Schweinsteiger transfer fee revealed

Manchester United did not pay Bayern Munich 15 million pounds to secure the services of midfielder Bastian Schweinsteiger.

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Manchester United spent 6.5 million pounds ($10 million) to take Bastian Schweinsteiger to Old Trafford in the close season, British media reported, citing a statement released by the midfielder's first club TSV 1860 Rosenheim.

The World Cup winner joined from Bayern Munich in July for a fee widely reported to be 15 million pounds but it appears the Red Devils paid far less than that to reunite the 31-year-old with Louis van Gaal, who managed him at the Allianz Arena from 2009-11.

Rosenheim, where Schweinsteiger began his youth career in 1992, are an amateur side in the south of Germany that play in the regional fifth division of the Bayernliga Sud.

The club released a statement on Wednesday detailing how much they had received from a sell-on clause included in Schweinsteiger's contract at Bayern.

“The transfer fee adds up to 9 million euros ($10 million),” Rosenheim said.

“We have been credited for two years (that Schweinsteiger spent at the club).

“We will receive the payment in two instalments, and after deducting the adviser and legal costs, we will receive 19,000 euros),” the statement added.

Schweinsteiger was 13 years old when he moved from Rosenheim to Bayern in 1998. He spent 17 years with the current Bundesliga champions, winning eight league titles, the Champions League in 2013 and a Fifa Club World Cup. – Reuters



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Rooney out to end EPL scoring drought

Wayne Rooney has not found the net for Manchester United in his last 10 league games, a run that stretches back to April 12.

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Wayne Rooney is keen to end his Premier League drought and carry his goal-scoring form for England back to the Premier League when Manchester United welcome Liverpool to Old Trafford on Saturday, British media reported.

Rooney became England's record scorer on 50 goals when he smashed home a penalty in their 2-0 win over Switzerland on Tuesday but has not found the net for his club in his last 10 league games, a barren run that stretches back to April 12.

“I am very happy and grateful, but I go back to Manchester, get back into training and start focusing on Liverpool. Hopefully getting two goals in the last two games will mean I continue scoring,” Rooney said.

“There's no better game to go into than Liverpool at home after losing our last game (2-1 at Swansea City). It is a game we have to win and it's something I'm looking forward to,” the former Everton striker added.

“To achieve what I have (by becoming England's top scorer), I would be lying if I said it didn't put a spring in my step and make you want to carry on scoring,” Rooney, who also scored in the 6-0 win over San Marino that booked England's place in the Euro 2016 finals in France, said.

Meanwhile, Ander Herrera has said United's midfield needs to start chipping in with goals to take some of the pressure off both Rooney and new signing Anthony Martial.

The Red Devils have struggled for goals in the early part of the season and have just three in their four league games so far, including the own goal by Kyle Walker in the 1-0 win over Tottenham Hotspur in the season opener.

“We don't have to give all the responsibility on scoring to Wayne or Anthony Martial. We have to help. It is very important as a midfielder to score. We all have to help,” the Spanish midfielder said.

“Wayne is very important to us. Most of the time he will score but when he doesn't, he is helping the team and he is always fighting for the team.

“He runs for the rest of the team and he likes to provide assists. We are very lucky to have him,” the 26-year-old added. – Reuters



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Chelsea, Spurs to play at Wembley?

FA chief executive Martin Glenn has backed plans by Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur to use Wembley as their temporary home while their own stadiums get redeveloped.

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Football Association chief executive Martin Glenn has backed plans by Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur to use Wembley as their temporary home while their own stadiums get redeveloped.

Premier League champions Chelsea plan on increasing the capacity of Stamford Bridge to 60,000, a 500 million pound ($767.70 million) plan that would require a new home for at least two seasons.

Tottenham may also spend the 2017-18 campaign away as the seek to rebuild the White Hart Lane which will also host National Football League (NFL) games.

Both the clubs are naturally interested in a temporary relocation to Wembley, according to British media reports.

“I won't comment on clubs but if that's an opportunity then we will follow it,” Glenn told reporters.

“We are there to provide help. We can run the FA for less costs and we can raise more,” he said, adding it also made financial sense for the stadium.

“There's a range of things. It's primarily a football stadium, football matches are more profitable to run than concerts and other things.

“We are the national stadium and seeking to use it more is what we are all about. We have an obligation to football.

“It's in our interest as an association for clubs to redevelop their grounds, make superb facilities and if it's possible to help them in that transition by using Wembley, we are absolutely supportive of that,” he added. – Reuters



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Rooney’s record will stand for a long time

Gary Lineker believes Wayne Rooney will be England's leading goal-scorer for “a long time” after Rooney netted a record-breaking 50th international goal against Switzerland.

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Gary Lineker believes Wayne Rooney will be England's leading goal-scorer for “a long time” after the Manchester United striker netted a record-breaking 50th international goal against Switzerland.

Rooney's late penalty in Tuesday's 2-0 Euro 2016 qualifier at Wembley eclipsed Bobby Charlton's 45-year-old mark of 49 and left him two goals in front of Lineker, who scored 48 England goals between 1984 and 1992.

With Rooney not yet 30 and the second-highest scorer in the current England set-up, Danny Welbeck, having only scored 14 international goals, Lineker believes it will be a while before the captain's tally is bettered.

“I think it'll last a long time,” Lineker, 54, told a group of journalists in London on Wednesday. “We've got no-one anywhere near it at the moment, so it's going to last at least 10 years.

“You'd have to score five, six a year, which is not that easy, so it has to last for a good period of time. Harry Kane might come through and prove to be a very consistent goal-scorer; he might not.

“I would suggest we have a long wait. And he (Rooney) could put it, not out of sight, but into the sixties.”

While Rooney's goals have secured his place in English football history, Lineker believes it would be wrong to focus only on his qualities as a marksman.

“There is so much more to his game than goals -- a wonderful work ethic, his awareness of space -- and he is thoroughly deserving of the record,” said the former Barcelona, Everton and Tottenham Hotspur striker.

“He is a very intelligent footballer. He knows where to go, how to pull defenders out of position, and his movement is top-class. Although he may not have the blistering pace of some, he has terrific speed of thought.

“He is not your quintessential poacher, but because he contributes so much inside and outside the box, he will get you those kind of goals.”

Lineker recently spent time with Rooney during the filming of an intimate documentary about the United captain that is due to be broadcast on British television next month.

Acknowledging that Rooney has not always enjoyed the undivided affection of English fans – the legacy, perhaps, of repeated failings at major tournaments – Lineker hopes the film “will transform the public opinion of him”.

“He's a decent guy with a lovely family and I think that comes across,” added Lineker, who is now a television presenter with BT Sport.

Lineker famously squandered an opportunity to equal Charlton's record when he fluffed an attempted 'Panenka' penalty during a friendly against Brazil at Wembley in May 1992.

It was to prove the closest he came to matching Charlton's mark, but he says the only regret from his international career was England's penalty shootout defeat by West Germany at the 1990 World Cup in Italy.

“If someone had told me when I started my career that I would finish one goal behind Bobby Charlton, I would have said: 'You are having a laugh,'“ he said.

“So I never really thought about it. The only thing I look back on and think 'if only' and regret maybe is 1990, winning the penalty shootout and possibly winning the World Cup. That is the thing.

“Obviously I wish I had not been a smartarse and tried to chip the penalty against Brazil. I would have liked to have beaten the record – I'm not suggesting I wouldn't – but absolutely no regrets.

“I had a wonderful career and I am very lucky.” - AFP



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City’s Delph faces long injury layoff

Manchester City midfielder Fabian Delph could miss up to nine games for club and country after he pulled up with a hamstring injury during England's win over Switzerland.

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Manchester City midfielder Fabian Delph could miss up to nine games for club and country after he pulled up with a hamstring injury during England's win over Switzerland in a Euro 2016 qualifier on Tuesday, British media reported.

Delph has yet to start for his club since completing a controversial move from Aston Villa due to a hamstring injury he picked up in a pre-season friendly, although he has made two appearances for Manuel Pellegrini's side off the bench.

The 25-year-old was forced off within the first minute of England's 2-0 win at Wembley and is expected to miss Champions League ties against Juventus and Borussia Moenchengladbach and a League Cup clash against Sunderland.

He could also miss Premier League matches against Crystal Palace, West Ham United, Tottenham Hotspur and Newcastle United and England's remaining Euro 2016 qualifiers against Estonia and Lithuania.

On a more positive note for City, Brazilian midfielder Fernando is closing in on full fitness after recovering from a groin injury that he battled with for most of last season.

The 28-year-old last featured for his club on May 10 and said he needed pain-killing injections before most of his 33 appearances.

“I've been working hard to recover. I'm feeling much better now with no pain so I will resume normal training this week and hopefully be available at some point within the next fortnight,” Fernando told the club website (www.mcfc.co.uk)

“I can't wait to get my season finally up and running and being pain free at last will be a huge relief,” he added. – Reuters



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Lucas remains committed to Reds

Liverpool midfielder Lucas Leiva has put a summer of transfer speculations behind him and is determined to emerge as a key player.

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Liverpool midfielder Lucas Leiva has put a summer of transfer speculations behind him and is determined to emerge as a key player for the Premier League club this season.

The longest serving player in the current Liverpool squad, Lucas was linked with a move to Besiktas but the president of the Turkish side confirmed last month that the Reds were unwilling to offload the Brazil international.

“It's been very intense (the window), to be honest. I think the last couple of years, every transfer window my name is (linked with a move),” the 28-year-old Lucas told the club website (liverpoolfc.com).

“Of course there are times when you think you might have to move on and I was very close to moving but one thing I will always have is commitment to this club.”

“I'm here to fight for the club as I have been doing for eight years. I'm just looking forward to a good season and putting Liverpool back where it belongs.

“Hopefully, I'll be an important player for the club this season.”

Currently seventh with seven points from four games, Liverpool visit fifth placed Manchester United when they resume their Premier League campaign on Saturday. –Reuters



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Mashaba has foot in mouth disease

Shakes Mashaba and diplomacy are like the parallel lines of a railway – destined never to meet.

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Of course we’ve always known that Shakes Mashaba and diplomacy are like the parallel lines of a railway – destined never to meet.

But one would have thought experience has taught the man to be a bit more calculating before expressing himself.

After all this is a man who once lost his job – as coach of the national team – owing to his inability to avoid public outbursts against his employers.

Time and experience, however, appear not to have helped Bra Shakes one bit ... as this week has shown.

Following the shock defeat to Mauratania at the weekend, Bafana Bafana’s coach has once again gone and put his foot in it with utterances that have only served to irk a disappointed football public some more.

The excuses that Bra Shakes put forth for the 3-1 defeat left some of us cringing in embarrassment for a former football star we grew up admiring.

After all this is a man we once used to refer to as the gentleman of South African coaches.

Back then, when he was in charge of the national Under-20 side and later the Under-23s, Mashaba almost always said the right things. Of course he didn’t say a lot then, such was the limited interest in the age group outfits.

But when he did say, you always took notice – Mashaba usually sharing his plans for the team he was in charge of with consummate eloquence.

His squad’s camps were open – Bra Shakes having no problem allowing the media to join in at the team’s lunches and allowing them free access to the players.

It was for this reason, and the fact he got the teams producing good results, that he became a favourite of most.

He did very well with Bafana in his first tenure and was only fired for daring to stand up to his employers – not for bad results.

And so it was with glee that most of us welcomed his return to the post last year. That he then qualified for the Africa Cup of Nations after many moons of us watching as bystanders saw him rise up even further in the popularity stakes.

But then, at the first sight of failure, he goes and loses it again. Now surely that’s not the mark of a good leader.

Yet while Bra Shakes should know better, I find myself pretty disappointed at the media division of the South African Football Association (Safa), who clearly are not doing their job.

A good media team would have anticipated the onslaught that Mashaba faced upon returning from Nouakchott and helped him weather the storm. Instead they left him out to dry and the man duly got his foot in it. What a pity! - The Star



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Football doing it’s bit for refugees

Several projects across Europe are being launched by football fans and clubs, both professional and amateur, to welcome refugees.

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Berlin – German sport is reflecting the country’s political and grassroots response to the refugee crisis with a number of

initiatives to help migrants.

Elsewhere in Europe, several projects are being launched by football fans and clubs, both professional and amateur, to welcome refugees and provide material and other support.

In Germany, where Bayern Munich last week pledged to organise a training camp for refugees and raise 1 million euros (1.12 million dollars) for refugee projects, many clubs and fans are running initiatives.

On Wednesday evening, German second division side St Pauli invited 1 000 refugees to a friendly match against Borussia Dortmund in Hamburg held under the slogan “Refugees Welcome.” Child refugees escorted the players onto the pitch.

Dortmund defender Neven Subotic, whose family left Serbia for Germany in 1990, said: “When I think of the way refugees are being welcomed in Germany I get goose pimples.”

St Pauli coach Ewald Lienen said football cannot do a great deal and a single match won’t help people with their everyday concerns “but we can make a statement which is incredibly important.”

Professional sport, which is sometimes accused of ignoring social problems, could in fact now be criticised for making token gestures which boost sport’s image as much as providing support to refugees.

“The whole thing does of course have a symbolic dimension, that is something you cannot deny,” said sport scientist Juergen Mittag of the German Sport University in Cologne.

However he points out that many small sports clubs are also helping by making sports halls and other facilities available, donating clothing and the like. Sport – especially football – also has significant position in German society and “cannot simply stay out of it.”

Shows of support for refugees are expected around Germany’s football stadiums at the weekend when the Bundesliga resumes following an international break. After recent photos of German fans holding Refugees Welcome signs at matches, a fan movement has also begun in England showing support for the refugees.

A Twitter account, @RefugeesEFL, has called for a “Day of Solidarity” across the 92 teams in the top four divisions for Saturday to send a message to the British government.

The event will coincide with UK Home Secretary Theresa May’s meeting with EU leaders two days later to discuss the crisis.

Aston Villa fans were one of the first groups to sign up to the call for support and will display a Refugees Welcome banner at Sunday’s televised game at Leicester.

The support is so far mainly a grassroots movement, although the Premier League is not short of money after a 5.14-billion-pound

(5.75-billion-dollar) television rights deal beginning next season.

England’s top-flight clubs have spent 870 million pounds on summer transfers.

Europe’s leading football clubs do however aim to generate up to 3 million euros to charities supporting migrants by donating income

from ticket sales for upcoming Champions League and Europa League games.

“Football too has responsibility,” European Club Association chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge said.

In Italy, Roma launched the global charity Football Cares to help refugees with donations to United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Save The Children, International Rescue Committee and the Red Cross.

The club’s spokesperson for the initiative is their board member Mia Hamm, one of only two women included in Fifa’s 125 greatest living players.

“Football has once again showed its true gift – the ability to bring us all together for the cause of humanity,” Hamm said.

In Spain, football giants Real Madrid will donate 1 million euros to help refugees to be taken in by Spain in the next few weeks. However there has been a sluggish response from Spain’s sporting institutions to calls from non-governmental organisations to help the migrants.

No other football or sports clubs have yet to follow Real’s example, despite NGOs and the media campaigning for help for the migrants.

In Catalonia, radio station RAC1 has asked European champions Barcelona “to consider how they can help. The most important club in the world simply cannot remain on the sidelines in such an emergency.”

While football has been in the forefront of help, other sports are also active. The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has pledged to donate 2 million dollars for projects supporting refugees.

Compared to the 3.25 million dollars the IOC distributes daily to athletes and sports organisations around the world, the sum is small.

Mittag for his part does not want to make a judgment on these sort of donations; the money pledged by sports authorities will certainly help those in need. “Now it is up to each to say, could one be doing more?” he said. – DPA-ANA



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De Gea hopes for United start

David De Gea is hoping to win back his place in goal at Manchester United after he played his first competitive match this season.

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Madrid - David De Gea is hoping to win back his place in goal at Manchester United after he played his first competitive match this season in Spain's 1-0 Euro 2016 qualifying victory away to Macedonia on Tuesday.

Coach Vicente del Bosque gave De Gea a vote of confidence by selecting him ahead of captain Iker Casillas for the match in Skopje, when Spain's comfortable win thanks to an own goal put the holders two points clear at the top of Group C and close to securing their berth at the finals in France next year.

De Gea's planned move to Real Madrid fell through in farcical fashion last week when the paperwork was delivered too late and United coach Louis van Gaal has not used him this season while the transfer sage dragged on.

“I felt good, I really wanted to play,” De Gea, who had little to do during the game, told Spanish television.

“Now I need to keep working and see if I have some good fortune at my club as well,” added the 24-year-old former Atletico Madrid keeper.

“My future will be the same as now: remain calm, keep working and improving. In concrete terms, enjoy my football. I am happy.”

Spain, who have not conceded a goal in six qualifiers, lead the section on 21 points, two ahead of Slovakia who were held to a 0-0 draw at home on Tuesday by an Ukrainian side further three points behind in third.

The nine group winners and runners-up and best third-placed side qualify directly, while the eight remaining third-placed teams contest playoffs for the last four spots.

Chasing a third straight continental triumph, Spain can make sure of their place with a home win over Luxembourg on Oct. 9 before they play in Ukraine three days later.

Although Spain enjoyed a comfortable win against bottom-placed Macedonia, Del Bosque, who fielded a weakened team, was not happy with the performance.

“We have to recognise that we did not play well,” he told a news conference.

“We could single out individuals but the right thing to do is to admit there was a general dip in our play.

“After the goal we were very static, slow, on the back foot and lacking in depth.”

“They did not dominate us but we were not comfortable and they had the odd chance on the counter attack.” – Reuters



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Kane hopes to reproduce England form

Harry Kane is hoping to reproduce his international form for Tottenham Hotspur when the Premier League resumes.

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Harry Kane is hoping to reproduce his international form for Tottenham Hotspur when the Premier League resumes this weekend and has set his sights on overhauling Wayne Rooney's newly established England scoring record.

The Manchester United captain broke Bobby Charlton's record when he smashed home an 84th minute penalty to notch his 50th England goal in a Euro 2016 qualifier against Switzerland at Wembley on Tuesday.

Kane scored the third goal of his burgeoning international career to break Switzerland's stubborn resistance in the 67th minute before Rooney sealed a 2-0 victory, England's eighth win in as many Group E games.

The Tottenham striker was a second-half substitute and found the back of the net 10 minutes after coming on to earn his fourth England cap with a smart left-footed finish from Luke Shaw's low cross.

The international break has been productive for Kane, who came off the bench to score against San Marino, a 6-0 victory that booked England's ticket to next year's finals in France, and Switzerland.

The striker, who scored 31 times last season, is yet to open his Premier League account in four games so far but is confident of kick-starting his campaign when he returns to club football against Sunderland on Sunday.

“Any striker wants to be scoring goals, so it's great to come away and get a couple,” the 22-year-old Kane told reporters.

“I'll go back and focus on Spurs but if I don't score at the weekend it's not the end of the world.

“Hopefully I can get some chances for the club now and start scoring goals and really kick on this season,” he added.

Kane is also hopeful that he can one day overtake Rooney as England's top scorer.

“Rooney has set the mark and will probably go on to score quite a few more hopefully for us,” Kane said.

“We'll see where he ends up and hopefully I'll be chasing him down. I'm sure he's very proud of what he has achieved.” – Reuters



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Will Ajax make a deal for Isaacs?

Ajax Cape Town have an opportunity to sign Erwin Isaacs – but, strangely enough, they aren’t salivating at the prospect.

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Ajax Cape Town have an opportunity to sign Erwin Isaacs – but, strangely enough, they aren’t salivating at the prospect.

Isaacs spent six months at the Cape club on loan from Wits last season and was an instant hit. The 28-year-old from Lavender Hill’s experience and industry provided a solid contribution in ensuring that Ajax ended fifth in the PSL and qualified for the final of the Nedbank Cup.

The Urban Warriors were keen on making Isaacs’s move permanent during the transfer window this season, but were put off by Wits’ exorbitant asking price. But the attacking midfielder is now a free agent.

He still had one year to go with the Students but, after much deliberation, they decided to terminate his contract and allow him the opportunity to seek a new challenge elsewhere.

Because he is a free player, Isaacs can be signed even though the transfer window is closed.

He is currently training with Ajax and is keen on playing for the team where he really enjoyed himself last season. The club’s management, though, say budgets have already been done and it’ll be difficult to make the deal.

The coaches, however, are keen on adding Isaacs to the squad – and it now all depends on whether they can convince the money men to loosen the purse strings for a player that will definitely beef up the squad and offer an influential presence in the dressing-room.

Meanwhile, Ajax are in action on Saturday night when they host Polokwane City in a PSL fixture at the Cape Town Stadium (kick-off 8.15pm) – and coach Roger de Sa has a few crucial decisions to make regarding selection, especially because there are so many injury concerns in the squad.

While De Sa always focuses on the present challenge, the fixture immediately at hand, he may have to think long-term this week. Ajax’s next engagement, after Polokwane, is the MTN8 final against Kaizer Chiefs in Port Elizabeth next Saturday – and he may have to rest a few key men who are carrying niggles this week.

First up is Bafana Bafana central defender Rivaldo Coetzee. The 18-year-old was injured in the national team’s 3-1 embarrassment to Mauritania and sat out last night’s Nelson Mandela Challenge friendly against Senegal in Soweto. On his return, Ajax will assess the extent and severity of Coetzee’s injury before deciding whether he plays against Polokwane or not.

Goalkeeper Anssi Jaakkola is another worry. The Finn has been in great form this season, but injured a tendon in his hand. He is currently training with a splint, but still handling and catching balls excellently.

Reserve goalkeeper Jody February returned from Tunisia today, after playing for the SA Under-23 squad. If De Sa decides to give Jaakkola a break before the final, then the promising February is looking at a PSL start on Saturday.

And for that SA Under-23 trip to Tunisia, Ajax’s Abbubaker Mobara and Riyaad Norodien were also supposed to travel. But both were sent back to the Cape by Amaglug-glug’s medical staff, with Mobara troubled by an ankle injury and Norodien struggling with a groin strain. With this exciting young duo also regulars in De Sa’s team, they add to the problems facing the coach.

Finally, there’s striker Prince Nxumalo, who’s back training after a huge scare two weeks ago when he suffered a series of epileptic fits. He spent a few days in hospital in Joburg, had some time back home with his family in Durban, and is now training again.

Nxumalo is on medication for the seizures and, according to medical advice, he should be out for about four weeks. The coaches are monitoring him at training to gauge how much pressure he can handle.

All in all, it’s a big selection juggle for De Sa as he contemplates Polokwane and Chiefs over the coming weekends.



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Rooney breaks England’s goal-scoring record

Wayne Rooney became England's all-time record scorer when he smashed home his 50th goal with a penalty against Switzerland.

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London - Wayne Rooney was overcome with emotion after becoming England's all-time record scorer when he smashed home his 50th goal with an 84th minute penalty in a Euro 2016 qualifier against Switzerland at Wembley on Tuesday.

The England skipper, who scored from the spot after Granit Xhaka had fouled Raheem Sterling, has now passed the mark of 49 goals established by Bobby Charlton in May 1970.

The FA presented the 29-year-old with a replica shirt with “Rooney 50” on the back in the dressing room after the 2-0 win secured top spot in Group E for already-qualified England.

Charlton will be invited to present fellow Manchester United great Rooney with a golden boot to mark the record before England's next home match against Estonia in October.

Asked to describe his feelings, Rooney, who equalled Charlton's record also with a penalty away to San Marino on Saturday, said: “It's a great feeling obviously.

“I've known I've been close to it for the last few England games and to finally do it is a dream come true and as you've probably seen I was a bit emotional out there.

“It's a huge honour and something I'm extremely proud of and happy it's done and hopefully I can kick on from here and concentrate now again on the team and hopefully success in the future,” he told ITV.

“I am pleased its out of the way because now I don't have to keep on being asked questions about it.”

Rooney blasted his penalty past Yann Sommer making sure he hit it with enough venom to give the Swiss keeper no chance.

“It was a big moment for me and I just picked my corner and put my boot through it to get as much power on it as possible and make it hard for the goalkeeper and the keeper got a touch and thankfully it had too much power so I'm grateful for that.

Asked where it ranked in a career in which he has won five Premier League titles and the Champions League, he said: “It's right up there if not the best to be your country's all-time leading goalscorer before the age of 30.

“It's something I could never have dreamt of. I'm extremely proud tonight.”

Rooney praised England manager Roy Hodgson for helping him achieve his milestone after taking over the job in 2012.

“Since Roy's come in I've scored a lot of goals and I'm grateful to him for letting me play with the freedom which I've enjoyed,” he said.

Hodgson, whose side were the first to qualify for next year's finals in France, told a news conference: “I am pleased we won, I am pleased Wayne broke the record and I am pleased Harry Kane scored the other goal.

“I don't think Wayne will stop here either. We play about 10 games a year now, maybe more, and I think he can play at least another 30 games for England and, at his rate of scoring, maybe get another 10 or 15 goals. I don't think he has finished yet.” – Reuters



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Bafana retain Mandela Challenge trophy

Bafana Bafana turned in a crowd-pleasing display to inflict a 1-0 defeat over Senegal’s Lions of Teranga in the Nelson Mandela Challenge.

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Johannesburg – Bafana Bafana finally turned in a crowd-pleasing display to inflict a 1-0 defeat over Senegal’s Lions of Teranga in the Nelson Mandela Challenge clash at the Orlando Stadium on Tuesday evening.

The win, coming in the 22nd edition of the NM Challenge, was South Africa’s first over Senegal since readmission to international competition in 1992, and the Nelson Mandela Challenge trophy will remain in the country after Bafana retained it by defeating Cote d’Ivoire 2-0 in 2014.

The only goal of the match was scored by 29-year-old Bafana debutant Mpho Makola, 11 minutes from the end.

The Senegalese held the initiative at the outset when they were content to hold onto the ball without looking to penetrate the opposition’s defensive lines. Bafana was forced onto a largely defensive role as they tried to undo the visitors’ grip in the early stages of the match.

From around the 13th minute onwards, Bafana Bafana started imposing themselves on the match by pulling off several sorties deep into Senegal’s half. Cheick N’Diaye, Senegal’s goalkeeper, was soon brought into play although Bafana Bafana was hardly threatening initially.

However, midfielder Sibusiso Vilakazi in tandem with striker Thamsanqa Gabuza struck up a fine understanding around the fringes of the Senegalese penalty area but they were kept in check by a workmanlike Senegalese rear guard.

Up to this stage of the match, the best effort on target was landed by SA midfielder Makola who tried to hit the target with a speculative long-range shot from 45m out.

Midway through the first half, Shakes Mashaba’s team had already shown a vast improvement from the side that were thumped 3-1 by Mauritania last Saturday.

In the 24th minute, the ‘Lions of Teranga’ managed to pick up some impetus going forward especially when they attacked down the left channels. Diafra Sakho, who plays as a striker for English club West Ham United, worked his way into the striking zone but his curling shot was held out by SA goalmouth custodian Itumuleng Khune.

Once Bafana Bafana warded off this danger, they took control of the rest of the half and may have done enough to be at least one goal to the good by the time the halftime break dawned.

Their best scoring effort emerged in the 43rd minute when Vilakazi fed Gabuza with a deft defence-splitting pass, but the former’s shot, from point-blank range, was tipped against the crossbar by N’Diaye, before bouncing back into play.

On the stroke of halftime, Andile Jali was yellow-carded, and later in the match his teammates Clayton Daniels (51) and Anele Ngcongca (69) also had their names entered in the referee’s book.

Play was fairly docile when the match restarted, but some 11 minutes later the small crowd was given something to cheer about when the unmarked Sakho stalked into the penalty area to latch onto an upfield kick. He unleashed a spectacular overhead kick, but the ball flew high over the posts.

Just a few minutes later, SA sprung a penetrative counter-attack which ended with Vilakazi being set free but with the goals at his mercy his shot ended in the side netting.

The turning point in the match came in the 78th minute when Makola let rip with a scorcher just outside the ‘D’ and Alfred Gomis, Senegal’s substitute ‘keeper was beaten all ends up.

The goal eventually proved to the matchwinner, much to the delight of the Bafana Bafana’s camp.

African News Agency



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‘Scrap transfer window and reduce fees’

Gareth Bale’s agents says the transfer window should be scrapped and deals permitted throughout the season.

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Manchester - One of European football's leading player agents says the transfer window should be scrapped and deals permitted throughout the season.

The transfer window in Europe closed last week amid the annual flurry of moves and the high-profile collapse of Spanish goalkeeper David De Gea's transfer from Manchester United to Real Madrid.

“I think I would open it 365 days. It is just not right,” Jonathan Barnett told delegates to the Soccerex convention on Tuesday.

“Clubs should have the right to buy and sell players, and players should have the right to move when they want.

“I just think it puts unnecessary pressure on everyone and on everything, and I just think it is unfair,” added Barnett, owner of the Stellar Group, who negotiated Gareth Bale's record-breaking 100 million euro ($111.80 million) move from Tottenham to Real Madrid.

“I think it would make a better spectacle, as well, to have transfers all year round,” he added.

However, Barnett conceded that some curb might be necessary to avoid a title race being influenced unduly by late-season deals and said he would like to see a return to the system formerly used in England, which restricted transfers only after March.

“Maybe not (deals) in the last couple of weeks. I don't think the old system was bad at all,' he said, suggesting there might even be a commercial benefit for clubs in removing the summer transfer deadline.

“It might bring transfer fees down because then people wouldn't be rushed into spending the money they do at the last minute,” he said.

But one area where Barnett would like to see limits is in clubs' use of temporary player loans.

The issue has come to the fore after Chelsea increased their number of players on loan to other clubs to 33 during the latest transfer window.

“I think you have to look very closely at that - I don't think it is very healthy for the players. I am an agent for the players and my concern would be that it doesn't do them good,” he said.

Barnett, whose Stellar Group represents hundreds of athletes, including many English Premier League footballers, said he was opposed to proposed changes from FIFA that would cap agents' earnings on deals while removing the licensing system.

“They are completely illegal. We are fighting that in Brussels and we will fight it everywhere,” he said.

Reuters



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SA football needs to lose in order to win

After a brief lull, the abject performance of Bafana Bafana is again in the spotlight, writes Rodney Reiners.

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Cape Town - Here we go again… After a brief lull, the abject performance of the SA national football side is again in the spotlight. Not that it wasn’t expected - because, at a national level, football still has no direction.

There’s always talk of Vision 2022, but, after a much-hyped initial phase, there’s little evidence that Bafana Bafana are playing a role in this project. It’s still only about short-sighted, short-term gains.

On Saturday night, in a 2017 Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon) qualifier, Bafana were embarrassed 3-1 by little-known Mauritania - an inept performance that lacked energy, was absent of any notable game approach and, to be brutallu honest, laid bare the lack of any proper tactical planning and selection strategy.

So let’s look at where we are on this oft-quoted Vision 2022. Ostensibly this long-term venture is aimed at first qualifying Bafana for the 2018 World Cup in Russia and then making a real go of it - performance and results-wise - at the 2022 event in Qatar.

On being appointed as national coach in July last year, Shakes Mashaba was quick to freshen up the squad. While, at the time, his commitment to the next generation was admirable, it appears that recent selections suggest a change in policy. Desperate to qualify for the 2017 Afcon tournament, more older, experienced players have been drafted in again.

And to no avail, as witnessed by the humiliating defeat in Mauritania - because, judged on the evidence of the performance, there was definitely not enough thought given to selection or game strategy, or whether this fixture was in line with Vision 2022 or not.

Away fixtures on the continent are notoriously difficult. The approach, therefore, is paramount, especially if the motivation was to win at all costs. It’s pointless for a coach to pick what he thinks is the best team - it’s far more prudent to adopt a ‘horses for courses’ philosophy.

On the road, in tough cauldrons like Mauritania, a team needs warriors - combative, competitive footballers who don’t know when to quit, and players with unlimited, unwavering courage and a composed temperament in high-pressure situations. Mashaba was fully aware that he was going into the match with quite a few key players who were rusty from a lack of football, but he failed to heed the warning signs - and paid the price.

However, all this is moot because nobody really knows what Safa, Mashaba and Bafana really want. If it’s about Vision 2022, then surely, at this time (2015), it shouldn’t be about results. It should be about continuing the experimental, development and maturing process. It should be about persevering with the sincere desire to blood the next generation, to provide a stage and opportunities to grow their experience and game time. This, though, appears to have been abandoned, as seen in Mauritania.

I’ve said it before, I’ve said it often enough, and I’ll say it again … the problem is that, as a nation, we cannot lose with dignity. We never see the bigger picture, everything is about here and now, and reacting emotionally to every sporting defeat. In sport, absolutely no team, can win each and every game, it’s just not possible… In South Africa, we think it should be so. It’s the arrogance that characterises us as nation, as a people, that prevents football from progressing. And it’s this same arrogance and supercilious air, which pervades all nooks and crannies of our society, that will ensure we never progress as a country too.

And, again, for my two cents, I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: For South African football to move forward, it needs far deeper introspection, it needs to start at grassroots, it needs to properly and fairly recognise and reward ability - and, more importantly, it needs to lose in order to win. If 2022 is the objective, then stick with it, get the talented youngsters in, play them, invest in them, be prepared to accept defeat, and reap the rewards much, much further down the line.

But, rest assured, it won’t happen. Because the next result is always far too important for everybody - and that is why football is stuck hopelessly in neutral, mired in myopia, and dictated to by the ‘Kasi Flavour’ addicts on the terraces.

But, on a more current, personal level, something that continues to alarm is that there appears to be two different sets of rules for footballers.

In January 2014, at the lowly African Nations Champions (CHAN) event, goalkeeper Moeneeb Josephs’ blunder resulted in him becoming the scapegoat of the country. Vilified, hounded, nationally embarrassed, and even singled out for blame by our comical Sports Minister, Josephs has never been recalled to Bafana. He lost his national place and never got another look-in, even though his club form has been exemplary.

Goalkeeper Darren Keet erred in a 2015 Afcon match against Algeria earlier this year - and he, too, has been out in the cold ever since.

On Saturday, goalkeeper Itumeleng Khune allowed Mauritania to take the lead after a silly, schoolboy howler in the first half, and Bafana never recovered from his dreadful error.

So what do you think? Will Khune be banished to the sidelines, like Josephs and Keet? Dream on…

Cape Times



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