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  • Russian coach of the Kazakh national football team fined for disrespecting the Kazakh language

    Russian coach of the Kazakh national football team fined for disrespecting the Kazakh language

    Russian coach of the Kazakh national football team fined for disrespecting the Kazakh language

    The head coach of the Kazakh national team, Stanislav Cherchesov, was fined 1,500 dollars for ridiculing the Kazakh language. The incident occurred at a press conference after a match against Slovenia.

    The President of the Kazakhstan Football Federation, Adlet Barmenkulov, announced the measures taken against the head coach of the national team, Stanislav Cherchesov, because of the coach's jokes about the Kazakh language, which were made at a press conference after the game with the Slovenian team in Almaty. This was reported by BaigeNews.kz, according to UNN.

    There are mistakes, we talked about this with journalists just yesterday. Cherchesov's humor, of course, goes beyond that. I personally talked to him, explained the relevance and priority of the state language. We had a conversation with him, we worked with him. He was fined,

    – Barmenkulov said.

    Details

    It is noted that at a press conference dedicated to the defeat of the Kazakh national team by Slovenia (0:1) in the League of Nations, Russian Stanislav Cherchesov ridiculed a journalist who asked him a question in Kazakh.

    According to media reports, Stanislav Cherchesov's fine amounted to 738,400 tenge (1,500 dollars).

    Alexander Petrakov is officially dismissed as head coach of the Armenian national teamOctober 14 2024, 08:13 AM • 11568 views

  • Another Premier League manager picks up touchline ban for ‘nonsense’ booking

    Another Premier League manager picks up touchline ban for ‘nonsense’ booking

    Sam Barrott books Manchester United manager Erik ten Hag

    Only five Premier League managers have not been booked this season. Mikel Arteta has been behaving himself but two bosses has been banned already.

    Arteta was the joint leader for Premier League manager yellow cards in 2023/24, sharing that title with the departed Roberto De Zerbi. He is not alone in boasting a clean record, but plenty of coaches have made their way into the book.

    Premier League managers with three cards this season

    Andoni Iraola (Bournemouth)

    First booking
    Newcastle (August 25) – shown a yellow card by David Coote in the 94th minute for dissent after a winning goal from Dango Ouattara was disallowed for handball.

    “I went to talk to the referee, but I think the referee today could not do much more. He gave a goal. (The VAR officials) didn’t give him the chance to see the images again. What is he going to do? He took the right decision. He dealt quite well with the game, I think. He cannot do much more. It’s obvious he’s not the one that has made a mistake today,” he said.

    Second booking
    West Ham (August 28) – shown a yellow card by Peter Bankes in the 91st minute for dissent after a late Jarrod Bowen winner appeared to come off his elbow.

    “It’s even more clear. I don’t know what to say. We are not making these mistakes but we are suffering the consequences, and we are out of the competition because of a mistake. I don’t know what we have to do to change something but obviously it’s costing us a lot. We haven’t won on Sunday because of VAR and we are out of the cup because there is no VAR,” he said.

    Third booking
    Liverpool (September 21) – shown a yellow card by Tony Harrington in the 25th minute for dissent after Luis Diaz’s opening goal.

    “I think it was clear what happened, I asked for an offside and for VAR but they think I asked for a yellow card and it wasn’t even a foul for Liverpool. Probably they understand why but they cannot accept any appeal for yellow cards they told me, so I will be upstairs, yes,” he said of his suspension.

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    Nuno Espirito Santo (Nottingham Forest)

    First booking
    Southampton (August 24) – shown a yellow card by Sam Barrott in the 20th minute for dissent after Ben Brereton Diaz was not booked for a foul on Anthony Elanga.

    Espirito Santo offered no public comment.

    Second booking
    Brighton (September 22) – shown a red card by Robert Jones in the 87th minute for persistent foul and abusive language after Morgan Gibbs-White was sent off for a foul on Joao Pedro.

    “It looks like a yellow card sometimes, others it’s a good tackle. It’s a hard one to judge. That’s why I think us as a club and all the clubs should support the referee as it’s a tough task. It’s emotional, we are under a lot of stress. That [Jones initially signalling that Gibbs-White had won the ball] was the mess. But let’s hope they improve and we continue. I don’t want to see it as a problem. I see it as a very hard job to do,” he said. Nuno was later given a three-game touchline suspension and fine by the FA.

    Third booking
    Chelsea (October 6) – shown a yellow card by Chris Kavanagh in the 74th minute for dissent after Malo Gusto blocked a Morgan Gibbs-White shot and the Nottingham Forest forward suffered an injury.

    “Please referees understand that we are there on the touchline and on the pitch, it is very emotional. There are so many things happening, so many thoughts and so many circumstances. It is very hard to keep our emotions together. I must apologise for my behaviour, but I didn’t do anything that another manager wouldn’t do,” he said.

    Russell Martin (Southampton)

    First booking
    Manchester United (September 14) – shown a yellow card by Stuart Attwell in the 81st minute for dissent after Jack Stephens was sent off for a foul on Alejandro Garnacho.

    “The only thing I was annoyed about was the process of the fourth official and the ref looking at each other for ages and asking if they would give it. So that was my only frustration. I felt maybe he missed him during the game, but I think he’s made contact, so it is what it is,” he said.

    Second booking
    Leicester (October 19) – shown a yellow card by Anthony Taylor in the 99th minute for dissent after complaining about the amount of stoppage time; Jordan Ayew scored the winner in the 98th minute.

    “I was frustrated at the end. We’d played longer than the seven minutes but that’s just frustration and emotion coming out,” he said.

    Third booking
    Manchester City (October 26) – shown a yellow card by Tony Harrington in the 43rd minute for dissent after Flynn Downes was booked for a foul on Bernardo Silva.

    “It’s a bad decision because Flynn takes the ball and gets booked. I didn’t swear at the fourth official, I threw my arms up in the air at a bad decision and I got booked. I’m not happy about that because I miss a game next week. If I’m wrong and I deserve a yellow card, then I hold my hands up. But today, I think that’s nonsense. I’ll probably get fined for that as well, but it is nonsense,” he said.

    READ NEXT: Premier League sack race: Ten Hag revels in relative safety as mere second favourite

    Premier League managers with two cards this season

    Unai Emery (Aston Villa)

    First booking
    Everton (September 14) – shown a yellow card by Craig Pawson in the 85th minute for dissent towards a match official, but it is not explicitly clear what triggered any outburst. There are some suggestions he ventured out of his technical area while ranting at Ross Barkley, and we’ve all been there.

    Emery offered no public comment.

    Second booking
    Wolves (September 21) – shown a yellow card by Tim Robinson in the 65th minute for dissent after complaining that Jorgen Strand Larsen was taking too long vacating the field after being substituted.

    Emery offered no public comment.

    Fabian Hurzeler (Brighton)

    First booking
    Arsenal (August 31) – shown a yellow card by Chris Kavanagh in the 43rd minute for dissent after a Declan Rice foul on Joel Veltman for which the midfielder was booked.

    “I was booked because I was complaining about the tackle against Joel. For me, of course we can mistake that in the Premier League that it’s a yellow card but I think nobody can complain if it’s a red. Not because of the foul but it’s more like the way he’s going into the duel,” he said.

    Second booking
    Nottingham Forest (September 22) – shown a red card by Robert Jones in the 87th minute for entering the field of play without the referee’s permission after Morgan Gibbs-White was sent off for a foul on Joao Pedro. The touchline ban was later rescinded following a discussion with PGMOL head Howard Webb, although he was fined by the FA for acting in an improper manner.

    “I know what the fine will be and I also know that I will be on the sideline against Chelsea. I also have to learn out of this situation, how fast you can get a red card here in this league. But, of course, the fine we will accept. If you give a red card for this, you have to ban a lot of coaches during the games because in an emotional situation of the game it will happen that you make a step on the pitch. Of course we are role models and we have to act like this. But I think sometimes you also should bring out your emotions. In this case it was to protect Joao Pedro because it was a hard tackle on him. If I don’t show emotions there, me as a player, I would say, ‘the coach isn’t interested in me’, so that’s why I try to show emotions in some part of the games,” he said.

    Marco Silva (Fulham)

    First booking
    Leicester (August 24) – shown a yellow card by Darren Bond in the 82nd minute for dissent after a perceived Victor Kristiansen foul on Calvin Bassey was not given.

    Silva offered no public comment.

    Second booking
    West Ham (September 14) – shown a yellow card by Tim Robinson in the 16th minute for dissent after a penalty was not given against Max Kilman for a perceived foul on Adama Traore.

    “It’s a clear penalty in my opinion, it’s incredible how it’s not a penalty so this is difficult to accept. I don’t have doubts. On the field I didn’t and after I don’t as well. When my player is sprinting one-on-one with the goalkeeper and someone pushes from behind, it’s almost impossible…it’s difficult to accept how the decision on the field was like that. It was clear for me and for you. We have to respect the decision but it had a massive impact in the game. If it’s a penalty, he should’ve been sent off, he didn’t try to play the ball. In that moment it’s a clear penalty and a clear red card,” he said.

    Steve Cooper (Leicester)

    First booking
    Aston Villa (August 31) – shown a yellow card by David Coote in the 93rd minute for dissent after a penalty was not given against Youri Tielemans for a perceived foul on Jamie Vardy; it was incorrectly awarded as a Villa throw-in instead.

    “I think everybody in the stadium would have been booked if the referee could have got around to it. I’ve just accepted that the refereeing is where it is. The key message to us was that the threshold for tackles and duels, in this beautiful English game that we love, was going to be raised. I can remember it clearly. And then we get that,” he said.

    Second booking
    Arsenal (September 28) – shown a yellow card by Sam Barrott in the 21st minute for dissent after a perceived foul on Jamie Vardy by William Saliba in the build-up to Arsenal’s first goal.

    “We were very disappointed with a foul not being given on Vards for the first goal. And although we don’t come into games trying to get players sent off, why he hasn’t sent off Calafiori is a little bit beyond belief. Because of the spell we’re in and the spell that I’m in personally, I’m trying to not let referees’ decisions be the headline, as I’m trying to take responsibility for a team that needs to get better results. But we feel those were two poor decisions,” he said.

    READ NEXT: Shearer slams referee over ‘awful decision’ after Arsenal beat Leicester in the Premier League

    Pep Guardiola (Manchester City)

    First booking
    Arsenal (September 22) – shown a yellow card by Michael Oliver in the 97th minute for entering the field of play without the referee’s permission while celebrating a John Stones equaliser.

    Guardiola offered no public comment.

    Second booking
    Fulham (October 5) – shown a yellow card by Peter Bankes in the 93rd minute for dissent after sarcastically applauding the booking of Ederson for time-wasting.

    Guardiola offered no public comment.

    Gary O’Neil (Wolves)

    First booking
    Arsenal (August 17) – shown a yellow card by Jarred Gillett in the 87th minute for dissent after a penalty was not given against Jurrien Timber for a perceived foul on Hwang Hee-chan.

    O’Neil offered no public comment.

    Second booking
    Nottingham Forest (August 31) – shown a yellow card by Simon Hooper in the 78th minute for dissent after a penalty was not given against Chris Wood for an alleged handball.

    “How outstretched Chris Woods’ arm was and the fact it hits him right on the hand, it looked fairly obvious to me. It’s interesting how close Simon got to blowing his whistle. Very close to his lips,” he said.

    Premier League managers with one card this season

    Thomas Frank (Brentford)

    First booking
    Tottenham (September 21) – shown a yellow card by John Brooks in the 59th minute for dissent after a perceived handball outside the box by Guglielmo Vicario.

    “He had handled it outside the box. That incident did not define the game. It was a mistake. It could have been a free-kick to us. It could have helped us. But, hey, you never know. I think the probability of scoring from a direct free-kick is like 0.0543. So probably not the biggest probability for scoring anyway. And I think John Brooks overall had a very good game. The way he handled soft fouls both ways was really good,” he said.

    Enzo Maresca (Chelsea)

    First booking
    Bournemouth (September 14) – shown a yellow card by Anthony Taylor in the 66th minute for dissent after a perceived foul on Wesley Fofana was not given.

    “It’s not a problem, this amount of yellow cards. It is what it is. I complained about a foul on Wesley Fofana which for me was quite clear but it can happen. Eight yellow cards probably because these sort of games are about duels and fight and this can happen. Sometimes the game demands the way you have to behave,” he said.

    Sean Dyche (Everton)

    First booking
    Leicester (September 21) – shown a yellow card by Darren England in the 46th minute for dissent after Michael Keane was booked for a foul on James Justin.

    Dyche offered no public comment.

    Arne Slot (Liverpool)

    First booking
    Chelsea (October 20) – shown a yellow card by John Brooks in the 26th minute for dissent after complaining about a series of decisions which went against Liverpool.

    “The booking came from the fact that, I think there were three or four decisions that didn’t go in our favour. So it was a handball, I don’t know if it was, but everybody was screaming for it, so I did as well. Then there was the red card situation, then there was the penalty situation just afterwards. So there were a few things going against us, and I think sometimes you cannot hold your emotions, and that’s what you saw with me as well. He deserved to give me a yellow card. He should have given me, which he did. I deserved it. I have to put it like this,” he said.

    Erik ten Hag (Manchester United)

    First booking
    Brentford (October 19) – shown a yellow card by Sam Barrott in the 51st minute for dissent after Brentford scored from a corner when Matthijs de Ligt was sent to receive treatment on a head injury for the third time.

    “It was dry blood so he was already treated for the injury. I didn’t understand why he was sent [to the touchline]. I went over to Matthijs and he said: ‘It is dry blood and I have to come off – I don’t know why.’ A huge moment because Brentford are very good at corners and you miss one of your best headers. We felt some injustice and used it as fuel, the madness and anger,” he said.

    Julen Lopetegui (West Ham)

    First booking
    Liverpool (September 25) – shown a yellow card by Andy Madley in the 69th minute for dissent after a penalty was not given against Kostas Tsimikas for a perceived handball.

    “In the second half, I think that it’s a penalty. The new rule is really clear that it hit the hand. It was no penalty and in the next action they scored,” he said.

    Premier League managers with zero cards this season

    Mikel Arteta (Arsenal), Oliver Glasner (Crystal Palace), Kieran McKenna (Ipswich), Eddie Howe (Newcastle) and Ange Postecoglou (Tottenham).

    READ NEXT: Arsenal one-in-five title chances destroyed thanks to ‘record’ red cards

  • The grid, principle and date of the 2026 World Cup draw have been determined

    The grid, principle and date of the 2026 World Cup draw have been determined

    The grid, principle and date of the 2026 World Cup draw have been determined

    The draw for the 2026 World Cup will take place on December 13, 2024. 55 national teams will be divided into 12 groups, the winners of the groups will reach the final stage, the second places and the 4 best teams of the Nations League will play the playoffs.

    The European qualifying tournament for the FIFA 2026 World Cup is scheduled to begin in March 2025. The finals of the 23rd FIFA World Cup will be held with the participation of 48 teams in Canada, Mexico and the United States. Ukraine is in the second basket of the draw.

    Writes UNN with a link to uefa.com.

    The draw for the 12 groups, which will include the eight best teams of the Nations League (four winners and four runners-up will qualify for the playoffs), will take place on December 13, 2024.

    Ukraine's national team is in the second draw basket, along with Turkey, Sweden, and Wales. Greece, Slovakia, Romania and the Czech Republic are likely to be there.

    2026 World Cup qualifiers – how it works

    The new format of the 2026 World Cup qualifying tournament was unveiled by UEFA on January 25.

    55 national teams will be divided into 12 groups (without Russia, although the situation has not yet been resolved).

    The preliminary stages will be reduced to groups of four or five teams (instead of five or six).

    The winners of each qualifying group will advance to the final stage.

    The runners-up and the four best-ranked teams in the League of Nations will participate in the playoffs.

    The final will be held in 16 cities in Canada, Mexico, and the United States:

    USA (11): Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Houston, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Seattle

    Mexico (3): Guadalajara, Mexico City, Monterrey

    Canada (2): Toronto, Vancouver

    The final will take place in New York on July 19, 2026.

    Football: Dovbyk misses Ukraine's training session before match with Czech RepublicOctober 14 2024, 05:37 AM • 13124 views

  • Who are football’s top goalscorers of 2024? Mbappe is only fifth…

    Who are football’s top goalscorers of 2024? Mbappe is only fifth…

    The top scorers of 2024.

    Erling Haaland scored 44 goals last year and that kept him clear of the competition despite playing no football in the final weeks of 2023.

    He ended 2023 one goal ahead of Harry Kane and one more ahead of Kylian Mbappe, and that trio will be expected to dominate 2024 again for Manchester City, Bayern Munich and PSG/Real Madrid.

    The criteria: All club goals in all competitions for clubs in Europe’s top 10 leagues.

    10) Alexander Sorloth (Atletico Marid) – 21 goals
    A slow-ish start to the season for his new club, but two goals v Leganes will do his confidence a whole world of good.

    9) Cole Palmer (Chelsea) – 23 goals
    Even without any European football stat-padding, Palmer has proven a goalscoring force. Three Premier League hat-tricks in 2024 include a couple of four-goal hauls and he is in the top ten for assists this year too.

    8) Vinicius Jnr (Real Madrid) – 26 goals
    One hat-trick helped beat Barcelona in January’s Supercopa de Espana while another helped break Borussia Dortmund in October ahead of the Ballon d’Or vote.

    7) Luuk de Jong (PSV Eindhoven) – 26 goals
    PSV dropped 11 points in the entirety of the Eredivisie season and De Jong’s form – at the age of 33 – was a major factor. Twenty-nine goals and 15 assists in a league season is fire. Started the new season with two goals in the Dutch equivalent of the Community Shield and finally netted in his third league appearance. And then again in his fifth. And sixth. And seventh. And eighth.

    6) Jonathan David (Lille) – 29 goals
    There was a Coupe de France hat-trick to kick of 2024 but since then there has been an avalanche of Ligue Un goals. It’s actually astonishing that he was not targeted more aggressively for a summer transfer. Has already scored seven times as Lille’s 24/25 season started early with Champions League qualification and then progressed to beating Actual Real Madrid and Actual Atletico Madrid.

    5) Kylian Mbappe (PSG/Real Madrid) – 31 goals
    Being drawn against a side in the sixth tier of French football is handy when you want to make a quick start to the new year. Mbappe scored a hat-trick in a 9-0 win before adding two more goals v a third-tier side. But he failed to turn up twice v Borussia Dortmund as PSG wimped out of the Champions League semi-finals.

    Started life for Real Madrid with a Super Cup goal and has now scored eight in 13 for his Spanish club, which feels kind of underwhelming.

    4) Erling Haaland (Manchester City) – 33 goals
    Not bad for a League Two-standard player. And any talk of him being a flat-track bully should be silenced by a two-goal salvo v Spurs that pretty much won Man City the title. Then he started the new season with two hat-tricks and 10 goals in total in his first five games. Which is all quite mad. Though he was kept out by both Newcastle, Fulham and Wolves. But not Sparta Prague or Southampton.

    3) Harry Kane (Bayern Munich) – 33 goals
    He scored the most goals of any player in their debut Bundesliga campaign. And indeed the most goals he himself has ever scored in a single campaign, with 44. But he still ended the season without a trophy and that will never not be funny. Started the new season with a late goal after coming off the bench, then another in the league before scoring the 22nd hat-trick of his career against Holstein Kiel. Three days later he got his 23rd against Dinamo Zagreb in a four-goal haul. In Germany, some are questioning whether he is holding back Bayern. And then he scores a hat-trick v Stuttgart.

    2) Robert Lewandowski (Barcelona) – 34 goals
    There’s life in the old dog yet. He’s still starting (and scoring) for Barcelona at the grand old age of 35. A first hat-trick of the season came against Alaves and he babysat the academy kids to a Real Madrid thrashing.

    1) Viktor Gyokeres (Sporting) – 38 goals
    The former Coventry man scored 29 league goals as Sporting cruised towards the Portuguese title. And he has casually started the new season with 11 goals in his first eight league games of 2024/25, either side of scoring on his Champions League debut. It is actually astonishing that the top scorer of 2024 was not the subject of a summer transfer.

  • Yaroslava Maguchikh won the title of the best athlete of the year in Europe

    Yaroslava Maguchikh won the title of the best athlete of the year in Europe

    Yaroslava Maguchikh won the title of the best athlete of the year in Europe

    Yaroslava Maguchikh was recognized as the best athlete of the year in Europe. The athlete won Olympic gold, set a world record of 2.10 m and won the European Championships in 2024.

    Yaroslava Maguchikh became the best athlete of the year in Europe. This was reported by European Athletics, UNN reports.

    Details

    This is the first recognition for the athlete in this category after she was a finalist in 2022 and 2023.

    In 2024, Yaroslava achieved significant success, becoming an Olympic champion and setting a world record with a 2.10-meter jump. In addition, she won the European Championships and the Diamond League finals, which underscores her outstanding achievements in global athletics.

    This award is a clear recognition of her talent and perseverance, and reflects Ukraine's significant contribution to international sport.

  • De Bruyne the only Premier League name on list of best assist providers in 2024

    De Bruyne the only Premier League name on list of best assist providers in 2024

    Real Madrid forwards Vinicius Junior and Kylian Mbappe celebrate

    There are some huge names on the periphery and Kevin de Bruyne’s lead as Europe’s premier assist provider in 2024 is starting to look a little shaky.

    De Bruyne is on course to reclaim the crown he won for Manchester City in 2022, which Joey Veerman stole for PSV in 2023.

    The criteria: All club assists in all competitions for teams in Europe’s top 10 leagues. The top scorers are here.

    10) Raphinha (Barcelona) – 14 assists
    Things have not been simple for the Brazil forward since he left the comfort of Leeds but the occasional Barcelona captain has risen to the role and has become one of the most creative players in Europe.

    9) Dusan Tadic (Fenerbahce) – 15 assists
    In his first season in Turkey, Tadic registered double figures for assists for the tenth different league campaign of his career. He is still flying at 35. No wonder Jurgen Klopp was “very angry” at not signing him all those years ago.

    8) Viktor Gyokeres (Sporting) – 15 assists
    The leading goalscorer of 2024
    is on for a remarkable double which would surely culminate in the big transfer his form has warranted for some time.

    7) Vinicius Junior (Real Madrid) – 15 assists
    The Ballon d’Or favourite
    has wisely avoided knackering his knee in quite the same way as closest rival Rodri, giving him a couple of months to establish an unassailable lead in that particular. Assists in five consecutive La Liga games should do it, as should playing with Kylian Mbappe, Endrick and Jude Bellingham.

    6) Pedro Goncalves (Sporting) – 15 assists
    The natural successor to Bruno Fernandes always features prominently when assessing the chief continental chance creators. He might pick his next career move a bit more wisely. In the Portuguese league alone he has registered double figures for goals and assists in the past two seasons and is on course to complete that hat-trick with four and three respectively in 2024/25.

    5) Wendel (Zenit St Petersburg) – 15 assists
    They’re obviously built different in Russia, with Wendel laying on a couple of goals in each of Zenit’s first three league games, as well as their Super Cup final win over Krasnodar. Barcelona were linked in the summer but they probably had no money.

    4) Alex Baena (Villarreal) – 16 assists
    Few players have been quite as influential in Villarreal’s recent excellent run of form and academy product Baena has been good enough for La Liga’s surprise title challengers to crack into Spain’s victorious Euro 2024 squad.

    3) Alejandro Grimaldo (Leverkusen) – 17 assists
    One of the most important cogs in the Xabi Alonso machine, Grimaldo cost nothing in the summer of 2023 after his Benfica contract expired but he is worth an awful lot to the Bundesliga champions now. The left-back has embraced the Leverkusen heritage admirably, assisting stoppage-time goals against Augsburg, Leipzig, Qarabag and Patrik Schick’s late equaliser in the DFB-Pokal final against Stuttgart.

    2) Dries Mertens (Galatasaray) – 18 assists
    Having earned his Turkish Super Lig twilight years, Mertens is no doubt enjoying himself. Ten of those 18 assists were recorded across an eight-game period between early March and mid-May, helping propel Galatasaray to a remarkable title win. Many more have inspired a phenomenal unbeaten start to their defence.

    1) Kevin de Bruyne (Manchester City) – 18 assists
    There is the slight added benefit of playing behind a robot who has converted half of those assists – De Bruyne laid Haaland on four times in one FA Cup rout of Luton in February – but the Belgian has also set up Phil Foden and Josko Gvardiol twice in 2024, as well as Bernardo Silva, John Stones, Oscar Bobb, Julian Alvarez and Jeremy Doku just the once.

    And this is De Bruyne pretty much slowing down due to age, injury and being perennially internationally grumpy.

  • Forbes releases ranking of the world’s highest paid footballers

    Forbes releases ranking of the world’s highest paid footballers

    Forbes releases ranking of the world's highest paid footballers

    Forbes has published the top 10 football players with the highest salaries in the 2024/25 season. Cristiano Ronaldo leads the way with an annual income of $285 million, followed by Messi and Neymar.

    Forbes has published the top 10 football players with the highest salaries in the 2024/25 season, UNN reports.

    Details

    It is noted that the ranking took into account not only the player's salary, but also various incomes, including income from non-football activities (advertising contracts or business income).

    Top 10 highest-paid football players in the world in the season-2024/25:

    1. Cristiano Ronaldo, Al-Nasr, striker – $285 million per year.

    2. Lionel Messi, Inter Miami, forward – 135 million.

    3 Neymar, Al-Hilal, forward – 110 million.

    4. 4. Karim Benzema, Al-Ittihad, forward – 104 million.

    5. Kylian Mbappe, Real Madrid, forward – 90 million.

    6. 6. Erling Holland, Manchester City, forward – 60 million.

    7. Vinicius Junior, Real Madrid, forward – 55 million.

    8. Mohamed Salah, Liverpool, forward – 53 million.

    9. Sadio Mane, Al-Nasr, striker – 52 million.

    10. Kevin De Bruyne, Manchester City, midfielder – 39 million.

    The grid, principle and date of the 2026 World Cup draw have been determinedOctober 17 2024, 10:22 AM • 10701 view

  • Tottenham desire to land impressive £33m PL striker points to sale of expensive asset

    Tottenham desire to land impressive £33m PL striker points to sale of expensive asset

    Liam Delap, Tottenham

    The desire from Tottenham to land Liam Delap points to the desire to sell one of their own strikers, as ex-Spurs scout Bryan King feels they won’t get him “unless” they sell a player in his position.

    Tottenham are one of the Premier League big boys most impressed with Delap during his first proper Premier League season. The forward played twice for Manchester City in short cameos in recent seasons, before heading to Ipswich in the summer.

    There, he has bagged five league goals in nine games – including a late equaliser in a 4-3 loss against Brentford, before he almost equalised again when hitting the post – and reports suggest Tottenham are keen on him, with Delap’s value now at £33million.

    Former Spurs scout King feels that move won’t happen unless a striker is sold by the club, though.

    “They’ve just signed a striker from Bournemouth [Dominic Solanke] for £60million-plus,” King told Tottenham News.

    “You’ve got Richarlison and Solanke. You wouldn’t be looking to bring in another striker until at least next summer unless someone left Spurs in January.”

    Solanke, having only been signed in the summer, is unlikely to be sold, but Richarlison, who has struggled to prove his worth after a £60million move in 2022, has been the subject of multiple reports on Spurs getting rid already.

    As such, if Delap is to be pursued, Richarlison is likely the man to make way.

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    King feels Ipswich are unlikely to want to let Delap go until at least the summer, though, given he is their top scorer this term and could help them to avoid relegation – they have been hovering around the drop zone.

    “However, then it depends on if Ipswich Town are willing to sell him. I think they’re going to have problems in the Premier League,” King said.

    “Therefore, the one guy scoring your goals, why would you want to sell him? That would be bad business, in a season where they’re trying to survive.”

    Whether or not the former Manchester City academy player gets a big move remains to be seen, but continuing to bang in goals can’t hurt his chances.

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  • A magical eleven minutes and three goals: Lionel Messi sets a historic record for Inter Miami

    A magical eleven minutes and three goals: Lionel Messi sets a historic record for Inter Miami

    A magical eleven minutes and three goals: Lionel Messi sets a historic record for Inter Miami

    Lionel Messi scored his first MLS hat trick in 11 minutes to help Inter Miami defeat the New England Revolution 6-2. The team finished the season with a record 74 points and a winning percentage of 0.765.

    The Argentine star scored his first hat trick in the US soccer league, and Inter Miami defeated the New England Revolution 6-2 to finish the season with 74 points, a record for the MLS.

    Writes UNN with reference to Los Angeles Times.

    Lionel Messi, 37, scored a hat-trick in 11 minutes of the second half (in the 78th, 81st and 89th minutes) of the match between Inter Miami and the New England Revolution, thanks to which his team won 6-2 (2-2).

    It is noteworthy that Miami currently has 74 points, which is a league record: never before has a team scored so many points in an MLS season.

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    With a record of 22 wins, eight draws and four losses, Inter Miami, owned by former soccer star David Beckham, finished the season with a winning percentage of 0.765, another MLS record.

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  • Chelsea head coach did not include Mudryk in the squad for the match against Liverpool

    Chelsea head coach did not include Mudryk in the squad for the match against Liverpool

    Chelsea head coach did not include Mudryk in the squad for the match against Liverpool

    This is the first time this season that the Ukrainian winger has not been included in the squad, although he is neither injured nor disqualified.

    Chelsea head coach Enzo Maresca did not include Ukrainian winger Mykhailo Mudryk in the application for the match in the 8th round of the English Premier League against Liverpool, UNN reports.

    Details

    Today, on October 20, at 18:45, at Anfield in Liverpool, the team of the same name will take on Chelsea of London's Mykhailo Mudryk. For the first time this season, Ukrainian winger Mykhailo Mudryk was not included in the team's application, although he is neither on the injured list nor on the list of disqualified players.

    Chelsea's lineup looks like this: Sanchez in goal; in defense: Reece James, who returns to the start after injury, Adarabio, Colville, Gusto; in midfield: Caicedo, Lavia, Madueke, Palmer, Sancho; in attack: Jackson.

    Liverpool's lineup: Kelleher in goal; in defense: Alexander-Arnold, Konate, van Dijk, Robertson; in the midfield: Jones, Gravenberg, Soboslai; in attack: Salah, Jota, Gakpo.

    Addendum

    Earlier, the media reported that Mudryk wanted to leave due to a lack of playing practice. It was reported that the Ukrainian winger could join Olympique de Marseille in the near future.

    Mudryk joined Chelsea from Shakhtar Donetsk in the 2022/2023 season for €70 million. In total, Mudryk played 66 matches for Chelsea, scoring 7 goals and providing 7 assists.

    Recall

    The national team of Ukraine defeated the national team of Georgia with a minimum score of in the third round of Division B of the 2024/25 Nations League. Mykhailo Mudryk scored the only goal in the match.