Last Weekend: Haaland delivers a Hammerblow, Bayern start with six while PSG fire five

Last Weekend: Haaland delivers a Hammerblow, Bayern start with six while PSG fire five

It’s safe to say that football is back in full swing now, with three of Europe’s top-five leagues starting their 2022/23 season along with a raft of other competitions. We will be going over some of the meaningful matches in this edition of Last Weekend.


🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 England: West Ham United 0-2 Manchester City

The Premier League threw up a number of surprising results this weekend, most notably Fulham’s draw with Liverpool and Brighton’s first-ever win at Old Trafford. Our focus, however, will be on the defending champions Manchester City, who came away with a relatively comfortable win at West Ham.

The star of the show was their new striker Erling Haaland, who won and converted a penalty in the first half before going on to add a second after the hour mark. In doing so, he highlighted how he solves two of Manchester City’s ‘problems’ from last season.

The first is the issue of spot-kicks. Last season, they had four different takers in normal time, across all competitions, and it is safe to say that none really established themselves.. Haaland, on the other hand, netted every penalty he took in 2021/22 and that streak continued on Sunday with a pinpoint finish to the bottom corner.

More pertinently, the Norwegian international changes the dynamic of how Manchester City approach open games. Last season, they generally looked to control and slow down games where they had the lead and the opposition were pushing for an equaliser because if the match became an end-to-end affair, they had no one to make runs in behind and get on the end of counterattacking moves. With Haaland, though, they grabbed a second just minutes after West Ham started to come out of their shell, with the ex-Dortmund striker fed by an inch-perfect through ball from Kevin De Bruyne.

Another intriguing aspect of Manchester City’s performance was their tactical tweaks, in possession, to accommodate Haaland. Pep Guardiola is no stranger to inverted full-backs, and he took this concept to extreme lengths by asking Kyle Walker and João Cancelo to tuck in close to the centre circle, often leaving Rodri to drop in between the centre-backs to create a 3-2-5 shape, with the two other midfielders pushing forward and the wingers hugging the touchline.

This was the big question – how long it would take Manchester City to accommodate Haaland – and it appears that the answer is no time at all.

🇩🇪 Germany: Eintracht Frankfurt 1-6 Bayern München

Pessimism was at an all-time low in Germany following the Bundesliga opener on Friday, which saw record champions Bayern Munich utterly thrash Europa League holders Eintracht Frankfurt.

Leading up to the match, there was some excitement and anticipation for the season as Borussia Dortmund seemed to have strengthened in the transfer window, while Bayern had changed a bit following the departure of star striker Robert Lewandowski, so there was some uncertainty around their attack.

Julian Nagelsmann’s side put all doubts to bed in emphatic fashion with a five-star first half showing centred around fluidity up front – which was something that they did not have with Lewandowski in the mix. On this occasion, new signing Sadio Mané partnered Serge Gnabry up top with Jamal Musiala and Thomas Müller operating just behind them.

The movements and positional rotations of this quartet really dizzied the Eintracht Frankfurt defence. Each member of the quartet registered two goal involvements, while the debutant Mané got a goal for himself.

After a terrific first half where the away side mounted a five-goal lead, they could afford to take their foot off the gas for the second period and cruise to victory. While it is far too early to reach any conclusions about the season, this has to be considered a statement victory from Bayern Munich.

🇫🇷 France: Clermont Foot 0-5 PSG

Things are not looking much better in France, where defending champions Paris Saint-Germain put five past Clermont Foot in their first match of the league season, just a week after beating Nantes 4-0 in the Trophée des Champions.

Christophe Galtier named an unchanged starting line-up, so we were treated to the fluidity of the front three of Pablo Sarabia, Lionel Messi and Neymar once again. The Brazilian international was the standout performer of the match as he thrived in a narrower role in the left half-space, for which PSG’s new manager deserves credit. By using a back-three system which relies on the wing-backs to provide attacking width, Galtier enabled Neymar to have a greater involvement in the match in a more central position, as is evidenced by the fact that he managed 67 touches on the night.

Neymar played a part in four of his side’s goals, scoring the first, and setting up the subsequent three. Indeed, it was his creativity that particularly shone, as his statistics from the match show.

His old friend Messi did not want to miss out on the fun, so he bagged a late brace that included an overhead kick, to cap things off rather nicely.

Not only are PSG playing some superb football on the pitch, but their transfer business led by new sporting director Luis Campos also seems to be very clever. They recently signed Renato Sanches from Lille, and are being strongly linked with a move for Fabián Ruiz from Napoli. With that level of talent in their squad with a manager who knows how to use it, the league will surely be theirs again come the end of the season.

🇵🇹 Portugal: Santa Clara 0-0 Casa Pia

The Liga Portugal got back underway this weekend, and there were lots of interesting results to talk about. Last season’s top two, Porto and Benfica, won their respective matches by a four-goal margin, while Sporting and Braga took part in a thrilling 3-3 draw.

So, we have obviously picked out a goalless match, which saw Casa Pia make the long journey to the Azores to face Santa Clara. While most sides do not look forward to this journey, Casa Pia and their fans had been looking forward to this fixture for a long time because this was their first top-flight league match in 83 years.

The last time Casa Pia were in the topmost division of Portuguese football was the 1938/39 season when the league was called the Primeira Divisão and there were just eight teams competing in it. A certain FC Porto won their second league title that season, while Casa Pia themselves finished rock bottom, avoiding defeat in just one of their 14 matches.

They have already matched that record this time around and probably should have had more than a point from this long trip out to the mid-Atlantic. They missed a penalty in the 10th minute of the match, and even thereafter, continued to look threatening as they outshot their opponents.

Nonetheless, this was a very promising performance and result for Casa Pia. Next up for them: A visit from giants Benfica in an all-Lisbon clash. Unfortunately, though, it will not be played in their home stadium, the Estádio Pina Manique, as it does not meet the capacity requirements. Their first true home match, therefore, will be in two weeks’ time against Boavista.

🇮🇹 Italy: Hellas Verona 1-4 Bari

Over in Italy, the Serie A season does not start until next weekend, but the initial rounds of the Coppa Italia have been taking place over the past couple of weeks. Some top-flight clubs were involved in the Round of 64 including Hellas Verona, who hosted Serie B newcomers Bari.

This was the first competitive match for the hosts’ new head coach Gabriele Cioffi, who succeeded Igor Tudor following the Croatian tactician’s move to Marseille. Things started off pretty well for him as Kevin Lasagna drew first blood in the 16th minute, but Michael Folorunsho equalised for the away side at the half-hour mark.

After that, it was the Walid Cheddira show. The 24-year-old striker, who bagged a brace against Padova in the previous round, put Bari in front just before half-time. He would go on to net two more goals in the second half to complete a memorable hat-trick, with Davide Farioni’s sending-off sealing Hellas’ fate.

The Coppa Italia format is often criticised for being tougher for lower-league sides, but Bari will hope to be outliers to that fact when they face Parma in October with a spot in the Round of 16 on the line.

🇨🇭 Switzerland: FC Zürich 0-3 Sion

On the opening weekend of the Swiss Super League season, we highlighted FC Zürich’s hefty defeat against Young Boys. Well, things have gone from bad to significantly worse for the defending Swiss champions – they are currently the only side in Europe to sit bottom of their league after lifting the title in the previous edition.

More worryingly, they are the only team in the history of the Swiss Super League to have failed to score in each of the first four rounds of fixtures. In fact, this holds true even as you look back to the Swiss top-flight all the way to the 1940s, after which data availability becomes limited. The point is: FC Zürich have had a monumentally poor start to the league campaign.

Their loss to Sion highlighted this, as they looked flat for large periods of the match against a side that had the second-worst defence in the league last season, based on goals conceded. At the other end, they shipped three goals to the side that had the second-worst attack in the league, based on goals scored.

It is very early in the season, but FC Zürich will already be contemplating parting ways with new manager Franco Foda, who is largely responsible for this, as he has been tinkering with formations and tactics from match to match and failing to give his team any real identity. Following his disappointing campaign with Austria in Euro 2020, this is not a good look for the 56-year-old German.


Written by Neel Shelat.

Cover Image from IMAGO

Posted by Bill Biss
Premier League Review: The biggest stories of the opening weekend

Premier League Review: The biggest stories of the opening weekend

The return of the Premier League this weekend saw shock results, dazzling debuts, a host of eye-catching performances, and no scoreless matches. But what were the biggest talking points?


By Sam McGuire, our new Premier League expert


Premier League, meet Darwin Núñez

Championship champions Fulham stunned Liverpool at Craven Cottage in a game that finished 2-2. Though the Reds had the majority of the ball – finishing the match having had 67% possession – the hosts dominated the tempo and the space. Fulham limited Liverpool to an expected goals haul of just 0.11 in those opening 45 minutes. 

And then Jürgen Klopp introduced Darwin Núñez. He wanted to fight fire with fire having seen what Aleksandar Mitrović, Fulham’s powerhouse centre-forward, did to his team. 

A £65million summer signing from Benfica, the 23-year-old changed the game. He racked up four shots – the most in the match – in a 45-minute cameo and created two chances, finishing the match with a goal and an assist. 

Liverpool’s expected goals total in the second half was 1.12, really highlighting how, yet again, Klopp’s decision to unleash the chaos maker paid dividends. It is only a matter of time before he will be leading the line for the Premier League title hopefuls.

Manchester City’s inevitability

It took Erling Haaland just 36 minutes to open his Premier League account for the reigning champions. The 22-year-old earned and scored the penalty in the first half and then raced through after the break to calmly curl the ball past Alphonse Areola. 

On another day, he comes away from the London Stadium with the match ball having taken five shots – the second most of any player this weekend. The Norway international missed two decent chances from within the six-yard box. The second of these efforts arrived just five minutes after he had made it a double. 

Perhaps the biggest surprise was what Haaland was doing in the build-up. One of the concerns following his arrival from Borussia Dortmund was how the ruthless goalscorer would adapt to Man City’s patient approach. 

Yet against West Ham, the City No. 9 found a teammate with 91% of his passes and the team average was 93%. He seamlessly slotted in and that can only be a bad thing for everybody else.

Brighton gatecrash Erik ten Haag’s Old Trafford debut

Manchester United had lost just one of their pre-season outings heading into this match. Ten Hag had managed to bolster his ranks with the signings of Lisandro Martínez and Tyrell Malacia – both of whom started against Brighton. 

Prior to kick-off, the home crowd would have been confident and hopeful. Yet 30 seconds into the match, they might have felt a little differently after Leandro Trossard pressed Diogo Dalot, dispossessed him and then lashed a left-footed effort into David De Gea’s side netting. 

That was a sign of things to come as Graham Potter’s men flew out of the blocks and aggressively pursued the hosts. 

Potter stuck with his 3-4-3 system but went with two wingers in the wing-back roles as opposed to converted full-backs, with Solly March being deployed on the right and Trossard on the left. It is a subtle tweak but it makes a big difference. 

They took up positive off-the-ball positions in high and wide areas which allowed Adam Lallana and Pascal Groß to overload central positions while supporting Danny Welbeck. It was a first-half blitz and it worked so well with 86% of their expected goals total coming in those opening 45 minutes. 

The Third Spurs Threat

Heading into the game against Southampton, all eyes would have been on Heung-Min Son and Harry Kane. The former claimed the Golden Boot last season alongside Mohamed Salah having netted a career-high 23 goals. 

Kane scored 17 times and notched a further nine assists in a season that went somewhat under the radar due to the exploits of his teammate.  

Spurs came from a goal behind to record a 4-1 win but neither Kane or Son got on the scoresheet for Antonio Conte’s men. 

In fact, the star of the show on Saturday was Dejan Kulusevski. The 22-year-old finished with a goal and an assist to continue his blistering form for the Premier League side following the loan switch from Juventus. 

He now has six goals and nine assists in the English top-flight in just 1,353 minutes. Kulusevski could prove to be the difference-maker for Spurs this season if teams look to thwart Son and Kane. 


(Images from IMAGO)


You can follow every match from the 2022/23 Premier League season live with FotMob — featuring deep stats coverage including shot maps, xG, and player ratings. Download the free app here.

Posted by Bill Biss
This Weekend: The Premier League, Bundesliga and Ligue 1 all return

This Weekend: The Premier League, Bundesliga and Ligue 1 all return

The best action to follow this weekend


By Bill Biss

Saturday

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 People react in one of two ways when you mention that the Premier League starts this weekend – there are those who express relief that big club football is ‘finally’ back and those who are in shock that the summer break is over so soon. There’s no in-between.

Here at FotMob we know that football never really stops but a new season is always to be celebrated. And after Crystal Palace and Arsenal kick-off the campaign on Friday evening there are six games to look forward to on Saturday. They include the early kick-off, where Jürgen Klopp takes his Liverpool side to Fulham, who are once again back in the top flight after their Championship triumph back in May.

Amongst the afternoon kick-offs – Spurs, and their replenished squad, meet Southampton and there’s the much anticipated return of Nottingham Forest who play Newcastle United in their first Premier League game of the 21st century. The evening fixture sees Thomas Tuchel clash with Chelsea legend Frank Lampard, at Goodison Park, a ground where the (London) Blues have lost their last four games.

🇩🇪 The Bundesliga season also gets underway this weekend and after the fanfare of the big Friday night battle between Europa League champions Eintracht Frankfurt and 10-time league holders Bayern München, the fixture Gods have laid on some more treats for us.

Perennial runners-up Borussia Dortmund begin, at home, with a massive test against the side who finished just behind them in third last season – Bayer Leverkusen. There were contrasting fortunes for both sides in last weekend’s DFB Pokal games with Dortmund easing past third tier opposition whilst Leverkusen lost to a side from the same division.

As if that wasn’t enough – there is also the small matter of the Berlin Derby! One of Germany’s biggest fixtures was only guaranteed when Hertha rescued themselves from relegation in the play-off at the end of the last campaign. They go to a Union side still on a high after their 5th placed finish and qualification for the Europa League group stages.

🇫🇷 Ligue 1 is the third of Europe’s big five leagues returning this weekend and Saturday’s main game of note comes as reigning champions PSG, now led by former Lille and Nice coach Christophe Galtier, start their title defence at relative minnows Clermont. The side from the Massif Central just managed to survive last season – finishing four points above the relegation zone in what was their first ever season at this level.

🏆 Saturday is also a big day for African football with an all-Moroccan tie in the CAF Super Cup. Wydad, who won the CAF Champions League with a victory over record winners Al Ahly feature against RS Berkane. The Orange Boys are based away from the footballing hotspot of Casablanca so will no doubt be massive underdogs against the might of Wydad – in fact, they’ve never actually won their domestic league, finishing sixth to Wydad’s title win last time out. But they did pull-off a highly credible defence of their CAF Confederations Cup title meaning they’ve won the competition in back-to-back seasons. You can expect an excellent atmosphere for this one.

🇳🇱 Back in Europe, the start of the Eredivisie follows last weekend’s crazy 5-3 win for PSV over Ajax in the Johan Cruyff Shield – the Dutch Super Cup. Ruud van Nistelrooy will be looking to continue that form as his PSV side play newly promoted FC Emmen whilst Ajax will need to pick themselves up for the trip south to Fortuna Sittard.

🇮🇹 We have to wait another week for league action in Italy but there will be a number of Serie A sides involved in Coppa Italia action over the weekend. In fact, all but last season’s top eight sides will compete at this, the Round of 64 stage. Perhaps one of the most interesting games involves ambitious Serie B club Como who play away at Spezia. Following bankruptcy and reformation the side boast former England international and Chelsea captain Dennis Wise as their CEO and made news this week with the signing of Cesc Fàbregas, who also became a minority owner of the club.


Sunday

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 The opening round of the Premier League continues at pace with the three remaining games all falling on Sunday. After a week in which off-field matters and player discipline have grabbed the headlines, the Eric Ten Haag-era starts in earnest as Manchester United face Brighton, at Old Trafford. Kicking off at the same time will be Leicester’s game against Brentford, providing us with a first opportunity to get used to the idea that after 11 years, Kasper Schmeichel is no longer going to be in goal for the Foxes!

And last but not least, the Champions Manchester City get underway at the London Stadium. West Ham and City last met in the penultimate game of last season – a match in which West Ham led 2-0 and gave Liverpool hope of stealing the title, only for City to comeback in the second half, and claim a valuable 2-2 draw.

🚨 Next up, a selection of European derbies to whet your whistle! In round two of the Scottish Premiership season, Edinburgh clubs Hibernian and Hearts will look to maintain their 100% start to the campaign, with a win against their bitterest rivals.

And in Denmark where both the reigning champions FC København and the previous league winners, and city rivals, Brøndby have started poorly – a victory in the Derby could kickstart 2022/23 for either club.

Switzerland’s big two – Basel and Young Boys also go toe-to-toe with both presumably still reeling from the unusual end to last season which saw neither of them win the Super League for the first time since 2009!

🇫🇷 Back in Ligue 1, some of PSG’s title rivals will get their season started with important home games, with Marseille playing Stade de Reims, and Lille facing Auxerre – the side who sealed a dramatic promotion by beating top flight Saint Etienne in the play-offs.

L’OM, who never seem far from the next disaster, lost their coach Jorge Sampaoli over the summer with the Argentinian walking away from the club due to a perceived lack of ambition from the owners in the transfer market. They are now led by the Croatian Ivor Tudor who has already been quoted in the press as saying his players don’t work hard enough.

🇩🇪 There are two games to tell you about in Germany as RB Leipzig feature in the day’s early kick-off – away at Stuttgart – who only escaped relegation on the final day of last season. And later, Schalke 04 will look to mark their return to the Bundesliga with a win at Europa Conference League qualifiers FC Köln.

After spending 30 years in the top flight Schalke finished rock bottom of the league in 2021 but bounced straight back as the deserved champions of a highly competitive 2. Bundesliga at the first attempt.

🤝 Lastly for this weekend, watch out for the Joan Gamper Trophy, an exhibition mach in which Barcelona traditionally welcome fans back to Camp Nou ahead of each new league season. Roma were originally the invited guests but José Mourinho further damaged his reputation at his former employers when his side later pulled out.

Instead, Pumas UNAM are visiting all the way from Mexico! With one win and five draws to their name in the current Liga MX season the famous University side fly halfway around the world for this game in between fixtures against fellow Mexican giants Monterrey and Club América. The game does of course allow Dani Alves to be reunited with the side he just left a few months ago. Since joining Pumas, the 39-year-old has played two full games, and marked his debut with an assist.


If you want to follow any of the games mentioned above, click on the relevant link and tap the bell icon to receive all the key match updates.

Or join us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to discuss all the important football going on this weekend!

Cover Image from IMAGO

Posted by Bill Biss
Look ahead to the new Bundesliga season with FotMob

Look ahead to the new Bundesliga season with FotMob

It’s time for one of the most unique smells in world football to return, heavy hops mixed with the sweet chargrilled smell of Wurst as you walk to a stadium is very much, and unmistakably, German – as is the atmosphere. The Bundesliga bangs back on Friday night but will this campaign end differently than the last 10? It just might you know.


By Chris Williams, our new Bundesliga expert


New Look Bayern

Bayern are the perennial holders of the Meisterschale, a straight 10 championships has made the silver salad bowl theirs, much to the dismay of those who wish to challenge. 

But, there are changes afoot in Säbener Straße. Robert Lewandowski has departed for Barcelona, and he’s taken with him the remarkable stat of a goal every 100 minutes while in the Bundesliga; 384 games resulted in 312 goals with 75 assists as well as a number of long-standing records falling to his sheer ability to find the net. 

‘Hurrah’ shouts everyone outside Munich.  Well, maybe not so loud so soon. The Poland international has been replaced by Sadio Mané, who arrives from Liverpool having won every trophy possible while at Anfield, scoring some important goals along the way.

The 30-year-old can play in all of the forward areas and has started to evolve from a wide threat into a lethal striker who can lead the line. As proven by his display in the German Supercup last weekend, Mané not only scored on his debut but could have had a hattrick if not for two close offside calls which ruled out a duo of further strikes.

His positional play was superb, as was his linkup with Jamal Musiala and Serge Gnabry. The trio posted the highest Fotmob ratings after the match, Musiala topped the Bayern charts with an 8.6 while his attacking teammates posted an 8.2 apiece. 

Bayern look hot going forward, but interestingly – still weak at the back to a well-organised attack. The opening month will tell us a lot about how May 2023 might look.

A Hero Returns

The Friday night opener often pits the Champions against a tasty team, and this season sees Europa League holders, Eintracht Frankfurt welcome Bayern into town.

Make no mistake, Eintracht should challenge for the league, but anyone who saw them last time out will know that their European exploits were at odds with domestic performances.

However, the Eagles shocked almost everyone in June when they announced that World Cup winning hero Mario Götze would return to Germany dressed in all white.

The now 30-year-old was dogged by injury over his time at Bayen, then on return to Borussia Dortmund. But last season in the Eredivisie with PSV he made 29 league appearances, the most minutes on a pitch since his 2014-15 campaign. 

If the midfielder stays fit, Eintracht have a chance of punching at the weight their name, history and city deserve. 

Hello, Again

Borussia Dortmund have had a torrid time of late, yes they finished second last season – but yet again they were too far off Bayern, eight points the difference and some of the performances under Marco Rose were abject at best.

The ex-Gladbach coach lasted one campaign at the Westfalenstadion, ousted in the summer he was replaced by Edin Terzić who led the Schwarzgelben to Pokal victory in 2021 while interim coach after Lucien Favre was sacked in late 2020.

Hindsight is wonderful, and I’m sure the Dortmund hierarchy now wish they’d not chased Rose at the expense of Terzić, who was kept around just in case.

With the dugout strengthened it was time for the Black and Yellows to upgrade their on-field options, and boy have they done that.

Sebastien Haller was the first announced but distressingly the forward was subsequently diagnosed with a testicular tumour and is now expected to be out for several months, we wish him all the best in his treatment and recovery.

Nico Schlotterbeck and Niklas Süle arrived from Freiburg and Bayern respectively and will undoubtedly shore up their backline.

The defensive duo have been joined by exciting wide forward Karim Adeyemi. While at Red Bull Salzburg the German netted 94 times, hitting 19 goals in 29 Austrian Bundesliga games last season.

And  – he’s already off to a flyer, scoring the third goal in a 3-0 victory over 1860 Munich in the German Cup. Of the 76 minutes Adeyemi played in the Pokal he registered 100% in both his aerial duels and long searching passes – he’s one to watch for sure.

Lots to come

The beauty of the Bundesliga, as I hope you’ll come to see, is that there isn’t just one team – it’s not just Bayern, there are another 17 teams all with pedigree and passion.

Strap in there’s a full season ahead, from Union Berlin to the returning giant of Schalke 04, we’ll travel east to Leipzig and west to Köln, this league is wonderful – get ready to experience it. 


(Images from IMAGO)


You can follow every match from the 2022/23 Bundesliga season live with FotMob — featuring deep stats coverage including shot maps, xG, and player ratings. Download the free app here.

Posted by Bill Biss
Last Weekend: The Lionesses Roar, Rooney Time in DC and a new look for Burnley

Last Weekend: The Lionesses Roar, Rooney Time in DC and a new look for Burnley

With football returning in some of Europe’s Big Five nations while the summer leagues continue, the 2022/23 season is about to lift off. On our agenda this time around, we have England’s Euros triumph, Wayne Rooney’s first match in charge of DC United, Vincent Kompany’s managerial debut for Burnley and more.


🏆 UEFA Women’s Euros: England 2-1 Germany

The big day was finally here. Almost a year after the men’s team faltered at the final hurdle, England’s women had the chance to win their nation’s first major footballing trophy since 1966.

The Euros had been filled with high-quality football from a tactical, technical and entertainment point of view, but the final was different. It was chaotic, often scrappy, and sometimes a little violent but that is just how such big finals tend to be.

There were no goals in a first half of limited chances but England took the lead after the hour mark when Keira Walsh played Ella Toone in behind and the Manchester United forward beat the keeper with a delightful scoop. Before the English fans could really start to dream — just before the 80th minute — Germany popped the party as Lina Magull applied a finish to a mesmerising passing sequence.

As extra time wore on, the Wembley crowd would inevitably have been reminded of the Euro 2020 final which the men’s team lost on penalties. 10 minutes before the end though, Chloe Kelly scored her first-ever England goal in the scrappiest fashion possible to snatch the lead again.

That was followed by 10 minutes of the artform that is keeping the ball in the opposition corner, and then finally, the referee called it a day. The significance of this achievement, not just on a sporting level but also on a societal level, cannot be overstated.

In truth, this could have been anyone’s game as the xG indicates, but buoyed by their home crowd, England showed just a little bit more in extra time, and that was the difference between victory and defeat.

This is a very clichéd thing to say, but genuinely, football was the real winner on this occasion.

🇺🇸 MLS: DC United 2-1 Orlando City

MLS is no stranger to action-packed weekends but this one was even crazier than usual as there were 37 goals scored, two four-all draws, and two other matches that featured four or more goals.

We will be making do with a match that saw just three goals though, because it featured Wayne Rooney’s managerial debut for DC United, a club he represented as a player during his previous spell in America.

The ex-Derby County manager set his side up in a 4-4-2 formation, but things did not exactly start well as Júnior Urso opened the scoring for Orlando with a wonderful lob in the ninth minute. The visitors were in control of the match thereafter, but as Rooney and co. so often did during his playing days under a certain Scottish manager, his team fought back late in stoppage time to turn the game on its head.

The xG faithful would call this win far from deserved, but DC United got the three points in the end, and that is what matters. This win takes them off the foot of the Supporters’ Shield standings but they remain last in the East so there is lots of work to be done from here on in.

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 England: Huddersfield Town 0-1 Burnley

The Community Shield in England provided most of the weekend’s headlines but a more consequential match was the Championship opener between Huddersfield Town and Burnley on Friday night.

There were new managers in both dugouts so both sets of fans would have been full of that new-season optimism. Burnley were kicking off in the second tier for the first time since 2015/16 and they were much-changed. With Sean Dyche departing towards the end of last season Vincent Kompany was brought in from Anderlecht and tasked with leading the Clarets back to the Premier League.

Saying that Dyche and Kompany’s styles of play are polar opposites would be an understatement. Dyche was known for a defensive style of football centred around an organised and hard working 4-4-2 block. Kompany, on the other hand, developed a lot of his tactical ideas as a player under Pep Guardiola at Manchester City, so he likes his teams to play a possession-dominant brand of football.

The Belgian manager named his XI in a 4-3-3 formation, which morphed into a sort of 3-4-2-1 in possession with lots of positional rotations. The keeper was regularly involved outside his box as he popped up on the right of defence to offer passing options, while the wingers, and full-backs had defined and different roles.

For a side renowned worldwide for their defensive football, Burnley’s adaptation to this stylistic shift was very impressive. There were some favourable factors for them that should be mentioned, such as the fact that over half of their line-up was comprised of debutantes, and Huddersfield looked clueless as they sat in their defensive shape and let their opponents do whatever they pleased.

Nonetheless, Kompany and his side should be very happy with this win, which was more comprehensive than the scoreline suggests as they outshot their opponents 16-2. Undoubtedly, though, tougher tests await the Clarets.

🇩🇪 Germany: Elversberg 4-3 Bayer Leverkusen

We had the Supercup in Germany too, which Bayern won 5-3, but our focus will be on the Cupset laden first round of the DFB Pokal.

2. Bundesliga side Jahn Regensburg beat Köln on penalties, Lubeck, who play in the fourth tier got the better of Hansa Rostock, fifth-tier club Stuttgarter Kickers won by a two-goal margin against Greuther Fürth, who were only relegated from the Bundesliga last season, and 2. Bundesliga newcomers Eintracht Braunschweig sent Hertha Berlin packing, amongst others.

Arguably the biggest upset, though, was Elversberg prevailing over Bayer Leverkusen in a seven-goal thriller. They won promotion from the Regionalliga, which is the fourth tier of German football, for just the second time in their history last season, so going and beating a side that qualified for the Champions League by finishing third in the top flight is a mightily impressive achievement. In fact, it was the first time they defeated a top-division side in a competitive fixture.

Even more impressive is the fact that they went toe-to-toe with their opponents, taking the lead on three separate occasions and almost matching them in terms of chance creation.

Elversberg have never made it past the second round of the DFB Pokal, so they could create yet more history in a few weeks’ time.

🇫🇷 France: PSG 4-0 Nantes

As in England, the French season kicked off with the second tier playing the same weekend as the Super Cup but for once, we’ll give precedence to the latter.

A big reason for that was the fact it was Christophe Galtier’s first competitive match in charge of Paris Saint-Germain and there were lots of positive signs to take. Last season, Mauricio Pochettino lost this match as he was still figuring out the best way to use his superstars in collaboration but Galtier has appeared to have taken notes from his predecessor.

Both at Lille and Nice, Galtier employed a 4-4-2 formation and emphasised defence first, but he unsurprisingly is not doing that at PSG. Over midway through last season, Pochettino seemed to realise that switching to a back-three was the best way forward for his squad, and Galtier did not change that as his XI lined up in a 3-4-3 formation.

Lionel Messi played through the middle as a false-nine while Neymar had lots of freedom to drop deep on the left. Kylian Mbappé was suspended so Pablo Sarabia operated as the most advanced attacker on the right but no doubt the French super star will do a better job in this role. Apart from that, the only intriguing thing of note was Marco Verratti dropping in the last line to allow the wide centre-backs to push forward, but this happened only occasionally in the first half.

Of course, the big question is how PSG will work defensively with the lack of input from their superstar attackers, and this is a question that was not really answered here as Nantes kept little possession. Barring a couple of early saves from Gianluigi Donnarumma, this was a smooth win for the French champions with Messi, Neymar and Sergio Ramos all getting on the scoresheet.

🇳🇱 Netherlands: Ajax 3-5 PSV Eindhoven

In a weekend full of Super Cup finals, the best one by far in terms of entertainment was played in the Netherlands, where Ajax took on rivals PSV in a day of debuts. Six players including four starters were making their competitive debuts for their clubs, with an even split on both sides. Additionally, there were new managers in both dugouts – Alfred Schreuder for Ajax and Ruud van Nistelrooy (yes, that one) for PSV.

Steven Bergwijn, who recently left Tottenham, opened his Ajax account with a wonderful curling effort to give them a early lead. Guus Til did one better by half-time, though, as he scored two near-carbon copy headers to turn the match on its head. Antony equalised for the hosts early in the second half, but a Gakpo goal, and Til completing a hat-trick on debut gave PSV a two-goal cushion.

Substitute Mohamed Kudus pulled one back with almost 20 minutes left to bring Ajax within touching distance of their opponents but Calvin Bassey’s first competitive outing for Ajax was soured when he got sent off in the 78th minute. PSV had lots of chances to put the game to bed, but they only successfully did so in stoppage time through Xavi Simons, the highly-rated youngster who left PSG this summer.

It should be said that in the last 11 seasons, the winners of the Johan Cruyff Shield have only gone on to lift the league title on three occasions, so perhaps this result is not truly indicative of the season to come!


Written by Neel Shelat.

Cover Image from IMAGO

Posted by Bill Biss
This Weekend: Supercups, Season Starts and the Euros Final

This Weekend: Supercups, Season Starts and the Euros Final

The best action to follow this weekend


Saturday

🏆 We may as well call this Supercup Saturday with a number of traditional season openers taking place across Europe. Okay, so it’s known as the Community Shield in England but you get the drift and Liverpool vs. Manchester City is undoubtably the biggest draw of the day.

This clash, the first of its kind to be played before the start of August since 1958 takes place just 69 days after the two sides took the last Premier League title race to the final day. City took that, obviously whilst Liverpool had to settle for the FA and League Cup double. But how have both fared in the transfer market? And how are their squads shaping up for the new season? This is the first real test in at least semi-competitive action.

Elsewhere, the Dutch equivalent known as the Johan Cruyff Shield also provides a huge game with Ajax playing rivals PSV. ‘De Topper’ pits the sides who finished last season first and second in the league – with PSV losing out in that, but coming good in the final of the KNVB Cup, where they beat Ajax in the Final.

Watch out too for Bayern München in the DFL Supercup where Julian Nagelsmann’s side will be looking to start the post-Lewandowski era with a win over last season’s DFB Pokal winners RB Leipzip. This game takes place on the same weekend that the new DFB Pokal gets underway – with Borussia Dortmund winning in style at 1860 München on Friday night.

Wrapping things up, Portuguese double winners FC Porto take on Tondela, the minnows who made it to the final of last season’s cup competition despite getting relegated from the top flight. And in Turkey, Trabzonspor – who ended their long wait for a league trophy will look to lift more silverware against Cup winners Sivasspor.

🤝 With many of the top leagues due to commence over the next couple of weekends, this one provides a last opportunity for a lot of big sides to fine tune their starting XIs. Meaning that you’ll find a lot of club friendlies listed in your app for the next few days.

Among the headline games: Real Madrid play Juventus at the famous Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California, Roma face Spurs in some kind of José Mourinho clásico being played in Israel and Barcelona do battle with MLS side New York Red Bulls – who currently sit third in the Eastern Conference.

And unofficially speaking, there appears to be a Premier League vs. La Liga Battle Royale taking place with (at the last count) eleven games taking place between English and Spanish sides. Manchester United are so keen they have one team facing Atlético Madrid on Saturday (in Oslo) and another side playing another Madrid based side, Rayo Vallecano on Sunday (in Manchester).

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 The EFL season officially started on Friday night with Vincent Kompany’s Burnley side recording a narrow win at Huddersfield on Friday night. However, the real fun starts on Saturday with games across all the divisions that sit at the second through to the fourth tier of English football.

In the Championship, the evening kick-off should be worth watching with West Bromwich Albion heading to Middlesbrough.

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 The Scottish season has been up and running for a while with the ever-early League Cup group stages but now we get the first games in the Premiership. Rangers headline the opening day as they begin their latest title challenge away at Livingston.

🇯🇵 And finally, top of the table action from a league that is already deep in to the campaign. With 22 rounds played in the J.League, Yokohama F. Marinos lead Kashima Antlers by five points, so Saturday’s game between the two will be vital for both sides. Marinos are looking to take back the title they last won in 2019 whilst the Antlers are hoping to break a six year barren run.


Sunday

🏆 The most successful Women’s Euros to date will come to a close on Sunday evening with a showpiece game set to break record attendances for a final in both the women’s and men’s version of the tournament. In fact, over 500,000 people will have attended a match at some point during Euro 2022 with Wembley sold out for the clash between hosts England and record winners Germany.

It’s a repeat of the 2009 final where Germany beat England 6-2 – one of eight European titles they have to their name. It’s going to be an intriguing match-up between the two best sides at the tournament, resilient England vs. the indefatigable Germans, and there’s a battle for the golden boot too with both Beth Mead and Alexandra Popp level on six goals a piece. One more for either player will break another tournament record.

🇫🇷 In a hangover from Supercup Saturday, the Trophée des Champions takes place in French football on Sunday. New PSG coach Christophe Galtier must lead his merry bunch of superstars against Nantes, the side who beat Galtier’s previous club Nice, in the final of the Coupe de France back in May.

With criticism already emerging in the French press and questions over Galtier’s readiness to deal with the stars at the club, it’ll be imperative that they start well and let Kylian Mbappé know that staying in Paris was worth his while.

🤝 We already mentioned Manchester United’s second friendly of the weekend against Rayo but elsewhere the England vs. Spain Battle Royale continues with games between Fulham and Villarreal and Leicester City and Sevilla. The latter having already provided opposition for Arsenal on Saturday!

Speaking of teams playing two games in one weekend, a Liverpool XI will face Ligue 1 side Strasbourg, on Sunday evening. The question remains – will Liverpool get to parade the Community Shield on the pitch at Anfield ahead of that one!?

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Back in Scotland, Ange Postecoglou’s Celtic kick off their title defence against Aberdeen. The Dons have a proud record of never being relegated from the top flight but they did come close last season – finishing 10th out of 12 sides so they’ll be looking for immediate improvements this time around.


If you want to follow any of the games mentioned above, click on the relevant link and tap the bell icon to receive all the key match updates.

Or join us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to discuss all the important football going on this weekend!

Cover Image from IMAGO

Posted by Bill Biss
Last Weekend: Italian impact in Toronto, Salzburg start strong and Derby Day in the 2. Bundesliga

Last Weekend: Italian impact in Toronto, Salzburg start strong and Derby Day in the 2. Bundesliga

The past few days have seen marquee signings announce their arrival in Major League Soccer whilst in Europe we’ve seen yet more the league seasons get underway and old rivalries renewed.

Those are just a few of the subjects on the agenda for this edition of Last Weekend.


🇨🇦 MLS: Toronto 4-0 Charlotte

Gareth Bale may have scored his first MLS goal against Sporting Kansas City, but elsewhere on Saturday night, two Italian wingers were causing quite a stir on their debut for Toronto FC.

Lorenzo Insigne and Federico Bernardeschi had been brought in from Napoli and Juventus in the last few weeks, and they were both selected from the start against Charlotte.

Before either of them could get involved Jonathan Osorio put the hosts in front in the fourth minute. Six minutes later, Toronto added a second, with Bernardeschi providing the assist from a corner.

But the party was just getting started. After the half-hour mark Bernardeschi found the bottom corner from distance to make it 3-0. And on the stroke of half-time Insigne notched up his first goal involvement with a clever flick to assist Michael Bradley. Neither of the Italians came out for the second half as Bob Bradley decided to rest his stars for tougher battles to come.

The hosts cruised through the second half to register their first win in six matches. They remain down in 13th in the Eastern Conference but there are positive signs that they will improve now.

Aside from the two Italian signings, Toronto FC’s terribly shaky defence seems to be stabilising, while their attack was gradually improving even before Insigne and Bernardeschi arrived.

If this trend continues, the Canadian club will certainly get themselves closer to the play-off spots.

🇦🇹 Austria: Salzburg 3-0 Austria Wien

Perennial champions Salzburg kicked off the 2022/23 Bundesliga season by hosting Austria Wien. The scoreline suggests that this was a routine victory for them — and it was — but there was some tactical intrigue involved in the performance.

Over the summer, Salzburg lost, among others, Brendan Aaronson, who was the first-choice starter in the attacking midfield position in their 4-3-1-2 system that has a sort of diamond shape in the midfield. They did not sign any like-for-like replacement – instead bringing in Shakhtar striker Fernando for under a quarter of the fee they received from Leeds United for Aaronson’s transfer.

The reason for this quickly became clear in the match against Austria Wien. Generally, such systems with a diamond in midfield see the two strikers stretch the opposition defence while the attacking midfielder operates between the lines. Matthias Jaissle had other ideas as he used Fernando in the attacking midfield position and asked him to push forward and join the two strikers to create a very narrow front-three.

Typically, for sides that like to keep possession this would be a problem as the big distance between the midfield and attack would make ball progression difficult. However, Salzburg’s style of play is very direct and transition-based so the usage of the front-three to overload the two opposition centre-backs worked pretty out well for them.

There were goals and assists for each player in the three-man attack, with Fernando earning a man of the match performance in his new hybrid role.

🇩🇪 Germany: Nürnburg 2-0 Greuther Fürth

With Greuther Fürth dropping down to the 2. Bundesliga, the Franconian derby – Germany’s biggest rivalry in terms of the number of fixtures played – was back. Both they and Nürnberg had failed to win on the opening weekend of the season so they were in search of their first three-point haul of the new campaign.

Having won nine of the last 15 fixtures prior to this one, Fürth have been the dominant side in this rivalry over the course of recent history. Indeed, they were unbeaten in their last five matches against their arch-rivals. Nürnberg looked determined to change that right from the get-go, and they took the lead at the quarter-hour mark through Christoph Daferner.

The visitors kept close to two-thirds of possession in this match but they failed to make much of it as they conceded twice as many shots as they themselves fired. Nürnberg’s main issue was the fact that they were failing to convert their chances to add a cushion to their lead. That was until the 81st minute when substitute Manuel Wintzheimer found the back of the net with a left-footed effort inside the penalty area.

With that, Nürnberg sealed their status as ‘Derbysieger’ (derby winners), which will certainly add a spring to their step for the next few weeks.

🇧🇪 Belgium: Anderlecht 2-0 Oostende

A week after the Super Cup, the Belgian top-flight was back for the 2022/23 season. Club Brugge’s last-gasp win over Genk in a five-goal thriller may have stolen most of the headlines, but since we already covered them and their star performer Andreas Skov Olsen a week ago, our focus will be on their rivals Anderlecht this time out.

It was the start of a new era for Belgium’s most successful club (in terms of league titles) as Felice Mazzù was taking charge of his first competitive match. The man who masterminded Union Saint-Gilloise’s fairytale rise for the last couple of years was brought in after Vincent Kompany left for Burnley and he wasted no time in implementing his preferred 3-5-2 formation.

It would be an exaggeration to say that Anderlecht looked as exciting as Union did under Mazzù last season but that is hardly a surprise as their players naturally need time to adjust to a new system. What they did quite well was ensure Oostende were not given any great opportunities while also nicking a crucial goal from a corner close to the half-time break.

There were some encouraging signs for the rest of the season too, as Wolves loanee Fábio Silva came off the bench for the last ten minutes and certainly made his presence felt before getting on the scoresheet just before full-time. Lukas Nmecha and Joshua Zirkzee are testaments to the fact that Anderlecht have a great track record with on-loan strikers of late so Silva will hope to get his career back on track in Belgium and has certainly started strong.

🇸🇪 Sweden: Häcken 1-2 Djurgården

The top two in Sweden crossed swords this weekend, as league-leaders Häcken hosted Djurgården – who sat just a point behind them, albeit having played a game more.

There weren’t many chances early on but Häcken took the lead after half an hour when Alexander Jeremejeff scored his 15th goal of the season from the penalty spot. Djurgården created a fair few chances to equalise before half-time but the scoreline remained 1-0.

However, after the break it took them just four minutes to get back on level terms through Emmanuel Banda, and about 15 minutes later, Elias Andersson put them in front. Djurgården then held on for what was a deserved victory – based on the xG at least, as the xG scoreline read 1.32-2.13 in their favour.

Indeed, Djurgården are the best side in the league based on xGD (Expected Goal Difference — the difference between their expected goals accumulated and expected goals conceded), as their tally of +0.85 is the highest in the league. Their attack is among the best, but it is their defence that separates them from the rest of the sides in the running for the title.

The result meant that the visitors go top of the Allsvenskan, at least until Häcken play their game in hand.

🇧🇷 Brazil: Fluminense 2-1 Red Bull Bragantino

Alexander Jeremejeff is scoring goals at a scary rate in Sweden and over in Brazil Germán Cano is doing something similar.

The 34-year-old Argentine striker scored his fifth goal in five league matches to extend Fluminense’s lead against Red Bull Bragantino. This run of form has seen him shoot up the scoring charts and he has now become the outright top-scorer in the Brazilian top-flight. In this period of time, he has also notched up a couple of assists and scored in the Copo do Brasil.

His goals have helped Fluminense go unbeaten since mid-June and with six wins in their last seven league games – they have broken into the top-three and are within touching distance of leaders Palmeiras.


Written by Neel Shelat.

Cover Image from IMAGO

Posted by Bill Biss
FotMob’s Euro 22 Quiz: Playoffs

FotMob’s Euro 22 Quiz: Playoffs

How many can you get right?


What’s your score? Let us know on Twitter!

Posted by Curt Baker
Last Weekend: Castellanos flying for NYCFC, Norway crash out of the Euros and summer is officially over

Last Weekend: Castellanos flying for NYCFC, Norway crash out of the Euros and summer is officially over

There were a host of big fixtures as Rivalry Week continued in MLS while the final round of the Group Stages provided drama at the Euros. Elsewhere the 2022/23 season began, in earnest, across Europe, thus signalling the return of the ‘winter leagues.’

We will be covering all that and more in this edition of Last Weekend.


?? MLS: New York Red Bulls 0-1 New York City

The final day of Rivalry Week saw the Hudson River Derby between the sides placed second and third in the Eastern Conference. Both teams had two wins and a draw in their last three games so this was set to be a very even encounter.

That is indeed how it turned out to be, although NYCFC dominated possession, as they typically do. That would not have been concerning for the hosts because they tend to thrive in transition and were unbeaten in home clashes against their rivals since 2017.

This was a match of very few clear-cut chances, but the decisive moment came in the 69th minute when Santiago Rodríguez floated a ball over the top for Valentín ‘Taty’ Castellanos, with the Argentine striker nudging the ball home after some very clever movement to create space for himself. It was hardly a surprise to see him on the scoresheet as this was his sixth goal in his last four matches.

Last season’s Golden Boot winner finds himself at the top of the scoring charts yet again, and with the highest xG and second-highest xGOT tallies in the league, he has a very good chance of staying there – should a much rumoured move to Europe not come to fruition in the coming days. The rumour mill was churning after he appeared to be bidding farewell to the fans and his manager after being substituted.

Of course, Castellanos could just have been enjoying his role as derby-day match winner.

? UEFA Women’s Euros: Austria 1-0 Norway

With England having secured progression to the knockouts and Northern Ireland already eliminated, the big decisive match in Group A saw Austria take on Norway with the two sides level on points. Naturally, the winner would advance to the quarter-finals but in case of a draw, Austria had the upper hand thanks to Norway’s inferior goal difference after England put eight past them in midweek.

So the onus was on Norway to chase the game, but they looked very flat in the first half while Austria created a few decent chances before taking the lead in the 37th minute, via the head of Nicole Billia. Even after trailing, Martin Sjögren’s side never really looked threatening as Manuela Zinsberger faced just two shots on target.

For a side that features forward talent from the likes of Barcelona and Chelsea plus Ada Hegerberg – the Champions League’s all-time top-scorer in a must-win match, a shotmap like this is incredibly disappointing.

Austria, therefore, deservedly progressed to the knockouts where they will face Group B winners Germany. That should be a very tight affair as the Germans are the only side apart from England to have kept a clean sheet in all of their group matches, while Austria have conceded just once.

?? Switzerland: Young Boys 4-0 FC Zürich

The Swiss Super League returned with a blockbuster clash between defending champions FC Zürich and Young Boys, who had won the title in four straight seasons prior to 2021/22. There were new head coaches in both dugouts – ex-MLS and USA Under-17 manager Raphael Wicky for the hosts and ex-Austria manager Franco Foda for FC Zürich.

There were no goals and truthfully, barely any noteworthy openings in the first half as both sides were cautious in their approach, but the second half was filled with action. 10 minutes after the break, Zürich were awarded a penalty for handball, but Antonio Mascherano skied his kick. Seven minutes later, Christian Fassnacht headed the home side in front.

After the first round of substitutions, Cedric Itten came off the bench to score ion debut in the 77th minute. And in a nine-minute period thereafter, Young Boys scored twice more through Fabian Rieder and Wilfried Kanga, making the final score quite flattering.

In reality, the two sides were very evenly matched in terms of xG and in fact, Zürich had a slightly greater tally, but they were left ruing missed opportunities.

?? Denmark: FC København 0-1 Horsens

In Scandinavia, the Danish Superliga is the only top-flight winter league, and it was back for the 2022/23 season this weekend. Defending champions FC København were playing on Sunday as they hosted newly-promoted Horsens at Parken.

The visitors thought that they had gotten off to a perfect start when Casper Tengstedt, who scored 15 league goals in the second tier last season, put the ball in the back of the net but a VAR review saw the goal ruled out for offside. Nonetheless, they continued to defend resolutely and create chances but it was FCK who were celebrating next – at least until another VAR review ruled their goal out for the same reason.

Horsens had less than a quarter of possession in the game, but they went toe-to-toe with their opponents as they contained them very well in their 5-4-1 defensive shape while also posing a regular counterattacking threat. Their hard work paid off just after the hour mark when Zambian left wing-back Lubambo Musaba directed his finish in to the top corner from the edge of the box.

The home side tried hard to find an equaliser thereafter, but as this shotmap shows, they were not allowed to create any serious goal-scoring opportunities and had to resort to potshots by the end.

?? Belgium: Club Brugge 1-0 Gent

Belgian football was back with the Super Cup, the traditional season-opener featuring the previous winners of the league and cup. That meant Gent visited Club Brugge, for whom Carl Hoefkens was making his managerial debut after he stepped in following Alfred Schreuder’s move to Ajax.

Hoefkens stuck to the 3-5-2 formation that worked wonders in the second half of last season but Gent were seemingly able to neutralise it in their 3-4-1-2 shape. The visitors were the first to hit the back of the net through Tarik Tissoudali less than 10 minutes prior to half-time, but the assistant referee’s flag was raised. With effectively the next attack at the other end, Brugge scored after Andreas Skov Olsen cut inside from the right and found the bottom corner.

The Danish international looks set to have a standout season in his first full campaign in Belgium. After joining from Bologna, he played a massive role in Club Brugge’s title charge as he contributed with five goals and six assists in 739 minutes of action in the league, averaging 1.34 goal involvements per 90.

Coming back to the match, Gent were unquestionably the better side in the second half as they pushed for an equaliser, but their efforts proved futile despite the fact that they attempted thrice as many shots as their opponents.

?? Germany: Kaiserslautern 2-1 Hannover 96

Our beloved 2. Bundesliga also returned this weekend. Kicking us off were four-time Bundesliga champions Kaiserslautern, who were last seen in the top flight over a decade ago, and had been down in the third tier since 2018. They finished third last season, securing promotion only after beating Dynamo Dresden in the play-offs.

This was a big game for the visitors too, as Stefan Leitl, who recently led Greuther Fürth to the Bundesliga, was taking charge of them for the first time in a competitive fixture. His side lined up in his favoured 4-1-2-1-2 formation. For the hosts, Dirk Schuster made just two changes from the XI that beat Dresden in May.

The away side unsurprisingly dominated possession, but early on, Kaiserslautern looked more dangerous going forward, with the deadly duo of Terrence Boyd and Mike Wunderlich looking in the mood. Indeed, those two combined for the opener in the 11th minute after a very loose backpass from Julian Börner.

Kaiserslautern looked fairly comfortable after taking the lead and continued to pose a threat going forward, but as we entered the second half and inched closer to the final whistle, the nervousness surrounding the slender lead was palpable in the Fritz-Walter-Stadion. The home fans’ fears came true in the 80th minute when Håvard Nielsen, who had followed Leitl from Fürth to Hannover, came off the bench and grabbed an equaliser.

The visitors would have hoped to push on and score a winner thereafter, but the final twist in the tale in stoppage time saw centre-back Kevin Kraus redirect Kevin Prince Redondo’s bicycle pass towards the net following a corner, sending the stands into a state of absolute delirium.

This was a dream start to the season for Kaiserslautern, but their focus should remain on avoiding relegation for now.

?? Norway: Viking 2-1 Kristiansund

We’ve looked at a lot of positive stories this week, but there is a less optimistic one from our home league, the Eliteserien, where Kristiansund are still winless after 12 matches – picking up just one solitary point way back in April when they drew with HamKam.

Their loss to Viking on Sunday was the second time in three games when they have lost from a winning position. After going into the half-time break with a clean sheet, they took the lead through Bendik Bye in the 52nd minute but conceded the equaliser almost straight from kick-off. They were still looking set to hold on to a point but a penalty conceded in the 89th minute stripped them of that as well.

It will take nothing short of a miracle for Kristiansund to survive as they currently sit 12 points away from safety and they could even break the unwanted record of fewest points in a league season (in the three points for a win era). This is held by Aalesund and Start, who managed 11 points in 2020 and 2002 respectively.


Written by Neel Shelat.

Cover Image from IMAGO

Posted by Bill Biss
This Weekend: Pre-season clashes, Season re-starts and crunch time at the Women’s Euros

This Weekend: Pre-season clashes, Season re-starts and crunch time at the Women’s Euros

The best action to follow this weekend


Saturday

? The final round of groups games at the Women’s Euros continues on Saturday with Group B coming to a head. Germany face Finland but are already assured of their place in the quarter-finals thanks to two contrasting wins. They dominated against Denmark, running in four unanswered goals but were forced on to the back foot by Spain, before eventually beating them by two goals to nil despite having just 30% of possession.

The other game is therefore a direct play-off for the second qualification spot with both Spain and Denmark level on three points thanks to their respective wins over Finland. Spain are famously without star player Alexia Putellas at this tournament but Denmark should be able to call on their no.10, Pernille Harder, who was substituted following a clash of heads shortly after scoring the winner against the Finns.

? Pre-season is now well and truly underway for Europe’s top clubs and we can therefore bring you coverage of friendly games being played all around the world as part of lucrative overseas tours. Saturday’s highlights include Sevilla vs. Spurs in South Korea, Chelsea vs. Club América in Las Vegas, Everton vs. Arsenal in Baltimore and FC Köln vs. Milan in well, Köln.

???? MLS’s Rivalry Week has been keeping us entertained in recent days and the derby-day action continues in to a second weekend.

Austin moved top of the Western Conference thanks to their midweek win over fellow Texans Houston and they now face the third club from the Lone Star State – FC Dallas, on Saturday. Elsewhere, there’s the Canadian Classique featuring Montréal (4th in the East) and Toronto (13th).

?? The 2. Bundesliga, one of Europe’s most keenly fought second-tier leagues returns this weekend, meaning we’ll be treated to a number of headline clashes between sleeping giants, or big sides who for whatever reason find themselves at this level.

St. Pauli were top of the table for long periods last season and looked nailed on for automatic promotion only to fade and finish fifth. Having no doubt regrouped in the summer, they begin the new campaign at home to Nürnburg, a side with nine top flight titles to their name but who are now looking at their fourth-straight season outside the Bundesliga.

??Another league returning to the app is the Swiss Super League. And here, the FA are kicking things off with a bang as last season’s surprise winners FC Zürich travel to Young Boys – the title winners in each of the four seasons prior to that.


Sunday

?? The MLS Rivalry week continues in to Sunday with the Hudson River Derby between New York Red Bulls and New York City. With both clubs battling at the right end of the Eastern Conference, this should be a significant fixture. The two last met in June with Red Bulls pulling off a convincing 3-0 win in the quarter-finals of the US Open Cup.

Elsewhere, there’s the cross-border Cascadian rivalry between Portland Timbers and Vancouver Whitecaps plus a meeting between second and third in the Western Conference as LAFC travel to Nashville.

?? Back in the 2. Bundesliga and perhaps still smarting from their defeat in the promotion play-offs last season – Hamburg start at Eintracht Braunschweig. Eintracht themselves are another of the sides in the division with a German title to their name but they have been yo-yo’ing between the second and third tiers for the last few seasons and will be hoping to consolidate now they’re back at this level once again.

? Group C wraps up at the Women’s Euros on Sunday and it’s a group where, mathematically, any of the four sides could still go through.

Defending champions Netherlands are on four points having drawn with Sweden and overcome Portugal – despite that is, injuries and positive Covid cases affecting key players such as goalkeeper Sari van Veenendaal and Vivianne Miedema. They now face a Swiss side who only have one point but have proved dogged opponents in the tournament so far.

The Swiss lost to Sweden last time out, with Barcelona’s Fridolina Rolfö key to the Swedes’ success. They’ll be looking to her to perform well again in their meeting with Portugal. Similarly to the other game, Sweden start on four points to Portugal’s one and there will no doubt be someone on both benches tasked with keeping an eye on the scoreline in the other game to ensure everyone knows exactly what result they need to progress.

?? Unlike other Nordic countries, Denmark doesn’t play its main football season over the summer months. Instead, it just feels like that due to the shortness of the gap between one Superliga season ending and the new one beginning!

So, less than two months after winning the Championship – FC København will kick off their title defence with a game against Horsens, at home, on Sunday.

?? Football also returns in Belgium with the country’s Super Cup set for Sunday. Club Brugge, who won their third successive league title during 2021/22 play Gent, who overcame Anderlecht in last season’s Cup final.


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Cover Image from IMAGO

Posted by Bill Biss