Friday 31 August 2012

Gambo Tries Out At Samsunspor

Gambo Mohammed will begin a one-week trial at relegated Samsunspor of Turkey today as the Kano Pillars forward seeks to replace former Super Eagles teammate Ehiosun Ekigho in the club.

The home-based Super Eagles invitee will have to convince Samsunspor managerTarkan Demirhan he has all it takes to solve his attack problems before he could be handed a contract at the Turkish second string league side.

Gambo was granted one-week permission by Kano Pillars management to embark on the trip on Monday just hours after they lost the Federation Cup third place match to Prime of Oshogbo at Teslim Balogun Stadium, Lagos.

“We were aware of his trip to Turkey. The management duly granted him permission to travel and he was given one week for that purpose,” states an official of the club, Idris Malikawa.

Igiebor Targets Trophies With Betis

Nigeria midfielder Nosa Igiebor has set his sights on winning silverware in Spain following his move to Real Betis.
The 21-year-old signed from Hapoel Tel Aviv on a four-year deal last week and is eager to settle in at his new club.

"I'm very happy to be at Real Betis and one of the most competitive leagues in the world," he told BBC Sport.

"Playing in Spain was a big dream and now that I am in Spain I need to fulfil that desire to be a big success here.
"It will be tough to play regularly but I'm a strong competitor mentally and physically who wants to play and help my team-mates."

The former Olympic international who has played twice for the Super Eagles is following in the footsteps of illustrious compatriot Finidi George.

George, a Champions League winner with Dutch side Ajax, was with Seville-based Betis for four seasons and is recognised as the most successful African at the club.

The winger made 130 appearances for Béticos and scored 38 goals between 1996 and 2000.

"It's good to be reminded of a successful compatriot but I didn't come here to relax but to improve," said Igiebor.
"I hope to contribute like [Finidi George] did and go a step further by winning trophies here hopefully."

Igiebor who has been named in the Nigeria squad to face Liberia in next month's Africa Cup of Nations qualifier is hoping he can be a favourite with the passionate fans.

"I've been told about the club's passionate fans, the love they feel for this team," he said. "It's very important to feel the support during the good times and tough times.

"I've heard about the rivalries and derbies, coming from Israel I have experienced that.

"It's going to be a long road but I hope to settle down quickly and give my best to the team."

After playing in the Nigerian Premier League with Sharks and Warri Wolves, Igiebor's European career got off at Lillestrom of Norway.

He switched to Hapoel Tel Aviv of Israel last summer where he scored seven goals in 41 appearances.

Etim Esin: Moses Will Succeed At Chelsea

Former youth international, EtimEsin, is optimistic that Super Eagles forward Victor Moses will shine at Chelsea after joining the side from Wigan Athletic last week.

Moses completed a 9 million pounds move to Stamford Bridge after weeks of speculation and was handed the number 13 jersey worn by German star, Michael Ballack, when he was with the Blues.

“Nigerians are worried about Victor Moses because he will have to contend with some other good players at the club, but I think he can make an impact at the club,” the former Super Eagles midfielder said.

“The manager, Roberto Di Matteo, will play him on the wings and he will have about two players to fight for a place which I think is not a big number. Victor will cope and will have game time at Chelsea. I’m not really worried. He just has to replicate the form he had at Wigan,” Esin said.

On the forthcoming 2013 Africa Nations Cup qualifier against Liberia in Monrovia on September 8, the one-time Lierse of Belgium midfield maestro hailed the rebuilding efforts of Stephen Keshi and expresses belief that the team named for the game will deliver.

“The list for the game against Liberia is okay. Yes, there are some big names omitted, but generally, it is a good team and I have no doubt that Liberia will be defeated but the boys have to also take the game seriously because we’ve seen some matches being lost or drawn contrary to expectations in the past.”

Fitness Test For Odemwingie

Nigeria forward, Peter Osaze Odemwingie will undergo a fitness test today to ascertain his readiness for this weekend's visit of Everton to the Hawthorns in an English Premier League game.

Odemwingie suffered a thigh injury in training last Thursday and missed the 4-2 defeat of Yeovil in Tuesday night's Capital One Cup second round tie.

The Baggies won thanks to a brace by Shane Long, a super strike from Chris Brunt and a Craig Dawson effort.
Baggies joint No.2 Keith Downing hopes that Odemwingie and some of Albion’s walking wounded will be ready for Saturday.

“We’ve had a few bumps and bruises,” said Downing.

“We had six or seven players who had knocks and strains so the medical staff are working hard ahead of Saturday – though I stress none of them are serious.

“I don’t think Peter’s far away. We’ll have to assess it on Thursday and nearer the weekend we will have a bit more light on the injury but it’s not a serious one so I think he will be very close to being in the squad.

Falconets Ready To Fly Over Mexico

Coach Says He Has respect For Their Foes Today


Chief Coach of the U-20 Women National Team, Edwin Okon has reaffirmed his respect for Mexico whom they confront this morning in one of the quarter final matches of the FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup in Japan.

The match which is scheduled for Tokyo National Stadium will be aired at 8am in Nigeria and it is the 25th match of the tournament.

Speaking on Wednesday evening at the Pre-Match Conference shortly after the team's official training, Okon described their opponents as one replete with surprises.

"This is a team that came from a 4-0 goal deficit against Japan in their opening match to qualify for the quarter final. It shows that it is a team with great potential and determination," he added.

"But I have told my girls not to be deterred but they should be resolute. All the eight teams left in the competition are targeting the trophy, so it is going to be a tough fight.

In yesterday's training, the girls practiced penalty shoot-outs in case the match goes into extra time. This would be the second meeting between both sides. In 2010 in Germany, both teams played a 1-1 draw at the group stage of the competition.

Both Players and Coaches every evening after dinner take time to study their opponents matches.

Unlike Nigeria's Falconets which have reached the quarter finals five times out of six Women's World Cup participation, this will be Las Aztecas' second appearance.  Nigeria however has an edge having gone beyond the quarters in 2010, while Mexico were knocked out by Korea Republic.

Meanwhile Singaporean referee, Apbai Abirami will be at the centre for today's match and will be assisted by Cui Yongmei of China. While Lee Seulgi of Korea and Qin Liang of China are the second Assistant Referee and fourth official respectively.

Wednesday 29 August 2012

Transfer deadline day: Ten players to attract the late window-shoppers

It will take a much-improved offer – and a replacement lined up – for Liverpool's Brendan Rodgers to sell Andy Carroll now.

Thanks to Carlos Tevez and his found, lost, new-found, lost, new-new-found love for Manchester, its people and Roberto Mancini, the interminable transfer saga has been without its leading man this summer. Luka Modric has sealed his move to Real Madrid ahead of the transfer deadline, Robin van Persie left Arsenal relatively quickly by their standards and even Emmanuel Adebayor is off the Manchester City payroll at last. Still, there are plenty more agitating for a move or being pushed out of the door by their employers and here are 10 players whose futures may not be resolved until 11pm on Friday …

1. Andy Carroll, Liverpool


Brendan Rodgers was only in the door at Liverpool five minutes when he made it clear the most expensive English footballer in history did not figure in his plans and could be sold at the right price to improve his transfer budget. Two months on, all Liverpool have on the table are loan offers with a view to buy in 12 months' time from Newcastle United and West Ham United. It will take a much-improved offer – and for Liverpool to have lined up a replacement – for Rodgers to sell now.

2. Clint Dempsey, Fulham

Liverpool are under investigation by the Premier League over allegations they tapped up the Fulham forward earlier this summer. According to Martin Jol, Dempsey told all and sundry he was Anfield-bound on his return from the United States only subsequently to discover, having demolished bridges at Craven Cottage, that Liverpool do not have the money to buy him. Sunderland are reportedly interested, Everton had a look and Jol has spoken in recent days of a possible return to the fold at Fulham.

3. Michael Dawson, Tottenham

The retirement of Ledley King looked to have left Tottenham Hotspur in greater need of the central defender but, with the arrival of André Villas‑Boas as manager, Dawson's stock has plummeted at White Hart Lane. Villas‑Boas has stated he views Dawson as the club's fifth-choice centre-half and, in that respect, he should probably look for another employer. A move to Queens Park Rangers has been rejected and he awaits a possible offer from Sunderland.

4. Leandro Damião, Internacional


Spurs are not exactly blessed with established strikers, even with the permanent signing of Adebayor. Daniel Levy has made repeated attempts to redress that weakness by striking a deal with Internacional for the Brazil international, who impressed at the Olympics, but without success. The Tottenham chairman has now turned to Leandro's compatriot Willian of Shakhtar Donetsk and has a long‑standing interest in the Porto playmaker João Moutinho.

5. Joey Barton, Queens Park Rangers

Ports, as well as Twitter, have kept Queens Park Rangers' deposed captain occupied this summer. The midfielder trained with Fleetwood Town having been ostracised by Mark Hughes over the 12-match ban he received for helping Manchester City win the Premier League title last season, but it is now Marseille, not the Cod Army, where he hopes to reappear. Conjuring up images of Victoria Pendleton at the Olympics, his heart is already at the Vélodrome, apparently.

6. Daniel Agger, Liverpool

"Agger was never a target," said Roberto Mancini at Anfield on Sunday. So why include him on the list? Because Manchester City did in fact make a £20m bid for the Liverpool defender and have never completely backed away from signing the Dane. Brendan Rodgers would prefer to sell Charlie Adam, Jay Spearing and Joe Cole to fund late transfers at Anfield but has conceded the final decision, should an offer in excess of £25m arrive, may not be his.

7. John Heitinga, Everton

Across Stanley Park, the future of Everton's Dutch central defender remains uncertain and he could be used to release funds, or as part of a swap deal, by David Moyes in the final few days. Heitinga was close to joining Fenerbahce before the Turkish club made Joseph Yobo's move from Goodison Park permanent instead and he has not started the first two games despite sweeping the Player of the Year awards last season.

8. Scott Sinclair, Swansea City


Not a saga as such, just a deal that has taken Roberto Mancini longer than he would have wished but is now close to being completed. Sinclair is expected to join the champions from Michael Laudrup's swaggering Swansea City for £6.2m this week having been omitted from the Swans' 3-0 win against West Ham on Saturday. Whether that will satisfy a manager who wanted players such as Javi Martínez and Daniele De Rossi this summer is another matter.

9. Yohan Cabaye, Newcastle United

Having sold Alex Song to Barcelona and lost out to Liverpool in the race for Nuri Sahin, Arsène Wenger is looking to strengthen his central midfield options in the coming days. The Arsenal manager denied claims that he wants Newcastle's Cheik Tioté at the weekend but continues to be linked with Tioté's French team-mate. Alan Pardew stated at the end of last season that Newcastle were vulnerable to big money offers from Champions League clubs but has survived unscathed so far.

10. Michael Owen, Unattached


And finally, where will one of the finest goalscorers of his era get to show that his talk of still being in love with the game, of still having something to offer in the Premier League, is not just talk? Owen, available on a free after his release from Manchester United, has spoken to several clubs. Stoke City want him, he wants Everton, and David Moyes has other targets but is worried about the depth of his squad. This has "last-minute move to boyhood club" all over it.

Football has gone back to the back three, but why can be a mystery

A dozen teams in Europe's top five leagues had three at the back at the weekend, but it's hard to see what Roberto Mancini thinks Manchester City get out of this tactic.
Everything tactical in football is relative. There are few absolutes; everything has meaning and relevance only in relation to everything else. The question "What's the best formation?" is nonsensical because it depends on so many subsidiary questions: who are my players? How fit are they? How confident are they? How motivated are they? What are they used to doing? What result do we need from this game? Are we home or away? What is the weather like? What is the pitch like? Who are the opposition? How do they play? What shape do they play? How are their form and fitness? Even if a manager can accurately assess all of that, it may still be that after 10 minutes it becomes apparent that he needs to tweak something because of a player, whether on his side or the opponent's, suddenly having a great game or an appalling game.

Yet trends develop. Certain formations become modish. Often, as with the long-standing reliance on 4-4-2 in Britain, it's to do with how football is coached at youth level. Sometimes it's because a successful team makes a particular way of playing popular – 4-4-2, for instance, first came into vogue because of England's success at the 1966 World Cup. And sometimes formations disappear because, in the great game of scissors-paper-stone that football tactics often become, the fashionable way of playing is particularly effective against it.

Three years ago, playing three at the back had all but disappeared. It had died away in the late 50s and 60s as the W-M was superseded by a back four, and re-emerged in the mid-80s, in slightly different forms, with Carlos Bilardo's Argentina, Sepp Piontek's Denmark, Franz Beckenbauer's West Germany and Ciro Blazevic's Dinamo Zagreb. The logic was simple: a libero flanked by two man-markers who picked up the opposing centre-forwards, wing-backs to drive the opposing wide men back and, against a 4-4-2, an extra man in midfield to help control possession (it was this approach, rather than the use of a back three per se, that Johan Cruyff described as being the "death of football"). The problem came as teams stopped playing two centre-forwards. Leave a libero and two markers against one striker and that means one of the markers is redundant (and, as a marker, probably not that adept at stepping into midfield), which in turns means a side will be a player short elsewhere on the pitch.

Yet three at the back has started to make a comeback. It began in Italy, with Udinese and Napoli. At Barcelona, the first and most successful stage of Pep Guardiola's season-long charge backwards through the evolution of tactics was a back three. Then Wigan Athletic started doing it. Now Manchester City have joined in. In fact, in the top divisions of Europe's top five leagues over the weekend, 12 teams used the shape (eight in Italy, two in England, one in Spain, one in France and none in Germany). Three at the back is back.

The difficulty of playing with three at the back against a lone striker has not gone away, of course. But what has emerged over the past few seasons is that there are specific circumstances in which the benefits of the shape outweigh that negative. Most obvious, for teams that sit deep and seek only to defend, having two spare men at the back (particularly if the marking is zonal rather than man-to-man) is actually a major advantage. Perhaps because of the extraordinary control of the ball achieved by Barcelona and Spain, it now seems more acceptable for games – in the minds of the team doing defending if nothing else – to take place only in one half, for one team to sit extremely deep and look to absorb pressure with only the occasional breakaway or set play. Internazionale's performance at the Camp Nou in the second leg of the Champions League semi-final in 2010 opened a new vista of defensive possibility.

That was certainly the logic Bordeaux used away to Paris Saint-Germain on Sunday, holding them to a 0-0 draw with an extremely defensive 3-3-3-1: Carlos Henrique, Ludovic Sané and Michaël Ciani across the back with Henri Saivet and Ludovic Obraniak playing almost alongside the holder Landry Nguemo, so the shape was often a 5-3-1-1. That's three draws in a row for PSG and, as Philippe Auclair pointed out, it's not that teams have found a recipe for upsetting PSG, it's that everything that has been tried against them has unsettled them: Lorient counterattacked, Ajaccio sat back and sprang forward in controlled bursts of pressing; Bordeaux just stayed exceptionally deep.

In Italy, the attraction seems cultural. I discussed the issue in some detail here in February, but essentially there is a cultural urge to pack the centre, which is why two years ago the default formation was 4-3-1-2 with very little width. A back three offers a way of gaining attacking width (see, for example, Stephan Lichtsteiner getting forward to score Juventus's opener against Parma on Saturday) while still being able to retain the number of bodies in the centre that Italian football seems to need to feel comfortable. It was also notable at the weekend that six of the eight sides using a back three were playing each other: Fiorentina against Udinese, Juventus against Parma and Palermo against Napoli (the other two were Bologna using a defensive back three away to Chievo and Siena playing a 3-5-2 against Torino's narrow 4-4-2). It may be that there was some matching of shapes going on, teams adopting a back three to play against a back three.

The third group that may be attracted to a back three is those following the Bielsa protocol. Marcelo Bielsa's philosophy is radical – too radical, sadly, for most players, as Athletic Bilbao seem to be finding out (he may be the greatest theorist in football today, but the practicality of dealing with players who persist in being human undermines his coaching). For him defending is less about marking or reacting to opponents than about pressing to regain possession. He needs to be able to get players high up the field quickly, partly to attack an opponent in possession and partly to offer passing options when possession is regained. That is the logic Barcelona followed last season.

Quite what advantage Manchester City see in using a back three is far from clear. They played with a back three against Chelsea in the Community Shield and then again against Liverpool on Sunday. "We went to it last year a little bit to close games off, but what the manager has tried to work on all pre-season is the ability to be able to go to a back three if we want to, and be more offensive than defensive with it," the assistant manager, David Platt, explained in a piece with the Manchester Evening News after the 3-2 win over Chelsea. "The problem is that when you give the ball away you are more susceptible to a counterattack, and we did that for both goals against Chelsea.

"Robbie [Mancini] wanted to have a go at it this season, and we had discussions about it. Last year we flicked into a three at times, but we did it tactically, such as when we were 2-0 up with 20 minutes to go and someone puts a big striker on, to snuff out the space. Then it was done more from a defensive point of view in the last 15 or 20 minutes when teams were throwing everything, and the kitchen sink, at us. To add that other string to the bow, we had to have a good look at it from more of an offensive point of view, where we would have the wide centre-halves coming out and playing with the ball rather than staying narrow, and we are getting the wing-backs high."

The attacking possibilities were apparent at times in the Community Shield, most notably when the left wing-back Aleksandar Kolarov got forward to cross for Samir Nasri to score City's third. Defensively, City were rather less comfortable. Against Liverpool, the problems were more pronounced (and, of course, although City ended up winning the Community Shield relatively comfortably, they were trailing when Branislav Ivanovic was sent off).

The problem was the classic one of having three central defenders line up against a single central striker. With Raheem Sterling and Fabio Borini both threatening, neither City wing-back could get forward, and that meant Liverpool, with a midfield three plus two full-backs (although both were perhaps more cautious than they needed to be) able to push on in the absence of any City threat from wide, were able to dominate City's midfield two of Yaya Touré and Nigel de Jong plus Nasri dropping back. City in the end were extremely fortunate to take a point.

So why did City use the back three? From what Platt said it would be to make City more like Barça, to drive the game higher up the pitch.

But if that was the aim, then why start with a midfield four as functional as James Milner, De Jong, Touré and Kolarov? That's not a four geared to ball retention. But equally it seems inconceivable that City, facing a Liverpool side that had lost 3-0 to West Brom on the opening day, would have seen the need to go in with additional defensive cover – and the way they started the game certainly wasn't defensive.

The lazy analysis of Mancini is to say that he's over-cautious because he's Italian, a weary stereotyping that's so generalised as to be meaningless. Where Mancini does seem to stay true to the traditions of the Italian game, though, is in his distrust of wingers (which you suspect Adam Johnson's fitful form only intensified). His sides, both at Inter and City, have always been narrow: playing a 3-4-1-2 allows him to have players overlap, as Kolarov did against Chelsea, while, in theory, retaining solidity. The problem comes against teams with genuine width such as that Liverpool demonstrated on Sunday.

But there are wider problems. While it's always useful to have an extra tactical option, it's hard to see how it's possible for City, given personnel, to play a 3-4-3 or 3-4-1-2 without it becoming a broken team: a back three, two wing-backs, a holder (or two) and poor Yaya Touré slogging up and down to connect the back six to the front three. For one thing, that would seem to make it very difficult to fit Nasri and Silva into the same lineup, and for another that would seem to increase the reliance on Touré, which it must be one of the aims of this season to reduce. There's nothing wrong, as such, with being a broken team, but it's a reactive way of playing: surely the richest team in football, a team that could be to this generation what Real Madrid was in the 50s, should be pro-active in approach, should be looking to produce a cohesive style of football that seeks to dominate games?

Even if City's approach is puzzling, though, three at the back has re-established itself. Wigan Athletic's use of it is fascinating, particularly given how, this season, it has often morphed into a back four with Maynor Figueroa falling back in to a more orthodox left-back position at times. With Shaun Maloney dropping deep and Arouna Koné clearly operating behind Franco Di Santo, the system in Saturday's win against Southampton was a base 3-4-2-1 that at times looked like a 3-4-3 and at times like a 4-4-1-1. For Roberto Martínez, the back three seems a way of enhancing flexibility without sacrificing too much solidity: he has a back three and a front one and six players who adjust as required. In that, they're not dissimilar in approach to Napoli and, like Napoli, it's an approach that seems specific to that relatively small group of players. Wigan are unlikely to rotate too much this season.

Every generation feels as though it is living at the end of history.

It's very hard to imagine what will come next. How could there be anything new on football? How can it develop tactically? But evolution isn't necessarily forward. Perhaps there are no great tactical revolutions to come; probably our globalised, perpetually analysed world militates against them. But there is still plenty of life in old ideas, still plenty of ways to reinterpret that with which we are already familiar.