It’s all about the team for Makola

Orlando Pirates midfielder Mpho Makola scored on his debut for Bafana in the Nelson Mandela Challege against Senegal.

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Scoring on debut is always special, but scooping the Man of the Match award and securing a vital win for your country, is extraordinary.

This was the case for Orlando Pirates star midfielder Mpho Makola whose incredible strike in the 78th minute meant Bafana Bafana retained the Nelson Mandela Challenge trophy with a 1-0 win over Senegal at Orlando Stadium on Tuesday night.

The winger creating space for himself, before launching a powerful shot outside the box which gave Senegal goalkeeper Khadim Ndiaye no chance.

Not only did Makola help Shakes Mashaba’s team lift the trophy again, but this was also their first win over the Lions of Taranga.

“It was a great goal. I’m happy that my team managed to win, it was a good game after all,” said Makola.

“Every player wants to play for the national team and be a regular. But it is more about being consistent, that is something I want to do.”

As much as the goal was important for the midfielder, it was also critical for the team as well, after falling out 3-1 to a lowly ranked Mauritania in the Afcon qualifiers over the weekend.

“I’m excited, it was all about redeeming ourselves after the performance we showed over the weekend.

“It was more about Nelson Mandela, we did it for him tonight. I’m happy with my performance and my goal.”

With the national duty out of the way for now, Makola will be travelling to Egypt today with the Pirates team for their final CAF Confederations group stage match against Zamalek.

The Buccaneers and the White Knights are level on points in group B, with the Egyptians topping the standings with a better head to head record.

“They are top of the log. But we are going to approach the game the way we always do. I’m looking forward to the game, we want to top the group and hopefully get the first leg away when we go into the semi-final.” - The Star



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Courtois injury blow for Chelsea

Chelsea goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois has injured his knee and is likely to miss their visit to Goodison Park to take on Everton.

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Chelsea goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois has injured his knee and is likely to miss the champions' visit to Goodison Park to take on Everton on Saturday, British media reported.

The Belgium international returned to Chelsea fully fit after international duty, but limped out of his first practice session on Wednesday.

The 23-year-old could be facing an extended period on the sidelines and the club will discover the full extent of the problem after more tests are conducted on Thursday.

Chelsea, who lie 13th in the table on four points from four games, can bring in Asmir Begovic as a replacement, having signed the former Stoke City keeper in the close season after Petr Cech departed for Arsenal. – Reuters



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LVG laments ‘ridiculous’ Martial fee

Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal has admitted that the fee paid for striker Anthony Martial was “a ridiculous amount of money”.

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Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal has admitted that the fee paid for teenage French striker Anthony Martial was “a ridiculous amount of money”.

The 19-year-old, who only won his first cap for France after the deal went through, cost a staggering reported fee of £36 million ($55.1m, 49m euros) from Monaco just before the transfer window closed last week.

It is believed the fee could rise to £58 million, and van Gaal, speaking at an event in Manchester for executive United season-ticket holders, said: “It was a ridiculous amount of money, but it's the crazy world we are in.”

The Dutchman added that the fee reflected a trend of United being routinely quoted “£10 million more” for players.

In addition, he said that Martial had been signed for the club's “next manager”, and suggested that would be his current assistant Ryan Giggs.

Van Gaal was quoted by The Times as saying: “I have not bought Martial for me - I have bought him for the next manager of Manchester United.”

He added of Giggs, who was alongside him at the event: “I feel I am introducing the next manager of Manchester United.” – AFP



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Pirates target top spot

Orlando Pirates’ Caf Confederations Cup game on Sunday will be the first time that Thabo Rakhale has played in Egypt.

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Orlando Pirates’ Caf Confederations Cup game on Sunday will be the first time that Thabo Rakhale has played in Egypt.

Against Zamalek, the skillful midfielder expects similar weather and field conditions to the ones the Buccaneers found in Tunisia, where they defeated CF Sfaxien 0-1 in July.

“That day our performance was superb, I’d say,” Rakhale said this week.

At the Petro Sport Stadium, Pirates will find a similar opponent style-wise, playing to the North African brand of structure and toughness.

The Egyptian giants came out on top when they visited Orlando Stadium in July, coming back from a goal down to defeat Pirates 2-1.

“I think the lack of experience is why we ended up losing that game,” Pirates coach Eric Tinkler said of the defeat. “We didn’t know how to protect our lead, we didn’t know how to play for the result. But I think if you looked at the games after that we improved in that area.”

Rakhale said that the team will try to use their superior mobility and versatility to get around Zamalek’s defence, while maintaining their own structure.

“The coach gives us the freedom to go all over the field for as long as we’re keeping the shape of the formation,” the midfielder said.

“The type of formation we want to play, in terms of offense, is going to be very different to the type of formation we’re going to be using defensively and it’s about the players being able to adapt,” Tinkler said.

Both sides are level on points and have already qualified for the semi-finals. What remains is which team will top Group B. Securing the top spot will earn an away first leg in the semis, which the Sea Robbers view as an easier route to the final.

On a personal level Rakhale added that the team’s continental adventure has given him a chance to gain experience and confidence.

“As a player it helped me grow,” he said. “It has helped in a way that I can mark and attack at the same time.” - The Star



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Wenger happy with attacking options

Arsene Wenger defended his transfer policy, saying he was satisfied with his Arsenal squad and had plenty of options in attack.

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London - After failing to score in their opening two home Premier League games for the first time in 36 years, Arsenal will be looking for their first goals and their first win at the Emirates Stadium this season when they play Stoke City on Saturday.

Manager Arsene Wenger has been roundly criticised by many of the club's fans for failing to strengthen his team during the transfer window, especially in attack.

Arsenal are sixth in the table with seven points from their opening four matches that include a 2-1 victory at Crystal Palace, a 1-0 win at Newcastle and a goalless draw with Liverpool.

But two of those three goals were own goals, and Arsenal appear to have a lack of firepower up front with Danny Welbeck's injured knee keeping him out of the side at least until Christmas time.

Including their 1-0 win over Chelsea in the Community Shield in August, Arsenal have only scored four goals in five games so far.

Wenger though, defended his transfer policy on Thursday, saying he was satisfied with his squad and had plenty of options in attack too.

“I have made over 300 transfers and every time the decision you make is do you buy the player to strengthen your squad, or not.

“The solutions we had were not convincing at all and in the end you do not buy to give wrong hopes.

“You want to buy because the players who come in can help your squad to be stronger.

“Buying and selling is one way to strengthen your team but it is not your only way.”

Welbeck, scored only four league goals in his first season at Arsenal following his move from Manchester United just over a year ago, but knows where the net is as his 14 goals in 33 England appearances prove.

Without him, the burden falls on Olivier Giroud, who has scored once this season, and Alexis Sanchez, who hasn't scored any, as Wenger's senior front two, although Theo Walcott, Santi Cazorla and Aaron Ramsey have consistently backed up with goals from midfield in the past.

Wenger said Arsenal did want to sign a forward but couldn't find one to improve the squad.

“It's about finding an efficient solution,” he said. “They don't just drop down from heaven.”

Asked about Giroud's start to the season - he was jeered by French fans for a series of missed chances in France's friendly against Serbia on Monday - he replied: “I have confidence in the ability and quality of our strikers.

“Of course I'm confident that I have enough cover and enough quality.”

The last time Arsenal failed to score in their opening two league matches was in the old First Division in August 1979 when they lost 2-0 to Ipswich Town and drew 0-0 with Manchester United at Highbury - the same sequence they have had this season with a 2-0 loss to West Ham followed by the draw with Liverpool.

If they are looking for omens, their third home game ended in a 2-0 win over Middlesbrough, a result that would delight everyone connected with the club this weekend. – Reuters



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AVB set for Zenit exit

Andre Villas-Boas has refused a contract expansion and will step down as Zenit St. Petersburg coach at the end of the current season.

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Moscow - Andre Villas-Boas has refused a contract expansion and will step down as Zenit St. Petersburg coach at the end of the current season, the former Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur coach has said.

“At the end of the last season the club offered me the chance to extend my contract, but I refused this offer and at the end of this season I will leave my post,” the 37 year-old Portuguese, currently serving a six-match touchline ban, told the club website (www.fc-zenit.ru).

The former Porto manager took over at Zenit in March 2014 and helped the club win the 2014-15 Russian Premier League title.

In their current campaign, Zenit are third in the table, six points behind the leaders CSKA Moscow.

“We did not undertake the work during the transfer window that we had expected and the squad is limited. It has not been strengthened with the exception of those players who came at the start of the transfer window. The limit on foreign players has changed,” Villas-Boas said.

“Even despite this we will carry on working and we need to get points to catch those who are in front of us, while we will also try to be successful in the Champions League,” he said.

Villas-Boas was banned by the Russian Football Union earlier this month for pushing the fourth official during Zenit's home match with Krylia Sovetov. – Reuters



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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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