يويفا يُعلن عن الفائز بجائزة رئيس الاتحاد الأوروبي لكرة القدم 2023

أعلن الاتحاد الأوروبي لكرة القدم “يويفا” عن الفائز بجائزة الرئيس الشرفية عن عام 2023 قبل ساعات قليلة من إقامة حفل أفضل لاعب في أوروبا.

وتقام مساء اليوم، الخميس، حفل أفضل لاعب في أوروبا مع إجراء قرعة دور المجموعات من بطولة دوري أبطال أوروبا للموسم الحالي 2023/2024.

وأفاد البيان الرسمي للاتحاد الأوروبي “يويفا” بأن مهاجم منتخب ألمانيا الأسطوري، ميروسلاف كلوزه، هو من سيحصل على الجائزة مساء اليوم.

وأشاد رئيس يويفا، ألكسندر شيفيرين، بمسيرة كلوزه الكبيرة ومواقفه الواضح التي تعزز من نزاهة أحد أطراف لعبة كرة القدم وهم الحكام.

اقرأ أيضًا.. موعد قرعة دوري أبطال أوروبا 2023-2024 اليوم

وكان هناك موقف شهير للمهاجم الألماني السابق عندما سجل هدفًا أثناء وجوده مع نادي لاتسيو في مباراة أمام نابولي وتم احتسابه، لكنه توجه إلى حكم المباراة وأبلغه بأنه سجل الهدف بيده وتراجع الحكم عن قراره.

وتحدث شيفيرين عن كلوزه في تصريحات لموقع “يويفا” الرسمي، وقال: “على مدار تاريخ كرة القدم تألقت بعض الأسماء بهالة كبيرة من التميز يصعب تكرارها”.

وتابع: “أحد تلك الأسماء هو كلوزه، من بداياته إلى أن أصبح هداف كأس العالم التاريخي، لاعبًا يمثل العزيمة والمهارة ولكن أيضًا الروح الرياضية التي تتجاوز حدود الاحتراف، من خلال سلوكه وإصراره على فعل الصواب”.

واختتم: “كان دائمًا ما يشكل نموذجًا يحتذى به لجميع الرياضيين حول العالم”.

رسميًا.. لاعب جديد يرحل عن برشلونة على سبيل الإعارة

أعلن نادي برشلونة عن رحيل جديد لأحد اللاعبين ضمن صفوفه على سبيل الإعارة إلى ليفانتي المنافس في بطولة الدوري الإسباني.

وتوصل برشلونة لاتفاق مع نادي ليفانتي على انتقال ظهير الأيسر الشاب، أليكس فالي، حتى نهاية الموسم الحالي.

وكان يلعب فالي البالغ من العمر 19 عامًا ضمن صفوف شباب برشلونة في السنوات الماضية.

ويتبقى في عقد الظهير الأيسر الشاب موسمين مع برشلونة، أي حتى 30 يونيو 2025، لكنه اتفق على الرحيل من النادي الكتالوني.

اقرأ أيضًا | تكرهونني آلان.. رافينها يوجه رسالة لجماهير برشلونة بعد مباراة خيتافي

الراحلون عن برشلونة في الميركاتو الصيفي الحالي

سيرجيو بوسكيتس – انتقل إلى إنتر ميامي.

جوردي ألبا- انتقل إلى إنتر ميامي.

صامويل أومتيتي – انتقل إلى ليل.

أليكس كويادو – انتقل إلى ريال بيتيس.

نيكو جونزاليس – انتقل إلى بورتو.

فرانك كيسيه – انتقل إلى أهلي جدة.

عثمان ديمبلي – انتقل إلى باريس سان جيرمان.

موعد مباراة ليفربول وجروثر فيورث الودية اليوم

يلتقي فريق ليفربول الإنجليزي، ظهر اليوم الإثنين، مع خصمه جروثر فيورث الألماني في مباراة ودية.

ويستضيف ملعب “رونهوف سبورت بارك” مباراة الفريقين الودية، في إطار الاستعدادات للموسم الجديد.

كان ليفربول قد خاض مباراته الودية الأولى ضد كارلسروه، حيث فاز الريدز بأربعة أهداف مقابل هدفين، وصنع النجم المصري محمد صلاح الهدف الأول.

ويخوض ليفربول عدة مباريات ودية أخرى، وذلك ضد كل من ليستر سيتي، بايرن ميونخ ودارمشتات.

ويبدأ ليفربول مشواره في الموسم الجديد من الدوري الإنجليزي بمواجهة قوية ضد تشيلسي، يوم 13 أغسطس القادم. موعد مباراة ليفربول وجروثر فيورث

ستنطلق المباراة في تمام الساعة الثانية ظهرًا بتوقيت القاهرة والسعودية.

ويمكنكم مطالعة مواعيد ونتائج جميع المباريات لحظة بلحظة عبر مركز المباريات من هنا.

Chambers highlights demand on resources

It is, perhaps, a sign of the times that, just as the County Championship season should be reaching a peak, the demands on its resources are at their greatest. Maurice Chambers’ loan signing demonstrated so.

George Dobell at Edgbaston28-Aug-2013
ScorecardMaurice Chambers made an immediate impact for Warwickshire•Getty Images

It is, perhaps, a sign of the times that, just as the County Championship season should be reaching a peak, the demands on its resources are at their greatest.Over the next couple of weeks, teams vying for the title or fighting to avoid promotion and relegation will lose players to England, Ireland and Scotland. Other players will be rested after the rigours of international campaigns. Few of the Ashes-winning squad will make another appearance in the county game this year.All of that is understandable. The England team pays the bills for the county and the recreational game and it is entirely reasonable to demand the players are used and rested as the team management see fit. Equally, it is quite appropriate for Ireland and Scotland to call upon their best players as they seek to progress in world cricket.But there is a downside. The endless withdrawals – be they for Lions game or international fixtures – that stretch through the season, not only threaten the integrity of the premier domestic competition, but threaten to drive a wedge between the international game and the county game. And if that happens, the difficulty of county players taking the step-up to international cricket will grow.There was a time such withdrawals were masked by the presence of experienced, older players or strong overseas or Kolpak registrations. But now, with young player incentives and tougher work permit criteria, that depth has been diminished.With such factors combining, the dilution of the county game is both obvious and dangerous. It may well, in time, return to bite the England set-up. You could construct a strong argument to suggest it was one of the key mistakes made in Australian cricket a decade or so ago.Certainly Warwickshire are a shadow of the team that won the County Championship title last season. As well as having lost seven players to various England squads at some stage of the season (Ian Bell, Jonathan Trott, Chris Woakes, Varun Chopra, Boyd Rankin, Chris Wright and Keith Barker, four of which are absent from this match) they have lost Freddie Coleman (to Scotland) and William Porterfield (to Ireland).In this game, they are further weakened by injuries. Their captain, Jim Troughton (back) is absent, two of their leading allrounders, Rikki Clarke (ankle) and Woakes (who hurt his thigh batting for England) are absent, several seamers – such as Oliver Hannon-Dalby, Wright, Richard Jones, who has joined on-loan despite carrying an injury – are absent as are two spinners in Chris Metters (who has been released due to injury) and Paul Best. As a result, their attack in this game consisted of a 20-year-old – Tom Milns – and two other seamers – Recordo Gordon and Maurice Chambers – with two first-class wickets between them this season.But such setbacks offer opportunity. In this game, Warwickshire drafted in Chambers, unwanted at Essex, on loan in a deal that stretches to the end of the season. Chambers, a 25-year-old longer on talent than achievement at this stage of his career, bowled with impressive pace and decent skill and discipline to suggest he may be able to persuade another county to invest in him. He will hope to follow the path of former team-mate Wright, who benefitted considerably from leaving Chelmsford and working with former Essex bowling coach Graeme Welch, who is now at Edgbaston. At present, Warwickshire are interested more in finding a solution to their availability crisis and have looked little further ahead than that.But they have opened talks with unsettled Somerset keeper, Jos Buttler. They are one of three clubs to have made an approach for the player and are likely to have offered him the chance to keep in all white-ball cricket if he joins. The difficult economic times are likely to result in far less movement in this year’s close-season than has been the case in the previous two or three years.It appeared for the first half of the day that Sussex would take full advantage of Warwickshire’s weaknesses and winning an important toss on a flat, dry pitch. Though they played and missed a few times, Chris Nash and Luke Wells put together a composed opening stand of 121 taking full toll of anything straying in line or length and of an unusually short boundary. Indeed, with Warwickshire struggling for pitches after a busy season, they were required to gain special dispensation for the 49-yard boundary on the Eric Hollies Stand side of the ground. Wells, tall and upright, was strong on the drive, while Nash, dropped by Jeetan Patel on 24 at slip off Gordon, cut particularly well.But Sussex squandered much of their hard work. After Nash played slightly across one, Sussex subsequently lost 6 for 39 runs in 21 overs as their middle-order surrendered their wickets in an array of soft, impatient strokes.If Michael Yardy, undone by late swing, was the victim of a fine delivery, Wells, caught at mid-on as he mis-timed a flick to the leg side, and Rory Hamilton-Brown, caught at short mid-on at he skipped down the wicket and attempted to drive, had less excuse. Ed Joyce fell to a loose drive at a wide ball, Matt Machan top-edged a pull and Ben Brown, caught on the crease, looked as if he were beaten for pace.At that stage it appeared Sussex, who are still outside contenders for the Championship title, might struggle to gain even a couple of batting bonus points. But Chris Jordan, perhaps the signing of the season, and Will Beer, demonstrated the patience and determination that so many of their top-order colleagues failed to exhibit, in adding 83 unbeaten runs for the eighth wicket before stumps. It was Jordan’s second half-century of the campaign, to complement his 51 Championship wickets.The Warwickshire attack, green as it was, were impressively tight and, in Chambers and Gordon, had bowlers of considerable pace. The pitch may well provide help to spin later in the game, presenting quite an opportunity for Will Beer and, perhaps, highlighting the absence of Monty Panesar for Sussex.

Durham hand back India, Australia fixtures

Durham have given up the chance to host India and Australia during the 2014 and 2015 seasons

Andrew McGlashan03-May-2013Durham have given up the chance to host India and Australia during the 2014 and 2015 seasons in the latest sign that the newer international venues in England and Wales are finding it a struggle to balance the books in what are costly ventures.They have handed back a Twenty20, which had been allocated to them against India in 2014, and an ODI against Australia for the following year. These matches will now be put back into a tender process for other grounds to host.When Durham initially bid for matches the package they earned included matches against Sri Lanka (2014) and New Zealand (2015) which the club will retain. They were then offered the India and Australia contests at a fixed sum which they accepted but have now decided are not in their best interests.”They are attractive fixtures, but how lucrative they are is another matter,” David Harker, Durham’s group chief executive said. “We decided to be cautious over what we could expect to sell to the public when the matches were reasonably close together.”The club were given an indication of potential problems when last year’s Twenty20 against South Africa did not sell out. Finances are currently stretched at the club and they have not been able to afford an overseas player this season.Durham will host their first Ashes Test later this year and retain the Test they are due to host against Sri Lanka in 2016. “We have a very good track record in tickets,” Harker said, “and are confident in selling the matches we retain.”David Collier, the ECB chief executive, said: “Today’s announcement is in line with Durham’s long-term business plan and means that the club will host an optimal number of major matches over the four year period whilst allowing the North East region to continue to benefit from regular international cricket.”In March this year, Durham’s Labour-controlled county council, agreed in principle to invest £2.8m in the club to help it through straitened financial times. The decision came against a backdrop of job losses and planned cutbacks amounting to £200m by 2018.The council justified the investment on the basis of an independent impact report which concluded Durham would contribute almost £20m to the local economy this year, and a further £40m over the next three years.It was also incumbent upon Durham, however, to show that unnecessary risks were not being taken with taxpayers’ money.Durham are not the first county to find hosting international cricket financially difficult. Yorkshire opted not to bid for 2013 and 2015 Ashes Tests because of the cost, while Glamorgan were plunged into financial problems after becoming a Test venue when the 2011 match against Sri Lanka was badly hit by weather.Cardiff had been due to host the first Test against West Indies last summer, but it was put back out to tender after Glamorgan said they would be late paying their staging fees for the Sri Lanka match although they have been awarded a 2015 Ashes Test.When the bidding process for international matches was first introduced it was done on a blind basis which often forced counties into levels of financial commitment they could not afford. The latest allocations, which took place last year, had set packages that counties could bid for ranging from £200,000 to £12 million and they were then judged against various criteria.Additional information was added to this story on May 4

Finn shines as England batsmen draw game

Steven Finn, excelling in a new role as nightwatchman, struck a maiden Test and first-class fifty to make a huge contribution towards England saving the first Test in Dunedin and saving face in the bargain

The Report by David Hopps09-Mar-2013
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsSteven Finn reached the first fifty of his first-class career•Associated PressSteven Finn, excelling in a new role as nightwatchman, struck a maiden first-class fifty to make a huge contribution towards England saving the first Test in Dunedin and saving face in the bargain. As Finn walked back to the dressing room with 56 to his name, and perhaps his first experience of pad burn after not far short of five hours at the crease, he was in danger of being rewarded with a full-time appointment to go alongside the gratitude of his team mates.Finn’s marathon resistance stretched until the second over after tea, at which point he succumbed to an ambitious slog-sweep at the left-arm spinner Bruce Martin. Spared Finn’s sudden appreciation of the art of batsmanship, New Zealand might well have triumphed. As their bowlers strove gamely for victory on a docile surface, they will also have rued the rain and bad light which prevented play on the opening day.England lost Nick Compton on a slow final morning, with Jonathan Trott and Kevin Pietersen following in the afternoon. Ian Bell’s senseless run-out of Joe Root, thrown out second ball for nought by a direct hit from cover, kept New Zealand’s interest flickering enough in the final session to take a third new ball, but by then England’s lead was 117 with four wickets and 25 overs remaining. Bell wisely saw the job through until, with the advantage stretched to 128, the match was called off at the final drinks break.Pietersen’s out-of-sorts innings immediately invited conjecture that he might be protecting an injury and, to add to the intrigue, he watched the last rites in front of the dressing room with a large black X on his right knee. To offer such target practice was especially dangerous in New Zealand, who can invent a sport for most things and who even now are probably drawing up the rules for world championship knee archery.Pietersen, Trott and Compton fell to the unflagging left-arm swing of Neil Wagner, who will need every hour of his three days off before the second Test begins in Wellington, but New Zealand never quite got on a roll.Finn could take much credit for that. The wagon wheel, which might one day be framed in his downstairs toilet, showed five boundaries scooting off in the general direction of third man, but he generally made good use of his long reach on a pitch which slumbered to the last. James Anderson, his predecessor, has taken a battering in some of the most threatening situations Test cricket can offer, but Finn got a cushier job and relaxed into it with aplomb. Wagner did test him against the short ball eventually, but only at around 130kph and only when his eye was in.He reached his 50 from 142 balls, angling Wagner through gully, but then decided to take stock, scratched a new guard and did not score for the next hour and a quarter. His next single brought ironic applause from the Barmy Army and a blast from Billy Cooper’s trumpet. It was just as well that he did dig in because Trott fell for 52 in the same over, Wagner taking a good leaping catch in his follow-through from a leading edge, and Pietersen soon followed to an inside edge from a nondescript shot.Perhaps Pietersen was just having one of those days. Just as he is intoxicated by the big occasion, he can run on empty if a game feels flat. If he guested in a club knockabout, there is every chance that somebody would get him out for nought, just as there would be every chance that Finn would get a hundred.Finn escaped a couple of tough chances; in the first over of the day edging very low towards Dean Brownlie at third slip and later, on 37, sending an edge between the slips off Kane Williamson. The middle of the bat often proved elusive, especially when compared to the timing shown by Trott, but his stay was testament to the work England’s bowlers put in their batting.England began the day still 59 runs behind and a couple of early wickets, with the second new ball still new, would have opened the door for New Zealand. However, it took them more than an hour to make the breakthrough which came when Wagner swung one back into Compton’s pads who, for a moment, considered the review before deciding, wisely as replays showed, that it would have been a waste.Compton’s seven-hour innings – 117 from 310 balls – was a study in concentration and determination. He was given a warm ovation as he walked off, his father Richard leading the applause from the crowd, and was safe in knowledge that his Test berth is now secure.Trott’s half-century was effortless, a punchy straight drive off Martin emphasising that there would be no last-day encouragement for the spinner, who instead continued to toil on a dead surface.England made only 53 from 28 overs between lunch and tea and Finn was responsible for 14 of them. But the overs were ticking down and for England, that was all that mattered.

Southee happy to hunt wickets with Boult

Unlike Sri Lanka’s attack, New Zealand’s has supported their spearhead effectively at the P Sara Oval. Their spearhead, Tim Southee, has claimed another heavy haul in Colombo, after his four wickets in the first innings in Galle, and he has attributed this to the others in the attack. Southee had removed Tillakaratne Dilshan and Kumar Sangakkara on the second evening, and he dismissed Angelo Mathews and Tharanga Paranavitana the next day, claiming figures of 4 for 51.Southee said left-arm seamer Trent Boult had been especially helpful to his success in Sri Lanka. The bowlers not only complement each other by testing batsmen against different angles of attack, but also specialise in swinging the ball in opposite directions. Southee largely takes the ball away from the right-hand batsmen, while Boult moves it in.”Trent Boult has got a massive role to play in the wickets I’ve taken,” Southee said. “He’s helping out by putting pressure at the other end and I am sure his turn to take wickets is just around the corner. It’s tough conditions at the moment, but I’m going through a period where it’s coming out nicely.”New Zealand were only able to remove three batsmen in almost 70 overs on the third day, and despite having worked their way to the start of Sri Lanka’s tail, they were unable to dismiss the hosts for less than the follow-on mark. Thilan Samaraweera and Suraj Randiv resisted with an unbeaten stand of 97 towards the end of the day, but Southee’s efforts leave his team still in the hunt for a win as, having lost six wickets, Sri Lanka still trail by 187 runs.Southee said wickets in the first hour of the fourth day would be crucial to New Zealand’s hopes of levelling the series, particularly as the pitch offers little for bowlers once the ball gets old. New Zealand will begin the day with a ball that is only 4.2 overs old.”Massive hour tomorrow morning, if we can pick up a couple of wickets and run through them then who knows,” Southee said. “It’s definitely a new-ball wicket, and if you can grab a couple with the new ball, then it makes it easier to make inroads into the batting line-up. It’s not as easy when the ball gets older, and that can affect the team.”Southee said New Zealand weren’t displeased with their day’s work, given the number of good batsmen in Sri Lanka’s ranks. “It’s a tough batting line-up and there are some world class players here who have scored a lot of runs. They keep coming one after another and it just shows their great batting depth is. It would have been nice to have a couple of more [wickets] today to really get into their tail. Hopefully in the second innings, the spinners come to play.”

Supervisor appointed for Deccan Chargers auction

The Bombay High Court has appointed a court officer, MD Narvekar, to supervise the auction of IPL team Deccan Chargers

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Sep-2012The Bombay High Court has appointed a court officer, MD Narvekar, to supervise the auction of the IPL franchise Deccan Chargers on September 13 in Chennai. The franchise is up for sale after its owner Deccan Chronicle Holdings Limited (DCHL) suffered financial losses.The ruling was made after Tata Capital Financial Services, to which DCHL owed Rs.101 crore ($18 million approximately), had filed a petition with the High Court to protect its interests in view of the dues. The High Court also stated the sale proceeds from the auction would have to be deposited in ICICI bank and that the money once deposited couldn’t be disbursed or appropriated by the company without its permission. Five per cent of the winning amount would also have to be paid to the BCCI.The winning bid, worth between Rs. 800 crore ($144 million approximately) to Rs.1000 crore ($180 million approximately), could go towards paying back the debt.A few companies have shown interest in the Hyderabad-based team, with Indian conglomerate, the Videocon group, being one of them.

Com gol contra bizarro, Atlético-GO derrota Oeste pela Série B

MatériaMais Notícias

Oeste e Atlético-GO fizeram uma das partidas que abriram a 26ª rodada do Campeonato Brasileiro da Série B nesta sexta-feira. Na Arena Barueri, a equipe de Goiânia venceu a partida por 2 a 1, com um gol contra de Daniel Borges e um de Renato Kayser, e chegou ao G-4 da competição.

O primeiro tempo foi bastante agitado, com ambas as equipes criando chances reais de gol. O placar foi aberto aos 31 minutos em lance no mínimo peculiar: o lateral Daniel Borges recuou a bola da região da intermediária, ela bateu em um ‘montinho artilheiro’, saiu da direção do goleiro Tadeu e entrou no gol, abrindo o placar para o Atlético-GO.

O Dragão, porém, nem teve tempo de comemorar, já que, dois minutos depois, os donos da casa empataram: Betinho tocou para Marcinho que, com espaço, avançou e chutou de muito longe, acertando uma bomba no ângulo para empatar o duelo para o Oeste.

A etapa complementar manteve o mesmo ritmo dos primeiros 45 minutos. Logo no início, Pedro Bambú chutou de longe, o goleiro Tadeu deu rebote e Renato Kayser, mostrando oportunismo, apenas teve o trabalho de empurrar para o fundo das redes e dar números finais ao placar.

Com a vitória, o Atlético-GO retornou ao G-4 da Série B, alcançando o terceiro lugar, com 43 pontos. Na próxima rodada, o Dragão fará um clássico contra o Goiás no Estádio Olímpico. O Oeste, por sua vez, permanece na 11ª posição com 34 pontos e terá um compromisso contra a Ponte Preta na própria Arena Barueri no próximo sábado.

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