Pirates players up for big African award

Four Orlando Pirates players have been nominated for the African player of the Year based in Africa.

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Johannesburg - Orlando Pirates players Kermit Erasmus, Oupa Manyisa, Felipe Ovono and Thamsanqa Gabuza have all been nominated for the African player of the Year based in Africa.

The four players have caught the attention of onlookers during the season as The Buccaneers progressed to the final of the Confederation Cup.

The nominations, showing a clear bias towards players involved in the Caf Champions league and Confederation Cup, have no other South Africans among their list of nominees.

African player of the Year - Based in Africa

1 Abdeladim Khadrouf (Moghreb Tetouan, Morocco)

2 Abdelmalek Ziaya (ES SETIF Algeria - Algeria)

3 Ahmed akaichi (Etoile du Sahel, Tunisia )

4 Andiramahitsinoro (Carolus USMA, Algeria Madagascar)

5 Baghdâd Bounedjah (Etoile du Sahel, Tunisia)

6 Bakri el Madina (El Merriekh, Sudan)

7 Bassem Morsi (Zamalek, Egypt)

8 Boris Moubhio (AC Leopards, Congo)

9 Djigui Diarra (Stade Malien, Mali)

10 Felipe Ovono (Orlando Pirates, South Africa)

11 Guelassiognon Sylvain Gbohouo (T P Mazembe, D R Congo)

12 Hazem Emam (Zamalek, Egypt)

13 Hocine Ragued (Espérance de Tunis, Tunisia)

14 Kermit Erasmus (Orlando Pirates, South Africa)

15 Malick Evouna (Al Ahly, Egypt)

16 Mbwana Aly Samatta (T P Mazembé, D R Congo)

17 Mohamed Koffi (Zamalek, Egypt Burkina Faso)

18 Mohamed Meftah (USMA, Algeria)

19 Moudather el Tahir (Al Hilal, Sudan)

20 Oupa Manyisa (Orlando Pirates, South Africa)

21 Robert Kidiaba (T P Mazembe, D R Congo)

22 Roger Assalé (T P Mazembe, D R Congo)

23 Thamsanqa Gabuza (Orlando Pirates, South Africa)

24 Zein Edin Farahat (USMA Algeria)

African News Agency



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Klopp not planning to raid Dortmund

Liverpool's new manager Jurgen Klopp has said he had no intention of poaching players from his former club Borussia Dortmund.

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Liverpool's new manager Jurgen Klopp has said he had no intention of poaching players from his former club Borussia Dortmund for the Reds.

“That is in no way my approach,” he told newspaper Bild in an interview published Monday.

The 48-year-old has a contract to manage the Merseyside giants until June 2018 and will take charge of his first Premier League game against Tottenham Hotspur on Saturday.

Asked if he had already secured commitments in funding for the winter transfer window, Klopp said that was a subject “that does not interest me at all”.

“We are now in October and I still don't know how many games there are until winter. But there are a few, and we will first look at our own people,” said Klopp, who started his first training with his new club Monday.

The former Borussia Dortmund head coach was appointed on Thursday following the dismissal of Brendan Rodgers, who was sacked after three and a half years at Liverpool. – AFP



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Yaya in line for another African Player award

Manchester City midfielder Yaya Toure is in the running to be named African player of the Year for the fifth time in a row.

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Johannesburg - Manchester City midfielder Yaya Toure is in the running to be named African player of the Year for the fifth time in a row.

The nominees were announced on Monday by CAF with a list of 37 names up for the coveted award.

Ivory Coast captain Toure, plays a pivotal role for Manchester City in the English Premier Club as the side currently top the table after eight rounds of fixtures.

There have been rumours of Toure, 32, retiring form international football to concentrate on prolonging his club career but the player has not made a decision on the matter yet.

The competition for the top African award, however, will be keenly contested with Ghanain duo Andre Ayew and Christian Atsu also nominated.

Full list of African player of the Year nominees (name, club, nationality): 1 Ahmed Musa (CSKA Moscow, Russia - Nigeria) 2 Andre Ayew (Swansea City, England - Ghana) 3 Aymen Abdennour FC Valence, Spain Tunisia 4 Baghdad Bonjah Etoile du Sahel, Tunisia Algeria 5 Bassem Morsi Zamalek, Egypt Egypt 6 Chrisitian Atsu Bournemouth, England Ghana 7 Dieu Merci Mbokani Norwich, England D.R Congo 8 El Arbi Hillel Soudani Dynamo Zagreb, Croatia Algeria 9 Faouzi Ghoulam Napoli, Italy Algeria 10 Ferebory Dore Angers, France Congo 11 Gervais Yao Kouassi Rome, Italy Cote d'Ivoire 12 Ibrahima Traore Borussia Monchengladbach, Germany Guinea 13 Javier Balboa Al-Faisaly, Saudi Arabia Equatorial Guinea 14 Heldon Ramos Rio Ave, Portugal Cape Verde 15 Mame Diouf Stoke City, England Senegal 16 Max Alain Gradel Bournemouth, England Cote d'Ivoire 17 Mehdi Benatia Bayern Munich, Germany Morocco 18 Modather Al Tayeb “Karika” Al Hilal, Sudan Sudan 19 Mohamed Salah As Roma, Italy Egypt 20 Nicolas Nkoulou Marseille, France Cameroon 21 Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang Borussia Dortmund, Germany Gabon 22 Robert Kidiaba T.P Mazembe, D.R Congo D.R Congo 23 Rudy Gestede Aston Villa, England Benin 24 Riyad Mahrez Leicester City, England Algeria 25 Sadio Mane Southampton, England Senegal 26 Serge Aurier Paris Saint Germain, France Cote d'Ivoire 27 Seydou keita Rome, Italy Mali 28 Sofiane Feghouli Valence, Spain Algeria 29 Stephane Mbia Trabzonspor, Turkey Cameroon 30 Thievy Bifouma Granada, Spain Congo 31 Victor Wanyama Southampton, England Kenya 32 Vincent Aboubakar Porto, Portugal Cameroon 33 Vincent Enyeama Lille, France Nigeria 34 Yacine Brahimi Porto, Portugal Algeria 35 Yannick Bolasie Crystal Palace, England RD Congo 36 Yasine Chikhaoui Al-Gharafa, Qatar Tunisia 37 Yaya Toure Man City, England Cot d'Ivoire - ANA



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Klopp to focus on brand of football

Developing a recognisable brand of football this season is the only target that Liverpool's owners have set new manager Jurgen Klopp.

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Developing a recognisable brand of football this season is the only target that Liverpool's owners have set new manager Jurgen Klopp, the German told Bild over the weekend.

The former Borussia Dortmund manager was unveiled as Brendan Rodgers' successor on Friday and sparked excitement by saying he could win Liverpool the Premier League title in the next four years but, in an interview with the German paper, called for patience because of the enormous challenge he faced.

“There is no doubt, this is a huge challenge, for me and my coaching team,” he said.

“Liverpool have not had any success for a long time and they've changed the manager all the time. And now they have appointed a German who is no miracle worker.

“Progress is not possible without a bit of time.”

Klopp, who has reportedly signed a three-year contract, also said Fenway Sports Group, the club's owners, did not expect him to deliver either a trophy or Champions League qualification in his first season.

“I spoke to the people in charge of the club at length. (There are no targets for this season), just simply to play football with a recognisable brand.

“Whether there is money to spend in January or not doesn't interest me. We are only in October and I don't even know how many games we've got until the transfer window opens and therefore we will have a look at the players at our disposal first.”

Klopp, whose first game in charge is against Tottenham Hotspur at White Hart Lane on Saturday, said he had not planned the 'Normal One' quote that made the headlines after his first news conference at Anfield.

“It's not normal club, it's a special club. I'm the normal one,” Klopp had said on Friday, sending the assembled journalists into raptures at the tongue-in-cheek comparison with Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho, who labelled himself the “Special One” at his inaugural news conference in England.

“No, I hadn't thought about that at all,” Klopp said.

“I was asked and simply answered. Sometimes it is better to keep your mouth shut - but that is quite difficult at a press conference,” he added. – Reuters



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Hazard can’t explain loss of form

Chelsea's Eden Hazard cannot explain why he is struggling for his club this season and said manager Jose Mourinho has been right to drop him.

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Chelsea's Eden Hazard cannot explain why he is struggling for his club this season and said manager Jose Mourinho has been right to drop him from the starting line-up as he is in the “worst form of his life”.

The Belgium was the Premier League's best player last season as Chelsea cruised to the title, but paid the price for his stunning fall from grace this term when Mourinho dropped him from the starting line-up for the Champions League defeat by Porto on September 29.

Hazard has no goals and just two assists in 11 appearances for the club this season, a slump that has contributed to Chelsea's slide down the table, where they currently sit in 16th place.

“This is the first time in my career that I have had such a difficult spell like this,” Hazard was quoted as saying by the British and Belgian media.

“I can't really explain it. All I know is that I will need to work hard in order to bounce back. At Chelsea we have concerns both as a team and individually,” the 24-year-old winger added.

Hazard admitted his poor performances meant he was no longer “untouchable” as one of the first names on Mourinho's team sheet, but praised the Portuguese and backed himself to bounce back when the league resumes on Oct. 17 after the international break.

“I was left on the bench against Porto in the Champions League, and I am no longer immune to being left out. You can be untouchable when you play well, and that has not been the case with me,” Hazard said.

“I think the manager wanted to send me a message by making me a sub. I don't read everything he says, but he explains everything.

“I am not too worried for him - Mourinho is the best coach in the world when it comes to dealing with pressure. I am an optimist, and I know I can learn a lot from tough spells.

“I hope to come back stronger, and I am ready to play and do my best,” he added. – Reuters



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Krul blow for struggling Newcastle

Newcastle United goalkeeper Tim Krul will miss the rest of the season with a cruciate knee ligament injury suffered in the Netherlands' 2-1 win over Kazakhstan.

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London - Newcastle United goalkeeper Tim Krul will miss the rest of the season with a cruciate knee ligament injury suffered in the Netherlands' 2-1 win over Kazakhstan in a Euro 2016 qualifier in Astana on Saturday.

The Premier League's bottom club, without a win after eight matches, announced the news on Sunday and recalled inexperienced 18-year-old Freddie Woodman from a loan spell with fourth-tier Crawley Town as back-up for second choice keeper Rob Elliot.

Krul looked in agony after falling awkwardly on the artificial turf near the end of the match he was only playing in because the Netherlands' first choice keeper Jasper Cillessen pulled out during the warm-up.

His north-east club said on their website (www.nufc.com) that because of the severity of the injury Krul would not play again this season. – Reuters



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Jagielka to lead England

England defender Phil Jagielka will lead out an “interesting” team in Lithuania on Monday when they try to finish their Euro 2016 qualifying campaign with a perfect record.

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London - England defender Phil Jagielka will lead out an “interesting” team in Lithuania on Monday when they try to finish their Euro 2016 qualifying campaign with a perfect record.

Jagielka is captain for the first time with Wayne Rooney and Gary Cahill missing and is set to have goalkeeper Jack Butland, midfielder Jonjo Shelvey and striker Jamie Vardy in the lineup.

Victory for England will see them finish qualifying with an unprecedented perfect record of 10 wins and manager Roy Hodgson believes his team have a great chance to achieve that feat.

“Phil (Jagielka) will captain the team and take the place of Gary Cahill,” he told the FA website (www.thefa.com).

“We've let James Milner go and we're already without Michael Carrick, who had to leave us through injury and Jack Wilshere is injured, so I mentioned Jonjo Shelvey.

“Jamie Vardy came on the other night and we are probably looking to see him, if not from the start at some stage during the game.

“We've been fortunate in the sense that we have come through the match on Friday evening unscathed in terms of injuries,” he added referring to the 2-0 win over Estonia at Wembley.

“We've a very interesting team for Phil to lead out tomorrow, a young team, but players we believe in and we're very conscious of the fact we could have a perfect record if we win the game, but we also know that it's not a given we will win...

Everton centre back Jagielka, 33, will captain England on his 38th appearance and hopes to mark the occasion with a win.

“It's a great honour for me personally, but we've got a big task ahead of us tomorrow,” he said. “We started this campaign a while ago and the job was to try and win every single game.

“Normally you say that and not a lot of people expect you to do so, but we've put in some great performances along the way and it's nice that we will have the opportunity to do so.

“We know it is going to be a difficult game with a few of the boys going (home) and a few of us getting a bit of an opportunity, whether you've got caps or you've not got too many caps under your belt, this is the opportunity you want.

“The squad is strong and it's up to us who gets the chance tomorrow to go and prove it and put a good performance on.” – Reuters



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Klopp tries to play down expectations

Jurgen Klopp is well aware that the greatest threat he faces at Liverpool is the overwhelming sense of what he might achieve.

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“If you make me out to be Jesus and the next day you say he can't walk on water, there is a problem,” said Jurgen Klopp, who is well aware that the greatest threat he faces at Liverpool is the overwhelming sense of what he might achieve. “I can't walk on water,” he smiles. “I dive.”

Klopp's mantra when arriving on Merseyside on a private jet was that it was not how you came to a club but how you left it. When he quit Borussia Dortmund, exhausted by a seven-year struggle to overhaul Bayern Munich, the fans in the Westfalenstadion unfurled a vast banner that read: “Danke Jürgen.”

There were a couple of banners on the Kop for Brendan Rodgers, but they had disappeared long before his dismissal last Sunday. Generally, the Liverpool managers who have come to Anfield with the greatest expectations - Graeme Souness and Kenny Dalglish second time around - ended their reigns messily. Bill Shankly appeared a managerial mediocrity when he arrived to bind the wounds of a club who had been knocked out of the FA Cup by Worcester City.

“Expectations are important in life,” said Klopp. “After all this hype, we can cool down and talk about football. But expectations are one of the most important things we have to talk about.

“Liverpool fans have been waiting for so many years that I can understand they are losing patience, but it doesn't work like that. Some things will change, because I am different to other managers, but we cannot change the whole world in one day.

“I don't want to use my three-year contract as an excuse and after that three years say, 'Well, now we can rise up'. No, I want to change as many things as soon as possible, but it is really important that we are patient enough to be successful.”

During his unveiling at Anfield, Klopp was constantly reminded what a good fit Liverpool seemed. Like Borussia Dortmund, they have a vast fan base who celebrated winning a European Cup a decade before his appointment. Their great enemy is one of European football's old aristocracy: for Bayern Munich, read Manchester United.

And yet Klopp was keen to stress that there was no special bond between himself and Liverpool. They had merely called at the right moment, when, four months after stepping down at Dortmund, the prospect of more walks with his dog, more games of tennis, more time at home, was beginning to pall.

His agent, Marc Kosicke, said he received the first phone call from Liverpool immediately after Rodgers's dismissal on Sunday afternoon. “Naturally, we had a few questions for Liverpool,” he said. “But what I do think is that Jurgen wouldn't have committed himself so quickly to any other club.”

Klopp reflected: “I left Dortmund in the best way you could leave a club. I did the same with Mainz. For the second time I could say, 'Thank you, great time.' Then for the first time I could reflect how big those two Bundesliga titles were. Before, I never had time.

“The feeling was that if somebody calls me, then I'd see how I feel, and when FSG [Liverpool's owners] called, it was a good moment for me and my family.”

There was an expectation that Klopp might be tempted to wait to succeed Pep Guardiola at Bayern when the Catalan's contract expires in June. “No, I don't wait a minute for anything,” he said. “No, really, I am not this type of person. I don't wait.” – The Independent on Sunday



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Bafana wary of Honduras

On the face of it, Bafana Bafana will take on easier opponents in Honduras late on Tuesday night than they did against Costa Rica.

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On the face of it, Bafana Bafana will take on easier opponents in Honduras late on Tuesday night than they did against Costa Rica in the early hours of Friday.

For one, Honduras are ranked way below the South Africans by Fifa, Los Catrachos positioned 89th and Bafana 74th.

Granted, rankings can often be misleading and Shakes Mashaba and his team will do well not to read much into that.

But then there’s the fact that Honduras have won only one of their last five matches, a 3-0 thrashing of Venezuela early last month.

Before and after that friendly success were a Concacaf Gold Cup draw and defeat to Panama and Haiti respectively as well as a friendly defeat to Ecuador plus a draw with Guatemala on Friday.

Not the kind of results to have Bafana shaking in their boots, especially not a Bafana side walking on water following a splendid display that saw them get the better of Costa Rica in their own backyard two days ago.

Yet a word of caution to the South Africans as they look to complete a successful tour of Central America with victory is that the man in charge of the opposition has a proven pedigree.

Colombian Luis Pinto will be standing opposite Mashaba on Tuesday eager to continue with his hopes of turning Honduras’ fortunes around. And being a little under a year in the job, Pinto believes he is on the right track with the match against Bafana presenting him yet another opportunity to test his boys against quality opposition from a different confederation.

“I want this team to do more with the ball, to play faster than they used to,” Pinto said in a recent interview with Fifa.Com.

“The talent is there, these players can go far.”

Almost every coach makes such pronouncements as they take on a new team, and most often than not they prove hollow. But Pinto is not just any coach, the Colombian having joined Honduras on the back of a fantastic 2014 World Cup run that saw him take Costa Rica to the quarter-finals.

And already they are feeling the impact of his experience in Honduras, having discarded most of the senior players who helped the country qualify for back-to-back World Cups (2010, 2014) for the first time in their history and replacing them with young players.

The process, as he said, cannot be easy. “Transition from one generation to the next is always painful, but it’s allowed me to look for a fresh style for Honduras.”

That style will be on show against a cock-a-hoop Bafana that will do well not to underestimate the opposition.

Fortunately captain Itumeleng Khune has called on his teammates to keep their eyes on the ball.

“The past two games against Senegal and Costa Rica have shown the great talent we have and that if we stay focused and continue working hard, we can go places. That is what we will strive to do going forward. All of us have the same resolve to take our football to the next level.”

With Pinto looking to do the same for Honduras, a fascinating match looks to be in the offing for anyone prepared to stay up until midnight (SA kick-off time) on Tuesday. - Sunday Independent



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Double injury worry for City

Manchester City fear Sergio Aguero and David Silva are both out of the Manchester derby and their Champions League tie with Sevilla.

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Manchester City fear Sergio Aguero and David Silva are both out of the Manchester derby and their Champions League tie with Sevilla.

Aguero fears he will be out for at least a month after suffering a hamstring tear playing for Argentina while Silva sprained ankle ligaments playing for Spain on Friday.

Aguero lasted just 22 minutes of Argentina’s 2-0 defeat to Ecuador.

“I think I’ll be a month without playing,” Aguero said. “I’ll go to the AFA national team compound to carry on with treatment. To recover from the tear I’ll surely need a month.

“I’d been playing very frequently and was in doubt [for Thursday’s match] until the last minute, but as a player you always want to be there and never know what can happen.”

The Argentine FA confirmed in a statement: “The studies we did today show that Sergio Aguero has a Grade Two muscle tear.”

A Grade Two tear can require anything from two to eight weeks to recover from and the striker has a history of hamstring problems. He was replaced as a precaution after his five-goal haul against Newcastle last week and later admitted he had felt his hamstring in City’s previous game against Borussia Monchengladbach.

City’s problems were compounded on Friday as Silva came off after just seven minutes of Spain’s 4-0 win over Luxembourg with a sprained ankle and was ruled out for two to three weeks. Spain confirmed Silva had suffered “a bad sprain of the internal lateral ligament of the right ankle”. Silva has only just returned to action after a calf injury. - Mail on Sunday



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Walcott warns England players

Theo Walcott says completing an historic 100 percent record in the Euro 2016 qualifying campaign will count for nothing unless they mount a strong challenge at the finals.

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Theo Walcott has warned his England team-mates that completing an historic 100 percent record in the Euro 2016 qualifying campaign will count for nothing unless they mount a strong challenge at the finals.

Roy Hodgson's side can become only the sixth team to win all of their matches in a European Championship qualifying campaign if they defeat Lithuania in their 10th and final Group E fixture at the LFF Stadium on Monday.

It would be the first time England have gone through qualification, in its current format, without dropping a point.

But Arsenal forward Walcott, who kept England on course for their memorable milestone with the opening goal in Friday's 2-0 win against Estonia, is honest enough to admit Hodgson's men faced relatively weak opposition in the group and much sterner tests lie in wait in the finals in France.

“We want to make it 10 on Monday night. It is a nice little thing to have. We want to win every game,” Walcott said.

“But we will be more tested in these friendlies coming up (against France and Spain next month) and everyone wants to win competitions and make this country proud.

“There are some young, eager faces in that dressing room who are keen to do well but we are only going to be judged when it comes to tournament football.”

Although Walcott was understandably keen to strike a cautionary note given England's habit of underachieving at major tournaments, he also insisted Hodgson and the players deserve credit for recovering from the shattering blow of crashing out of the World Cup at the group stages.

Since their misery in Brazil, England have embarked on a 13-match unbeaten streak and, while some of their wins have been achieved with less than impressive displays, Walcott wants the much maligned national team to be shown a little respect.

“Having nine wins after the disappointment from the World Cup and bouncing back the way the players have done, we have to be proud of ourselves,” Walcott said.

“The backroom staff have changed things and things are working for us. This team is definitely hungry and eager to do well.”

The always conservative Hodgson agrees with Walcott that judgement has to be reserved on England until the finals.

“I think we've got probably the best defensive record in qualifiers. We've certainly scored the most goals,” Hodgson said,

“We don't stand up and shout it from the rooftops every time, but it's not a bad achievement. Basically we keep our feet on the ground.

“We know it's next summer that really counts, but we're working hard to improve going forward into that competition.”

With top seeding and qualification as group winners confirmed, Hodgson has decided he can do without Wayne Rooney, Michael Carrick, Joe Hart, Gary Cahill and James Milner, who have all been sent back to their clubs to recuperate.

An inexperienced party of 20, the average number of caps per player in the squad is 12, will travel to Lithuania.

Three years after winning his first cap, Stoke's Jack Butland will start in goal and defenders Phil Jones, Chris Smalling and Phil Jagielka, plus midfielder Jonjo Shelvey, are also in line to start.

“We think he's a good goalkeeper. We always believed in him and he's certainly deserved his chance,” Hodgson said of Butland.

“Although Joe would have liked to have got an extra cap under his belt, he fully understands that this is Jack's moment. We wish him well.”

Lithuania, beaten 4-0 by England earlier in the campaign, are second bottom after a 1-1 draw in Slovenia.

They could still finish level on points with Slovenia, who hold the play-off spot at present, but an inferior goal difference and head to head record means they have no chance of qualifying. – AFP



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Wales clinch Euro 2016 spot

Wales ended a 57-year wait to qualify for a major tournament despite Saturday's 2-0 defeat in Bosnia.

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Zenica, Bosnia - Wales ended a 57-year wait to qualify for a major tournament despite Saturday's 2-0 defeat in Bosnia which kept alive the Balkan nation's hopes of joining them at the Euro 2016 finals.

The result left the Welsh second in Group B on 18 points from nine games, two behind Belgium who won 4-1 against Andorra to also qualify, and four ahead of third-placed Bosnia.

Israel's 2-1 defeat at home to Cyprus left them on 13 points and meant the Welsh could not be caught in the race for an automatic place at the finals in France next year.

Bosnia substitute Milan Djuric, who replaced winger Edin Visca on the hour, was instrumental as he scored the first and set up the second for striker Vedad Ibisevic.

“The best defeat of my life!” said Welsh inspiration Gareth Bale, the world's most expensive player, after learning that the Israel result had sent his team into next year's tournament.

“It was a difficult game but we have done it and everyone is very happy,” added the Real Madrid forward.

“This is right up there in my career. It was a dream from when I was a small child to play in a major tournament. It doesn't stop here, we have business to do in France.”

The Welsh, who celebrated with several hundred travelling fans, host bottom team Andorra in their final match while Bosnia will seal a playoff berth if they beat Cyprus on Tuesday.

Having made their only previous appearance on a major stage at the 1958 World Cup, Wales held their own for most of the match but were undone by some poor defending.

They fell behind after Miralem Pjanic punted a long free kick upfield from the halfway line and the ball fell kindly for Djuric to beat goalkeeper Wayne Hennesy with a looping header after it bounced over several defenders off the slippery turf.

The Bosnians were missing their top scorer Edin Dzeko, who could not shake off a knee injury, and lacked bite up front while the visitors threatened on the break with Bale giving his markers a roasting on the left flank.

Although he had only just recovered from a calf injury, the winger was at the heart of every Welsh move and often dropped back to help a packed midfield stifle the Bosnian engine room.

The home side had the upper hand in the first half and came close in the ninth minute when Visca shot wide of the far post from a good position after he was put through by Pjanic.

Wales nearly scored against the run of play on the stroke of halftime when Bosnia goalkeeper Asmir Begovic somehow smothered the ball under pressure from Aaron Ramsey and Neil Taylor.

With the hosts throwing more men forward after the break, Wales exploited the gaps and Bale missed a good chance when he sliced his shot wide after racing clear of a defender.

The visitors came forward with more purpose after falling behind but Bosnia, roared on by a passionate home crowd in the Bilino Polje Stadium, added a second goal in the dying minutes.

Djuric got on the end of an inswinging corner at the far post and squared it back across the box for Dzeko's replacement Ibisevic to bundle in from point-blank range.

“We played a decent match and deserved our win,” Bosnia coach Mehmed Bazdarevic told the country's BHT television.

Begovic added: “We did a good job thanks to a disciplined performance, particularly in defence. Our fighting spirit was exemplary while the forwards did what they needed to.” - Reuters



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Blues keen on boosting defence

Chelsea will reportedly make fresh attempts to sign Everton defender John Stones and Paris Saint-Germain’s Marquinhos.

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Chelsea will reportedly make fresh attempts to sign Everton defender John Stones and Paris Saint-Germain’s Marquinhos in January.

The Blues had several bids going up to £30million for 21-year-old England international stopper Stones during the summer with Everton successfully holding on to their prize asset.

The player even tried to force a switch to Stamford Bridge by handing in a transfer request, before accepting the Toffees' decision to keep hold of him.

The speculation has not affected Stones' performances for the Goodison Park outfit and he has enjoyed a solid start to the season before picking up a knee injury in the Capital One Cup win over Reading last month.

And following Chelsea's shocking start, with their defence conceding 17 goals in their opening eight matches in which they have picked up just eight points, it seems the Stamford Bridge bosses will back Jose Mourinho with more money to make a renewed bid to sign Stones in the New Year.

Meanwhile, PSG's Brazilian defender Marquinhos could also be the subject of another bid after the Blues failed with a late transfer deadline day attempt to sign him.

The 21-year-old is behind Thiago Silva and David Luiz in coach Laurent Blanc's pecking order and he could be tempted to make the move to the Londoners in search of regular first-team football. - Female First



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Kloppmania hits Anfield

So a new word has been put into the lexicon of Merseyside football. On the front of the Liverpool Echo, in thick bold print, there it was: Kloppmania.

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So a new word has been put into the lexicon of Merseyside football. On the front of the Liverpool Echo, in thick bold print, there it was: Kloppmania.

The first page of the local paper has always been cleared for the coronation of a new Liverpool manager and it was the same again yesterday as Jurgen Klopp breezed into town; the headline reflected the mood of the club’s supporters.

That hasn’t always been the case. On July 1, 2010, the words ‘Roy Joy’ that accompanied the story confirming Roy Hodgson’s arrival did not reflect the general feeling of ambivalence but, here, the message was right. Klopp’s appointment has captured the imagination.

On the taxi rank at the back of The Kop, cabbies could be heard talking about a probable return to the Champions League next season, while the ticket office at the same end of the stadium was doing a brisk trade for forthcoming games.

One supporter had travelled from Ireland just to be outside Anfield for when his press conference started; he was among a group of around 100 fans who had started to gather at the bottom of Skerries Road just after 9am, waiting to get a glimpse of the man of the moment.

They cheered when the silver people carrier whizzed in around 9.10am and did the same again when he left around two hours later, headed for Melwood, Liverpool’s training ground, where he spent much of the afternoon familiarising himself with his new place of work.

While he was at Melwood, an order from the club shop in the Liverpool One complex was being whisked back to the Hope Street Hotel: two personalised Liverpool shirts for his two sons. They were not the first jerseys bearing his name to be printed, as one customer had already got ‘Klopp 1’ on the back.

It was only in those specific areas of the city, however, that you knew a big day for the club had taken place. In years gone by, sandwich boards would have been erected outside newsagents to advertise the news. On this occasion, there was no need.

Everyone has known since Monday how Liverpool were hot on the trail of one of the top managers in Europe and his announcement that he was ‘The Normal One’ will have struck a chord with a city whose people are not fooled by bluster.

‘This has got everyone talking,’ club legend Jan Molby noted. ‘I’ve never known Liverpool supporters to be so universally united behind a decision that the club has made. They are thrilled, and it is easy to see why.’

The man himself seemed genuinely taken aback by it all, humbled even. When he began to talk, though, the energy and force of his personality began to shine through; he spoke simply, passionately and promised to bring the good times back.

‘I’m looking forward to the intensity of football and how the people live football in Liverpool,’ Klopp responded when asked if he was ready for the challenge.

‘It’s not important what people say when you come in but what they say when you leave. If we sit here in four years I think we win a title. I’m pretty sure.’

Should he deliver that title, Kloppmania will reach a completely different level. This will not be a dull ride. – Daily Mail



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Shakes wants ‘more of the same’

With Costa Rica done and dusted, Shakes Mashaba has expressed his desire for more of the same from Bafana Bafana going forward.

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With Costa Rica done and dusted, Shakes Mashaba has expressed his desire for more of the same from Bafana Bafana going forward.

South Africa’s senior national team chalked up a second win over the highly-rated Central American side yesterday when Bafana beat Los Ticos 1-0 courtesy of a well-taken goal by Andile Jali in San José.

Back in 2003, Mashaba was in charge when goals by Siyabonga Nomvethe and Patrick Mayo ensured a 2-1 Nelson Mandela Challenge win over Costa Rica in Potchefstroom.

Yesterday’s win was particularly impressive, given that the current Costa Rica side are fresh from a fantastic World Cup show where they reached the quarter-finals.

It was no wonder Mashaba was beaming as he waxed lyrical about his boys after the match.

“It is good to develop a winning culture ahead of meetings with Angola (in the World Cup qualifiers) and next year’s Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers,” Mashaba said at the post-match conference.

“The boys showed they can mix it with the best in the world when their backs are against the wall.

“I thought we really took total control of the game in the first half and we were full value taking the lead going to the break.”

Bafana scored on nine minutes via Jali, a beauty of a goal that saw the midfielder intercept a Costa Rica pass before playing a one-two with Thulani Serero, then force his way through two defenders and deftly dink the ball over the advancing Keylor Navas – the Real Madrid goalkeeper.

Having scored so early against a quality side that had taken the initiative, it was always going to be a tall order for Bafana to hold on to the end. They achieved that and could have scored a few more, Serero once sending the ball over from a good scoring position and then denied by Navas from close range.

Yet with no ball winner in midfield to stop the Costa Rica attacks at their inception, pressure was continuously brought to bear on the defence who repeatedly had to make last-ditch clearances.

Against much better opposition such a weakness will be exploited, but Mashaba was impressed, that shortfall notwithstanding.

“The defence was watertight and the midfielders played like a well-oiled machine in the first 45 minutes. And what can I say about goalkeeper Itumeleng Khune; despite suffering a recurring hamstring injury, he marshalled his defence with aplomb.”

And the coach would like more of the same in future.

“This is the spirit this team must carry going forward into the World Cup qualifiers and the Africa Cup of Nations,” said Mashaba

“I now want to go to Honduras and finish the good job we started here.”

With Honduras nowhere near Costa Rica in quality and ranking, logic dictates that Bafana should win fairly easily on Wednesday.

But they will do well to add a defensive touch to their slick midfield that knocked the ball about purposefully and impressively.

Most importantly, though, they will have to translate their fantastic friendly showing into competitive matches – Bafana generally good at such “meaningless” matches but disappointing in the ones that matter. - Saturday Star



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