Talented teenagers make passage to India as football bids to find its feet on the subcontinent

Updated 05 October 2017
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Talented teenagers make passage to India as football bids to find its feet on the subcontinent

NEW DELHI: A stroll through the dirty, disorganized dustbowl that is downtown Delhi does not seem to offer many answers to the question of whether anybody actually cares that India, this famously cricket-crazed country, is about to host its first major international football tournament. Posters and publicity material for the FIFA Under-17 World Cup, which starts today, is sparse and when asked most people provide only blank stares or uneasy smiles.
Nobody is under any illusions: FIFA’s age-group tournament is incomparable to a World Cup proper. Yes, it involves 24 teams from across the globe, and yes, it will be broadcast across 187 territories — BeInSports have the rights for Saudi Arabia — but with an average attendance of 12,000 and very few players known by even the most ardent follower, it can often be a hard sell.
FIFA is keen then to push the idea that this is a unique event that should be embraced by all.
“It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for India because we don’t know if a World Cup event like this will ever be here again,” said Javier Ceppi, FIFA’s tournament director.
“And it’s also a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for the players because we don’t know if they will ever get the chance to play in a World Cup again.”
Traditionally, pre-tournament trumpeting tends to paint a picture of a biennial event that produces the stars of tomorrow. Ronaldinho, Andres Iniesta and Toni Kroos are among the high-profile names to perform at this level (see below for more players to have graced the tournament). Yet development takes time and not all players excel at U17 level. The likes of Fernando Torres and Landon Donovan are the exceptions rather than the rule, as a scroll through the list of the tournament’s Golden Ball winners demonstrates.
Of the 16 teenagers named player of the tournament since the inaugural event in 1985, only three have gone on to play at a senior World Cup, with two — Cesc Fabregas and Kroos — winning the ultimate prize. The list of top scorers produces slightly better results with five having played at a World Cup proper, but the likes of Yuri Nikiforov and Wilson Oruma never became household names beyond their own precinct.
Earlier this week, The Guardian newspaper listed what it thought were 60 best young talents in the world. Twenty one of them are playing this month in India and that number could have been higher had Christian Früchtl, a gargantuan German goalkeeper, not been promoted to the Bayern Munich bench after Manuel Neuer suffered a broken foot. Brazilian Vinicius Junior, meanwhile, was refused permission to travel by his club Flamengo, who have already signed an agreement with Real Madrid to sell their prize asset to the Spanish side next summer for £45 million.
The difficulty with identifying talent at such a young age is that players develop physically at different rates. A taller, stronger player who appeared a world-beater in his early teens is just as likely to fade into obscurity as his teammates’ bodies catch up.
It works both ways. At 18, Scott McTominay was struggling to get any action for Manchester United reserves, but after growing 10 inches in a little under two years, last season he made his Premier League debut under Jose Mourinho.
So if the ultimate purpose of the tournament is not necessarily to produce future stars, what is it?
For India, it is about educating the public, generating excitement in the game, and making it clear that the sport does not require pristine Premier League pitches. Social media is the preferred marketing vehicle rather than costly posters and promotional materials and it seems to be working: India’s opening match against the US, taking place today, has sold out, even with the host nation’s coach, Luís Norton de Matos, only giving his team a five percent chance of victory.
“Of course, we would like to write history, but, in the US, players have competitive football from aged seven,” he said. “Those players come here with 10 years of competition behind them. We do not have that. So my advice is my players enjoy every minute because it’s a moment they will never forget. If they give 100 percent and lose it is not the end of the world.”
Three talented teens who became global greats
LUIS FIGO: The peerless playmaker scored twice in the 1989 tournament as Portugal finished in third place. That was to set the tone for the rest of his international career as the most prominent part of the famous Golden Generation experienced nothing but near-misses on the international stage. At club level, however, Figo was one of the best players of his, or any other, era. A midfield maestro who starred at both Barcelona and Real Madrid, winning the Champions League in 2002 with Real and the Ballon d’Or in 2000.
ALESSANDRO DEL PIERO: For a country that excels in the dark arts of catenaccio defending Italy does produce a lot of sublime midfielders and forward. So many, in fact, that it is tough to stand out. That, however, is exactly what Del Piero did during a career that saw him progress from the U-17 World Cup in 1991 to becoming a Juventus legend and ultimately a World Cup winner in 2006. Full of guile and grace, Del Piero lit up every stage he played on.
NEYMAR: The Brazilian played in the 2009 U-17 World Cup and it is fair to say had a disappointing tournament, scoring just once as Brazil limped out at the group stage. It is also fair to say that life has been a lot kinder to him since. He became the lynchpin of a successful Santos side, transferred to Barcelona where he formed perhaps the deadliest forward line ever seen, with Lionel Messi and Luis Suarez, before joining Paris Saint-Germain this summer for a jaw-dropping fee of $263 million to become the world’s most expensive player. Not bad going.


Sydney-Hobart yacht crews set off on gale-threatened race

Updated 12 sec ago
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Sydney-Hobart yacht crews set off on gale-threatened race

  • Race crews face rough weather and big waves as they move down Australia’s east coast, then tackle the notorious Bass Strait toward the Tasmanian state capital Hobart
  • LawConnect and rival Comanche battled for the lead as crews vied to be first out of the harbor

SYDNEY: Crews of more than 100 yachts set sail Thursday on a “boat-breaking” Sydney-Hobart yacht race, with gale-force winds and high seas forecast for the grueling bluewater classic.

Under blue, mid-summer skies, spectators crowded onto boats and lined the shore of a breezy Sydney Harbor as a starting cannon set the fleet of 104 on a dash to the open ocean.

Race crews face rough weather and big waves as they move down Australia’s east coast, then tackle the notorious Bass Strait toward the Tasmanian state capital Hobart.

Weather is a critical factor in the 628-nautical mile event, first held in 1945.

Six men died, five boats sank and 55 sailors were rescued in 1998, when a deep depression exploded over the fleet in the Bass Strait.

“We are seeing strong wind warnings developing through the afternoon today and getting up to gale, so about 35 knots,” meteorologist Gabrielle Woodhouse said in the last briefing hours before the start.

A strong south-westerly change would move across Bass Strait early on Friday morning, potentially bringing showers, lightning, thunder, and waves of up to 4.0 meters (13 feet).

In the first minutes of the race, reigning line honors champion LawConnect and rival Comanche battled for the lead as crews vied to be first out of the harbor.

“These conditions are probably the worst forecast I’ve ever had to go through. The odds of boat damage are obviously very high,” LawConnect skipper Christian Beck said ahead of the race.

But the forecast conditions could favor LawConnect, he said.

“We’ve had a crew that’s been together for six years. We hope our crew is our main strength. The harder it is, the more that comes to our advantage,” Beck said.

LawConnect edged Comanche to win by just 51 seconds last year, and the two 100-foot supermaxis are again expected to battle for line honors.

“It’s going to be a fast and furious first night out there on our way down to Hobart,” said Matt Allen, co-skipper of Comanche, a four-time line honors champion and the race record holder.

“It’s probably going to be boat-breaking sort of conditions,” Allen said ahead of the race. “The really small boats are really going to cop it a few times in this race.”

Fellow skipper James Mayo said strategy would be key for Comanche, which surged over the finish line in one day, 9 hours, 15 minutes and 24 seconds to set a new mark in 2017.

“It’s about keeping the boat in one piece, you know there’s going to be some good rides,” Mayo said.

Two other supermaxis are entered — Wild Thing and Maritimo.

Alive, last year’s overall winner of the Tattersall Cup, which takes into account boat size and other factors, will again be in contention to defend its title.

Other previous overall winners in the fleet include Centennial 7 (formerly Celestial) and Love and War.


Lamar Jackson breaks NFL QB rushing record, accounts for 3 TDs in Ravens’ 31-2 romp over Texans

Updated 26 December 2024
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Lamar Jackson breaks NFL QB rushing record, accounts for 3 TDs in Ravens’ 31-2 romp over Texans

  • Jackson threw for 168 yards and two touchdowns and ran for 87 yards and another score

HOUSTON: Lamar Jackson broke the NFL career rushing record for quarterbacks in Baltimore’s 31-2 victory over the Houston Texans on Wednesday, bolstering his case for MVP as the Ravens moved closer to the AFC North title.
Jackson threw for 168 yards and two touchdowns and ran for 87 yards and another score. He pushed his career rushing total to 6,110 to move past Michael Vick, who had 6,109 in his 13-year career.
The Ravens (11-5) have already wrapped up their third straight playoff berth and need a victory over Cleveland next week to win the division over Pittsburgh. The Steelers dropped a third straight with a loss to Kansas City on Wednesday.
Jackson, the MVP last season and in 2019, put on a show rivaled only by the spectacular Super Bowl-caliber halftime performance by Beyoncé to give Baltimore its third straight win. And he needed just more than three quarters to do it, giving way to Josh Johnson with about 10 minutes left and the game long decided.
Jackson threw 9- and 1-yard TD passes and was not touched on a 48-yard scoring scamper that made it 24-2 in the third quarter.
Derrick Henry ran for 147 yards and set the Ravens season record with his 16th touchdown on a 2-yard run in the first quarter. He eclipsed Ray Rice (2011) and Mark Ingram (2019).
Baltimore dominated a Houston team reeling after losing dynamic receiver Tank Dell to a season-ending knee injury Saturday.
The AFC South champs struggled to finish drives and got their only points on a safety in the second quarter. C.J. Stroud threw for 185 yards, but was sacked five times and threw an interception and Joe Mixon managed just 26 yards rushing as the Texans (9-7) lost a second straight.
Rookie Kamari Lassiter dropped Henry for a 4-yard loss for the safety with about 10 minutes left in the first half to cut the lead to 10-2.
Dameon Pierce then returned the kickoff 45 yards to get the Texans to their 43. But they came away empty when Mixon was stopped on the 1 after grabbing a short pass on fourth-and-3.
Jackson then orchestrated a 99-yard drive to pad the lead. He scrambled to evade the rush and found Mark Andrews for a 67-yard gain to get the Ravens in the red zone with just more than two minutes left in the first half.
Isaiah Likely’s 9-yard TD reception two plays later made it 17-2. It was the first 17-2 halftime score in NFL history.
Kyle Hamilton intercepted Stroud’s pass on the first drive of the second half. Two plays later, Jackson’s long TD run made it 24-2.
He set the rushing record on a 6-yard run on Baltimore’s next drive. Later in the drive, he scrambled to escape several defenders before finding Andrews for a 1-yard score to leave Baltimore up 31-2.
Injuries
Ravens RB Rasheen Ali injured his hip in the third quarter and didn’t return. … Texans TE Cade Stover returned after missing two games following an emergency appendectomy.
Up next
The Ravens host the Browns, and the Texans visit the Titans next weekend. The game dates have yet to be determined.


World No. 1 Sabalenka ready for more Slam success

Updated 26 December 2024
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World No. 1 Sabalenka ready for more Slam success

  • Sabalenka: I love Australia and I always come here hungry and always come here ready
  • The 26-year-old enjoyed a sensational 2024, reaching seven finals and winning four titles, including the US Open

BRISBANE: World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka says she is “fresh and ready to go” in her bid for a third straight Australian Open title, warning she has plenty of room for improvement.

The 26-year-old enjoyed a sensational 2024, reaching seven finals and winning four titles, including the US Open.

Her year was kickstarted by defending her Australian Open crown, beating China’s high-flying Zheng Qinwen in the final.

Should she win it again, she will become the first woman to claim three straight Melbourne Park singles titles since Martina Hingis between 1997-1999.

“I feel fresh and ready to go,” the Belarusian said, according to the WTA website Thursday, after arriving for the Brisbane International which starts on Sunday ahead of the Australian Open from Jan. 12.

“I love Australia and I always come here hungry and always come here ready.

“I feel all the support here, and I think that’s the best thing about Australia, that people are really, really, into tennis.”

Sabalenka also began 2024 in Brisbane, reaching the final without losing a set only to crash to Kazakstan’s Elena Rybakina in the decider.

She spent time in the off-season at her home in Florida before heading to the Middle East to prepare for Australia and will use the Brisbane tournament to fine-tune her Grand Slam preparations.

“You work hard on lots of things in the pre-season,” she said.

“The first tournament before the major tournament is the one where you can try it out and see what’s going to work well for you, and what’s not.”

Despite her rise through the ranks to be the player to beat heading into 2025, Sabalenka said there were still parts of her game that need work.

“Oh, there is so many things to improve,” she said.

“I mean, I’m not that good with maybe my game at the net in singles. There is a lot of things to improve in my touch game.

“There is so many things, even my serve is not as good as I want it to be, so there is always (elements) to improve.”


Mahomes throws 3 TDs as Chiefs clinch AFC’s top seed by breezing past the skidding Steelers 29-10

Updated 26 December 2024
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Mahomes throws 3 TDs as Chiefs clinch AFC’s top seed by breezing past the skidding Steelers 29-10

  • Kansas City (15-1) spent three hours toying with the Steelers (10-6) like a cat batting around shreds of leftover wrapping paper

PITTSBURGH: Andy Reid donned a Santa Claus suit in a giddy Kansas City Chiefs locker room on Christmas Day, then handed his team a present it increasingly looks like it deserves: home-field advantage throughout the AFC playoffs.
How Reid managed to slide into the costume so quickly after Kansas City’s clinical 29-10 victory over the reeling Pittsburgh Steelers to lock up the top seed in the AFC for the fourth time in seven years is a mystery (though he hinted there’s an elf involved).
How Reid’s team manages to pull away from the pack year after year is not.
A lot of Patrick Mahomes. A dash of Travis Kelce. A splash of speed. A defense that quietly goes about its business, even when its leader is standing on the sideline in sweatpants.
Yes, it has been ugly — by Kansas City’s lofty standards — at times while the Chiefs have chased a third straight championship. Yet as the playoffs loom, the group that looked so vulnerable for most of the season suddenly seems to be rounding into form.
And the road to the Super Bowl will once again go through Arrowhead Stadium. Just the way the Chiefs like it.
“Getting the No. 1 seed is important,” Mahomes said after throwing for 320 yards and three touchdowns. “It’s like winning a playoff game.”
Even if how the Chiefs locked it up didn’t exactly feel like one.
Kansas City (15-1) spent three hours toying with the Steelers (10-6) like a cat batting around shreds of leftover wrapping paper. The Chiefs raced to an early 13-point lead and were never really threatened by Pittsburgh, which has dropped three straight to see its chances of capturing the AFC North take another hit.
“That sucked, to be blunt,” Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said.
It often does when Pittsburgh is on one side of the line of scrimmage and Mahomes is on the other. Mahomes is now 4-0 against the Steelers with 17 touchdowns against just one interception. He connected on first-half scoring tosses to Xavier Worthy and Justin Watson and added a history-making 12-yard touchdown flip to Kelce to seal it in the fourth quarter.
The grab was the 77th scoring reception of Kelce’s career, breaking a franchise record set by Hall of Famer Tony Gonzalez. The 35-year-old Kelce celebrated by dunking the ball over the goal post, a nod to Gonzalez’s signature move. The gesture drew a 15-yard penalty for unsportsmanlike conduct, though it hardly mattered. Harrison Butker made the longer extra point and the Chiefs were firmly in control.
“It’s just showing Tony some love,” Kelce said with a laugh on the day he joined Gonzalez and Jason Witten as the only tight ends to reach 1,000 receptions. Kelce finished with eight catches for 84 yards while playing for an offense that is starting to get its swagger back.
The defense wasn’t bad either, even with five-time Pro Bowl defensive end Chris Jones sidelined by a calf injury. Jones’ teammates hardly looked gassed while playing for the third time in 11 days.
“It was tough,” cornerback Trent McDuffie said. “I mean, three games in 11 days is crazy for anybody. But I thought we handled it very well.”
The Steelers did not. Pittsburgh went 0-3 during the span, a brutal stretch against Super Bowl contenders Philadelphia, Baltimore and Kansas City in which the Steelers looked outclassed.
Perhaps more troubling than the losses is the way they played out. Pittsburgh lost each contest by at least 14 points and could find itself starting the postseason on the road after playing fast-and-loose with the two-game division lead it enjoyed just three weeks ago.
“I think that there’s highs and lows in every season,” Pittsburgh quarterback Russell Wilson said after throwing for 205 yards with an ill-timed pick in the end zone in the first quarter. “We’ve got to make sure that we end this last game on the right footing and right belief.”
That hasn’t been an issue in years in Kansas City. Not with Mahomes at the controls. He spread his 29 completions to eight different players, including a career-best eight to Worthy and four to Hollywood Brown, whose return from injury has given the Chiefs another playmaker in what is starting to look like another stacked deck.
“We’re playing, especially offensively, our best football of the year,” Mahomes said.
Looks like it. The two-time MVP hardly bothered by the ankle injury he suffered against Cleveland, throwing touchdowns to cap Kansas City’s first two drives. And while the Steelers drew within 13-7 and 16-10, they never had the ball with a chance to take the lead in the second half.
Instead, the Chiefs — who spent most of the first three months of the season squeaking by most weeks — zoomed away with the No. 1 seed and several weeks to rest before a bid for a three-peat that certainly looks doable.
Injuries
Chiefs: RB Isiah Pacheco left in the second half with a rib injury.
Steelers: DT Cam Heyward exited briefly in the fourth quarter but managed to return.
Up next
Chiefs: finish up the regular season by heading to Denver.
Steelers: host Cincinnati in the regular-season finale.


Inspired by ‘incredible’ Ronaldo, Matheus Nunes eyes success with Manchester City and Portugal

Updated 26 December 2024
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Inspired by ‘incredible’ Ronaldo, Matheus Nunes eyes success with Manchester City and Portugal

  • The 26-year-old spoke to Arab News about the role his mother played in his career and moving from Brazil to Portugal at a young age

MANCHESTER: As a child growing up without a father in a favela in Rio de Janeiro, Matheus Nunes had a couple of familiar figures to inspire him to a footballing dream and better life.

One was his mother, Catia, who combined raising and supporting her family with the odd appearance for a local team as a goalkeeper.

The other was Brazil and Barcelona icon Ronaldinho.

Both provided the “magic” that has now seen the Rio-born Nunes starring for Manchester City and Portugal, the country where he moved to as a youngster.

“My mum was my hero,” the 26-year-old told Arab News exclusively. “I learned from her — and she used to play football as well.

“She was a goalkeeper, trying to save my shots. It was just in Brazil, not professionally, but she played in friendlies, local games with friends — she was always playing,” he said.

“She was, what you call, a tomboy. She had about 12 cousins and, compared to her age, she was the only girl in their age group so she was always doing men’s stuff.

Nunes continued: “Football-wise, my first hero was Ronaldinho. I enjoyed everything about him.

“I watched all of his videos on YouTube when I was young. I don’t know how to describe it but, for me, if he’s not the best footballer of all time, he’s probably one of them.

“It was magical watching him. He was the guy who made me fall in love with football.”

So too, inevitably, did Cristiano Ronaldo, once Catia moved the family to Portugal and Nunes learned English and all about the Premier League from his Sunderland-supporting stepfather, John Greenman.

Long before the forward joined Al-Nassr in Saudi Arabia, Ronaldo starred at Lisbon side Sporting — a club Nunes would also later join — before successful spells at Manchester United, Real Madrid and Juventus.

When he was called up by Portugal for his international debut against Qatar in 2021, Nunes admitted being a bit star-struck when meeting Ronaldo, now 39 and still scoring goals for club and country.

“He’s incredible, a machine to be still playing now,” said Nunes. “I don’t know if I will ever be able to do that, but he’s just incredible.

“I’m not going to lie, I was a bit nervous when I first met Cristiano. But it wasn’t just him, but a lot of the big players I met when I first went to the national team. I had only played with them in video games before, so it was a great moment.

“My first gift when I was two was a football, so everything led to this. I didn’t try to be a professional in Brazil because I came to Portugal when I was very young,” Nunes said.

“But, after I arrived in Portugal, it was only then that I switched my mindset and said I am going to try to be a footballer here.

“That’s kind of why I chose Portugal as the country I wanted to play for, because Portugal opened doors for me to in terms of professional football.”

However, Nunes’ path to being a professional was far from easy and he combined playing for Portuguese fifth-tier side Ericeirense while working in a bakery.

His break came at Estoril in 2018, before Sporting signed him one season — and just six appearances — later.

Such was Nunes’ rise that, three years on, English side Wolverhampton Wanderers paid a club-record £38 million ($48 million) for him — and Manchester City followed with £47 million at the start of last season.

Nunes, though, has struggled for a starting spot and the chance to show his best form at the Etihad, despite lifting the Premier League and Club World Cup in his debut season.

While he has been given more opportunities — and impressed when played in a more favored attacking role — Nunes has had to help City fill holes due to their injury issues.

Deputising at full-back, he conceded a late penalty with a foul on Amad Diallo that allowed Manchester United to snatch a dramatic 2-1 comeback victory in the derby earlier this month.

That was one of nine defeats for City in their last 12 games — a disappointing run that has seen them drop down to seventh in the Premier League — leaving them 12 points behind leaders Liverpool, and in danger of missing out on the next stage of the Champions League.

With a home game against Everton on Boxing Day and trip to Leicester City on Sunday, boss Pep Guardiola will hope for a much-needed change of fortune to keep his side in contention for a top-four place.

Nunes himself is determined to make his mark in the best league in the world.

“In England you have the best players in the world, the best teams and the games are so intense,” he said.

“In Portugal there is a lot of quality as well, but here you can see every week it’s above the other leagues, and why you want to play here.

“It’s been tough because I haven’t got the minutes I wanted. But I want to play every week and you have to be ready if the manager calls you or not. I want to play, I want to win.”