It hurts to lose like that - Furman

Following a crushing 3-1 defeat to Mauritania, Bafana midfielder Dean Furman said the side were bitterly disappointed.

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Johannesburg - Following a crushing 3-1 defeat in their 2017 Africa cup of Nations qualifier to Mauritania in Nouakchott, on Sunday, midfielder Dean Furman said the side were bitterly disappointed.

“It hurts to have to lose like that but we know the performance wasn’t good enough and that is why there were a lot of disheartened players at the end of the game,” said Furman after the match.

“But we are team, we are together in the good times and we stick together in the hard times but we will grow and also learn from this.”

South Africa conceded a goal early when captain Itumeleng Khune failed to gather free kick directed straight as he fumbled the ball which crossed the line to gift the hosts a 1-0 lead.

“We are very disappointed; the game did not go according to plan. We found ourselves a goal down very early on and wanted to weather the storm. I felt we controlled the game but we were sloppy with the ball, tried to break down a team that had all the players sitting behind the ball waiting for a counter attack,” said Furman.

“Our ball retention and use of the ball had to be far better than what we displayed on the day. Credit must also go to Mauritania, they played well managing to catch us on the counter attack with their second and third goals and the sending off which turned the game into their favour even more. We are highly disappointed with the result and it is important for us to put it right as soon as possible.”

In contrast to Bafana’s previous campaign in the qualifiers where they topped their group, South Africa now find themselves at the bottom of the group with two matches played.

“It is truly a disappointing start looking back at the last qualifiers where we were top of our group from the first couple of games so to be in a different position, at the bottom of the group is not where we want to be but we have the ability, the talent, and the team to put things right and that’s what we have to focus on going forward.”

ANA



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Nothing went our way - Mashaba

With four matches left in the Afcon qualifiers, Bafana Bafana have it all to do to keep hope alive in qualifying for Gabon 2017.

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Cape Town - A mistake by Bafana Bafana goalkeeper and captain Itumeleng, a red card to debutant Siyabonga Zulu and two further goals for Mauritania were enough for the home side to send South Africa home with no points in a CAF Orange Africa Cup of Nations clash played on Saturday, 5 September in Nouakchott, Mauritania.

This was probably Bafana Bafana's worst showing in a long time to leave Shakes Mashaba's charges at the bottom of Group M with just one point after two matches.

Mashaba admitted as much when the squad landed from Mauritania on Sunday, 6 September.

“I must admit we did not play well at all against Mauritania. Furthermore the mistake by the keeper and the red card did not help matters, as well as injuries to key players towards the end of the game.

“Credit must go to the home side for the way they played but on a good day they are team that should not beat us - it is a pity we did not come to the party and it has cost us valuable three points. But take nothing away from them, they play as a team and are very passionate with some players with individual skill,” said a disappointed Mashaba.

“I have never seen my team played like they did, this was not a very impressive performance. Nothing went our way and even the heat did not assist. We managed to hold on after they took the lead, and were even able to equalise but could not hold on. They scored soft goals after the red card and the entire defence was in tatters as players picked up injuries.”

With four matches left in the qualifiers - two home and two away - Bafana Bafana have it all to do to keep hope alive in qualifying for Gabon 2017.

“The clash against Mauritania was a must-win for us, but everything is not lost. We have four games to go, 12 points to play for but that comes with pressure because any slip up and we will not make it to Gabon. Right now in terms of qualification it is still up in the air and it is upon us to get it right in the remaining matches,” added Mashaba.

Mauritania scored through Aly Abeide (5th), Boubacar Beyguili (78th) and Khalil Ahmed (86th) while South Africa's solitary goal came from Thamsanqa Gabuza (69th). Bafana Bafana take on Senegal on Tuesday, in a Nelson Mandela Challenge.

“Due to the injuries we will definitely make some changes and also because we want to give other players a chance who did not play in the first match,” concluded Mashaba. South Africa will conduct a training session at Orlando Stadium on Monday. - African News Agency (ANA)



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Wake up Shakes!

Coach Shakes Mashaba seems not to have grasped the calamity of Saturday's result against a team ranked 42 places below SA.

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The irony was clearly lost on Shakes Mashaba that it was the opposition – and not his own team – he was describing.

At OR Tambo International Airport yesterday, following their return from Mauritania where they were hammered 3-1 on Saturday night, South Africa’s senior national team coach was asked for his thoughts on their conquerors.

“They work as a team; they are committed; they are passionate; they show they want to play; they have two or three players who are very good,” Mashaba unflinchingly responded.

To which he should have perhaps added: “That’s why they whipped us”.

Instead, the Bafana Bafana coach had preceded his statement with a shocking assertion that his team is better than the north west African side.

“Truly speaking, to me they are not a team to beat us. Yes, they beat us convincingly but on a day when our boys were right, they are not a team to beat us.”

Well, that day was definitely not Saturday and for the coach to even venture there, was perhaps an indication that he does not really understand the calamity of Saturday’s result.

The loss to a team ranked 42 places behind us in the Fifa world rankings has turned qualification for the 2017 Africa Cup of Nations into a Herculean task.

But, of course, the coach believes Bafana can still be among the 16 nations that will contest the biennial, continental showpiece in Gabon – their propping up the Group M table with a single point from two matches (before Gambia played Cameroon late yesterday), notwithstanding.

“This was a must win for us and we were looking at winning it. But everything is not lost. We still have another four games, which puts more pressure on us, and we have to make it a point we snatch the maximum points.”

That will require Bafana to avenge Saturday’s defeat when Mauritania come to visit and put Cameroon to the sword here at home, too.

As if that was not much to ask of a team that resembled a bunch of sissies – although the coach, incredibly, seemed to believe Bafana left it all on the pitch of the Olympic Stadium in Nouakchott – they then also have to go to Cameroon and Gambia and win there.

Granted, Mashaba believes his team plays better away, but having failed to score against Gambia when they hosted them, it is hard to see them bringing home maximum points from Banjul. As for beating the Indomitable Lions in their own backyard, that would be a historic moment in the continental game – Cameroon being the only nation of Caf’s 54 member associations never to have lost an Afcon qualifier at home.

“It’s a 50-50. We’re still in with a good chance – four games to go which is 12 points.

“We need to work hard and snatch those,” Mashaba said.

There’s a lot of time, however, before their next Afcon qualifier with no less than four clashes against Angola – home and away qualification ties for both the African Nations Championships and World Cup preliminary – to come.

Anything less than success there, particularly in the World Cup matches, and it is debatable as to whether Mashaba will be in charge for Matchday Three and Four during the week-long Fifa dates when they will play back-to-back clashes against Cameroon on March 23 to 29 next year. - The Star



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Top ten EPL transfer gambles

With transfer window having closed last week, we look at some of the riskier transfers to have taken place in England.

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With transfer window having closed last week, we look at some of the riskier transfers to have taken place in England.

10. Etienne Capoue , Watford £6.3M

The French midfielder offers Watford some much-needed Premier League quality but in a potential relegation battle he will need to show more fight.

9. Roberto Firmino, Liverpool £29M

A huge fee for someone who still had to convince in a German league he was familiar with – and he arrives in what is a crux season for manager Brendan Rodgers.

8. James McClean, WEST BROMWICH £1.5M

Often unfairly criticised for his political stances, the Northern Ireland-born Republic winger still brings a lot of otherwise needless controversy. Is his talent worth all the trouble?

7. Aleksander Mitrovic, Newcastle £15M

Taken on talent alone, the Serbian striker would be a top signing. But his abrasive personality and poor reputation, as seen with his red card against Arsenal, so often compromise those abilities.

6. Alex Song, West Ham Loan

The Cameroonian holding midfielder made a big impact last season when he arrived from Barcelona but he then faded, and his start this season is already curtailed by injury.

5. Radamel Falcao, Chelsea Loan

Like their central defence, it is surprising that Chelsea’s back-up options up front are pinned on someone who has so many questions hanging over him.

4. Anthony Martial, Man Utd £36.3M

The French striker would be a fine purchase of great potential. But in the absence of another big attacking signing, it’s an awful lot of pressure to put on someone so young for so much money.

3. Kevin De Bruyne, Manchester City £56M

Those close to the Belgian national team expressed surprise at the move since he seemed far better suited to the directness of German football rather than City’s technical short passing.

2. Papy Djilobodji, Chelsea £2.7M

Jose Mourinho wanted a pedigree centre-half to finally give him another starting option. The Senegalese, a bargain-basement signing from Nantes, for all his possible qualities, is not that.

1. Younes Kaboul, Sunderland £5M

Dick Advocaat’s side badly needed someone to shore up a porous backline but their big defensive signing from France via Tottenham has so far only made it worse. – The Independent on Sunday



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Welbeck out for six months

Arsenal forward Danny Welbeck will be out for six months and might be doubtful for England's campaign at the Euro 2016 in France.

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Arsenal forward Danny Welbeck will be out for six months and might be doubtful for England's campaign at the Euro 2016 in France, manager Roy Hodgson has said.

The 24-year-old Welbeck underwent surgery on his left knee last week after struggling to progress in his rehabilitation following an injury, his club Arsenal said.

The former Manchester United striker has not played since damaging the knee after coming on as a late substitute in a 0-0 draw with Chelsea on April 26.

“Well, Welbeck bothers me now. He has already been out for me since March and for Arsenal since April, and now I hear it's another six months,” the 68-year-old Hodgson was quoted as saying by the British media.

“I can only hope that Danny recovers a bit quicker and then hits the ground running.”

Hodgson also compared Welbeck's injury problems with that of Liverpool forward Daniel Sturridge and while he is keen on them being fit, he is also prepared to look elsewhere.

“Daniel is a bit the same. It's getting on for a year now (since he played for England),” said the former Liverpool manager.

“They are always in my thoughts because I think they're very good players and they did extremely well when they were playing in the national team I was coaching.

“I've got to make certain that there are a few Vardys and Kanes and Walcotts, because we can't keep going around talking about the ones who aren't there.” – Reuters



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We made big mistakes - Khune

Itumeleng Khune described Bafana Bafana's 3-1 loss to Mauritania in their Afcon qualifier as a huge setback.

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Cape Town - Itumeleng Khune has described Bafana Bafana's 3-1 loss to Mauritania in a Group M clash of the CAF Orange Africa Cup of Nations Gabon 2017 qualifier at the Olympic Stadium in Nouakchott, Mauritania on Saturday, as a huge setback .

Captaining the side on the day, Khune gifted the hosts a goal early on the match.

“I committed a big mistake with the goal I let in and after that it was a huge mountain to climb. I had the ball covered but it took a swerve at the last minute and unfortunately I was too close to the poles and it went in. It is devastating to concede like that. Also, whenever you play away, it is always difficult to concede early and have to chase the game,” said Khune who was playing in his 71st international match and is the most capped in the squad.

“The result is a huge setback because we have now dropped five points out of a possible six - we picked up only one point at home. We should have collected three points at home and strived at worst for a point away, but we failed to do so. We can only have ourselves to blame and again it is only us who can rectify that. We still have 12 points to play for, but it means we have to win all the way and we could find ourselves on 13 points. So it is still up to us, we just have to bounce back from this disappointment.”

This was Bafana Bafana's second match of the qualifiers and have only one point.

“It is definitely not pleasing that we came all the way to Mauritania looking for three points but have to return home with none but we know where we went wrong, and we will have to improve on a lot of aspects of our game if we are to do well in the qualifiers. We had the better ball possession and dictated terms but it is just unfortunate that we have nothing to show for it,” added Khune. “With the goals they scored in the second half we were outnumbered as we were trying to push forward, playing with a man down. We cannot fault anyone for the loss but must take the blame as players. The worst result should have been a point away from home. We had a rush of blood after we equalised and went looking for the winner which did not come.

“We made huge mistakes which cost us the game - the first being my error in the first goal, and that's when we were tested. So we need to get it right in the remaining matches.” - African News Agency (ANA)



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Frustration for Wales coach

Wales had to beat Israel in their Euro 2016 qualifier to qualify for a major championship for the first time in over 50 years.

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Chris Coleman, the Wales manager, last night demanded to know what assistant referees positioned behind goals do, after the rejection of a very strong handball appeal denied his side the breakthrough they needed against Israel.

Eytan Tibi, one of the five-strong defence in an Israel side lacking any ambition, deflected a Neil Taylor cross away from Hal Robson-Kanu after 66 minutes and the denial of a penalty infuriated Coleman. “It was a penalty all day long,” said the manager, whose side had been refused two more marginal handball calls in Cyprus on Thursday.

“I don't know what the officials behind the goal are doing, to be honest, when they have the best [chance to make the] decision. They've got to make the call. How many times do you see that? I've never seen it, other than the penalty against us in Andorra [12 months ago].”

In truth, it was the lack of Welsh creativity and quality in finishing which contributed more to the stalemate in a game in which the home side enjoyed more than 65 per cent of possession for most of the game. Coleman admitted that an ability to break down such defensive teams was an area he must work on ahead of probable qualification for next summer's European Championship in France. “The next stage for us is learning to cope with these teams who come to frustrate,” he said. “We aren't used to it.”

Coleman accused Israel of kicking Bale, who had a strong start to the game but only began to threaten again after the hour mark. “Gareth Bale is shattered; he took some clumps in Cyprus as well,” the manager said. He also pointed to the absence, through injury, of holding midfielders Joe Allen and Joe Ledley as mitigating circumstances behind the draw.

The lack of tempo to the Wales side - with Leicester City's Andy King and Wolverhampton Wanderers' David Edwards both struggling to surprise an Israel team content to soak up pressure - meant that Bale and Aaron Ramsey were forced to drop deep to gather the ball. “We've lost all our holding midfielders, had to adapt and I was pleased - the boys had to do a lot of running and hung on in there well,” Coleman said.

Israel's manager, Eli Guttman, rejected Coleman's protests about the penalty. “It was not a penalty, in my opinion,” he said. “The fans shout, but if you are such a good team, don't shout just for penalties. I didn't think it was a handball; not at all. I didn't see any advantage from these Premier League players and one of the best in the world. We surrounded the Welsh players when they attacked.”

GROUP B Standings:

P W D L F A Pts

Wales 8 5 3 0 9 2 18

Belgium 8 5 2 1 17 3 17

Israel 8 4 1 3 14 9 13

Bosnia-H 8 3 2 3 12 10 11

Cyprus 8 3 0 5 12 13 9

Andorra 8 0 0 8 3 30 0

Remaining games:

10 Oct Andorra v Belgium, Bosnia-Herzegovina v Wales, Israel v Cyprus; 13 Oct Belgium v Israel, Cyprus v Bosnia-Herzegovina, Wales v Andorra – The Independent



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Belgium coach slams Benteke

Belgium may have beaten Cyprus but coach Marc Wilmots reckoned it was the worst performance he had seen from his flagging side.

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Nicosia - Belgium may have beaten Cyprus 1-0 with a late Eden Hazard goal to move closer to a place at Euro 2016 on Sunday but coach Marc Wilmots reckoned it was the worst performance he had seen from his flagging side.

He reserved much of his criticism for Liverpool striker Christian Benteke, although he was relieved with a Group B result which sees his team with one foot in next year's finals in France.

“We won two games in a row but this is the worst team performance I have seen and we will try to rectify the issue,” Wilmots told a news conference with his side having also beaten Bosnia 3-1 on Thursday.

Asked why Benteke was substituted at halftime, the Belgium coach said the striker had put in a “half-performance” and he needed to make a change as soon as possible.

Wilmots felt his team had created the better chances and, despite the poor performance, their character came through.

“Both sides missed chances... But we believed until the end that we would score and managed to got the result we needed,” he told reporters.

Explaining his team's sluggishness, Wilmots said both side's had struggled due to the humidity, gruelling pre-seasons and the fact they had played 72 hours earlier.

Cyprus coach Pambos Christodoulou felt his team deserved something from their last two games, having also lost 1-0 at home to group leaders Wales three days ago, despite playing better for large portions of both matches.

“Both games were decided on the finer details, but that's football. We now have two games left and we are still in the hunt for a playoff spot so let's see what happens,” said Christodoulou.

After eight matches Wales have 18 points, having been held to a 0-0 draw by Israel in Cardiff earlier on Sunday, with second-placed Belgium on 17. Israel have 13 points ahead of Bosnia with 11 and Cyprus on nine.

The nine group winners and runners-up and best third-placed side qualify for the finals while the eight remaining third-placed teams contest playoffs for the final four berths.

Despite Cyprus conceding against Wales in the 82nd minute and Belgium in the 85th, Christodoulou refused to blame the late goals on the fitness of his players but said both matches had opened up as the two teams looked for the winner.

“Although I've said it before, some of my players don't play regularly for their clubs (but) I won't blame the defeats on a lack of fitness or concentration because we too had chances to score late in both games,” he said. – Reuters



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Dutch on verge of Euro 2016 elimination

Turkey dealt a hammer blow to already faint Dutch chances of qualifying for Euro 2016 with a 3-0 home victory.

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Ankara - Turkey dealt a hammer blow to already faint Dutch chances of qualifying for Euro 2016 with a 3-0 home victory on Sunday which left the Netherlands in fourth place in Group A.

First-half goals by Oguzhan Ozyakup and Arda Turan put the hosts in charge and 85th minute effort by Burak Yilmaz sealed the points for Turkey who moved two points above the Dutch into third spot.

Last week's shock loss at home to Iceland had already left the Netherlands in real danger of missing their first European Championship for three decades, but if manager Danny Blind was hoping for an immediate response from his players he would have been disappointed.

It was another desperately laboured performance and they rarely looked like dragging themselves themselves back into the game after falling behind.

With the Czech Republic winning to move ahead of Iceland, who play Kazakhstan later, the Netherlands can no longer finish in the top two and will have to win both of their last two games to have any chance of a playoff spot. – Reuters



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Five painful lessons for Bafana

The adjectives duly came out on Sunday following Bafana Bafana's embarrassing 3-1 loss to Mauritania.

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Johannesburg - The adjectives duly came out on Sunday as South Africa tried to come to terms with Bafana Bafana’s 3-1 loss to Mauritania on Saturday night.

“Embarrassing, A Damn Disaster, Bungling Bafana Bite the Dust” – the headlines screamed.

And rightly so, for what transpired at the Olympic Stadium in Nouakchott was tantamount to treason by all involved. In some countries the entire squad would have been sent directly to an army base for some toughening up.

This is South Africa though and while most of us will lament the defeat, life will go on as usual for the players and the technical team with very little reprimand if any from either the South African Football Association (Safa) or the government.

As it is, they will all be in action at Orlando Stadium on Tuesday and a win in the friendly Nelson Mandela Challenge over Senegal will ensure the disaster of Nouachkott is quickly forgotten.

It shouldn’t though. Here are five things Shakes Mashaba and his boys have hopefully learnt from the defeat.

1 DON’T ROTATE CAPTAINCY

Mashaba probably thinks he is pioneering some new trend by rotating the captain’s armband instead of having one man in the position.

His reasoning that he wants to inculcate a sense of leadership in all his players just isn’t cutting it. And on Saturday there was no semblance of leadership from any of his players – a few of who had been captains before. Instead Dean Furman, replaced by Itumeleng Khune as captain, was never in the game and actually hardly looked interested as he at one stage kicked a clean of fresh air as he missed the ball completely.

Could it be he was sulking from being demoted? The world over every team has a permanent captain and Mashaba must follow suit. It helps settle the squad knowing who is their leader.

2 RESEARCH IS PARAMOUNT BEFORE ANY MATCH

Again this is a lesson Mashaba has to learn quickly or continue to send our national team down the drain.

Somewhat stubborn in his ways, the coach has this belief that he can simply prepare his team without worrying about the opposition. “Let them worry about us,” he likes to say. Unless you are Barcelona and can impose your way on any match, it is very impotant to know about your opponents Mkhulu Mashaba.

That the best the technical team knew was that Mauritania narrowly lost 1-0 to Cameroon and had some big losses way before was a recipe for disaster. And so it proved. A little research, for example, would have indicated to Bafana just how dangerous Ahmed Khalil is, the Algeria-based player having starred for the country in the CHAN tournament we hosted. And tapes of those were just a phone call away to the SABC or SuperSport. Embarrassingly they also looked like they had no idea they’d be playing on an astro-turf – now surely someone must be fired for that failure.

3 DON’T GIVE DEBUTS IN SUCH CRUCIAL MATCHES

Poor Phumlani Ntshangase! No doubt simply pleased to have been called-up, the Bidvest Wits leftback would have been shocked to be told he was starting ahead of Mzikayise Mashaba, the Mamelodi Sundowns fullback who has played for Bafana before.

And the youngster’s nerves were immediately evident as Ismaël Diakite skinned him in the first minute. And it was all downhill from there, when fellow debutant Siyabonga Zulu was sent off for a foul that screamed inexperience, Zulu having allowed the Mauritania player into his inside and thus giving his sight of goal before clumsily pushing him down.

But don’t blame the youngsters for all this. Granted Tsepo Masilela’s no show was a let down, but next in line should have been Mashaba and the coach cannot claim the little knock the Downs man suffered before departure was too bad as he brought him on later.

It’s all good to give players debuts but that has to be properly calculated.

4 pick PLAYERS on form, not on REPUTATION

There was a moment in the match when the television cameras focused on the Bafana bench and if looks could kill, Ayanda Patosi’s would have sent Mashaba to the grave.

The FC Lokeren player looked perplexed at having come all the way to sit on the bench when players who had only just got clubs got preffered ahead of him. And the fact that they merely huffed and puffed on the pitch, unable to cope with the heat and the pace of the game due to their lack of fitness, must have made Patosi all the more angry.

And there probably would have been many others who felt the same – the likes of Kermit Erasmus who have been playing regularly and with great impact at club level on the international scene only for the coach to stick with what appears his favourites. Mashaba and his technical team need to start being consistent with their selections and not go with players mainly due to previous performances.

5 ONLY THE GUTSY SUCCEED IN THE INTERNATIONAL GAME

Eric Mathoho is locally renowned for being a tough defender. On Saturday night the Chiefs defender was anything but as he twice allowed the opposition to go towards goal without even as trying to attempt a tackle.

But Mathoho’s lack of guts mirrored the entire team’s performance, with none of the players in yellow lifting their hands to be counted as warriors. Bafana looked like they couldn’t wait to get off the field, such was their disinterested showing.

Andile Jali hardly tracked back or forced his way forward as he usually does, there was no creative spark from Thulani Serero and Khune’s eagerness to turn defensive situations into attack proved costly as he allowed an innocuous free kick to beat him such was his rush to release a ball he had not yet got in his gloves.

On such an evening what Bafana needed was a no-nonsense coach who would give them something akin to Sir Alex Ferguson’s hair-dryer treatment at half time. Unfortunately in Mashaba they have a grandfather-type figure who probably caressed their egos if not begged them to go out and try their best.

Suggestions on social media that Orlando Pirates be sent out on the next Bafana away assignment suddenly appeared appealing. - Cape Times



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Queiroz critical of Moyes, Van Gaal

“I have great admiration and respect for Louis and David... But I think they made some critical and crucial mistakes.”

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London - Former Bafana Bafana coach and Manchester United assistant manager Carlos Queiroz has delivered a withering assessment of the work by David Moyes and Louis van Gaal since Sir Alex Ferguson’s retirement in 2013.

Queiroz had two spells as assistant to Ferguson - who led United to 38 trophies in 27 years as manager - from 2002-03 and 2004-08.

He believes Moyes, the successor to Ferguson who was chosen by the Scot but lasted only 10 months in the job, and Van Gaal have both made significant errors at the helm of the club.

“I have great admiration and respect for Louis and David... But I think they made some critical and crucial mistakes in the transition from Alex,” Queiroz told The Guardian.

Queiroz was particularly bemused by Moyes’ decision to remove coaching staff such as Mike Phelan, Rene Meulensteen and Eric Steele.

“It was not necessary to turn everything upside down with the staff with people like Phelan, people that know the insides of the club,” he said.

Queiroz added that, under Van Gaal, United have panic bought and insisted that with the money at the Dutchman’s disposal, he must get the club to challenge for trophies.

“A club like Manchester, with its financial capabilities, the results must be there immediately. We also want to see the players shining. Great players like (George) Best, (Paul) Scholes, (Ryan) Giggs, (Roy) Keane, (Ruud) Van Nistelrooy - where are they? Where are the stars of Manchester United?

“You have to prepare and then make the decisions together. You can still make wrong decisions but we never made panic decisions when buying players,” he said.

The Portuguese’s comments come after United signed 19-year-old striker Anthony Martial from Monaco in a deal that can rise up to £58million.

United are currently fifth in the Premier League after their first four games of the season, with seven points.

They were beaten 2-1 by Swansea in their last match and face Liverpool in their next encounter, at Old Trafford on September 12.

Daily Mail



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LVG still wants Bale or Ronaldo

Man United will not be deterred in making future bids for Gareth Bale or Cristiano Ronaldo after the David de Gea saga.

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London - Manchester United will not be deterred in making future bids for Gareth Bale or Cristiano Ronaldo due to the fall-out with Real Madrid over David de Gea.

United and Real swapped statements of blame last week after the proposed transfer of Spanish goalkeeper De Gea to the Bernabeu collapsed because relevant papers were not submitted in time for Spain’s 11pm deadline on Monday.

He is in the final year of his contract at Old Trafford and can sign a lucrative pre-contract agreement with Madrid in January without United receiving a penny.

The clubs have regularly dealt with each other over transfers in recent years, with David Beckham, Gabriel Heinze, Ronaldo and Javier Hernandez moving to Madrid and Angel di Maria arriving in the opposite direction. But United are confident the current dispute will not affect future negotiations and point to the fall-out over Ronaldo as evidence they will still be able to conduct amicable transfers.

Sir Alex Ferguson famously said he would not “sell that lot a virus” when Madrid started to pursue Ronaldo but, 12 months later, the player left for a then world-record fee of £80million.

United are desperate for a “Galactico” to give the club glamour and impetus and Bale and Ronaldo “the two most expensive footballers in history” have been long-term targets.

That ambition to bring at least one of them to Old Trafford will not disappear because of De Gea and United will be at the front of the queue if either gives any indication that they would be interested in leaving the Bernabeu next summer.

United will not consider selling De Gea in January and will let him run down in his contract if he does not sign a new one. The player is extremely unlikely to threaten to go on strike.

Indeed, the 24-year-old is likely to be the biggest winner of the impasse. As Real will no longer have to pay a transfer fee, he could earn an extra £8m over the course of a long-term contract.

And he will not have to include a super-agent like Jose Mendes in future negotiations another potential cost saving.

United, however, might reaffirm their interest in Borussia Dortmund midfielder Marco Reus in January. United have just loaned 20-year-old Adnan Januzaj to the German club.

Daily Mail



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Rooney now level with Charlton

England qualified for the Euro 2016 finals, with Wayne Rooney equalling Sir Bobby Charlton’s all-time scoring record.

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England qualified for the Euro 2016 finals after crushing San Marino 6-0 on Saturday night, with Wayne Rooney equalling Sir Bobby Charlton’s all-time scoring record of 49 goals for his country, which has stood since 1970.

The visitors outclassed San Marino’s part-timers as they chalked up a seventh successive Group E win to seal their place in France next year.

Rooney equalled Charlton’s record when he scored with a 13th-minute penalty, sending goalkeeper Aldo Simoncini the wrong way. It was his fifth goal against San Marino.

Cristian Brolli headed into his own net after 30 minutes before Ross Barkley nodded home seconds after halftime with his first goal for England.

Substitute Theo Walcott made it 4-0 with a tap-in at the far post in the 68th minute.

Harry Kane, who replaced Rooney in the 57th minute, scored England’s fifth with an exquisite chip before Walcott slid in the sixth goal in the 76th.

Meanwhile, Iceland’s ascent to the brink of qualifying for their first major tournament has been increasingly on the cards, says co-coach Heimir Hallgrimsson as an expectant country anticipates achieving that goal on Sunday.

One win from their last three Group A qualifiers will ensure a place at Euro 2016 in France for the Nordic nation.

“Some might think we have been a little naive but always it has always been our target and aim to qualify Iceland. In the past maybe it would have seemed strange to think we could come and beat a strong football power like Holland,” Hallgrimsson said after Thursday’s 1-0 win over the Dutch.

“But going so close in the playoffs against Croatia gave the players the belief we can achieve it,” he added, referring to Iceland reaching the 2014 World Cup qualification playoffs where Croatia beat them 2-0 on aggregate over two legs.

“We could smell going to Brazil. It gave everyone the belief that has never been there before.”

Iceland’s victory in Amsterdam completed a double over the Netherlands and kept them two points ahead of the Czech Republic at the top of the standings.

A home win on Sunday against Kazakhstan, who have lost six of their seven qualifiers, will take Iceland to 21 points and confirm a top-two finish and a trip to France next year.

“Let’s hope we can do it. We are not there that yet but in a very good position in the group,” said Hallgrimsson.

Iceland must still play second-bottom Latvia at home in October and away to Turkey.

Iceland’s newspapers on Friday encouraged supporters to begin booking their trips to next year’s finals.

In Amsterdam on Thursday, 3 000 traveling fans (about one percent of the north Atlantic island nation’s population), roared their players to victory.

* Nigeria were held to a goalless draw away to Tanzania on Saturday night in their Africa Cup of Nations qualifier in a disappointing start for new coach Sunday Oliseh.

The Super Eagles, who reached the last 16 at last year’s World Cup, were dominated by their hosts through much of the match as a new-look line-up, much changed from the side under previous coach Stephen Keshi, made little impact.

“We struggled in the first half. The second half we were a little better. But we lacked quality in certain areas,” said Oliseh.

Nigeria are in a tough qualifying group including Egypt, who play in Chad on Sunday.

Egypt and Nigeria both won their opening qualifiers in June and meet each other in two successive matches next March.

Reuters



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Bafana suffer shock defeat

A ten-man Bafana squad floundered to a defeat at the hands of Mauritania in their Group M 2017 Afcon qualifier.

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Johannesburg - Ten-man South African floundered to a 3-1 defeat at the hands of Mauritania in their Group M 2017 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier at the Stade Olympique de Nouakchott, Mauritania, on Saturday evening.

The only first-half goal was scored by Mauritania’s Aly Abeide who struck a sixth-minute free-kick which Bafana Bafana’s goalkeeper Itumuleng Khune failed to gather the ball and it bobbed into the net (1-0).

Bafana Bafana’s Dean Furman was yellow carded in the 37th minute but worse was to follow when Siyabonga Zulu was red carded in the 49th minute for a professional foul after Ismaël Diakité was upended a few metres away from SA’s penalty area.

A splendid header by striker Thamsanqa Gabuza allowed South Africa to equalise in the 69th minute when he rose well above Mauritania’s central defence (1-1).

However, the goal, South Africa’s first in two matches, did little to lift their game and their challenge was left was flat as Saturday night’s left-over beer when Les Mourabitones scored twice in quick succession ten minutes later through Beyguili Boubacar and Moulaye Ahmed Bessam (79, 86th).

In their opening qualifying match, South African were held to a goalless draw by Gambia at the Moses Mabhida Stadium, in Durban.

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It’s 3 points or bust for Masango and Co

Forme Chiefs winger Mandla Masango has warned that Bafana can ill-afford to take lowly-ranked Mauritania lightly.

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Johannesburg - Former Kaizer Chiefs winger Mandla Masango has warned that Bafana Bafana can ill-afford to take lowly-ranked Mauritania lightly.

Bafana play the host country, ranked 114th in the world rankings, in Nouakchott on Saturday night (kick-off 7pm) in a crucial Africa Cup of Nations Gabon 2017 qualifier.

Speaking after South Africa’s final training session before Thursday’s departure, Masango insists they know what lies ahead.

“It’s going to be a tough encounter because Mauritania are an unknown nation to us, we haven’t played them before,” he said. “We are well aware of how they played against Cameroon in their opening qualifier, so we cannot afford to take things for granted, we should go there and give it our all.

“We have a good group of players, full of confidence, and a lot of experience, but we have to put that to good use and ensure we return victorious. We are positive we will get the result we want because a negative result will set us back big time in the qualifiers.”

This is the first time Masango is in the national team since his move to Randers FC in Denmark. He also scored on debut for his new club.

“For me, coming to the national team as an overseas-based player is the same feeling,” he said. “It’s always an honour to represent South Africa and I am grateful to have received a call-up because it’s every player’s dream to play for their country.”

“And about my new home, there is a lot of difference with the kind of football I played in South Africa.

“There they move the ball quicker, they see an empty space even before they receive the ball, they don’t waste time on the ball. They are more tactically aware of what is happening.”

Masango is happy the move materialised as it was always his wish to play abroad.

“In life, no pain, no gain. You have to know what you want and stick to what you want because at the end of the day, your life is in your hands, nobody owns your life.

“I thank God for the opportunity because some players don’t get a chance to play overseas so I count myself as blessed.”

Meanwhile, Bafana arrived safely in Nouakchott after a 10-hour flight which included an hour’s stopover for refuelling in Libreville, Gabon.

Today will be the first time Bafana play Mauritania since readmission to world football in 1992.

Shake Mashaba’s men arrived to hot, humid conditions with temperatures hovering around 29º C just after 11pm.

After a slow start in the qualifiers with a goalless draw against Gambia in Durban in June, Bafana know that nothing but a win will help them stay within touching distance with log leaders Cameroon.

“We don’t know so much about them, but this is a must-win game for us,” Bafana midfielder Dean Furman said.

“We got off to a draw in the first match of the qualifiers and we know how competitive these groups are as our last AFCON experience showed us, so it is important to get those three points and that’s all we will be playing for.”

The new SuperSport United player believes it should not matter where they play - the important thing is the result.

“I wouldn’t say we play well away, every game is different. I think our home form is something we need to work on where we need to impose ourselves and make it a difficult place for teams,” Furman said.

“Before the last AFCON, our away form was being questioned but we have to apply ourselves whether we are away or home and go for a win.

“The more experience we have the better it is for the squad - it is good to see Itu (Itumeleng Khune) back and fully fit, he will be a big player - both on and off the pitch - and that kind of experience from playing on the continent is vital and can only bode well for us trying to have a successful campaign.”

His sentiments were echoed by defender Anele Ngcongca.

“All the games we play are very important, but this one (Saturday) is more so because we did not do well in our first game when we played to a draw against Gambia,” he said.

“So this one is a must-win to catch up with Cameroon who are top of our group.

“We have to go out there and give them the respect they deserve, but not too much because both want the same thing - three points and nothing else - so we have to use our quality to come back victorious. I believe the team is well prepared, we must go out there and deliver.”

Ngcongca has just made a move from Racing Genk in Belgium to League 1 side Troyes in France.

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