5 ways that Newcastle United’s season has been transformed under Eddie Howe

Eddie Howe (File: AFP)
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Updated 29 March 2022
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5 ways that Newcastle United’s season has been transformed under Eddie Howe

  • While a shrewd transfer policy has played its part, the Magpies’ stunning improvement is down to far more than simply spending money

NEWCASTLE: It’s all about the money, they said. Newcastle United will “buy” themselves out of trouble. Well, Eddie Howe’s Magpies are week-by-week going some way to disproving that Premier League theory.

No team in world football spent more than the Magpies in the January transfer window, as head coach Howe’s strengthening was backed by the funding of majority shareholders, the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia.

However, to point toward finance and rich owners only tells a fraction of the story of what has been happening at Newcastle United in 2022.

Here we take a look at what’s occurred behind the scenes at St. James’ Park, and at the club’s training pitches at Benton, to ensure transfer expenditure has been the cherry on top, rather than the foundations that underpin what has proved to be a miraculous turnaround in fortunes.

 

1. The return of belief and confidence

One win in 21 games kicked off Newcastle United’s Premier League campaign — and no side has ever remained in the top flight having opened up a top-flight season so poorly.

Not averse to making a bit of history, Howe’s Magpies are currently on course to become the one and only side to do just that.

But how have Newcastle gone from relegation fodder to comfortable in mid-table with such consummate ease? A lot of that is down to the positivity brought to the football club by the head coach and the team around him.

When Howe walked through the door, so did a wave of optimism, fresh ideas and hard work. He was the antithesis of the man he replaced, Steve Bruce.

Gone were the days of endless chatter at press conferences about the “quality of the opposition” and in its place a focus on what Newcastle can do, what will be achieved and some positive thinking.

That has not gone unnoticed in the dressing room, with a number of sources commenting on the switch in attitude and application within the ranks.

 

2. Trust the process

While belief changed mindsets off the field, training — and lots of it — has paid dividends on it.

Another thing that walked out the door with Bruce was the four-day weeks players had become accustomed to, and even more frustrated with.

An analogue manager in a digital age is how one insider put it to me when describing Bruce’s approach to things at St. James’ Park. 

No longer do players revel in the prospect of another day off, another night to go enjoy themselves — players of today are nothing like those brought up in the 1980s and 1990s. Certain standards, and an intensity and planning to training, are taken as a given by the modern footballer — this was something Bruce lacked, and Howe has in abundance.

Much like they did under Rafa Benitez, there is a sense within the group now that if plans, drawn up in Howe’s office, are followed, results will follow. That was never the case under Bruce.

 

3. Sharpening blunted tools

Too many good players, even average ones, looked well below par under Bruce. Many have been given a new lease of life in black and white under former Bournemouth boss Howe.

Improvements can be seen in the game of Sean Longstaff, Emil Krafth, Joe Willock, Jamaal Lascelles and Fabian Schar.

But the most stark difference in performance has come from Ryan Fraser, Jonjo Shelvey and Joelinton.

Shelvey looked like a blunt instrument for too long under Bruce, bar a positive end to his first season in charge. Too often the fall guy for poor performances, he looked like a player accelerating out the St. James’ Park exit door with every game that passed by.

Now, he’s an integral part of a midfield three with balance, ability to dictate and control.

Alongside him Brazilian Joelinton has turned from a poor No.9 and rank average No.10, to one of the most statistically successful midfielders on the planet on current form. His ability to close down spaces and win the ball high has relieved pressure on his team in a way his labored, back-to-goal routine of two years ago could only dream of. 

It has to be remembered that change only came about when Howe was brave enough to trust the player with an unusually deep role, following a committed, all-action showing in the battling, 10-man home draw with Norwich City.

And finally, Fraser has been, quite simply, a revelation. His pace, his drive and quality in the final third have more than made up for Allan Saint-Maximin’s drop-off in form and fitness.

Fraser’s recent form has likely saved his NUFC career.

 

4. The pursuit of perfection

Perfection never sleeps. It’s hard to see how head coach Howe does much of that either.

Arriving before anyone else — a regular training ground attendee at 6 a.m. — and the last to leave, Howe is setting the kind of example Bruce needed to, but showed little appetite in ever doing.

Inspirational messages have been plastered all over the walls of the training ground, as well as in the dressing rooms home and away.

Training drills are tailored to every opponent, plans are worked with and without the ball, as well as for every eventuality, including going down to 10 men.

Attention to detail is one of the reasons the club’s owners were attracted to Howe, and it’s the small things that are making the real differences come match day.

As much as perfection can never be reached, nor will its pursuit under Howe ever waver. His next bastion is improvements to the Newcastle training ground, with two trips to “better facilities” completed already, and we’re less than three months into the calendar year. That, in many ways, tells its own story about the lack of development and financing of infrastructure under the last regime.

 

5. Transfers — they’ve definitely played their part, too

The whole point of this piece is to take the focus away from the idea that Newcastle have bought their way out of trouble, however the deals done in January cannot be ignored.

All five, to differing degrees, have been transformative, but two, in particular, have shone — and they were probably the least high-profile in winter trading.

While Kieran Trippier’s quality shone bright but was darkened by injury quite quickly, Bruno Guimaraes’ slow burn has dazzled of late and Chris Wood’s physicality has boosted an ailing frontline, the introduction of Dan Burn and Matt Targett to the left-hand side of the back four has been a real masterstroke by Howe.

For too long converted right-winger Matt Ritchie was asked to fill in at left-back this season; his inability to grasp his newly found defensive responsibilities proving to be as alien to him as three points would prove to the team as a whole.

Meanwhile, skipper Lascelles, drained of his powers by some error-strewn performances, was asked to carry a backline that lacked leaders, quality and, ultimately, anyone willing to take responsibility.

With Burn and Targett, two proven Premier League performers, all of that has changed quite sharply.

Targett’s quality of delivery, close to matching that of Ritchie, has been coupled with a tenacity, energy and defensive awareness not seen on Tyneside since the likes of Davide Santon or Olivier Bernard.

Tucked slightly inside is Burn, seen by many as the form left-sided central defender in the Premier League, and surely only cost a spot in Gareth Southgate’s most recent England setup by his age, 29, and lack of involvement at all on the international scene.

There’s a solidity and reliability about the Newcastle backline now — and that will only develop further when Trippier’s inevitable return is confirmed, hopefully sooner rather than later.


Australian Open 2025: Jannik Sinner, Carlos Alcaraz and Novak Djokovic lead the men’s field

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Australian Open 2025: Jannik Sinner, Carlos Alcaraz and Novak Djokovic lead the men’s field

  • The year’s first Grand Slam tournament begins on the hard courts of Melbourne Park on Sunday morning local time
MELBOURNE: Here are some of the top men at the Australian Open, which starts at Melbourne Park on Sunday morning local time (Saturday night EST), with money-line odds via BetMGM Sportsbook:
Jannik Sinner
Seeding: 1
Career-Best Ranking: 1
Country: Italy
Age: 23
2024 Record: 73-6
2024 Titles: 8
Career Titles: 18
Grand Slam Titles: 2 — Australian Open (1: 2024), US Open (1: 2024)
Last 5 Australian Opens: 2024-Won Championship, 2023-Lost in 4th Rd, 2022-QF, 2021-1st, 2020-2nd
Aces: Sinner tested positive twice for a banned anabolic steroid in March but wasn’t suspended because a panel determined he didn’t use the drug intentionally and instead was exposed to it by his physiotherapist. The World Anti-Doping Agency has appealed his exoneration. ... Won his first Grand Slam title at the Australian Open last January and his second at the US Open in September. ... Ended 2024 with winning streaks of 14 matches and 26 sets.
He Said It: “Of course, I had some ups and downs, and whoever knows me, (knows) I was emotionally a bit down and a bit also heartbroken.”
Read All About It: Sinner’s 2024 included two Slam titles and two positive doping tests
Odds Are: +125
Carlos Alcaraz
Seeding: 3
Career-Best Ranking: 1
Country: Spain
Age: 21
2024 Record: 54-13
2024 Titles: 4
Career Titles: 16
Grand Slam Titles: 4 — French Open (1: 2024), Wimbledon (2: 2023, 2024), US Open (1: 2022)
Last 5 Australian Opens: 2024-QF, 2023-Did Not Play, 2022-3rd, 2021-2nd, 2020-DNP
Aces: Can complete a career Grand Slam at the age of 21 by winning the title at Melbourne Park. ... As it is, he is the youngest man in tennis history to win at least one major championship on three surfaces. ... Leads Jannik Sinner 6-4 head-to-head in their burgeoning rivalry. ... Went 12-5 against opponents ranked in the top 10 last year. ... Is 4-0 in Grand Slam finals.
He Said It: “I’m trying to make the people enjoy watching tennis.”
Read All About It: Alcaraz wants a seat at the adult table after his fourth major trophy
Odds Are: +350
Taylor Fritz
Seeding: 4
Career-Best Ranking: 4
Country: United States
Age: 27
2024 Record: 53-23
2024 Titles: 2
Career Titles: 8
Grand Slam Titles: None — Best: Runner-Up, US Open (2024)
Last 5 Australian Opens: 2024-QF, 2023-2nd, 2022-4th, 2021-3rd, 2020-3rd
Aces: Had never reached more than one Grand Slam quarterfinal in a single season until 2024, when he got there at the Australian Open and Wimbledon and made it to the final at the US Open before bowing out against Jannik Sinner. ... Also lost to Sinner in the title match at the ATP Finals, becoming the first man from the US to get that far at the season-ending championship since James Blake in 2006. ... Fritz’s coach, Michael Russell, earned ATP Coach of the Year honors for 2024.
He Said It: “I’ve always said: Once I do something once, I just feel a lot more confident in being able to do it again.”
Read All About It: Fritz was the first American man in 15 years to reach a Grand Slam final
Odds Are: +2800
Daniil Medvedev
Seeding: 5
Career-Best Ranking: 1
Country: Russia
Age: 28
2024 Record: 46-21
2024 Titles: Zero
Career Titles: 20
Grand Slam Titles: 1 — US Open (1: 2021)
Last 5 Australian Opens: 2024-RU, 2023-3rd, 2022-RU, 2021-RU, 2020-4th
Aces: Has made the final at Melbourne Park in three of the past four years but has yet to claim the championship. In two of those defeats in a title match, took a two-set lead before losing in five (to Jannik Sinner last year and to Rafael Nadal in 2022). ... Is 1-5 overall in Grand Slam finals.
He Said It: “Hopefully I can win some more Grand Slams. I believe in myself. I believe in my tennis.”
Read All About It: Medvedev once again came oh-so-close to an Australian trophy last year
Odds Are: +1400
Novak Djokovic
Seeding: 7
Career-Best Ranking: 1
Country: Serbia
Age: 37
2024 Record: 37-9
2024 Titles: 1
Career Titles: 99
Grand Slam Titles: 24 — Australian Open (10: 2008, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2023), French Open (3: 2016, 2021, 2023), Wimbledon (7: 2011, 2014, 2015, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022), US Open (4: 2011, 2015, 2018, 2023)
Last 5 Australian Opens: 2024-SF, 2023-W, 2022-DNP, 2021-W, 2020-W
Aces: Being coached in Melbourne by former rival Andy Murray. ... Bidding to become the first player in tennis history with 25 Grand Slam singles titles. ... 2024 was his first season without at least one major trophy since 2017. ... Was 20-0 in semifinals or finals at the Australian Open until last year’s loss to Jannik Sinner in the final four. ... 10 trophies in Melbourne are the most for a man. ... Won just one title in 2024, but it was a big one: an Olympic gold medal for Serbia.
He Said It: “To have a legend of the game, someone that is known to be as an intelligent tennis player as there is out there, it’s a great honor, great pleasure for me.”
Read All About It: Djokovic adds an Olympic gold medal to his resume
Odds Are: +500
Alex de Minaur
Seeding: 8
Career-Best Ranking: 6
Country: Australia
Age: 25
2024 Record: 47-21
2024 Titles: 2
Career Titles: 9
Grand Slam Titles: None — Best: Quarterfinals (four times)
Last 5 Australian Opens: 2024-4th, 2023-4th, 2022-4th, 2021-3rd, 2020-DNP
Aces: No Australian man has won the title at the country’s Grand Slam tournament since Mark Edmondson in 1976. ... This will be de Minaur’s first time seeded in the top eight at a major. ... He had only once ever reached a Grand Slam quarterfinal before 2024, when he made it that far three times: at the French Open, Wimbledon and the US Open. Now he’ll try to do it in front of the home fans for the first time. ... Got engaged to British tennis player Katie Boulter in December.
He Said It: “I don’t make too much fuss. I just put my head down and work on my craft.”
Read All About It: Hip injury forced de Minaur to pull out of Wimbledon showdown vs. Djokovic
Odds Are: +5000
___
Howard Fendrich has been the AP’s tennis writer since 2002. Find his stories here: https://apnews.com/author/howard-fendrich. More AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

De Zerbi is improving fortunes at Marseille two months after he considered quitting the club

Updated 28 min 37 sec ago
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De Zerbi is improving fortunes at Marseille two months after he considered quitting the club

  • That was back in November when, following home defeats to Paris Saint-Germain and Auxerre, he said he was ready to leave

PARIS: Marseille coach Roberto De Zerbi was so confounded by his team’s bad form that he considered quitting just months after arriving.
That was back in November when, following home defeats to Paris Saint-Germain and Auxerre, he said he was ready to leave. The 45-year-old Italian soon backtracked and affirmed his commitment to stay and turn things around.
Whatever he told the players at that time clearly worked, as did an arduous four-day camp. There were daily 5 a.m. wake-up calls for jogs on an empty stomach, followed by twice-daily training sessions.
Marseille is looking much sharper and fitter as a result.
The 1993 Champions League winner has won five of its six matches since the Auxerre loss and drawn the other against Lille — a decent result considering Lille is undefeated in all competitions since mid-September.
Marseille has rediscovered its touch, too, scoring 17 goals during that period, and has moved into second place in Ligue 1 behind leader Paris Saint-Germain, which is seven points ahead after 16 rounds.
Marseille travels to play Rennes on Saturday and PSG hosts lowly Saint-Etienne on Sunday.
De Zerbi has tightened things up tactically and is starting to work Marseille into a more streamlined side.
During his time with Brighton in the English Premier League, he earned a reputation as a shrewd tactician capable of beating bigger teams. He left Brighton after two seasons, having raised the team to its highest ever top-flight finish of sixth, and into the last 16 of the Europa League.
De Zerbi’s decision to join Marseille, which has passionate but impatient fans, surprised many observers. Even before his time at Brighton, De Zerbi had earned good reviews in Italy with Benevento and Sassuolo. He was widely praised for guiding Sassuolo to back-to-back eighth-place finishes in Serie A and touted as one of the best young coaches in Europe.
He had bigger clubs than Marseille calling for him last summer, but perhaps he saw the depth of Marseille’s potential — which is the only French club to win the Champions League and has a 67,000-capacity stadium.
De Zerbi has instilled a healthy competition for places within his squad and strengthened it further on Tuesday by signing central defender Luiz Felipe, who made over 100 appearances for Lazio in Serie A from 2017-22.
Felipe’s arrival comes after De Zerbi reproached his players for conceding too many goals — 19 in the league so far, compared with 14 for PSG and 16 for third-place Monaco and fourth-place Lille.
“We need so start thinking that 5-0 and 5-1 are not the same thing,” he said after Sunday’s 5-1 home rout of Le Havre at Stade Velodrome. “We need to make other teams understand that scoring a goal against us is difficult.”
Felipe said the possibility of playing under De Zerbi was “fundamental” in his decision to join.
“I have known De Zerbi since he was Sassuolo, it was always difficult to play against him,” Felipe said.
Key players have emerged into leadership roles, such as Argentina goalkeeper Geronimo Rulli and France midfielder Adrien Rabiot.
Playing in a role higher up the field allows Rabiot to make more dangerous use of his excellent passing range and eye for long-distance shooting.
Signing the 29-year-old Rabiot was seen as something of a coup of Marseille, considering that he is entering his prime years and his wealth of experience with Italian giant Juventus (212 matches overall) and France (50 caps).
“We need two, three, four or five Rabiots,” De Zerbi said recently.
Then he added, jokingly: “I asked him if he has any brothers, but unfortunately they don’t play football.”


UAE jiu-jitsu team to compete in 9 championships during 2025

Updated 09 January 2025
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UAE jiu-jitsu team to compete in 9 championships during 2025

  • Emirati male and female fighters will take part in regional, continental and international competitions across various categories

ABU DHABI: The UAE Jiu-Jitsu Federation has announced that the country’s national team will take part in nine championships in 2025.

Sponsored by Mubadala Investment Co., Emirati male and female fighters will compete from February to November, spanning regional, continental and international events across various age groups, the UAEJJF stated recently.

The continental season kicks off with the Asian Youth Championships in Thailand from Feb. 13 to 15, featuring competitions in categories falling under the ages of 14, 16 and 18.

The team will then head to Jordan for the ninth Jiu-Jitsu Asian Championship from May 23 to 25, for adults and under-21 athletes, where they aim to uphold their continental supremacy.

The UAE will also compete in the JJAU Regional Championship for West Asia in Bahrain on July 24 and 25, which includes the 14, 16, 18, 21 and adult categories. Additionally, the team will take part in the third Asian Youth Games from Oct. 22 to 31, focusing on the under-18 category.

Internationally, the team will participate in the Grand Prix Paris Open for adults in France on April 26 and 27, followed by the Grand Prix Thailand Open in Bangkok from June 19 to 21. The Grand Prix events are crucial for the UAE’s global ranking and positioning for the Jiu-Jitsu World Championship draw.

On the global stage, the 2025 World Games in Chengdu, China, from Aug. 10 to 12, will be a highlight for the adult category. The team aim to replicate their impressive performance from the 2022 World Games in Birmingham, Alabama, where they earned five medals, including two historic golds.

The season concludes with the Jiu-Jitsu World Championship in Thailand from Nov. 1 to 15, which encompasses all age groups — 14, 16, 18, 21 and seniors — followed by the Islamic Solidarity Games in Saudi Arabia on Nov. 17 and 18.

Fahad Ali Al-Shamsi, secretary-general of the UAEJJF, said the athletes are expected to do well across all competitions.

“The year 2025, with its high-profile championships, will build on our national team’s legacy of achievements and inspire future generations of athletes.

“We are fortunate to have the limitless support of our wise leadership, which provides our athletes with all the resources needed for success and has helped them achieve top global rankings.”


Barcelona defeat Bilbao without Olmo to reach Spanish Super Cup final

Updated 09 January 2025
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Barcelona defeat Bilbao without Olmo to reach Spanish Super Cup final

  • Gavi put Barcelona ahead from close range after 17 minutes and teenage winger Yamal netted the second early after the break

JEDDAH, Saudi Arabia: Young starlets Gavi and Lamine Yamal fired Barcelona, without Dani Olmo after his license to play was revoked, into the Spanish Super Cup final with a 2-0 win against Athletic Bilbao on Wednesday.
Spanish playmaker Olmo was cleared to play again on a temporary basis before the game but the decision came too late for him or Pau Victor, in the same position, to feature against Copa del Rey winners Athletic.
Gavi put Barcelona ahead from close range after 17 minutes and teenage winger Yamal netted the second early after the break.
Spanish and European champions Real Madrid face cup runners-up Mallorca on Thursday in the second semifinal in Saudi Arabia, where the competition has been held for the past few years.
“Athletic are a very physical team that make you run a lot, we suffered above all toward the end, but we were able to play well and we’re very happy,” Yamal told Movistar.
The winger said Olmo and Victor were pleased to be allowed to play once more.
“In the end you’re nervous when you can’t play and when you get news like that, you’re very happy,” added Yamal.
Barca coach Hansi Flick hailed the decision from Spain’s national sports council regarding Olmo and Victor.
“The whole club is very happy for this right decision,” said Flick, hoping to win his first silverware at the helm of Barca.
“We wanted to show we are a team and we win also for them.”
Barcelona, who qualified as La Liga runners-up, started brightly and Raphinha volleyed over from a fine Jules Kounde cross and forced Unai Simon into a good save with a free-kick.
It was no surprise when the Catalans broke the deadlock with Alejandro Balde cutting the ball back for Gavi, playing in Olmo’s attacking midfield role, to turn home for his first goal since suffering a severe knee injury last season.
The 20-year-old pointed at an imaginary watch in his celebration, a nod to Olmo who regularly produces the same gesture after scoring.
At the other end Inaki Williams dallied on the ball too long as Athletic’s best attacking move of the first half broke down.
Yamal, returning after an ankle problem, should have added Barcelona’s second after Raphinha’s shot was saved but the 17-year-old miscued an attempted lob.
Wojciech Szczesny, on his second start in goal for Barcelona, made a good save to keep Inaki Williams at bay before the break.
Barcelona doubled their lead early in the second half when Gavi slipped in Yamal who finished with aplomb.
Veteran Polish forward Robert Lewandowski spurned a fine chance to add the third, firing off-target when well placed.
Athletic coach Ernesto Valverde, who was sacked as Barcelona boss after a defeat at the same stadium in 2020, brought on Nico Williams to try and turn the game around.
The Spain international, heavily linked with Barcelona in the summer, was not fit enough to start, but made a positive impact from the bench.
The winger set up Oscar de Marcos to strike but the Athletic defender had strayed just offside and the goal was ruled out.
Inaki Williams also had a goal ruled out for offside after Frenkie De Jong’s poor back-pass took a slight deflection off Alvaro Djalo on its way to the Ghana international.
“It’s a shame given all the effort... but we have good things ahead of us and we have to continue,” said Inaki Williams.
Barcelona were able to book their place in Sunday’s final, in which Olmo will be allowed to feature.
“We don’t care (who we face in the final), it will be hard and we want to win it, which is the important thing, and go back home with the trophy,” said Yamal.


Tottenham beats Liverpool 1-0 in English cup semis after a serious injury and in-stadium ref call

Updated 09 January 2025
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Tottenham beats Liverpool 1-0 in English cup semis after a serious injury and in-stadium ref call

  • Liverpool, the defending League Cup champion, saw its 24-match unbeaten run in all competitions come to an end

Lucas Bergvall’s first goal for Tottenham secured a 1-0 win over Liverpool in the English League Cup semifinals on Wednesday in a first-leg match notable for a serious-looking injury to Rodrigo Bentancur and the first in-stadium announcement by a referee in the English game.
The 18-year-old Bergvall slotted home the winner in the 86th minute following a pass from Dominic Solanke, who thought 10 minutes earlier that he had given Tottenham the lead. That goal was ruled out after a VAR check for offside and referee Stuart Attwell communicated the decision via a wireless microphone to spectators inside Tottenham Hotspur Stadium and to TV viewers.
In the sixth minute, Bentancur — the Uruguay midfielder who plays for Tottenham — fell to the ground and lay prone after landing awkwardly when attempting a header from a corner. He was carried off on a stretcher, to applause from around the ground, after receiving treatment during a 10-minute delay.
The second leg is at Anfield on Feb. 6.
Newcastle leads Arsenal 2-0 after the first leg of the other semifinal match.
Liverpool, the defending League Cup champion, saw its 24-match unbeaten run in all competitions come to an end and there was a hint of controversy about only the team’s second loss of the season.
Visiting players and manager Arne Slot were unhappy that Bergvall was on the field to score what proved to be the winning goal after he escaped collecting a second yellow card for a foul on Kostas Tsimikas moments earlier. Indeed, Tsimikas was off the field, waiting to come back on having received treatment following Bergvall’s tackle, when the Sweden midfielder tucked home his finish.
Slot earned a yellow card himself for his protests, though he shook Attwell’s hand after the final whistle.
“It was quite obvious it was going to be a second yellow,” Liverpool captain Virgil van Dijk said. “A minute later he scores the winner.
“He (Attwell) made a mistake, in my opinion.”
It was a busy end to the match for Attwell, who took center stage after there was a video review following Solanke’s strike in the 76th minute. After being notified that Solanke was offside, Attwell used the public address system to declare the goal had been ruled out, in an NFL-style announcement.
The League Cup semifinals were chosen to pilot a process in England that has been widely used in other sports, and in soccer at the Women’s World Cup in Australia and New Zealand in 2023 and other FIFA events.