicester player this term. 

He’s found the back of the net just twice and has a single assist to his name. But his goal involvements come in the two games that the Foxes claimed all three points in under Van Nistelrooy. 

El Khannouss assisted Jamie Vardy’s opener and scored himself in a 3-1 victory over West Ham in the Dutchman’s first game in charge. He struck the winner in the 2-1 win at Spurs in January.

He caught the eye in a 2-0 loss to Manchester City, attempting the most dribbles of any player on the pitch (five) and having the highest success rate (80%). He also had a 100% tackle success rate against the reigning champions.

While his performances haven’t been enough to land him into any Team of the Season conversations, bigger teams have taken note of his work rate and quality. 

According to reports recently, Lazio are wanting to sign him for €30million this summer while RB Leipzig want to bring him in on loan, possibly to replace the departing Xavi Simons. That alone should be enough for the rest of Europe to realise he’s a talent.

RB Leipzig have an eye for final third players. 

There’s also interest in the 20-year-old from within the Premier League. Arsenal are the ‘most interested’ while league leaders Liverpool have him on their radar as they plot an attacking overhaul this summer. 

Despite his low attacking returns this term, you can understand why teams might be interested.

El Khannouss passing stats, Premier League 2024/25

In an interview with Sky Sports earlier in the year, Miguel Ribeiro, Genk’s first-team technical and individual coach, heaped praise on the young playmaker, saying: “I used to tell people that he had eyes in his back, because he sees everything. When you watch him, you see he is always checking around him and looking over his shoulders.” 

And you can see this now, even in the Premier League.

Despite Leicester’s struggles, and El Khannouss having to adapt to the rigours of the English top-flight, he’s managed to still post encouraging numbers.

El Khannouss defending stats, Premier League 2024/25

For example, this term in the Premier League, he’s completed over 60% of his attempted dribbles. He’s press resistant and a space-creator. Top teams love these profiles in their forward line. He’s also fairly accurate as a passer for someone who is a creator. He can retain possession and progress play – more boxes ticked. Without the ball, he’s a grafter. Again, this is an invaluable trait these days. For the Foxes this term, he’s won over 55% of his tackles and duels, he’s also handy in the air too despite being just 5″11′ and coming up against physical midfielders. 

He’s got potential in possession and he does what is required without the ball to fit into a top six team. If he develops as hoped, he could be another Genk academy graduate to dominate the Premier League, just like Kevin De Bruyne

Leicester’s biggest summer gamble appears to have been their most successful purchase. 


(Cover image from IMAGO)


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Posted by Bill Biss
Argentina looking to the future as they take on Brazil without Lionel Messi

Argentina looking to the future as they take on Brazil without Lionel Messi

Lionel Scaloni’s Argentina can confirm their place at the 2026 World Cup with a victory over Brazil on Tuesday night.


By Graham Ruthven


Not for the first time, Argentina needed a diminutive attacker to produce a moment of magic to win a match last week. The only difference was that it wasn’t Lionel Messi who conjured it up. Instead, it was Thiago Almada who netted a stunner to give La Albiceleste a narrow 1-0 victory in a crucial 2026 World Cup qualifier against Uruguay.

Messi watched from Miami where he is undergoing rehab for an injury picked up playing for Inter Miami before the international break. The Major League Soccer club are tight-lipped at the best of times when it comes to Messi’s fitness status and so it’s unclear whether the adductor strain will keep him out for any great period of time.

Even if Messi is back in action quickly, Argentina must look to build something in preparation for when their greatest-ever player finally calls it a day. With the 37-year-old currently sidelined, the 2022 World Cup winners will get a glimpse of what a post-Messi future will look like when they face Brazil on Tuesday night.

Against Uruguay last week, Lionel Scaloni set up his attack to play off Julián Alvarez with Almada in the left half-space and Giuliano Simeone on the right side. Argentina were happy to concede a lot of possession to open up space in quick transition with Alexis Mac Allister, Enzo Fernández and Leandro Paredes comfortable controlling the ball in the middle when they could.

Alvarez led the line for Argentina as they won the 2022 World Cup, but he has developed a lot as a centre forward since then. In Qatar, the then Manchester City player was used as something of a ‘False Nine.’ He was in the team to create space for others around him. Now, Alvarez is a difference-maker in his own right, as he has demonstrated for Atlético Madrid this season. 

Simeone is another who has made an impact for Atleti recently with the 22-year-old an irrepressible force in and out of possession. He might not be the most refined in a lot of his attacking play, but Simeone is carrying his winning mentality into the Argentinean national team. He is an asset.

Almada produced the game-winning moment, finding the back of the net with a laser from outside the box. The 23-year-old has made a good start at Lyon since making the move to Ligue 1 from Botafogo in January and is also growing in stature for Argentina. He will surely have a role to play at the 2026 World Cup.

Nico González came off the bench in the second half while Bayer Leverkusen’s Exequiel Palacios was also introduced to offer more muscle in the centre of the pitch as Argentina protected their lead. The highly-rated Nico Paz was also in the squad having caught the eye for Como in Serie A this season.

Of course, none of these players are Messi. Nobody is. If all goes well, Argentina will still be able to call on the former Barcelona number 10 next summer when La Albiceleste will be defending their title. Messi might be playing in MLS, but at his best he is still capable of winning a match at the top level. 

The concern for Scaloni must be that Messi’s recent injury record casts doubt on his ability to play high-intensity matches in quick succession. He has missed a lot of football since making the move to Inter Miami two years ago. This season, Messi has started just two out of five MLS fixtures. Last season, he started only 16 games.

For the 2026 World Cup and beyond, Scaloni must build something for Argentina that makes sense and functions with or without Messi. There are signs he is already doing this – it wasn’t just Messi who missed last week’s World Cup qualifying win over Uruguay, but Lautaro Martínez and Paulo Dybala too.

The qualifying picture ahead of Argentina vs. Brazil

“The national team is a team. When one is missing, another steps up,” explained Scaloni after Almada’s goal put Argentina on the brink of rubber-stamping World Cup qualification. “We had some very important absentees, but we have great players to go out on the field. The team is always more than just the names.”

Argentina enter Tuesday’s match against Brazil seven points clear of their rivals at the top of CONMEBOL qualifying. The Seleção have recovered after a slow start to the campaign, but Argentina are very much seen as the dominant force in the region right now. A home victory on Tuesday would further confirm this while showing La Albiceleste are looking ahead to the next generation. A generation without Messi. 


(Cover image from IMAGO)


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Posted by Bill Biss
Preview: Argentina face Brazil in the Superclasico

Preview: Argentina face Brazil in the Superclasico

South America’s two biggest footballing nations face off in the World Cup qualifiers for the first time since 2023. Argentina are without the great man himself, Lionel Messi, but Brazil are struggling to convince.


By Alex Roberts


Last week, Lionel Scaloni’s side came out 1-0 winners in their previous qualifier against Uruguay

thanks to a 68th minute goal from Lyon’s Thiago Almada, keeping them at the summit of the CONMEBOL table.

It was a mixture of magic and luck that spared Brazilian blushes in their 2-1 win over Colombia. Deep in to stoppage time, Vinícius Júnior struck a hopeful shot from around 20 yards out, it took a deflection off Jefferson Lerma and ended up in the back of the net.

The top six qualify for the 2026 World Cup, with the 7th placed team entering the intercontinental playoff

The elephant in the room

Argentina have plenty of attacking talent, but a lack of Messi would be detrimental for any club or international side, no matter his age. He was ruled out of this one after picking up a groin injury during Inter Miami’s 2-1 MLS win over Atlanta United.

With Lautaro Martínez a major doubt, having missed the win over Uruguay with a hamstring issue, Julián Alvarez has been given the opportunity to be Argentina’s main attacking threat for this international break.

He impressed last time out, providing the assist for Almada’s winner. Messi won’t be there forever, and it will take more than one player to replace him, but Alvarez has it in him to become a major player for the World Cup holders.

Blocking out the haters

Brazil boss Dorival Júnior has had plenty of critics, most notably from the likes of Ronaldinho, but he was bullish after their win over Colombia, saying “time puts everyone in their place.”

Dorival’s side were undoubtedly better than Colombia in their game, but they didn’t exactly dominate. An early penalty and some Vini Jr. magic have done little to calm the voices of discontent, and Argentina are a different beast all together.

It would take a monumentally huge collapse for the five-time World Champions to not qualify for the 2026 tournament, they currently sit third with 21 points from their 13 games. 

It’s what they’ll do when they get there that has people concerned.

Argentina’s new generation

Scaloni appears to be looking to the future, calling Bologna duo Santiago Castro and Benjamín Domínquez up to the senior team for the first time in their young careers. Neither have made an appearance… yet, but the chance to train at the highest level is just as important.

Como wonderkid Nico Paz received the call last year, providing an assist in Argentina’s 6-0 win over Bolivia. Like the other two, opportunities have been hard to come by, but time is on his side.

Whether any of them feature against Brazil is the big question. Their inclusion proves Scaloni know he can’t rely on the old guard for much longer. Their win in Qatar proved how close-knit the side were, taking time over any potential rebuild may not be such a bad thing.

Raphinha is a new man

Few could have predicted the season Raphinha would have. He’s been tearing it up for Hansi Flick’s free-scoring Barcelona side, and that incredible form is translating on the international stage too.

He was the man of the match in the win over Colombia, and he’s Brazil’s top goal scorer and assist provider in their qualification campaign so far. Dorival Júnior isn’t exactly known for the Joga Bonito that made Brazil virtually invincible in the early 2000s, but he’s given the former Leeds man a chance to shine.

Argentina’s defence is aging, they still have Nicolás Otamendi knocking about. Of course, experience is important, but having Raphinha running at you in the form he’s in would be a test for the very best.

Raphinha during qualifying

Prediction

Matches between these two countries are usually a lot cagier than many may think, it’s a massive rivalry and neither side ever wants to lose. That being said, we reckon this one will be a 1-1 draw.


(Cover image from IMAGO)


You can follow every game from the CONMEBOL World Cup qualifiers with FotMob this season – featuring deep stats coverage and player ratings. Download the free app here.

Posted by Bill Biss in Argentina, Brazil, Preview, SendAsPush, team_6706, team_8256, World News
Why Thiago Motta’s sacking is the tip of the iceberg for Juventus

Why Thiago Motta’s sacking is the tip of the iceberg for Juventus

Thiago Motta lasted less than a season at Juventus. His stint had a memorable European win, some solid defensive performances, a record number of league draws, a misfiring attack, and ended with heavy defeats to Atalanta and Fiorentina.


By Kaustubh Pandey


While Motta wasn’t blameless in the swift curtailment of his time with the Old Lady, due to his inflexibility, and faltering relationship with multiple players, Juventus find themselves at a very familiar juncture in their history.

Not too long ago, they had embarked on similar journeys under Maurizio Sarri and Andrea Pirlo. This, in turn, had happened right after Max Allegri’s first spell with the club ended with the board promising a modernisation that was cut-short on both occasions and Allegri returned to the club after a couple of seasons. 

In a way, Motta’s dismissal is a similar, but uglier tale. The club has briefed against him constantly and has villainised the ex-midfielder up until his sacking, suggesting their are other factors at play, and Motta’s situation is only the tip of the iceberg at the Bianconeri.

Juventus’ lack of direction

Juve operate in the tight financial regime of Serie A and considering their recent point deductions, they have to be extra cautious about their finances. All of that means that Champions League money is very important for Juventus and qualification is an immediate need for any new manager coming in.

A lot of times though, managers like Motta (who are ‘project’ managers and build for the long-term) take a fair amount of time to make the team their own. In this case, Juve were playing a completely different brand of football under Allegri and they made a quick jump to Motta, who preaches a more attacking brand of football.

That process always takes time and that is the risk that comes with hiring ‘project’ managers. That risk – as seen from examples at Milan and Roma – can cost Champions League qualification, which limits the budget going into the next season.

Managers like Allegri or Stefano Pioli are problem solvers and they adapt to situations extremely well. Pioli won Serie A with a not-so-great Milan side and Allegri helped Juve to the Coppa Italia as recently as last season and helped them through a very difficult campaign impacted by a points deduction. They are the textbook managers who can solve an immediate need and help improve sustainability, bringing little risk of missing out on Champions League.

But Juve are confused. They want to modernise and perhaps replicate the Atalanta model, but they barely have the patience to do so. The last few seasons show that. Perhaps, this is the time for them to buy into one model completely.

Were Juventus’ transfers Motta’s transfers?

While Juve’s PR line when signing new players is always that the incoming is the manager’s preferred signing, that isn’t always the case.

Teun Koopmeiners was being looked at by Juve throughout 2024 before he joined. Quite the same was the case with Khéphren Thuram. While Douglas Luiz joined from Aston Villa, it was a deal based on financial convenience as moving on Enzo Barrenechea and Samuel Iling-Junior gave them wiggle room in the market. 

Throughout the season, there have been no signs that Motta knows how to use Luiz and Koopmeiners.

Later, Lloyd Kelly, Renato Veiga and Alberto Costa joined at the time of a defensive injury crisis. Those moves were made quickly as they filled obvious gaps in the backline after injuries to Bremer and Juan Cabal

Beyond that, there is the question of breakout Bournemouth star Dean Huijsen being forced out of the club and Nicolo Fagioli suffering the same fate, despite impressing under Motta. Quite the same happened with Fabio Miretti, who is performing well at Genoa. Matías Soulé was also sold to Roma.

Dean Huijsen player traits – with comparison against similar players in the top five leagues

It can’t be a coincidence that all the club’s youth products – including Iling-Junior and Barrenechea were moved on at the same time. They were financial decisions made to earn capital gains and were barely managerial decisions. That is the reality Juve operate in and this problem will impact whoever signs on as the next manager too.

An untrustworthy dressing room?

Even though Motta is to be blamed for failing to control the squad dynamics, the Juve dressing room is full of instability.

Youth graduates Kenan Yıldız and Samuel Mbangula are constantly mentioned by the local press (that is often briefed by Juve) as for sale at the right price. Similar has happened for Andrea Cambiaso, who was linked with Manchester City.

It has also become clear that Juve painted a picture that the squad wasn’t happy with Motta. Whether that is true or not is a different point, but the club barely backed their own manager. Even if the players weren’t happy, that is often not a good sign at all.

Motta had to change captaincy multiple times during the season as he failed to trust players or vice versa. It became obvious that there is definitely an issue between the two parties. All of these problems can become major in the space of just a few months and after a point, it comes down to the culture that a club’s ownership imposes over a team. 

A culture of instability will make every individual insecure at the club, things will turn messy, and that will cost many managers their job.

There are bigger things to worry about than Motta and as time goes by, Juventus fans will see them out in the open.


(Cover image from IMAGO)


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Posted by Bill Biss
Liverpool are still missing Sadio Mane

Liverpool are still missing Sadio Mane

While Liverpool are tasked with a revamp of their attack this summer and perhaps even replacing their main source of goals, the fact remains that they are still yet to even replace Sadio Mané.


By Jack Lusby, ThisIsAnfield.com


Mohamed Salah has been by far the most influential player in this season’s Premier League, leading the top flight for goals (27), assists (17), big chances created (21) and xG and xA per 90 minutes (1.02).

No player has scored more match-winning goals (nine), while the Egyptian has by far the most involvement in his team’s goals, with 63.8 percent either scored or assisted by Liverpool’s No. 11.

That not only sums up how remarkable Salah’s form has been throughout a campaign that has cemented the Reds as champions-elect, but also the burden on his shoulders to drag them to the title.

Mohamed Salah’s shot map, Premier League 2024/25

No other Liverpool player has scored 10 or more goals in this season’s Premier League, with Salah’s fellow forwards Luis Díaz (nine) and Cody Gakpo (eight) the only others to even net five or more. Across all competitions their output of 13 and 16 goals each is more respectable, but five of Gakpo’s came in the fourth-priority Carabao Cup.

While it may be something of a rarity, the last time Liverpool had a genuine share of goals between two or more players was when they last lifted the Premier League title in 2019/20 – Salah with 19 and Sadio Mané with 18.

The season before that, Salah and Mané were tied with 22 league goals apiece, with the pair sharing the Golden Boot with Arsenal striker Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang in only the third time the award has been held by three players at once.

Premier League top scorers, 2018/19 season

Barring a miraculous run in the final nine games of the season, neither Gakpo or Díaz – nor Darwin Núñez or Diogo Jota, for that matter – will come close to even troubling the top five in this season’s Golden Boot race.

That is not to denigrate their input, of course, as all of Liverpool’s five most established senior forwards have had their part to play in an outstanding campaign – but such an unbalanced spread of goals is not tenable season in, season out.

It is a dynamic shift which Arne Slot will be forced to deal with, particularly if Salah himself opts to depart Anfield at the end of the season.

Which brings the focus back to Salah’s old partner-in-crime in attack, Mané, a player whom he shared far from the most amiable relationship at times on the pitch but certainly found a fierce understanding as part of the best attacking trio in the world.

Roberto Firmino‘s influence on Jürgen Klopp’s Liverpool was almost unparalleled and it is widely acknowledged that the club have yet to replace the No. 9, but it is equally clear that they have failed to replace Mané as the clutch player alongside Salah.

During Liverpool’s title-winning season of 2019/20, Salah was only responsible for 34.1 percent of his team’s goals – with 12 players, led by Norwich’s Teemu Pukki, more relied upon. That was largely due to Mané contributing with another 29.4 percent of their goals and assists. This season, Díaz has contributed to 18.8 percent as Liverpool’s second-highest.

Mané’s career history, including Liverpool summary

There were big moments from the Senegalese, not least seven match-winning goals in that league campaign – behind only Raúl Jimenez and Gabriel Jesus (both eight) and equal to both Salah and Firmino – as he became a flat-track bully of sides such as Newcastle, Aston Villa, Wolves, Norwich, West Ham and Bournemouth.

His brave header in the fourth minute of stoppage time in a 2-1 win over Villa was considered the moment that truly kickstarted Liverpool’s title charge.

Salah (45) and Steven Gerrard (30) are the only players to score more Champions League goals for the club than Mané (24), with the pair having made at least 18 more appearances in the competition each.

In fact only 14 players in Liverpool’s history have found the back of the net more often than Mané’s 120 goals in 269 games. Post-war, with records more reliable and the sport drastically changed, he would be in the top 10 behind only Ian Rush, Roger Hunt, Salah, Billy Liddell, Gerrard, Robbie Fowler, Kenny Dalglish and Michael Owen.

Those names are among the most esteemed in the club’s history, but it is rare that Mané’s is spoken in the same breath.

That may be as he found himself overshadowed by Salah, or perhaps as there was more of a parity between him, Salah and Firmino; it may be due a lack of attachment after his departure to Bayern Munich or the downturn he has experienced since.

But the difficulty Liverpool have faced in adequately replacing the player who once wore their No. 10 shirt should sum up how important he was to their success.

“He’s the one player I have played with who I have thought I am glad I don’t have to play against him,” Trent Alexander-Arnold told Gary Neville in an interview for The Overlap last year.

“He was the perfect attacker. He had everything. As an athlete, probably in the end he was similar to Ronaldo. He had the jump, he could get up, he was fast, he could finish. His finishing probably wasn’t the same but he could finish with both feet. He was just a threat at all times.”

Mané’s current season in Saudi Arabia

Mané possessed a bullish attacking threat and an assured two-footedness that allowed him to trouble sides from either flank and, towards the end of his time at Anfield, as a central striker. As Alexander-Arnold attests, he became as dangerous in the air as he was on the ground, while his pace on the counter was a major part of Klopp’s setup.

For a time, it seemed as though Díaz could offer the same maverick quality, but two serious injuries to the same knee appear to have sapped the Colombian of either his confidence or that unpredictability in one-on-one situations.

It is also fair to say that Liverpool are still yet to find another attacker as ruthless as Mané; as willing and capable of charging down lost causes; as decisive around in the 18-yard box.

Slot has, of course, opted for a different mould of left winger in Gakpo, whose ability to cut inside onto his right and test goalkeepers with phenomenal shooting power has drawn understandable comparisons with Arjen Robben.

But there remains a hole in the Liverpool squad where Mané’s attributes used to be, and ahead of a summer that could see a number of attackers leave – with question marks over Díaz, Núñez and Jota’s future along with Salah’s contract – it would be wise for the club to target a player with the same relentless quality.

Whether that is possible is, of course, another matter – as Mané’s focal role in Liverpool modern-day success should be more widely acknowledged. A legend who still has not been replaced.


(Cover image from IMAGO)


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Posted by Bill Biss
Preview: England take on Latvia in Thomas Tuchel’s second Wembley test

Preview: England take on Latvia in Thomas Tuchel’s second Wembley test

England should be able to run up a comfortable win against a Latvia team who’ve been out of form for years.


By Ian King


The road to 2026 continues

The Tuchel Era is upon us. The new England manager kicked off his spell in charge (and bid for a place at the 2026 World Cup finals) with a workmanlike 2-0 win against Albania on Friday night. A win is a win, and the manager was forthcoming about his team’s shortcomings afterwards. Latvia started theirs with a 1-0 win in Andorra, but more broadly their form has been wretched. Andorra, the Faroe Islands, Armenia, Liechtenstein and Moldova are the only teams they’ve beaten in the last four years.

Tuchel’s first game

First ever meeting

This is the first time that England have ever played Latvia, whose football association was originally set up in 1922 but who had a break of 50 years before reforming in 1990 as the country gained independence from the Soviet Union. The England women’s team beat the Latvia women’s team 20-0 in 2021 in a World Cup qualifier.

Key players

If there was one thing that England were missing on Friday night it was goals, and Latvia’s lowly position should give Tuchel the opportunity to let his players run wild a little. If he starts again – and he was withdrawn against Albania – Marcus Rashford increasingly feels like a player who could really do with a goal after nine appearances for Aston Villa without one, though it should be added that he’s certainly come close and that his performances since his loan have broadly been decent. 

There’s not much celebrity to be found in the Latvia team. They only have one UK-based player, and that’s defender Daniels Balodis of St Johnstone, who signed for them at the end of the January transfer window. Their top goalscorer is Jānis Ikaunieks of RFS. He’s scored 12 goals for them in 64 appearances, and he’s one of just two players in their squad to have reached double figures alongside fellow striker Vladislavs Gutkovskis, who’s scored 11 in 51.

Team News

Anthony Gordon was the player who replaced Rashford on Friday night, only to limp away himself and subsequently be withdrawn from the squad. Whether that means Rashford gets another start is open to question, but it’s hardly as though Tuchel is short of attacking options as a replacement and an opportunity may have opened up for Morgan Rogers, who was introduced at the same time as Gordon on Friday night, to be thrown into the mix. Latvia emerged from their trip to Andorra with no fresh injury concerns.

Prediction

Thomas Tuchel survived his first test as the England manager and Latvia should be more comfortable opponents than Albania were. He may choose to rest several players from that match, and as ever getting the result in the first place has to be the priority. But Latvia are ranked 140th in the current FIFA rankings while England are ranked 4th, and a 4-0 win absolutely shouldn’t be beyond the home side, and it could be more.


(Cover image from IMAGO)


You can follow every game from the UEFA World Cup qualifiers with FotMob this season – featuring deep stats coverage, xG, and player ratings. Download the free app here.

Posted by Bill Biss in England NT, Preview, SendAsPush, team_8491, World News