McClaren pleads for blind faith from fans

Newcastle United manager Steve McClaren has called on the fans to show “blind faith and belief” that the club will turn it around following a poor start to the season.

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With just two points from their first six Premier League games and pressure mounting from the stands, Newcastle United manager Steve McClaren has called on the fans to show “blind faith and belief” that the club will turn it around.

Newcastle are one of three teams still searching for their first league win of the season and have only local rivals Sunderland below them.

The Magpies host Sheffield Wednesday in the League Cup on Wednesday before facing tough games against champions Chelsea and Manchester City in the league.

McClaren, who has described the club's start to the season as a “bit like a car crash”, said he understood fans' frustrations but called on them to be patient.

“A bit of blind faith and belief that eventually we will get it right, turn it around, and start performing and winning games. Yes, we will eventually do that,” McClaren told reporters.

“As a supporter, with what happened last season, and then the expectation of this, it is a little bit of blind faith that is needed, that is required.

“We don't need to be told, we know what is going on. We know what we have to do, we know the solutions, we just have to go out there and do it,” he added.

Newcastle fans will hope to avoid a repeat of last season, where they failed to record a win in their first eight games and needed a win over West Ham on the final day to ensure their Premier League survival.

The club spent a reported 50 million pounds ($76.76 million) to bring in five new players to the squad, four of them to strengthen Newcastle's attacking depth, but the goals have not been forthcoming, scoring just three in the league so far.

Newcastle's problems worsened on Tuesday when defender Steven Taylor was ruled out for eight weeks and striker Papiss Cisse sidelined for the Cup tie against Wednesday.

McClaren dismissed reports of problems in the dressing room, with injury-plagued midfielder Cheick Tiote and out-of-form forward Cisse receiving heavy criticism.

“There's been no problem with Cheick. He's not a bad egg at all,” McClaren said. “He hasn't been able to build up his fitness but I know Cheick well and I couldn't be any stronger in terms of saying that he's not any trouble.

“Papiss is Papiss, and he goes around with a smile on his face. That's the culture that he's got,” he added. – Reuters



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Balotelli off the mark for Milan

Mario Balotelli scored his first goal since rejoining AC Milan to set them on the way to a 3-2 win at Udinese in Serie A.

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Milan - Mario Balotelli scored his first goal since rejoining AC Milan to set them on the way to a 3-2 win at Udinese in Serie A on Tuesday.

Milan raced to a 3-0 halftime lead before surviving a second-half fightback from the hosts as they picked up their third win in five Serie A outings under new coach Sinisa Mihajlovic.

Balotelli, on loan from Liverpool, needed only six minutes in his first start of the season to open his account when he curled a 20 metre free kick past Ornestis Karnezis who barely moved.

Giacomo Bonaventura volleyed in from Riccardo Montolivo's pass and Colombia defender Cristian Zapata headed the third from Bonaventura's corner in first-half stoppage time.

Emmanuel Badu and Duvan Zapata scored in a six-minute spell early in the second half to bring Udinese back into the match and set up a dramatic final half hour.

Milan goalkeeper Diego Lopez made a brave save at Cyril Thereau's feet, Maurizio Domizzi sent a free header over the bar and Lopez punched away a powerful Bruno Fernandes drive as Milan clung on.

Fernandes was sent off in stoppage time amid angry protests as Udinese slumped to their fourth successive defeat since their shock opening day win at champions Juventus. – Reuters



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Lewandowski’s nine minute blitz

Bayern Munich striker Robert Lewandowski become the first Bundesliga player to score five times in nine minutes.

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Munich - Bayern Munich striker Robert Lewandowski netted the Bundesliga's fastest hat-trick on his way to a sensational five-goal haul as a halftime substitute in their 5-1 demolition of VfL Wolfsburg on Tuesday.

He scored three goals in four minutes from the 51st to the 55th before quickly adding two more, including a spectacular volley, to become the first Bundesliga player to score five times in nine minutes.

“This was just crazy,” Lewandowski told reporters having instantly turned the game around after the Bavarians trailed 1-0 at halftime. “Five goals, that's just unbelievable. “I am very, very satisfied. This was a great evening for me.”

“We were behind at the end of the first half and I wanted to step on the gas because we needed two goals,” said the Poland captain, who in 2013 scored four goals for Borussia Dortmund against Real Madrid in the Champions League.

“I look up at the board after the third or fourth goal and I was surprised there was still so much time left to play. The coach did not have to tell me anything. I knew what had to be done.”

Lewandowski, who started on the bench beause he had just come back from a minor muscle injury, also became the first Bundesliga substitute to score five goals, and was one short of the all-time record goal haul of six by Cologne striker Dieter Mueller in 1977 in their 7-2 win over Werder Bremen.

“This is something I have never experienced before,” Bayern coach Pep Guardiola, left stunned on the sidelines, told reporters. “Five goals in nine minutes. Robert has been a great player in Germany and the world for some time now.”

The previous fastest hat-trick was scored by Duisburg's Michael Toennies in 1991 in a six-minute spell.

Toennies, through his former club, was quick to congratulate the new record holder, telling Lewandowski: “You deserved it, Robert. I have had this record for 24 years. It is a bit of a pity to see it go but what Robert Lewandowski conjured up was just amazing.” – Reuters



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Wits battle past Supersport

Bidvest Wits moved to the top of the Absa Premiership standings after a gutsy 1-0 league win over SuperSport United.

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Johannesburg - Bidvest Wits moved to the top of the Absa Premiership standings after a gutsy 1-0 league win over SuperSport United at the Bidvest Stadium on Tuesday night.

The 'Clever Boys' had to play the entire second half with 10 men after striker Henrico Botes was given his marching orders shortly before halftime.

However, Jabulani Shongwe's first-half strike would be enough for the home side to secure all three points on the night. This match was always going to be a hard-fought encounter, with neither team giving an inch on the field.

And it was definitely not for the faint-hearted as the referee dished out of a plethora of yellow cards.

There was also a lot of offside play, especially by the home side, who tried to get in behind the deep-lying SuperSport defensive line. Namibian striker Botes had a great chance in the 35th minute of the match after he latched onto Elias Pelembe's corner kick.

SuperSport goalkeeper Ronwen Williams, however, did well to keep the ball out.

Wits would eventually open the scoring five minutes later when Shongwe dribbled into the SuperSport penalty area before drilling the ball home with his right foot.

However, the home side went into the break with only 10 men on the field after Botes was given a second yellow card following a hand in the face of SuperSport defender Clayton Daniels.

But Wits were hardly troubled in the second half, even though SuperSport coach Gordon Igesund put on a lot of attacking players after the break. In fact, it was Wits who had the best chances of the second stanza, with Paty Faty and Phumlani Ntshangase shooting over the crossbar from long range. Wits substitute Joaquim Lupeta also shot wide in the 82nd minute.

SuperSport's best chance came in the 87th minute, but Wits substitute Marcus Lecki managed to clear the ball before Jeremy Brockie could pull the trigger. -ANA



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More frustration for Pirates

Polokwane City and Orlando Pirates played to a sterile goalless draw in their Absa Premiership match.

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Polokwane – It was a predictable stalemate at the Peter Mokaba Stadium on Tuesday night when Polokwane City and Orlando Pirates played to a sterile goalless draw in their Absa Premiership match.

Both teams have played five games and won only one this season and judging from the stilted performances from both teams it is going to take something special for them to make inroads into the top half of the league even though City could have won it with the last kick of the match.

The opening exchanges were even as both teams kept it tight in the midfield with chances very rare. One of these came when the towering 1.9 metre Polokwane forward Muzikayafane Ngidi blasted high over the crossbar after some clever inter-play from his team-mates in the 14th minute.

Minutes later Pirates' Kermit Erasmus make a great run down the inside left channel, went past the goalkeeper but his brilliant pass across the goalmouth from the byeline came to nothing with no Bucs players in the penalty area to finish it off.

The rest of the first half was a somewhat tepid affair with both teams showing an alarming lack of class when it came to the final pass.

Inevitably both attacks had little success and at the end of 45 minutes Pirates had the unenviable statistic of not having one shot on target with Polokwane goalkeeper George Chigova having an easy first half except for a couple of interceptions.

Pirates suffered a blow in the 59th minute when Oupa Manyisa went into a tackle and sprained his left ankle and collapsed to the turf in agony. He was stretchered off the field and replaced by Menzi Masuka.

Pirates then increased the intensity and pressed forward and in the 76th minute Chigova was called into action when he had to dive low to make a good save from a hard-hit shot from Mpho Makola. The last 10 minutes were probably the liveliest patch of play but in truth this was a poor advertisement for the PSL standards. - ANA



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Maritzburg remain winless

Maritzburg United's winless run continued when they lost their fourth Absa Premiership match 3-2 to Free State Stars.

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Maritzburg – Maritzburg United's winless run continued when they lost their fourth Absa Premiership match 3-2 to Free State Stars on Tuesday night at Harry Gwala Stadium.

Three second-half goals by Danny Venter, Andrea Fileccia and a late strike by Robert Sankara were enough to hand coach Ernst Middendorp his second successive victory as they move to the eighth spot on the log with six points.

On the other hand, the hosts remain rooted at the bottom of the log with one point from five matches.

The encounter comes on the back of the 'Team of Choice' having parted ways with coach Mandla Ncikazi and his assistant Fadlu Davids being handed the reins. However, facing his ex-boss in Ernst Middendorp, Davids failed to produce the goods for the hosts.

In the 16th minute, Kurt Lentjies took a shot at goal aiming to break the deadlock, however, Daouda Diakite parried the ball away and three minutes later, the former Mamelodi Sundowns man tried another shot but the keeper stood firm.

The Bethlehem side made strides to get an early goal when Sankara unleashed a long range shot but he failed to hit the target. With no clear-cut chances, both sides went to the interval still level pegging.

The second stanza saw the hosts moving swiftly to find an opener through Evans Rusike but his header was above Diakite' posts and in the 62nd minute the hosts found the back of the net when Venter finished Bokang Thlone's cross.

Nevertheless, their celebration did not last long as the hosts received a penalty four minutes later when Themba Tshabalala was penalised for a handball and Lentjies made no mistake to convert from the spot.

With 10 minutes to go, midfielder Philani Zulu was penalised for a foul on Fileccia and the referee pointed to the spot, the Belgian scored to give the Free State side the lead.

Maritzburg had a chance to equalise in the 84th minute when Lentjies and Ashley Hartog could not communicate as they both left ball for each other but it was substitute Mohammed Anas who grabbed an equaliser when he scored with his right foot in the 90th minute.

The drama was not over yet until Sankara netted a fine goal, thanks to an assist by Moeketsi Sekola to claim the three points. - ANA



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Costa banned, Gabriel red rescinded

Chelsea’s Diego Costa has been banned for three games following the London derby against Arsenal.

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London - Arsenal defender Gabriel has had his claim of wrongful dismissal in the feisty local derby against Chelsea upheld by the FA, but Chelsea's Diego Costa has been banned for three matches with immediate effect.

An FA statement on Tuesday said the Spanish international striker was guilty of “violent conduct not seen by the match officials but caught on video”.

Costa got a yellow card for deliberately chest-bumping defender Laurent Koscielny but referee Mike Dean missed him catching the Arsenal defender in the face shortly afterwards.

He will be unavailable for Wednesday's League Cup third-round tie at Walsall, and the Premier League games at Newcastle United on Saturday and at home to Southampton on Oct. 3.

Brazilian Gabriel, however, can play in Arsenal's League Cup match at north London neighbours Tottenham Hotspur on Wednesday.

His sending off at Stamford Bridge for retaliating against Costa was rescinded, although he is still subject to a separate charge of improper conduct for leaving the pitch too slowly.

Both clubs have been charged with failing to control their players.– Reuters



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Stylish City down Sunderland

Manchester City produced a blistering performance to defeat Sunderland in the third round of the League Cup.

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London - Manchester City produced a blistering first-half performance to win 4-1 at Sunderland in the League Cup third round on Tuesday, inflicting more misery on Dick Advocaat's struggling side.

There were also victories for Leicester City, who needed extra time to beat West Ham United 2-1, Aston Villa, who won 1-0 at home to local rivals Birmingham City, and Everton who came from behind to beat Reading 2-1.

Swansea City suffered a surprise 1-0 defeat at Hull City, Stoke City booked a spot in the next round by winning 1-0 at second-tier Fulham and top flight Bournemouth came through a penalty shootout with Preston North End.

There was never even a hint of an upset in the offing at Sunderland, whose lack of confidence after a poor start to the season was ruthlessly exposed by a rampant City.

Black Cats coach Advocaat was feted as a hero after steering the north-east club to safety last season, but his star has waned at the start of the current campaign as his side are without a win in six Premier League games.

They fell behind after nine minutes to a Sergio Aguero penalty after Patrick van Aanholt clattered into Jesus Navas and the Argentine forward dispatched the spot kick with a deft chip.

The floodgates then opened as three goals in 11 minutes from Kevin De Bruyne, an own goal by Sunderland keeper Vito Mannone and a Raheem Sterling strike put City 4-0 ahead at halftime, before Ola Toivonen headed a consolation in the second half.

Swansea were the only Premier League team to exit at the hands of lower league opposition on Tuesday as Hull's David Meyler struck four minutes before halftime for the side relegated from the top flight last season.

The midfielder stretched for a rebound and swept the ball into the corner four minutes before halftime to seal the tie.

Everton survive

Everton avoided a similarly embarrassing fate as second-half goals from Ross Barkley and Gerard Deulofeu helped them come back to beat Championship side Reading.

Roberto Martinez's Everton were trailing at halftime, but Barkley netted with a low volley and Deulofeu curled home a free kick to settle the encounter.

Leicester's unbeaten start to the season continued as they knocked out West Ham with Wales international Andy King scoring deep into extra time to secure a 2-1 win after the match had finished 1-1 after 90 minutes.

Twenty-year-old Joe Dodoo sidefooted Leicester ahead after six minutes before Mauro Zarate levelled for the visitors with a deflected left-foot effort.

Villa's Midlands clash at home to Birmingham proved to be a predictably scrappy dogfight with the Premier League side having played poorly before Rudy Gestede powerfully headed Jordan Amavi's cross into the net after 62 minutes.

Bournemouth went through on penalties after their match with second-tier Preston ended 1-1 after 90 minutes and 2-2 following extra time but Daniel Johnson failed to convert Preston's fifth spot kick, handing victory to the visitors.

Peter Crouch scored Stoke's winner against Fulham in the first half, steering his finish home from 10 metres after a neat one-two in midfield.

Middlesbrough beat Wolverhampton Wanderers 3-0 in an all-Championship clash.

The third round action continues on Wednesday when Tottenham Hotspur host London rivals Arsenal, Manchester United welcome second-tier Ipswich Town, holders Chelsea visit Walsall and Liverpool entertain fourth-tier Carlisle United.

REUTERS



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Fergie’s book raises many questions

There is a story in Sir Alex Ferguson's new book which is a tantalising hint at what went on at Manchester United.

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London - There is a story in Sir Alex Ferguson's new book Leading which, even now, more than two years on from his retirement, is a tantalising hint at what went on at Manchester United in those days when their Scottish manager's contentment with life at Old Trafford was perhaps not all it was supposed to be.

In a chapter that deals with Ferguson's career history he reflects on the fact that he has rarely had a job interview, listing only those at Queen's Park in Scotland in 1974, Wolverhampton Wanderers in 1982 and Barcelona in 1983. There is a nod to his well-documented rejection of Tottenham in the early 1980s while the United job in 1986, he points out, was offered to him without the convention of a formal interview. Then, finally, Ferguson throws in a detail that has you double-taking.

At an unspecified time, “later in my career” he says that he met with a representative of Massimo Moratti, the Internazionale owner. Discussions went as far as Ferguson being given a list of players leaving the club, and those whom they planned to sell and then all mention of this episode ends with a joke that his wife, Cathy, would never have been persuaded of a move to Italy.

Rather more pertinent was why her husband might have been, or even why he felt compelled to meet with an associate of Moratti. Perhaps it was after the treble of 1999, the year in which Ferguson's United beat Inter on the way to the first of his two Champions League triumphs when his stock in Europe was high. Or it could have been around the midpoint of the last decade, when Inter embarked on a period of domination in Italy at the same time Arsenal and then Chelsea were eating away at Ferguson's control of English football.

Either way, he lavishes just a paragraph on a meeting recalled as sufficiently serious to constitute a job interview of sorts - and one that could have changed the history of United. The Inter interview went unmentioned in both his 1999 and 2013 autobiographies and, frustratingly, in Leading, which is published today, it is dealt with in the space of 56 words.

The book itself is, as with everything that Ferguson has committed to paper over his career, a compulsory read for those who take the modern history of English football seriously. It is not supposed to be the orthodox football book, instead billing itself variously as “an inspirational guide to great leadership” and, perhaps most surprising, for those of us who saw Ferguson at his least magnanimous, promises methods for “dealing with failure”.

It is natural that successful people, given the time to look back on their lives, try to make sense of what came instinctively to them and understand how and why they came to accomplish so much. The book is co-written with the chairman of a private investment firm specialising in Silicon Valley start-ups and you are left wondering whether it might just be a step too far to try to force Ferguson's blend of ruthlessness and paternalism into the oft-bloodless theories on modern corporate success.

In Leading, he confidently drops in mentions of Snapchat and Instagram when talking about his grandchildren and it would be fair to say he has changed his position on Twitter. When Ferguson suggests that young managers could bypass newspapers and communicate with supporters directly through Twitter it is worth pointing out that Manchester United only launched their own club account seriously on the day he retired, so vehemently was he once opposed to it.

With Ferguson it is not the theorising about success but the details and observations of his life that are most arresting. The recollection of the tension in David Moyes when he came for an interview to be Ferguson's assistant in 2001; the day Ferguson told the Glazers it was unfair that Wayne Rooney was earning double his own salary; Gary Neville's “Arthur Scargill” nickname.

Yet, there is no meaningful discussion of the effect of the Glazers' ownership on a significant number of the club's supporters. Ferguson rehearses some of the core arguments against the American owners, that they have paid out vast sums in interest, that they will eventually cash in, but then the issue is dismissed in little more than three paragraphs, less of an examination than it merited in his 2013 autobiography.

The Glazer ownership may feel to Ferguson like a tiresome issue that pales in comparison with the scope and breadth of his remarkable career, yet it remains central to the life of United today. In a book aimed at the crowded market of management it seems more than a little strange that this particular challenge, among the greatest he faced, with complex factors on both sides, is not afforded more attention.

The intractable issue at the heart of the Glazer takeover was that Ferguson was not responsible for it, and nor could he change it. He was placed in an impossible position and an examination of those factors - with supporters' groups on one side and his loyalty to the continued success of United on the other - would be worthy of a book on its own. His tendency is always towards a robust defence of the Glazers, with no real examination of their opposition among United's support.

That said, if history is to be written by the victors, then this a man who has chalked up more victories than anyone else in his field and is telling the story his way, and his way only. He jokes at one point that in North Korea or Cuba it might be possible to control the press but “it is sheer fantasy to think that anyone in England is going to be able to do the same”. At least, I think he is joking.

Costa entitled to ask if the same rules apply to all

Diego Costa overstepped the mark with that slap/gouge on Laurent Koscielny, and the subsequent appealing and card-waving to get Gabriel and later Francis Coquelin in trouble do him no favours either. Goodness knows, he will pay a high price when the Football Association rules on that violent conduct charge.

Costa would be entitled to ask, however, if his transgressions were worthy of a charge, then why not Fernandinho's elbow on him in August in Chelsea's defeat to Manchester City? Just as last season Costa took an elbow from Martin Skrtel in the league game against Liverpool at Anfield in November that went unpunished. It does not excuse his behaviour on Saturday, but it might go some way to explaining the burning sense of injustice he nurtures.

Why would anyone want to walk in Advocaat's shoes?

There will always be someone prepared to step into the place of a departing Premier League manager, even if that place happens to be as manager of Sunderland. But you do wonder, when the time comes for Dick Advocaat to decide he has had enough of the club, just how the next incumbent will go about convincing himself it's a good idea to step in.

The Independent



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Mashaba confident ahead of friendlies

Bafana coach Shakes Mashaba announced the squad to travel to Central America for two matches next month against Costa Rica and Honduras.

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Johannesburg - Bafana Bafana coach Shakes Mashaba has announced the squad to travel to Central America for two friendly international matches next month against Costa Rica onOctober 8 at Boltodano Bricenio Stadium in Liberia and Honduras at Metropolitano Stadium on October 13.

The Costa Rica match will kick off at 4am SA time on October 9 while the one in Honduras will kick off at midnight in South Africa. “This is the first time I will be leading this squad out of Africa and it is an exciting prospect. The main idea is to try and gauge our level of performance. Also I think it's a good experience for us to play teams ranked above us like Costa Rica because to continue improving our rankings, we must play and beat the best,” said Mashaba.

This will be Bafana's first ever meeting with Honduras while they have played Costa Rica once - in the Nelson Mandela Challenge clash in 2003 at Olen Park Stadium in Potchefstroom. South Africa won 2-1, courtesy of second half goals from Siyabonga Nomvete and Patrick Mayo.

That was also the last game Mashaba was in charge of the national team in his earlier stint.

“If you look back then at the Costa Rica team, you will see they had a very strong team and it was not a fluke that we beat them. It is good that we are playing them again and see how both teams have progressed so far. I know for a fact they are much better and stronger; they are no longer the same team that we beat then; so it will be tough. But I have confidence we will do well because our boys can also put up a very good fight,” said Mashaba.

“We will do our best to go there and get victories. We want to take the Senegal outcome forward and try to win all the games going forward. But we have to be realistic and acknowledge that along the line we will encounter turbulence - win some and lose some, but our intention is to win all our games.”

Bafana assemble for camp on October 4 in Johannesburg and depart for Central America the next day.

They return to South Africa on October 15 - two days later they face Angola in the first of four matches of the 2016 Chan as well as 2018 World Cup qualifiers.

The squad to play the Chan qualifiers will be announced in the next few days.

“I would like to appeal to the nation to rally behind the team. We know that sometimes it hurts to lose but we are rectifying that and bring positive results,” concluded the Bafana Bafana mentor.

Bafana squad: Goalkeepers: Jackson Mabokgwane (Mpumalanga Aces FC), Itumeleng Khune (Kaizer Chiefs), Ronwen Williams (SuperSport United). Defenders: Eric Mathoho (Kaizer Chiefs), Rivaldo Coetzee (Ajax Cape Town), Thulani Hlatshwayo (Bidvest Wits), Siyabonga Nhlapo (Bidvest Wits), Anele Ngcongca (Racing Genk), Mzikayise Mashaba (Mamelodi Sundowns), Clayton Daniels (SuperSport United), Thabo Matlaba (Orlando Pirates). Midfielders: Dean Furman (SuperSport United), Andile Jali (KV Oostende), Bongani Zungu (Sundowns), Mandla Masango (Randers FC), Jabulani Shongwe (Bidvest Wits), Mpho Makola (Orlando Pirates), Ayanda Patosi (Lokeren), George Lebese (Kaizer Chiefs), Oupa Manyisa (Orlando Pirates). Strikers: Thulani Serero (Ajax Amsterdam), Thamsanqa Gabuza (Orlando Pirates), Sibusiso Vilakazi (Bidvest Wits), Tokelo Rantie (Bournemouth), Prince Nxumalo (Ajax Cape Town) - ANA



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Benteke adds to Liverpool’s woes

Liverpool striker Christian Benteke is set to undergo scan after sustaining a hamstring injury during their 1-1 draw to Norwich.

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Liverpool striker Christian Benteke is set to undergo scan after sustaining a hamstring injury during their 1-1 draw to Norwich City on Sunday, first team coach Gary McAllister has said.

The Belgium international, who was withdrawn at half-time against the Canaries due to tightness in his hamstring, has scored two goals for the club.

McAllister also confirmed captain Jordan Henderson had a successful operation on his broken metatarsal.

“Christian will have an MRI scan today and hopefully they'll find the problem - he's got a little problem with his hamstring,” McAllister told reporters ahead of their third round League Cup tie with Carlisle United.

“Everybody (else) is good. Jordan's come through fine. There's not really a timescale on that, but everything went well there,” he added. – Reuters



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Rooney changed United’s salary policy

Sir Alex Ferguson reveals in his latest book that Wayne Rooney's salary was raised to twice that of his manager's in 2010.

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Sir Alex Ferguson reveals in his latest book, published today, that Wayne Rooney's salary was raised to twice that of his manager's in 2010, prompting Manchester United's owners the Glazer family to introduce a rule that no player at Old Trafford could earn more than the Scot.

In Leading, the second book Ferguson has published since his retirement in 2013, the United manager makes a number of revelations about his 27 years in charge of the club, including a conversation with director Joel Glazer over the new contract for Rooney. The deal was agreed after a stand-off between club and player precipitated by a statement from Rooney publicly questioning United's ambition.

Ferguson writes: “When the Glazers and David Gill agreed to a big increase in Wayne Rooney's salary in 2010, they wanted to know how I felt. I told them I did not think it fair that Rooney should earn twice what I made and Joel Glazer immediately said: 'I totally agree with you but what should we do?' It was simple. We just agreed that no player should be paid more than me. We agreed in less time than it takes to read this sentence.”

Ferguson states that in his last 15 years at the club he was on a one-year rolling contract which entitled him to two years' salary if he was sacked. He writes: “In the Premier League I imagine that only Arsène Wenger and Jose Mourinho pull down the amount of money earned by their best players. That probably explains why nothing much is written about a manager's compensation. What message does it send to a team, if most of them are being paid more than their boss?”

The book, co-authored by Sir Michael Moritz, an investor in Silicon Valley technology firms, is presented as a guide to business leadership.

He reveals that the key to Paul Pogba leaving United in 2012 was the young Frenchman engaging the services of Mino Raiola, who also represents Mario Balotelli. Ferguson calls the first meeting with Raiola a “fiasco”, writing: “He [Raiola] and I were like oil and water. From then on our goose was cooked because Raiola had been able to ingratiate himself with Paul and his family and the player signed with Juventus.” – The Independent



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Struggles of Premier League A-Listers

Six players who shared 109 goals in the Barclays Premier League last season are all misfiring this season.

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Six players who shared 109 goals in the Barclays Premier League last season — Sergio Aguero, Harry Kane, Diego Costa, Alexis Sanchez, Eden Hazard and Wayne Rooney — are all misfiring.

Six games into the new season and the attackers have just three goals between them from a combined total of 35 games — and one of those was attributed to Hazard when it could easily have gone down as a Calum Chambers own goal.

The prolific marksmen have lost their accuracy. Centre forwards Kane (Tottenham), Aguero (Man City) and Costa (Chelsea) were the top three in the Premier League last season.

Sanchez (Arsenal), Hazard (Chelsea) and Rooney (Man United) play wide or in a deeper attacking role but all contribute vital goals when confident. Rooney became England’s greatest international goalscorer this month but has scored only four league goals in 2015.

Tired old excuses...

All strikers need confidence. It can disappear without good reason and take time to return. Or it can be damaged by a permanent change in circumstances, which might be physical (age) or mental (ambition) or a bit of both.

Managers, it seems, like to condition everyone to consider fatigue, even at the start of the season. Players who don’t feel tired are being told they are tired. Kane, Aguero and Sanchez were at summer tournaments. Kane came home from the European Under 21 Championship after England’s last game on June 24. Aguero (Argentina) and Sanchez (Chile) went on to the final of Copa America on July 4. They were excused summer club tours and started the first game of the season on the bench.

Aguero has spent less time on the pitch than the other six but played two international friendlies in the USA earlier this month, while Sanchez was in Chile for a match against Paraguay.

Players were supposed to be weary last year after the World Cup but it did not stop Costa scoring eight in his first six or Aguero four in six.

Commercially driven club tours mean it is hard to summon much sympathy. Modern footballers compete around the year and travel in luxury.

Their clubs boast hi-tech equipment and armies of medical experts to lavish care and attention on bespoke recovery programmes.

If players are not in top condition, their clubs have a squad big enough to supply an alternative.

We know your tricks...

The strikers who have what is needed to succeed in English football usually do so with a bang. Costa, Sanchez and Kane were new to the Premier League last season and ensured the novelty worked in their favour.

Many hours spent analysing opponents are, however, devoted to finding ways to nullify the goal threats.

Of last season’s top five scorers, four were new to the league: Kane, Costa, Sanchez and Charlie Austin of QPR. Only Aguero was not.

The ability to perform consistently under pressure and scrutiny marks out the best and nobody doubts the six in question will find their groove again soon. Something will click.

For Kane, expectation is a fresh burden, increased by the fact Tottenham disposed of their other recognised centre forwards. Goals from Son Heung-min suggest he will share the load but Kane does not shirk responsibility. Two goals for England prove the knack has not deserted him but they came in a gentle qualification campaign, against inferior opposition. The same might be said for Rooney’s Champions League hat-trick in Bruges, his one recent flourish in United colours.

Support acts struggle

This is most obviously a factor for Kane and Chelsea’s Costa and Hazard. Costa’s form cooled at the end of the last campaign — during which he struggled with hamstring problems — in correlation with his creator-in-chief Cesc Fabregas.

Costa has eight league goals in 2015. Kane has 16, Aguero 13, Hazard eight, Sanchez six and Rooney four.

Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho drove the core of his squad hard last season. They went on a post-season tour to Thailand and Australia, returned later than usual and went on a pre-season tour to North America.

With hindsight, Mourinho accepts this was a mistake, although Hazard bucks the trend. He has created more chances in the first six league games of this season than last, according to Opta.

Chemistry is important. Kane has missed the creativity of Christian Eriksen for a month. Aguero must learn to understand new players in the City side and Rooney has appeared more isolated over time as United have shelved their cavalier traditions and become a more functional unit.

Move to Leicester!

Opponents always strive to improve and are setting up, probably more than ever, to sit deep, smother space around the penalty box and spring quickly on the counter-attack.

In tight areas, passes must be more accurate and shots taken cleanly. ‘Fast is fine, but accuracy is everything,’ as Wyatt Earp said.

Like Earp, Sanchez loves to shoot. His 31 shots in 437 league minutes this season comes in at an average of one effort every 14 minutes. Nearly half were blocked before they reached goal. Eight forced a save, and two hit the woodwork against Stoke, on a day when goalkeeper Jack Butland was inspired.

Sanchez is a natural risk-taker but does not always show against the best teams. Perhaps the better defensive units force him into areas where his shooting is less potent. Perhaps when he is slightly below his peak, or when opponents are especially well drilled, he cannot perform the usual heroics.

City have played already against some of the most effective counter-attackers: Crystal Palace, Watford, Leicester, West Ham and West Bromwich. Aguero’s only goal came against Chelsea.

After six games, the Premier League’s top scorers are: 5 — Riyad Mahrez (Leicester), Callum Wilson (Bournemouth). 4 — Bafetimbi Gomis (Swansea), Odion Ighalo (Watford), Graziano Pelle (Southampton) and Jamie Vardy (Leicester). Leicester, Bournemouth and Watford rely heavily on the counter- attack. Gomis and Pelle are strong in the air and capable of punishing the fashion among the bigger clubs for more mobile and less physical centre halves.

Arsenal, perhaps the most extreme example, lack height and three of the seven goals they have conceded in all competitions have been from set-pieces, while four of the eight goals conceded by Manchester United have been headers.

P.S. Top of the charts in Spain is Real Madrid’s Cristiano Ronaldo, who had gone 500 minutes without a goal in La Liga before scoring five against Espanyol. Barcelona’s Lionel Messi has three in four while, in Germany’s Bundesliga, Thomas Muller of Bayern Munich has six in five. – Daily Mail



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Arsenal must keep their cool

Arsene Wenger has warned his players not to lose their composure again when they face Tottenham Hotspur in the League Cup.

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Arsene Wenger has warned his hot-headed Arsenal players not to lose their composure again when they face bitter rivals Tottenham Hotspur in the League Cup third round on Wednesday.

Wenger's side head to White Hart Lane for the first north London derby of the season after two successive defeats featuring three red cards for the Gunners.

France striker Olivier Giroud was dismissed in last week's Champions League loss against Dinamo Zagreb, while Brazilian defender Gabriel and Spanish midfielder Santi Cazorla were sent off in Saturday's painful 2-0 defeat at Chelsea.

Wenger largely blamed Chelsea's Diego Costa for provoking Gabriel into the kick that led to his dismissal.

But the centre-back has since been charged with improper conduct for his protests after being sent off and the Arsenal manager acknowledges his team need to do a better job of keeping their emotions under control even in the face of extreme provocation.

“It's true that we played the last two games with 10 men in the second half and I hope we play the next one with 11 v 11,” Wenger said.

“But it's another derby and that's not guaranteed as well.”

Yet there are few more testing environments in which to do that than White Hart Lane on derby day, when the hatred and bile will pour down from the stands towards Wenger's players.

Another factor that could negate Wenger's attempts to clamp down on the rash of red cards is Arsenal's desperation to get back on track after a pair of defeats that raised renewed questions about their ability to win the Premier League and Champions League.

Although the League Cup is traditionally well down Wenger's list of priorities and he often fields inexperienced starting line-ups in the competition, Arsenal midfielder Aaron Ramsey suggested he wouldn't mind skipping an evening's rest to help his club to a morale-boosting win.

“It's not good enough for a club like Arsenal to lose two games in a row,” Ramsey said.

“Hopefully now we can put things right on Wednesday. It will be a feisty game with hopefully some goals in our favour.”

While Arsenal's spluttering start to the season has taken a turn for the worse over the last week, Tottenham have recorded three consecutive victories to revive hopes of a successful season after a sluggish opening.

And Tottenham's Belgian defender Jan Vertonghen believes boss Mauricio Pochettino is building a young team capable of great things.

South Korea forward Son Heung-Min, 23, is the new idol of the Lane after his first Premier League goal -- and third in just three appearances in all competitions -- clinched a 1-0 win over Crystal Palace on Sunday.

Son's fine start following his transfer from Bayer Leverkusen is part of a youth movement also including 19-year-old Dele Alli, 21-year-old Eric Dier, 22-year-olds Ben Davies and Harry Kane and 23-year-olds Erik Lamela and Christian Eriksen.

“Things are looking very good. We have great young players and a good mix, so there are great things for the team if we can keep working like this. It looks very good for the future,” Vertonghen said.

One concern, however, remains the usually-prolific Kane's disappointing form.

The England striker is without a club goal this season but Vertonghen is confident he will rediscover his touch soon.

“He has just been a bit unlucky,” Vertonghen said. “He scored for England and in the training sessions he has been doing very well, so the goals will come.

“He's not a guy who will just have one good season and then you never see him again. He has the qualities to perform and the goals will come eventually.” – AFP



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Fergie wanted Pep, not Moyes

Alex Ferguson has revealed that David Moyes, his successor at Manchester United, was sixth on a list of ideal replacements.

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Alex Ferguson has revealed that David Moyes, the man chosen as his managerial successor at Manchester United, was sixth on a list of ideal replacements headed by Pep Guardiola and four others, who were all “unavailable” at the time.

In his new book “Leading”, United's longest-serving manager outlines the selection process behind Moyes' ill-fated appointment at Old Trafford, which lasted less than a year after he replaced the retired Ferguson in 2013.

“I asked Pep to phone me before he accepted an offer from another club but he didn't and wound up joining Bayern Munich in July 2013,” Ferguson wrote.

“When we started the process of looking for my replacement, we established that several very desirable candidates were unavailable.

“It became apparent that Jose Mourinho had given his word to Roman Abramovich that he would return to Chelsea, and that Carlo Ancelotti would succeed him at Real Madrid.

“We also knew that Jurgen Klopp was happy at Borussia Dortmund and would be signing a new contract. Meantime, Louis van Gaal had undertaken to lead the Dutch attempt to win the 2014 World Cup,” he added.

Moyes was sacked after 10 months at United but Ferguson defended his fellow Scot's record prior to joining the club.

“We chose David Moyes. He had been consistent in his job at Everton, had a good spell there - 11 years and showed appetite.

“Unfortunately, somehow it didn't work out for David. The process was perfect. It was a good process,” Ferguson said.

Instead, the former United manager reserved his criticism for Moyes' decision to overhaul his backroom staff after taking charge.

“I'm sure there are things that David would do differently if he had the opportunity to relive his time at Old Trafford,” Ferguson said.

“Such as keeping Mick Phelan (Ferguson's assistant), who would have been the invaluable guide to the many layers of the club that Ryan Giggs is to Louis van Gaal today.

“There is no point suddenly changing routines that players are comfortable with. It is counterproductive, saps morale and immediately provokes players to question the new man's motives,” he added. – Reuters



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