Bucs have one foot in Cup final

While the Al Ahly win ensures the Bucs have a foot in the Caf final, they know the next one will to take some doing.

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Johannesburg – The celebrations were somewhat muted, Eric Tinkler merely shaking hands with the bench and a few of the players going down on their knees and giving thanks to the one above – and with good reason, too.

For while this victory ensures Pirates have one foot in the Caf Confederation final, they know only too well that getting the second one over the line is going to take some doing.

Keeping a clean sheet in Egypt next weekend will require much more than the good saves Filipe Ovono pulled off here, and the last-ditch tackles that saw the likes of Rooi Mahamutsa and Ayanda Gcaba stop Ahly attacks in their tracks.

In their own backyard, Ahly are unlikely to be as flat as they were in the first half here but will rather force Pirates on to the back-foot as they did in the second stanza – and they will probably do so from the onset.

But having kept the defending champions at bay, Pirates can approach the second leg with some confidence and belief they can overcome the Red Devils in Suez next Sunday.

To do that they need only play with the ferocity and swagger that saw them dominate the first half, but they must add to that a killer instinct in the final third. A little of that here last night and the scoreline could have been much more convincing than the solitary goal advantage they will take to north Africa.

South African teams and ruthlessness, though, are like railway lines – destined never to meet.

At the beginning of the match, you got the impression Pirates totally understood the need to render this semifinal tie a no-contest by the end of the 90 minutes as they began with purposeful attacks.

But that attitude only lasted a quarter of an hour.

Early on, Kermit Erasmus harassed Hany Eldemerdash and quickly Pirates appeared to spot a weakness on the visitors’ right side. And with Thabo Matlaba pushing up, Pirates always looked dangerous when they attacked on the left.

The two then combined for Erasmus to deliver a dangerous ball across the face of goal, but Thamsanqa Gabuza could not connect.

There was no such escape for the visitors on nine minutes, a replica of the earlier move seeing Gabuza simply tap the ball past Ahmed Ekramy into the net for the opening goal.

Ten minutes later, Pirates almost went 2-0 up but Ekramy did well to parry over an Mpho Makola free-kick from the edge of the box after Gabuza was hacked down.

Yet, instead of piling on the pressure in search of a second goal, Pirates went into their shell and this allowed Ahly to dominate from the 20th minute.

While they had initially looked to be a shadow of the side renowned as the continent’s best, Ahly showed some neat touches during this period as they knocked the ball about purposely and punched holes through the Bucs rearguard. They looked particularly dangerous attacking from the wings, the high balls they knocked into the box troubling Pirates.

One of those, on 25 minutes, gave the home side a mighty scare as Abbas Eldawy bumped into Ovono, leaving the Bucs keeper sprawled on the pitch in pain.

Without a natural reserve keeper on the bench, coach Tinkler and everyone associated with the Buccaneers held their collective breath as the medical team treated Ovono for two and a half minutes.

The Equatorial Guinea number one was not badly hurt, though, and was quickly doing a great job keeping Pirates in the lead.

An excellent build-up by Ahly saw Matlaba skinned before Sobhi Ahmed hit a shot that Ovono could only tip on to the upright. The ball ricocheted into play and Ntsikelelo Nyauza did excellently to clear just in time to deny Eldawy a header into the open net.

Expectedly, Ahly returned from the break full of fire and forced Pirates onto the back foot for most of the 45 minutes but failed to make their dominance count.

Abd El Moneim was allowed a free shot on the edge of the box but sent the ball way over without troubling Ovono.

Then Duku Antwi worked his magic to get into the box, but Pirates did well to clear, with Mahamutsa livid at his teammates for allowing the opposition to put the defence under pressure.

Bucs will have to deal with similar pressure in the second leg, but most importantly though, they will need to score to be sure of progression to the final.

Orlando Stadium

Orlando Pirates: (1) 1

Gabuza 9

Al Ahly: 0

– THE SUNDAY INDEPENDENT



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Blatter probe misery for Safa

News that the Swiss are probing Fifa president Sepp Blatter is set to give Safa bosses sleepless nights.

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Johannesburg – News that Swiss prosecutors have opened proceedings against outgoing Fifa president Sepp Blatter after searching his office and seizing data on Friday is expected to give Safa bigwigs Danny Jordaan and Molefi Oliphant sleepless nights.

Swiss prosecutors opened the investigation on suspicion of criminal mismanagement or misappropriation relating to a contract Blatter signed with Caribbean football chief Jack Warner in 2005. The Swiss attorney-general’s office said Blatter was suspected of having signed a contract that was “unfavourable to Fifa” and of having “violated his fiduciary duties and acted against the interest of Fifa”.

He is also suspected to have made a “disloyal payment” to European football chief Michel Platini.

The 79-year-old Blatter, who has led Fifa since 1998, has consistently denied wrongdoing. Fifa says it is co-operating with the investigation.

The Sunday Independent investigation links the contract the prosecutors mention to a deal in which Blatter proposed that Fifa withhold US$10 million from the Jack Warner-headed Confederation of North, Central America and Caribbean Association Football (Concacaf) between 1999 and 2002. Blatter proposed this after establishing that the multimillion-rand João Havelange Centre of Excellence in Macoya, Trinidad, was registered in Warner’s name. This was after an integrity committee had established that US$26m in Concacaf funds had gone to the centre.

Former Fifa president Havelange had promised to fund the centre, just a month before Blatter replaced him as president in June 1998.

This was the period immediately after South Africa lost to Germany in bidding to host the 2006 World Cup.

South Africa submitted its bid document on August 9, 1999 and controversially lost to Germany on July 6, 2000. On August 4 and 5, 2000, the Fifa congress in Zurich adopted the rotation policy, making the 2010 campaign an all-Africa bid. South Africa decided to bid for the 2010 event.

“It is with pleasure that I now inform you that I have found an external solution to convert the loan into a donation,” Havelange wrote to Warner.

Blatter later wrote a letter to Warner that said: “We mutually agreed that US$10m of this would be reimbursable by means of Fifa’s annual contribution to Concacaf of US$2.5m over the four years 1999 to 2002.”

Coincidentally, South Africa made a US$10m donation to support football among the “African diaspora” in the Caribbean two years before it hosted the first Fifa World Cup in Africa.

Sports Minister Fikile Mbalula said the $10m had been to fund the João Havelange Centre of Excellence.

The Sunday Independent has established the $10m could not have been used in 2008 for the building of the centre as it had been in existence for 10 years. The SA Football Association and the Sports Ministry have insisted that the payment was an honest donation.

The Sports Ministry could not be reached for comment. Fifa spokeswoman Delia Fischer said: “We will have no further comment on the matter as it is an active investigation.”

– THE SUNDAY INDEPENDENT



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Ajax, Chiefs in stalemate

Kaizer Chiefs and Ajax Cape Town had to settle for a 1-1 draw in a pulsating Premiership fixture at Cape Town Stadium.

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Cape Town - Kaizer Chiefs and Ajax Cape Town had to settle for a 1-1 draw in a pulsating Premiership fixture at Cape Town Stadium on Saturday evening.

The match began at a frenetic pace and maintained that energy throughout the 90 minutes, with Ajax keeper Anssi Jaakkola the standout player on the pitch as he pulled off a number of crucial saves.

Chiefs took the lead just after the hour mark through an Edward Manqele strike, but their celebrations were short-lived as Ajax levelled matters five minutes later as Nathan Paulse produced a clinical header to restore parity.

The first chance of the match came for Chiefs on the quarter hour mark.

Camaldine Abraw made a bustling run towards goal before crossing for Manqele whose fiercely struck attempt was well-saved by Jaakkola in the Ajax goal.

Riyaad Norodien had a chance from the right hand side in the 35th minute, but his shot from a tight angle did not have enough dip as the ball landed narrowly over the crossbar with Chiefs keeper Reyaad Pieterse a more than interested observer.

Chiefs put together a flowing move in the 41st minute with Siphiwe Tshabalala running towards goal before offloading for Manqele who managed a first-time shot, but his attempt was blocked by an Ajax defender to bring an end to the dangerous passage of play. On the stroke of half-time Tsepo Masilela produced a screamer of a shot from just inside the area, only to see Jaakkola pull off a stunning save to keep his side level.

Chiefs were rewarded for their persistence in attack with the opener in the 65th minute.

After more swift interplay by the AmaKhosi, Tshabalala came up with the initial shot which was saved by Jaakkola, but Manqele was on hand to bury the rebound to take a 1-0 lead for the visitors.

Ajax, however, were quick to respond with the equaliser in the 70th minute through a Paulse header. Cecil Lolo whipped the ball in from a corner, and Paulse rose above two defenders to find the corner of the net to make it 1-1. There would be no further change in the scoreline, as both teams were forced to share the points from the encounter. - ANA



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United go top after City’s slip

Wayne Rooney's first Premier League goal of the season helped Manchester United comfortably beat bottom club Sunderland 3-0.

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Wayne Rooney's first Premier League goal of the season helped Manchester United comfortably beat bottom club Sunderland 3-0 on Saturday and move to the top of the table.

Manchester City's 4-1 defeat at Tottenham Hotspur earlier in the day had paved the way for United to lead in the title race for the first time since Louis van Gaal took over as manager last year.

And while the performance did not bear the hallmark of champions, it was good enough to beat a Sunderland side who are yet to win this season.

The visitors held out almost until half-time, but once Memphis Depay had opened the scoring, the result was never in doubt.

Rooney ended his drought less than a minute into the second half, taking him level with Denis Law as United's third-highest league goal-scorer with 171 goals, and Juan Mata added the final goal in the last minute.

Sunderland had won just one of their previous 28 league games against United -- a 1-0 victory in May 2014 that helped them complete a remarkable escape from relegation.

That success has been their only win at Old Trafford since 1968 and if they are not careful they are going to need another big effort to beat the drop after another desperate start to the season.

Visiting manager Dick Advocaat boasts a decent record against fellow Dutchman and former Sparta Rotterdam team-mate Van Gaal, with just one defeat from their previous nine managerial meetings.

But the pair no longer manage clubs of a similar standing and right from the start this was a rearguard action from Sunderland.

The Black Cats have the worst defensive record in the division, but they stood firm until the fourth minute of added time at the end of the first half with a deep back line that United struggled to penetrate.

Anthony Martial, bidding to become the first United player since Ian Storey-Moore in 1972 to score on his first three league appearances for the club, was kept quiet.

Rooney, meanwhile, who had not scored a league goal in 11 matches stretching back to early April, again looked short of his best.

It was left to the midfielders to try and unlock Sunderland's defence, with Mata sending a deflected shot just wide and Depay forcing former City goalkeeper Costel Pantilimon to palm a long-range shot over the bar.

Pantilimon was earlier penalised for handling outside the penalty area, but Mata wasted the free-kick.

For all United's dominance, Sunderland did manage periods of relief on the break, Jeremain Lens forcing David de Gea to save an angled drive with his feet from the visitors' best chance of the first half.

But just as it looked as though they would get to half-time unscathed, Sunderland fell behind with almost the final touch of the first half.

Daley Blind floated an angled ball over the visitors' defence for Mata to square to Depay, who tapped in from close range to claim his first domestic goal since joining United from PSV Eindhoven.

If that was bad news for Sunderland, what happened 30 seconds into the second half was a disaster as the game was taken beyond them.

Again Mata was involved with a pass to Martial, who showed great strength to reach the byline and drive in a low cross that Rooney forced into the net from close range with his knee.

After Sunderland had seen chances of an unlikely comeback snuffed out as De Gea saved from Ola Toivonen and Patrick van Aanholt, Depay should have made it 3-0 from Martial's pass, but failed to beat Pantilimon.

Pantilimon also saved well from Mata 10 minutes from the end, but he was powerless to prevent the Spaniard firing past him from an Ashley Young cross to cap a red-letter day for United. – AFP



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Chelsea snatch graw against Magpies

Chelsea came from two goals down against Newcastle to rescue a 2-2 draw at St James Park.

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Jose Mourinho is still to win a Premier League game at Newcastle, but the Chelsea boss must have felt like he was celebrating a victory after his side came from two goals down to rescue a 2-2 draw on Saturday.

Trailing to goals from Ayoze Perez and Georginio Wijnaldum, the reigning champions looked like suffering a fourth defeat in the space of seven Premier League matches when they were still 2-0 behind with 11 minutes left at St James' Park.

But after Brazilian midfielder Ramires clawed a goal back with a sensational long-range finish, his compatriot Willian's floated free-kick found its way beyond Tim Krul in the 86th minute to complete a gritty comeback from the visitors.

Chelsea might even have claimed a winner with Ramires forcing a fantastic last-minute save from Krul, but their comeback still provided a timely riposte to those who were questioning their character after a stuttering start to the season.

Newcastle's spirited showing was also a welcome tonic after a difficult few weeks on Tyneside, but Steve McClaren's side are still searching for their first league victory and remain in the bottom three.

The Magpies went into the game reeling from their humiliating midweek League Cup defeat to Sheffield Wednesday, but hardly looked a team devoid of confidence as they tore into Chelsea from the outset.

With Perez outstanding at the apex of the midfield, and Aleksandar Mitrovic providing a much-needed physical presence as the striker returned from a three-match suspension, the hosts were more threatening than they had been in any of their games since the opening day of the season.

Mitrovic went close with a 16th minute header that whistled wide, before Moussa Sissoko also narrowly failed to find the target with a low shot from the edge of the area.

Asmir Begovic was called into action shortly after, saving from both Perez and Daryl Janmaat as Newcastle continued to press.

But the Chelsea goalkeeper was powerless to prevent his side falling behind three minutes before the interval.

Vurnon Anita crossed from the right, and after pulling between Branislav Ivanovic and a dawdling Kurt Zouma, Perez took a superb first touch, then dispatched a clinical half-volley via the left-hand post.

Chelsea could have no complaints about being behind at that stage as their own first-half efforts were fitful at best.

Loic Remy endured a frustrating return to Tyneside as he found himself isolated for long spells, while neither Pedro nor Eden Hazard were able to exert much of an attacking influence as they were closed down by some disciplined Newcastle defending.

Having watched his side get their season back on track with a win over Arsenal seven days earlier, Mourinho will have been furious at his players' lack of impetus before the break, and his half-time words had an effect as Chelsea briefly improved at the start of the second half.

Remy headed Oscar's cross wide, but with Mourinho poised to introduce Radamel Falcao and Willian on the touchline, Newcastle struck for a second time in the 60th minute.

Perez swung over a corner from the right, and Wijnaldum escaped Fabregas' clutches to glance an excellent header into the bottom left-hand corner.

Chelsea reduced the deficit with 11 minutes remaining, with substitute Ramires rifling a brilliant long-range strike into the top left-hand corner.

Suitably inspired, Mourinho's men poured forward and struck again to claim an equaliser four minutes from time.

Willian whipped over an inswinging free-kick from the left-hand side, and while Ramires failed to make contact on the edge of the six-yard box, he did enough to distract Krul, who could only watch as the ball flew past him into the net. – AFP



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Pirates sink Al Ahly

Orlando Pirates defeated Egyptian giants Al Ahly 1-0 in their first leg of the CAF Confederation Cup semi final at the Orlando Stadium.

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Johannesburg - Orlando Pirates defeated Egyptian giants Al Ahly 1-0 in their first leg of the CAF Confederation Cup semi final on Saturday night at Orlando Stadium.

A first half goal by Thamsanqa Gabuza was enough to hand Eric Tinkler's men a deserved victory and a glimmer of hope going to the second leg to be staged in Cairo next weekend.

In a fast-paced football match, it was Gabuza who found an early goal as in the ninth minute when he connected with a beautiful cross from Kermit Erasmus to give the South Africans the lead.

The Buccaneers were awarded a set piece in the 18th minute and Mpho Makola unleashed a powerful shot which forced a brilliant save out of Ahly keeper Sherif Ekrami who was alert between the sticks and parried the ball out for a corner.

The Egyptians made attempts to trouble the hosts' defence when they pushed goalkeeper Felipe Ovono to make a superb block in the 31st minute, which hit the upright but defender Ntsikelelo Nyauza was nearby to clear to ball to safety.

The Sea Robbers went to the tunnel ahead with Gabuza's strike, and they began the second stanza in similar fashion.

Shortly after the restart left back Thabo Matlaba failed to keep his volley on target, following a brilliant move by the midfielders on a counter attack.

In the 61st minute, the Egyptians nearly equalised when they put pressure on the Buccaneers' defence but their long range attempt went across the face of goal.

With the visitors controlling the proceedings, it was Matlaba who was in space to net the second for the hosts in the 76th minute but his shot went straight to goalkeeper Ekrami.

Moemen Zakareya managed to get the best out of Rooi Mahamutsa with 10 minutes to go but once again the busy Ovono was in an uncompromising mood as the visitors continued to probe for an equaliser.

Coach Fathi Mabrouk's men tried all they could in an aim to go back home with a goal, but the Buccaneers' defence was solid to deny them as they succumbed to Gabuza's solitary strike. - ANA



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Sturridge scores in Liverpool win

Daniel Sturridge scored his first goals since March as Liverpool edged Aston Villa in their five goal thriller at Anfield.

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Daniel Sturridge scored his first goals since March as Liverpool edged Aston Villa 3-2 in the Premier League on Saturday to ease the pressure on manager Brendan Rodgers.

James Milner opened the scoring with an early goal, but there was no hint of the second-half drama to follow, which saw Sturridge and Villa's Rudy Gestede score two goals each inside 12 minutes.

After 59 minutes, Sturridge exchanged passes with Milner before unleashing a magnificent 16-yard volley past Brad Guzan to double the home team's lead.

That quality of finishing has been sadly lacking from the Liverpool line-up during Sturridge's absence with a hip injury, but it took just seven minutes for them to demonstrate that even if that area of their game has improved, they are still defensively weak.

Alan Hutton's right-wing cross exposed an absence of defenders in the home area and Gestede was able to scramble the ball in from close range.

Within a minute, Sturridge had restored the two-goal cushion, this time exchanging passes with Philippe Coutinho, whose back-heel allowed him the time and space to choose his spot and steer in another expert finish.

Again, Liverpool were found wanting in defence, Gestede leaping to convert Jordan Amavi's left-wing cross with a fantastic header, but the home side held on for a first league win in five matches.

Given the build-up to the fixture, and the growing pressure upon Rodgers following Wednesday's penalty shootout win over fourth-tier Carlisle United in the League Cup, it was hardly the most convincing of performances.

But Milner had given them a perfect start with just 66 seconds on the clock.

Coutinho found the England midfielder in a central position, 20 yards from goal, and with the visitors inexplicably backing off, Milner sent an excellent left-foot shot skidding past the dive of Guzan.

It was his first goal since joining from Manchester City during the close season.

After scoring just four goals in their opening six games, their worst such opening to a campaign in a decade, the early opener was much needed, but the remainder of the first half would see Liverpool fail to add to it.

Indeed, the better chances arguably fell to the visitors. After just six minutes, Amavi's left-wing cross found the towering Gestede, whose powerful header flew just off target.

Halfway through the half, Hutton's cross was poorly headed clear by Emre Can, directly to Gestede, who hurriedly shot wide.

Then, having shown strength and determination to win a loose ball, Hutton caused panic with a cross, goalkeeper Simon Mignolet punching meekly to Ashley Westwood, who saw his shot deflected behind.

There was more uncertainty in the home defence as Nathaniel Clyne gifted the ball to Scott Sinclair and must have been relieved when the Villa winger shot tamely at Mignolet.

For all their advantage in possession, Liverpool had struggled to create noteworthy chances, but they opened the second period with a more direct approach and soon had Villa on the defensive.

Clyne almost netted a rebound before Amavi made an important block, before the flurry of goals arrived that would decide the game.

Thereafter, a Coutinho free-kick was saved superbly by Guzan, the same Liverpool man shot directly at the goalkeeper from the edge of the area and Villa might have snatched an equaliser when Micah Richards headed over.

As Villa pressed for an equaliser, gaps began to appear in their defence and Sturridge would have had a hat-trick had it not been for a last-gasp Richards challenge and another Guzan save. – AFP



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Sanchez back to his best - Wenger

Alexis Sanchez scored a hat-trick as Arsenal moved into the top four with a 5-2 victory in an action-packed game at Leicester City.

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London - Alexis Sanchez rediscovered his spark with a hat-trick as Arsenal moved into the Premier League's top four with a 5-2 victory in an action-packed game at Leicester City on Saturday.

The Chile striker has struggled this season after scoring 25 goals in his first year after leaving Barcelona.

After a draining Copa America he has lacked his usual energy, failing to score for his club until Saturday, but he was back to his best as Arsenal rallied to inflict a first league defeat this season on Leicester.

Sanchez put the Gunners ahead from close range after Theo Walcott had equalised Jamie Vardy's early goal.

The Chilean then headed the visitors 3-1 up early in the second half and put the visitors out of reach with a long-range blast.

Vardy pulled one back before Olivier Giroud added a fifth goal for Arsenal.

It was all a reassuring sight for manager Arsene Wenger who relied so much on Sanchez last year.

“He is back to his level. He won a big competition with Chile, the Copa America,” Wenger told reporters.

“I think to adjust to the game on a mental level takes some time. I could see in training a different player in the last week or two and he has shown that today.

“I believe going forward he always looked dangerous. Overall he is a striker who is mobile and works hard for the team. When the team plays well he can score goals.”

Despite the convincing final score, Wenger said he had been worried as Leicester flew out of the blocks and dominated the early stages.

“I must say Leicester played well and to play a good football game there needs to be two teams,” Wenger said.

“They had the stronger start, they pushed us on our back foot from the start when they scored the first goal and I must say I was concerned after that as I thought they were close to scoring a second one and it would have made it difficult.

“We found the resources to equalise and after that our technical quality and the pace of our strikers gave them problems and we managed to make it 2-1 before halftime.

“In the second half we controlled the game and looked always like we could add another one,” said Wenger. – Reuters



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Messi's knee injury blow

Barcelona’s Lionel Messi is expected to be out for up to two months after suffering a knee injury in their La Liga victory over Las Palmas.

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Barcelona - Barcelona forward Lionel Messi is expected to be out for up to two months after suffering a knee injury in their La Liga victory over Las Palmas on Saturday, the club said in a statement.

The Argentine picked up the injury in a clash of legs with Daniel Castellano after three minutes and tried to continue but was substituted six minutes later.

“Tests have confirmed that Leo Messi has torn the internal collateral ligament of his left knee,” Barcelona said in a statement.

“The estimated time that he will be absent is around seven or eight weeks.”

Barca went on to win 2-1 with a double from Luis Suarez, but midfielder Sergio Busquets said losing Messi was a big blow.

“He is the best player in the world, our best player and the most dangerous so we are going to notice this,” he told reporters.

“We are having a lot of bad luck with injuries and particularly now when we cannot sign players.” – Reuters



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Another defeat for SuperSport

Platinum Stars moved to top spot on the log as they romped to victory over SuperSport United in their Premiership match.

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Pretoria - Platinum Stars moved to top spot on the log as they romped to a 3-1 victory over SuperSport United in their Premiership match at Lucas Moripe Stadium, in Pretoria, on Saturday.

Two strikes after the interval put Stars into a two-goal lead, but going well behind seemed to prompt the home side into action as they scored a goal with just over 20 minutes remaining.

But like the earlier strikes for Stars, a defensive lapse allowed the visitors to score their third and wrap up the match as a contest with 15 minutes remaining.

The win takes Stars to 14 points as they overtake Bidvest Wits who drew their match against Free State Stars.

In contrast, SuperSport remain on five points as they fell to their third defeat from the six league encounters this season.

Platinum Stars had a chance in the first minute as Eleazar Rodgers beat SuperSport keeper Ronwen Williams to a cross, but his headed attempt was just centimetres wide of goal. SuperSport had their first chance in the 10th minute through a setpiece.

Captain Thuso Phala had a dip at goal from a free kick from the edge of the area, but the shot took a deflection off the wall and sailed out for a corner.

Bradley Grobler for SuperSport had a chance from outside the box in the 23rd minute, but his effort took a deflection off a defender as the ball dribbled out.

In the 39th minute, Masibusane Zongo went for glory from a setpiece 25 metres out but his curling attempt did not threaten Williams. Two minutes later, the Stars last line of defence lost the ball carelessly and presented a sharp chance for Dove Wome in the box, and his fiercely-struck shot required a diving save from Mbongeni Mzimela in the Stars goal.

SuperSport had another chance inside the area before the break as Grobler had time and space but scuffed his shot across the face of goal.

The visitors opened the scoring against the run of play in the 53rd minute. Rodgers made a run toward the SuperSport goal and turned in a through-ball for Sibusiso Msomi who was clinical in finding the target to take a 1-0 lead for Stars.

Stars made it 2-0 on the hour mark. Bongani Ntuli was allowed by the SuperSport defence to make a run from close to the centre circle, before reeling off the shot in the area which evaded Williams as the visitors doubled their lead.

SuperSport pulled a goal back in the 68th minute. Wome chipped a cross over the Stars defence and Jeremy Brockie nailed the shot from a tight angle to make it 2-1.

Just as it appeared SuperSport were working their way back into the contest, a defensive error allowed Robert Nga'ambi to score the third for Stars.

Both Bongani Khumalo and Michael Morton watched on as the ball was headed on inside the area with Nga'ambi firing into the back of the net to compound the misery for the hosts.

The score would remain unchanged until the final whistle, as the hosts fell to yet another deflating defeat. - ANA



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Stars, Wits share the spoils

The Absa Premiership match between Free State Stars and Bidvest Wits could not produce a winner as they played to a goalless draw.

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Bethlehem - The Absa Premiership match between Free State Stars and Bidvest Wits could not produce a winner as they played to a goalless draw on Saturday afternoon at Goble Park Stadium.

Both sides went to the encounter having won their previous matches, and it was the visitors who first made strides to get an early goal when Thulani Ngcepe saw his header going wide over the bar as early as the third minute.

However, the hosts had to come to the party with Danny Venter making an effort to find an opener but his long range attempt went wide off Moeneeb Josephs' goals in the 14th minute.

With the match played on a sunny warm day, the conditions did not allow for high intensity and the first stanza failed to produce many clear-cut scoring opportunities.

The hosts began the second period with midfielder Mrisho Ngasa taking a shot but he missed to the right of Josephs' goal.

Coach Ernst Middendorp's men came back strongly and displayed a great deal of hunger with Robert Sankara showing a great initiative in the 62nd minute only to see his header off the mark.

In the 70th minute, Sankara made another attempt to trouble the Clever Boys' defence but the man of the match, Josephs was alert to parry the ball away from goal.

Subsitute Moeketsi Sekola was desperately looking for his maiden goal in the 2015/16 Premier Soccer League season and he tried a shot at goal, but the experienced Josephs was equal to the task to deny him in the 76th minute.

Although one would say the second half was a one-sided contest, Wits coach Gavin Hunt had to replace Jabulani Shongwe for Wangu Gome, however, his attempt to break the deadlock lacked venom as Daouda Diakite made an easy save with 13 minutes to go.

Following the stalemate, the Students move from the top of the Absa Premiership log position to the second spot behind Platinum Stars who beat SuperSport United 3-1 with 13 points from six matches while the hosts remain in 10th spot with seven points. - ANA



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Spurs dismantle City

Tottenham Hotspur produced a stunning fightback to defeat Manchester City 4-1 at White Hart Lane.

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London - Leaders Manchester City suffered their second successive Premier League defeat when Tottenham Hotspur produced a stunning fightback to win 4-1 at White Hart Lane on Saturday.

Goals from Eric Dier, Toby Alderweireld, Harry Kane and Erik Lamela left City reeling after the visitors had dominated early on and taken a 25th-minute lead through record signing Kevin de Bruyne.

Coming a week after a 2-1 home defeat by West Ham United that halted City's 100 percent start to the season, their second-half collapse in sunny north London means they could lose top spot after Saturday's later matches.

Manchester United will go top if they beat Sunderland.

There seemed no hint of what was to come when City broke quickly in the 25th minute through the marauding Yaya Toure who fed De Bruyne to slot past Hugo Lloris.

If there was a hint of offside about that goal, Tottenham's equaliser on the stroke of halftime was even more controversial.

Clearly offside, Kyle Walker crossed low into to the area and although City keeper Willy Caballero saved well from Son Heung-min the ball was drilled back into the net by Dier.

Tottenham went ahead five minutes after the break when Lamela's free kick was headed in by Alderweireld.

Eleven minutes later Kane broke his season-long goal famine for his club when he coolly clipped in a rebound after Christian Eriksen's free kick struck the crossbar.

The impressive Lamela completed the scoring when he showed great composure to fire past Caballero.

Tottenham's win, their third in a row in the Premier League, moved them into fifth place with 12 points from seven games, just three points behind City. – Reuters



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Stench of Fifa follows Platini

Events in the last 24 hours may have put an end to Michel Platini’s hopes of succeeding Sepp Blatter as Fifa president.

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Taxi for Platini, you have to say.

We have known ever since the day in June when Sepp Blatter - recalcitrant and unapologetic to the bitter end - told us he would be stepping down as Fifa president that the FBI or the Swiss Attorney General would soon have their hands on his collar. It was simply a matter of which. But it looks like Platini is going all the way down with him.

What sullied the stinking reputation of football administration most yesterday was not the Swiss stating their suspicion that Blatter has criminally misappropriated funds but that Platini, his long-time minion and one-time “football adviser” was suspected of being a recipient of more than £1.5m of them.

The cash was in return for services rendered between 1999 and 2002, yet it wasn't paid until 2011, say the Swiss. Nine years is a very long time to wait for a million, though Platini insisted last night “this amount relates to work which I carried out under a contract with Fifa.”

This was a rare public comment from the Frenchman. He wants to succeed Blatter - and is favourite to do so - yet has nothing to say about the alleged cesspit of backhanders, bungs and offshore accounts, which the governing body has drowned in, on Blatter's watch.

I was taken with the reporting of Rob Harris of the Associated Press (AP), who observed Platini at close quarters during Uefa's week-long gathering in Malta a few weeks back. Platini exuded all the ex-footballer nonchalance, parading around in red kit with his name on the back. He later lounged poolside in T-shirt and shorts, sipping coffee with Uefa colleagues, shaded from the late summer heat.

And, as Harris observed, he left it to his minion Gianni Infantino - yet again - to handle every awkward question about beleaguered, corrupt Fifa.

Regardless of how the Frenchman explains the €2m of Blatter money he trousered so belatedly, the impression left behind is one that weakens yet more his fragile credibility as the man to lead football.

That candidacy was already tarnished by his support for Qatar's bid for the World Cup in 2022.

He insists that his vote was “for the good of football” yet there has never been a denial from him that in November 2010, 10 days before Qatar was chosen, he attended a lunch at the Elysée Palace with Qatar's Prime Minister, its Crown Prince and Nicolas Sarkozy, then President of France. It was the following year that Qatar Sports Investments, a state-owned firm, bought Paris Saint-Germain, Sarkozy's favoured team, and that Platini's son became the boss of Burrda, a Qatari-owned sports-kit company.

It should be incumbent on a new Fifa president to dispel suggestions that the 2022 World Cup was bought by bribing executive committee members by a reopening of the Qatar bidding. No sign of such an offer from Platini. Only obsequious words about Blatter's forced exit - “a difficult decision, a brave decision” - which reinforced the impression that a new Fifa needs incalculably more moral fibre than this.

When asked by AP on Thursday to discuss his plans to replace Blatter, meaninglessness poured forth from Platini. Utterances such as: “A good Fifa is like a good referee. Nobody speaks about it.” Details? None.

When he said in the same interview, “Sarkozy never asked me to vote for Qatar, but I knew what would be good,” a smile played across his face. It was hard to imagine he was wearing one last night. – The Independent



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Rodgers tinkering costing Liverpool

Every time you talk about Liverpool and why they are not doing well, it's impossible not to go back to that fabulous 2013-14 campaign.

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I don't think I ever remember one team struggling so much to recapture what they were in possession of just a few short seasons ago.

Every time you talk about Liverpool and why they are not doing well, it's impossible not to go back to that fabulous 2013-14 campaign when they so nearly won the league. There are a number of reasons you can explore as to why they have never got close to that level, but one of them is Brendan Rodgers working from a formations book which looks like a railway timetable.

This season, just like the last one, he is constantly changing the formations - 4-3-3, 4-3-1-2, 4-4-1-1, 3-4-3: you name it, he's tried it - and though the general public think, “Oh, they're footballers, they spend all week training, they should just be able to adapt to these changes”, I can tell you it will be a nightmare for the players.

Rodgers is asking a right-back or centre-back to become a left-back in the case of Joe Gomez. And because the keys to a successful team are confidence and on-field partnerships, where one player innately knows the one beside him, the chopping and changing will destabilise Liverpool's players. In football, you need to know what kind of game you want to play and, generally speaking, buy players who fit. What's the point in spending as much in the transfer market as Liverpool have if you don't settle on a way of playing?

When it comes down to it, Liverpool's problem is goals. The point of comparison must be 2013-14, when their strategy was to get the early goal, forcing opponents to come on to them, so creating the space for them to play a ruthless counter-attacking game. Liverpool scored 59 first-half goals in 38 games that season. That's more than the entire number of goals they have scored since - first half and second half combined.

In 2014-15, they scored just 21 first-half goals. They have managed to score more than one goal only twice in the last 21 games in all competitions - against Newcastle United and relegated Queen's Park Rangers.

Yes, the defence, which looked like the weak point in 2013-14, has been improved. Their 10 clean sheets that season became 14 last season. But the goals are not coming for two reasons: a change in personnel and a failure to get the ball forward with the same lightning speed they used in 2013-14.

Let's deal with the personnel first, because that is something which in large part Rodgers has been powerless to affect. They lost Luis Suarez, of course; then had Daniel Sturridge out for much of last season. Now Raheem Sterling and Steven Gerrard have gone too. Four of the five leading scorers from last season are now gone or have been recently unavailable - Gerrard, Sterling, Jordan Henderson (out for at least six weeks) and Sturridge (only finding his way back after missing big chunks of last season).

But having spent money buying strikers this summer to solve last season's goalscoring problem, Rodgers does not seem to be showing any urgency in re-establishing that fast, counter-attacking game of 2013-14 which will allow him to capitalise on them. There was a huge amount of excitement when Liverpool paid big money to sign Roberto Firmino (also now struggling with injury) from Hoffenheim, with Danny Ings and Christian Benteke coming in too. But there's no point in having those players if the build-up is so laborious you can't get them away.

I've been watching Benteke become so isolated that he has been drifting back into midfield to get on the ball. That denies you the prime benefit of having him: the presence of a strong, rapid, dangerous player at the top of the side, who is capable of stretching opponents and giving Liverpool an attacking threat.

Ings is also a dangerous player, who has shown with his two goals in two games that the pressure of playing in a Liverpool shirt is something he can deal with. He is capable of running the channels to collect the ball in the pockets of space which the modern game allows there. Instead, he's being played on the left. That's a waste of an asset who should be played though the middle, or narrow in a line of three.

How can Liverpool get the ball up there rapidly and capitalise on players like this? By using the width of the pitch far, far more. It's not working for them in the central areas because opposing teams are packing it out, making it congested, and because in Philippe Coutinho and James Milner, Rodgers is not possessed of two particularly fast wide players. But if teams are packing the middle, they are affording you the width. Liverpool need to use Alberto Moreno and Nathaniel Clyne to penetrate these areas - and if they are going to play Gomez, do so on his natural right side, rather than on the left where, as a right-footed player, he will naturally tuck in, further congesting the centre.

If you've got a big player like Benteke, then forget all this passing and going sideways. We saw a hint of the benefits of this in Liverpool's best display of the season - the goalless draw at Arsenal, where they got Gomez and Clyne up in support.

To Rodgers, the modern manager with all his strategic tricks, this might seem an unsophisticated way of engineering the goals Liverpool are finding it hard to come by. But I'm not suggesting route one, just something more direct. At its heart, football is a simple game which some managers can overcomplicate. – The Independent



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Mata enjoying Van Gaal revolution

All footballers are vulnerable when a new manager arrives but Juan Mata would have felt a little more vulnerable than most.

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All footballers are vulnerable when a new manager arrives but Juan Mata would have felt a little more vulnerable than most.

He had come to Manchester United on board a helicopter in the January transfer window of last year just when David Moyes' regime was starting to slide badly and the banner on the Stretford End proclaiming Sir Alex Ferguson's successor to be “The Chosen One” was beginning to look an embarrassment.

Mata was a huge statement of intent. He had won the World Cup with Spain, he had won the European Cup with Chelsea, he had a silken touch. He would stop the slide. But the slide gathered pace and, three months after his arrival, the man who had paid a club record £37m for his services had been relieved of his duties.

Louis van Gaal, who succeeded Moyes, is famously no respecter of reputations. When he said early in his first season that he was quite capable of dropping Angel Di Maria or Radamel Falcao, despite the fact that one cost £59m and the other was being paid £265,000 a week, nobody believed him - until the teamsheets began being handed out at Old Trafford. Van Gaal could easily have consigned Mata to the wilderness but he did not. The Spanish midfielder flourished.

“Every manager has his own way of working and with him it was more different than it was with any other manager,” says Mata when we meet this week. “He said when he arrived that it was going to be difficult, especially at the beginning, but it is all about time and getting used to his way of working. I am talking about the number of meetings, the training sessions and the games.

“It is true that when a new manager comes to a club everyone starts from zero but I am quite happy with everything that is happening to me because I have a lot in common with his way of playing football.”

Van Gaal's way was never better demonstrated than in United's third goal at Southampton last Sunday, finishing off a move that contained 45 separate passes. The play built up like a symphony moving slowly across a pitch that was half sunlit, half in shadow, before reaching a climax. You feel Van Gaal would have taken the DVD home and treasured it, like some would a first print of Casablanca. “That was a great example of having possession with meaning,” Mata says. “It wasn't just possession for possession's sake. It was a great example of how to manage the situation when you are winning away.”

It was a victory that was settled by two goals by Anthony Martial, the teenager from Monaco signed for a fee of £36m that even Van Gaal thought steep but who has now found the net in his first two league games for United. Only two others have done that and Martial might be better than either Louis Saha or Ian Storey-Moore.

“If you come from France to England, you would normally need time to settle down - and then there is the fact he is 19,” says Mata. “I can tell you as a Manchester United player how big this club is and how you feel the repercussions of everything you do. It happens to everyone. It happened to me when I came. It is all about not thinking about the transfer fee or the pressure, just performing well and doing your job - and he is doing that.”

The job Mata has been doing just before we meet is a question-and-answer session at Wellacre Sixth Form College in Irlam, not far from United's training ground at Carrington. He is promoting the PlayStation Cup, which is designed to foster school football. Today, Wellacre are playing North Liverpool College.

A member of the away team, in a strong Scouse accent, asks about his most memorable game. “Are you a Liverpool fan?” Mata grins before talking about his two goals at Anfield in March. He admits he is glad David De Gea did not leave for Real Madrid because who else would he beat at table tennis - Mata is an expert at the sport. The music in the dressing room is “whatever Ashley Young puts on” and he does not hesitate when asked to name the best footballer he has played alongside. “Andres Iniesta”.

They won the World Cup together. “Winning the World Cup is something that will always be inside your mind and inside your body,” he says later. “Football is not about money but emotions. The day after we won it in South Africa was one of the most special days I have lived in my life.

“I remember flying to Madrid, arriving at the airport and seeing the whole country on the streets, waiting for you. I still get goosebumps if I talk about it. We were in a parade through Madrid and there were millions in the streets. It is something you cannot express in words, it is something you have to live and feel.”

The one thing that could be said of the United dressing room at its peak under Ferguson was that it was full of men who understood what it was to win and knew how to go about it instinctively.

They have largely gone. Of the squad of 18 that travelled to West Bromwich Albion for Ferguson's final game in May 2013 only three have survived and at one stage it did not look like De Gea would last the summer.

Wayne Rooney was not part of that team at The Hawthorns. Ferguson had exiled him and he would have known Moyes would be replacing the great helmsman. Moyes, the man with whom Rooney had fallen out with terminally at Everton. Moyes, the man who had successfully sued him for libel. In the event, just like Mata and Van Gaal, the relationship was excellent.

Mata says he feels comfortable in Manchester. There is a sizeable Spanish contingent at both Manchester clubs and he has known David Silva since their time at Valencia together. Jesus Navas is another friend.

Mata is a footballer with a hinterland. There is more to him than just the game. When he was at Chelsea, he lived in an apartment by the Thames and would take himself off to Brick Lane, Borough Market and Notting Hill, rather than the obvious places for an international footballer.

“It's a different lifestyle here than in London,” he says. “London is a very big city, Manchester is calmer. I live near the training ground so I do things around there in the countryside but I really like Manchester's Northern Quarter, where they have nice coffee shops and live music places.

“There is still a lot I want to achieve here. From the first day, I have felt appreciated. What I am looking forward to most is winning a trophy, because we haven't done so since I've been here - and there was a lot before I came.”

Juan Mata was supporting the biggest grassroots football tournament in the country - the English Schools' FA PlayStation Schools' Cup. Since its launch, over 150,000 teams have been involved, playstationschoolscup.com

MATA IN NUMBERS

18

The Spaniard has scored 18 goals in his 60 matches for United

9

Nine league goals last season was his best since 12 for Chelsea in 2012-13

50

His goal at Swansea last month was his 50th in English football – The Independent



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