Saturday, 4 November 2017

Patrice Evra: Marseille suspend defender after kicking fan during warm-up (bbc.com)

Marseille have suspended Patrice Evra after he kicked a fan in the head before his side's Europa League defeat at Vitoria Guimaraes on Thursday.
Footage showed the 36-year-old former Manchester United defender aiming an acrobatic kick at a supporter at the side of the pitch during the warm-up.
Evra will be interviewed before any disciplinary action is decided.
A Marseille statement also condemned the "unacceptable behaviour" by a "handful of provocateurs".
European football's governing body Uefa charged France international Evra with violent conduct earlier on Friday, with the full-back suspended for "at least one game".
French newspaper L'Equipe reported that Marseille supporters had been jeering Evra for about half an hour while the players prepared for the game, which the Ligue 1 side lost 1-0.
The player had gone over to the fans to talk to them - but the situation escalated.
Evra, who was named as a substitute, was dismissed before kick-off, and Marseille began the game with 11 players.
"As a professional and experienced player, Patrice Evra could not respond in such an inappropriate way," the statement added.
"In addition, the first results of the internal investigation conducted by the club reveal unacceptable behaviour on the part of a handful of provocateurs who uttered particularly serious hateful attacks against the player, even though the latter and his team-mates warmed up for an important game."
His former Manchester United and France team-mate, Mikael Silvestre, told BBC Sport Evra had "no future" at Marseille, but that the incident would not be the end of his career.

How it happened

  • Named as a substitute, Evra begins warming up with his team-mates before the game
  • The former Manchester United left-back appears to be the target of songs and abuse from the crowd for about 30 minutes
  • Evra approaches the Marseille fans, about 500 of whom had travelled to Guimaraes
  • He volleys a ball towards the crowd, but some of his team-mates come over and look to calm the defender down
  • Evra climbs over the billboards and looks to confront spectators who have come towards the front of the stand
  • The 36-year-old returns to the pitch, but a group of fans approach the billboards and Evra appears to kick one of them
  • Evra is led away to the substitutes' bench, but is sent off by the referee and watches the game from the stands

Friday, 3 November 2017

UEL : ARSENAL sekadar seri telor sahaja

We've qualified from Group H... ...but it's not quite the result we were looking for tonight

Wenger - It was a fair result
Read more at https://www.arsenal.com/news/wenger-it-was-fair-result#h7Sijd25SOAICGrS.99

it was fair result
wenger-

Wednesday, 1 November 2017

Dele Alli double rocks Real Madrid for historic Tottenham victory

Dele Alli, right, celebrates giving Tottenham the lead against Real Madrid with Kieran Trippier, who supplied the cross for the goal. Photograph: Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images

To put this result in perspective, it had been five years since Real Madrid last experienced what it was like to lose a Champions League group game. They had won this competition three times out of the past four seasons and, though it didn’t particularly feel that way here, don’t discount the possibility of that famous old pot returning to the Bernabéu again next May. Not yet, anyway.
However, this was the night when the most successful club side in Europe found out the hard way why Mauricio Pochettino and his players have attracted so much acclaim over the past few years. It was the night Dele Alli nutmegged Sergio Ramos and, by the end, Cristiano Ronaldo could be seen dragging his fingers down his cheeks in frustration. For Spurs, it went better than they could possibly have dared to hope and, without exaggeration, sparked the sort of euphoria that should embolden them now to think they can actually win this competition. 
Yes, let’s not get carried away, but what other conclusion is there when they have taken apart the 12-times winners? “It wasn’t that we played badly,” Zinedine Zidane, Madrid’s manager, said. “We just came up against the better team.”
Dele Alli of Tottenham Hotspur scores his side’s second goal via a big deflection off Sergio Ramos, left. Photograph: Michael Zemanek/BPI/Re/Shutterstock

Dele Alli and his Spurs team-mates applaud the fans after a famous victory. Photograph: Tom Jenkins for the Guardian
 Real Madrid’s Cristiano Ronaldo pulls a goal back for the visitors, via Eric Dier’s left boot. Photograph: Adrian Dennis/AFP/Getty Images
Christian Eriksen clips in Spurs’ third. Photograph: Dylan Martinez/Reuters
Eriksen celebrates. Photograph: Tom Jenkins for the Guardian