Tag Archives: draw

Conte blasts ‘selfish’ Tottenham after draw at Southampton – ESPN

  1. Conte blasts ‘selfish’ Tottenham after draw at Southampton ESPN
  2. Antonio Conte blasts his own players after draw against Southampton | Premier League | NBC Sports NBC Sports
  3. ‘I see selfish players’ – Antonio Conte rips own Tottenham squad in incredible rant after Spurs bottle another two-goal lead Goal.com
  4. Antonio Conte launches explosive broadside at ‘selfish’ Tottenham players and owner Daniel Levy Eurosport COM
  5. What did Antonio Conte say about Tottenham? Spurs manager rips into players, club culture after Southampton draw Sporting News
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Mohamed Salah made feelings clear after Liverpool’s disappointing draw at Crystal Palace – The Mirror

  1. Mohamed Salah made feelings clear after Liverpool’s disappointing draw at Crystal Palace The Mirror
  2. Crystal Palace 0-0 Liverpool: Jurgen Klopp’s Reds held on the road by the Eagles Eurosport COM
  3. Crystal Palace vs. Liverpool – Football Match Report – February 25, 2023 ESPN
  4. Four things spotted at Crystal Palace as triple Liverpool transfer need becomes painfully clear Liverpool.com
  5. Time’s up for Naby Keita! Liverpool winners & losers as Guinean offers nothing while Jordan Henderson looks frazzled against Crystal Palace Goal.com
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Jada Pinkett Smith Revealed How It Really Felt To Have The Oscars Slap Draw Attention To Her Alopecia – BuzzFeed

  1. Jada Pinkett Smith Revealed How It Really Felt To Have The Oscars Slap Draw Attention To Her Alopecia BuzzFeed
  2. Jada Pinkett Smith says having alopecia forced her to ‘see the beauty of myself beyond my aesthetics’ Yahoo Life
  3. Jada Pinkett Smith Reflects on Alopecia Journey Since Oscars Slap: “I Had to Really Dig Deep” Hollywood Reporter
  4. BHM_2023_front.jpg | Classical | wfmz.com 69News WFMZ-TV
  5. Everything Jada Pinkett Smith Has Said About Her Alopecia Condition, Hair Loss Through the Years Yahoo Entertainment
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Rep. George Santos’s staff hires draw scrutiny on Capitol Hill

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Hiring season is winding down on Capitol Hill. The flurry of forwarded résumés is fading, staff positions in House and Senate offices are nearly filled, and the mostly serious business of governing is taking hold.

The biennial job carousel, a parlor game that plays out in the Capitol’s bustling hallways, hyperdrive text chains and chatty cafeteria lines, is always a closely watched exercise by staffers. Who’s up, who’s down? Who’s in, who’s out?

But perhaps no staff hirings this year are being more closely watched than those of Rep. George Santos, the New York Republican who since his election in November has been buried in an avalanche of revelations that point to him not being the person he once claimed to be. He did not, for instance, graduate from Baruch College (or play volleyball for its team). Nor did he work for Goldman Sachs or Citigroup. And his grandparents did not flee Jewish persecution in Ukraine.

There are also questions about where his money came from, how he funded his campaign, and his work for a Florida company that the SEC is suing and has alleged is a “classic Ponzi scheme.”

Even as he has had to answer — or not answer — those myriad questions, Santos has been assembling a staff for his Washington and district offices, the No. 1 priority for first-term representatives. That means interviewing job candidates, vetting résumés, running background checks and finding people willing to work for a member who appears allergic to truth-telling.

Taking a job for Santos could prove dicey for staffers. In conversations with more than a dozen former and current Republican and Democratic lawmakers and staff members, many wondered if those who go to work for Santos, particularly higher-level staffers, would ever be able to find another congressional office that would hire them.

See the evolution of lies in George Santos’s campaign biography

So far, there is public information available for just five positions that Santos has filled, including chief of staff and communications director, according to LegiStorm, which tracks and posts congressional hiring. The initial makeup of Santos’s staff seems to lack the deep Capitol Hill experience that new members typically seek to help them get off to an effective start and quickly adjust to the rhythms and demands of Congress.

Santos hired Charles Lovett as his chief of staff. Lovett served as Santos’s campaign manager and worked for six months as a field organizer for the Ohio Republican Party, according to LegiStorm. He also served as political director for Ohio Republican Josh Mandel’s unsuccessful primary bid for Senate. He has not worked on the Hill previously. Viswanag Burra, Santos’s operations director, spent less than a year as special operations director for Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) and recently worked as executive secretary for the New York Young Republican Club.

His communications director, Naysa Woomer, appears to have the most Hill experience. She worked for three Republican members between 2014 and 2018 before moving to Massachusetts to be the communications director for the state Republican Party and then as a communications specialist for the state Department of Revenue.

Rafaello Carone, Santos’s senior legislative assistant, worked for three GOP members, but his stints were short in each office. He spent six months as social media manager for Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R-N.C.), two months as deputy communications director for Rep. Greg Steube (R-Fla.) and a month as press secretary for Rep. Paul A. Gosar (R-Ariz.), according to LegiStorm. He also ran a consulting firm that mostly worked for long-shot Republican congressional candidates. Gabrielle Lipsky, who served as Santos’s campaign press secretary, will be his press secretary and office manager. She does not have Hill experience.

A Santos staff member familiar with the hiring process said that the LegiStorm site is not up to date and that the congressman’s D.C. and N.Y. offices are “fully staffed.” Each member of Congress is provided with 18 full-time staff positions to spread across their offices as they see fit.

‘I felt like we were in “Goodfellas’’’: How George Santos wooed investors for alleged Ponzi scheme

Woomer, Santos’s communications director, said Thursday that the congressman would not be available for an interview for this story. His staff, she said, “all took this on because we have interest in serving the constituents of the 3rd Congressional District.” Santos’s staff members did not respond to emails seeking comment.

Fully staffed or not, Santos’s offices are already having to respond to the onslaught of requests from constituents and others that typically fill the inboxes of Congress members.

Jimmy Keady, a Virginia-based GOP strategist whose career as a Hill staffer included stints in senior staff for congressional freshmen, said it’s “imperative” that a freshman member of Congress surround themselves with Hill veterans who know what they’re doing — otherwise, they may find themselves underwater pretty quick.

“Capitol Hill is not a place where you can just, you know, walk in and understand what to do,” Keady said. “There are a lot of rules, there’s a lot of regulations, and there’s a lot of pitfalls that a lot of these freshmen members make because they don’t have staff around them who are experienced.”

If a new member isn’t focused on constituent services right away, Keady said, the voters are going to feel it.

“If you have members deciding, ‘I’m going to gut my constituents services, and I’m not going to have a [legislative director] — I’m just going to have six people on comms staff,’ you know, that’s fine — that might get you on Fox News,” Keady said. “But that constituent that has been waiting for their veteran benefits for six months, they’re not going to get service, because that is also a job of a member of Congress.”

At the top of the to-do list for a new member is leasing a district office or offices — and outfitting them with everything including internet, phones, desks, chairs and paper clips. And from Day One, they need to start responding to the unceasing inquiries from constituents needing help with Social Security checks, veterans’ issues and passports. And that’s all while the new member gets acquainted with the politics of Washington and the rules, official and otherwise, of Congress.

Jeff Jackson, a freshman Democrat from North Carolina, has been documenting his first weeks in Congress on Instagram with posts on everything including how new representatives choose their office space and explainers about financial disclosures. He said hiring people with experience on the Hill and in his district was a priority.

“Having people come in who are well-versed in how to do this gives me a lot of comfort,” Jackson said in an interview. “I’ve only been here a few weeks, but what I’ve learned is that there is a tidal wave of work hitting our office every day and it takes a whole team to stay afloat. If you’re just one man on a surfboard, you’re going to get crushed.”

It’s hard enough to get offices up and running in normal circumstances, but Santos is under intense media scrutiny. And he’s facing calls to give up his seat not just from Democrats, but from Republicans as well, including six GOP representatives from New York.

This month, Rep. Anthony D’Esposito, a Republican freshman whose district borders Santos’s, said Santos told “outright lies” and called on him to resign. And Nassau County Republican Committee Chairman Joseph G. Cairo Jr. said Santos no longer had the support of Republicans in the 3rd Congressional District. “George Santos’s campaign last year was a campaign of deceit, lies and fabrication,” Cairo said during a Jan. 11 news conference. “He’s disgraced the House of Representatives, and we do not consider him one of our congresspeople.”

The growing GOP calls for George Santos to resign, by the numbers

Santos has said he will not resign his seat. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), who needs Santos’s vote as he clings to a narrow majority in the House, has also rejected calls for Santos to resign and said this month that Santos was legally elected and seated without objection. House Republicans have assigned Santos to the House Small Business and the Science, Space and Technology committees.

Freshman Rep. Chuck Edwards (R-N.C.) is all too familiar with what can happen if members allow constituent services to be neglected: He is cleaning up the mess left behind by his predecessor, Madison Cawthorn.

Cawthorn, who took office in 2021 at age 25 and exited in scandal, prioritized publicity as a lawmaker. “I have built my staff around comms rather than legislation,” he wrote in an email to Republican colleagues published by Time magazine in 2021.

After losing in a GOP primary to Edwards, Cawthorn largely went MIA in some of his duties as a congressman. By October, calls to his district office were met by a voice mail noting that he was winding down the office and not accepting any new casework — even though outgoing members of Congress typically keep the office open and transfer all the files to the incoming member so that there is no interruption of service to residents in their district.

Instead, Edwards said Cawthorn did not leave him anything — “no files, no data, no anything.”

“We had to start from scratch,” he said.

He tried to get a head start while serving out the remainder of his term in the North Carolina Senate, encouraging constituents who had met with silence from Cawthorn to contact his state office. He recently heard from students who thought Cawthorn was going to nominate them to military academies and were getting anxious as the deadline approached.

In the state Senate, he said, “our office mantra was first in constituent services. We’ve already made that the office mantra of this congressional office.”

Former surgeon general faces his wife’s cancer — and the ‘Trump Effect’

For staffers who have opted to work for Santos, a future on Capitol Hill could prove difficult to negotiate, said George McElwee, who served as chief of staff for former GOP congressman Charlie Dent from Pennsylvania and was also president of the House Chiefs of Staff Association.

“Particularly for staff in those senior roles, people are going to wonder why they’re there. Why are they continuing on?” said McElwee, who is now a lobbyist at a bipartisan firm he co-founded in Washington. “And it’s probably going to hurt them at some point in their job prospects.”

McElwee doesn’t expect Santos to be able to hang on to staffers who hope to have careers on the Hill.

“A lot of the folks in his office probably have an eye to the door and they’re trying to find the route to get out,” he said. “They know it’s not a stable environment for them in their political future.”

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Protests in Stockholm, including Koran-burning, draw strong condemnation from Turkey

STOCKHOLM, Jan 21 (Reuters) – Protests in Stockholm on Saturday against Turkey and Sweden’s bid to join NATO, including the burning of a copy of the Koran, sharply heightened tensions with Turkey at a time when the Nordic country needs Ankara’s backing to gain entry to the military alliance.

“We condemn in the strongest possible terms the vile attack on our holy book … Permitting this anti-Islam act, which targets Muslims and insults our sacred values, under the guise of freedom of expression is completely unacceptable,” the Turkish Foreign Ministry said.

Its statement was issued after an anti-immigrant politician from the far-right fringe burned a copy of the Koran near the Turkish Embassy. The Turkish ministry urged Sweden to take necessary actions against the perpetrators and invited all countries to take concrete steps against Islamophobia.

A separate protest took place in the city supporting Kurds and against Sweden’s bid to join NATO. A group of pro-Turkish demonstrators also held a rally outside the embassy. All three events had police permits.

Swedish Foreign Minister Tobias Billstrom said that Islamophobic provocations were appalling.

“Sweden has a far-reaching freedom of expression, but it does not imply that the Swedish Government, or myself, support the opinions expressed,” Billstrom said on Twitter.

The Koran-burning was carried out by Rasmus Paludan, leader of Danish far-right political party Hard Line. Paludan, who also has Swedish citizenship, has held a number of demonstrations in the past where he has burned the Koran.

Paludan could not immediately be reached by email for a comment. In the permit he obtained from police, it says his protest was held against Islam and what it called Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan’s attempt to influence freedom of expression in Sweden.

Several Arab countries including Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Kuwait denounced the Koran-burning. “Saudi Arabia calls for spreading the values of dialogue, tolerance, and coexistence, and rejects hatred and extremism,” the Saudi Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

Sweden and Finland applied last year to join NATO following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine but all 30 member states must approve their bids. Turkey has said Sweden in particular must first take a clearer stance against what it sees as terrorists, mainly Kurdish militants and a group it blames for a 2016 coup attempt.

At the demonstration to protest Sweden’s NATO bid and to show support for Kurds, speakers stood in front of a large red banner reading “We are all PKK”, referring to the Kurdistan Workers Party that is outlawed in Turkey, Sweden, and the United States among other countries, and addressed several hundred pro-Kurdish and left-wing supporters.

“We will continue our opposition to the Swedish NATO application,” Thomas Pettersson, spokesperson for Alliance Against NATO and one of organizers of the demonstration, told Reuters.

Police said the situation was calm at all three demonstrations.

DEFENCE MINISTER’S VISIT CANCELLED

Earlier on Saturday, Turkey said that due to lack of measures to restrict protests, it had cancelled a planned visit to Ankara by the Swedish defence minister.

“At this point, the visit of Swedish Defense Minister Pal Jonson to Turkey on January 27 has become meaningless. So we cancelled the visit,” Defence Minister Hulusi Akar said.

Jonson said separately that he and Akar had met on Friday during a gathering of Western allies in Germany and had decided to postpone the planned meeting.

Akar said he had discussed with Erdogan the lack of measures to restrict protests in Sweden against Turkey and had conveyed Ankara’s reaction to Jonson on the sidelines of a meeting of the Ukraine Defence Contact Group.

“It is unacceptable not to make a move or react to these (protests). The necessary things needed to be done, measures should have been taken,” Akar said, according to a statement by Turkish Defence Ministry.

Turkey’s Foreign Ministry had already summoned Sweden’s ambassador on Friday over the planned protests.

Finland and Sweden signed a three-way agreement with Turkey in 2022 aimed at overcoming Ankara’s objections to their membership of NATO. Sweden says it has fulfilled its part of the memorandum but Turkey is demanding more, including extradition of 130 people it deems to be terrorists.

(This story has been corrected to remove the erroneous reference to Morocco in the ninth paragraph)

Reporting by Omer Berberoglu in Istanbul and Niklas Pollard and Simon Johnson in Stockholm
Additional reporting by Moaz Abd-Alaziz in Cairo
Writing by Ezgi Erkoyun and Niklas Pollard
Editing by Toby Chopra and Frances Kerry

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Mykhailo Mudryk cameo livens up Chelsea’s goalless draw at Liverpool | Premier League

The 1,000th game of Jürgen Klopp’s managerial career will not be remembered with fondness, if it is remembered at all. “I heard Arsène Wenger lost his 1,000th game 6-0 so I’m really happy that didn’t happen,” the Liverpool manager said. Klopp was determined to accentuate the positives despite his team, and Chelsea, illustrating why Champions League qualification may be beyond them.

A flat goalless draw at a freezing Anfield did nothing to validate talk of a revival from either Klopp or Graham Potter, although both seized on any crumbs of encouragement they could find. For Chelsea, whose run of six Premier League away games without a win is their worst in over seven years, they came in an impressive second half display from new £88m signing Mykhailo Mudryk and another imperious defensive performance from 38-year-old Thiago Silva. For Liverpool, who remain without a league win in 2023, it was a second successive clean sheet and the return to fitness of Darwin Núñez. Slim pickings indeed.

“He was really good,” the Chelsea manager said of Mudryk. “He will get better the more he is with us but there were promising signs. He has only had two sessions with us but from watching him with Shakhtar he is dangerous in one v ones, he makes things happen in the final third, he gets supporters off their seats and he knows where the goal is.”

Kai Havertz had an early goal ruled out by VAR but that was a rare incident in a game of precious little quality. The fixture’s usual stakes were already lowered before kick off with Liverpool and Chelsea ten points off the top four in ninth and tenth place respectively.

Klopp reflected: “For me it is clear, you have to make small steps and that is how it is. I expect progress and from the last league game it was definitely progress. We defended with passion, which we didn’t do two weeks ago, so that is important. Usually a point against Chelsea is not a bad result but I feel everyone is thinking; ‘How can you not win against them?’ They will win a lot of games, believe me. I saw good signs. Now we have to do the good things better and for longer. I am sure they will go in that direction.”

Havertz had the ball in the Liverpool net after only three minutes and perhaps the complexion of the game would have altered had VAR not disallowed the strike for offside. But probably not. The hosts struggled with crosses into their area from the outset. New Chelsea signing Benoît Badiashile was left unmarked at the first corner of the game, from Conor Gallagher, and his touch dropped for Silva to strike the base of a post from close range. Havertz converted the rebound and Liverpool had conceded first yet again. They were reprieved when, with the Chelsea celebrations over and the teams ready to restart, VAR found the goalscorer in an offside position.

Chelsea’s Kai Havertz thought he had given his side the lead, only to see his goal chalked off by VAR. Photograph: Chelsea FC/Getty Images

Klopp rightly rewarded Stefan Bajcetic and Harvey Elliott with starting roles following their contributions to the midweek FA Cup win at Wolves. The Liverpool manager also kept faith with the same midfield trio that brought more intensity and energy to the team following the abject defeat at Brighton, at the expense of Fabinho and Jordan Henderson, while James Milner was preferred at right back to Trent Alexander-Arnold. The end product was perfectly encapsulated by Klopp’s face when the half-time whistled sounded, a picture of undisguised fury at possession being lost and his team failing to trouble Kepa Arrizabalaga in the Chelsea goal.

There was more intensity and purpose from Liverpool after the break, and presumably after a few home truths from Klopp. Mudryk made an immediate impression, showing good feet to weave away from two Liverpool defenders in a tight space before finding the side-netting. Milner, booked for hauling down the Ukraine international, was replaced by Alexander-Arnold after Mudryk had escaped him once too often.

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    Hakim Ziyech fired over at the end of a superb run across the Liverpool defence and Alexander-Arnold skied a good chance from Núñez’s cross from the by-line. But a non-event of a game got the scoreline it deserved.

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    Magomed Ankalaev-Jan Blachowicz title fight ends in bizarre split draw

    LAS VEGAS — There will be no light heavyweight champion for at least several months after Magomed Ankalaev and Jan Blachowicz, inexplicably, fought to a split draw Saturday in the main event of UFC 282 at T-Mobile Arena in their bout for the vacant title.

    Judges scored it 48-46 Ankalaev, 48-47 Blachowicz and 47-47. The belt became vacant last month when champion Jiri Prochazka vacated it after a serious shoulder injury that could keep him out for up to a year.

    The UFC ordered Ankalaev and Blachowicz to fight for the vacant belt and it appeared that Ankalaev had done enough to win. Yahoo Sports had it 48-47 for Ankalaev, giving him Rounds 1, 4 and 5.

    But the judges’ couldn’t agree and everyone was stunned by the outcome. That included Blachowicz.

    He said he didn’t feel he won and the belt should be given to Ankalaev.

    Ankalaev was fighting back tears as he walked back to the locker room after pouring his heart out in the cage. He felt he’d won the fight and couldn’t understand the scoring.

    “I don’t know if I’m going to fight for this organization again because I don’t know what happened,” he said.

    Earlier, he said, “I won that belt. I don’t know what to say.”

    Jan Blachowicz and Magomed Ankalaev react after their UFC light heavyweight championship fight resulted in a split draw. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

    Ankalaev’s strikes carried the day early, but Blachowicz was chopping at Ankalaev’s legs and caused Ankalaev to struggle to stand and pivot.

    Ankalaev did what he had to do and took Blachowicz down in the fourth and then for most of the fifth, keeping him there.

    But on a night filled with great fights, the card was marred by highly dubious decisions. Paddy Pimblett won the co-main event 29-28 on all cards though most observers felt Jared Gordon won.

    It didn’t seem as if it could get more bizarre, but it did in the main event.

    Magomed Ankalaev of Russia controls the body of Jan Blachowicz in their UFC light heavyweight championship fight during the UFC 282 event at T-Mobile Arena on Dec. 10, 2022 in Las Vegas. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

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    Belgium knocked out of World Cup after goalless draw with Croatia



    CNN
     — 

    Belgium was knocked out of the 2022 World Cup on Thursday after a goalless draw with Croatia left it third in Group F.

    In what was a frustrating evening for the Red Devils, both Romelu Lukaku and Yannick Carrasco spurned good opportunities to score the goal which would have sent Belgium through.

    As it was, the No. 2 ranked team in the world failed to make the breakthrough at the Ahmad Bin Ali Stadium, meaning it won’t be featuring in the knockout phase of the tournament.

    Morocco – which won its game against Canada on Thursday 2-1 – and Croatia qualified from the group, finishing first and second respectively.

    For Belgium, it is another disappointing end to an international tournament and the Royal Belgian Football Association announced shortly afterward that manager Roberto Martínez had stepped down from his role as national team coach.

    In his post-match interview, Martínez said that Belgium can go home with its “heads held high.”

    “It’s not easy to win games in the World Cup. We weren’t ourselves in first game, we had a deserved defeat in the second game,” Martínez told the BBC.

    “Today, we were ready, we created opportunities and, today, there is no regrets. We’re out, but we can leave with our heads held high.”

    It was meant to be the last dance for the so-called ‘golden generation’ of Belgium.

    With many of its squad approaching or in their mid-30s – including Dries Mertens, Jan Vertonghen and Toby Alderweireld – the World Cup in Qatar was seen by many as a final opportunity to get over the hump and win an international football title.

    But although the squad was packed full of top-level players, the age profile of the team led some to believe that Belgium’s window had passed.

    In fact, Belgium’s star midfielder Kevin De Bruyne said in an interview with the Guardian that his side had “no chance” to win the title because the players are “too old.”

    And, needing a win in its final Group F game against Croatia to advance, Belgium’s weaknesses were clear to see in a slow-paced first half.

    The team had a lot of possession without ever really breaking down an organized Croatia while also looking vulnerable on the break.

    The biggest talking point of the half came midway through when Croatia thought it had a penalty – 2018 Ballon d’Or winner Luka Modrić had even placed the ball on the spot – only for referee Anthony Taylor to eventually rule out the spot kick for offside after a video assistant referee (VAR) review.

    After the break and following the introduction of Lukaku, Belgium increased the tempo as it pressed for a vital goal – the Inter Milan striker heading straight into the arms of Croatia goalkeeper Dominik Livaković.

    Seconds later though, it was Croatia who had a good chance; Mateo Kovačić’s curled effort tipped away by Thibaut Courtois.

    Despite Belgium being the team needing all three points, it was Croatia who ramped up the pressure. Courtois, playing in his 100th game for Belgium, had to be at his best to deny both Modrić and Marcelo Brozović.

    Belgium nearly got the all-important breakthrough on the hour mark when Carrasco was denied by heroic block from a defender before Lukaku hit the post when he likely should have scored.

    ust minutes later, Lukaku missed another glorious opportunity as he headed over from close range – the ball looked to have gone out moments before De Bruyne crossed it so the effort likely would have been ruled out.

    As time ticked away, Belgium had two massive opportunities to rescue a victory.

    In added time, Lukaku – with the goal at his mercy – could not sort his feet out and his weak effort was eventually gathered by the goalkeeper near the goal line.

    And in the final few seconds, when it looked like Belgium would have one final chance, a superb recovery tackle from 20-year-old Joško Gvardiol saved the day for the Croatians.

    It huffed and puffed, but Belgium could not find the vital goal. Afterwards, Martínez was asked about if this marks the end for the country’s ‘golden generation’ and the Spaniard was philosophical.

    “You see Youri Tielemans and other young players – the ‘golden generation’ is doing something that is bringing the next generation on,” he said. “It’s not what names are on the pitch, the legacy can be left in many ways.”

    Martínez added when asked if the result was a disappointment: “We wanted to get through but I’m sure the other national teams wanted to get through and that’s the tournament.

    “In the previous World Cup, we won three games in the group stage, we wanted to go all the way.”

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    USMNT draw vs. England sets up must-win Iran game at World Cup

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    KHOR, Qatar — In soccer, there are ties that feel like victories and ties that feel like defeats. The United States has experienced one of each in the group stage of this World Cup.

    Squandering a late lead against Wales in the 1-1 opener Monday left a bad taste, but standing up to mighty England in a 0-0 stalemate Friday was cause for light celebration.

    Nothing good, however, would come from another draw on the final day of Group B play Tuesday. The United States (two points) must beat Iran (three points) to finish in the top two and advance to the round of 16. With a loss or tie, this World Cup adventure ends.

    World Cup tiebreakers and advancement scenarios, explained

    When the 32-team competition began, getting out of the group was the threshold for modest success after missing the 2018 tournament and infusing the roster with young players. Now the Americans are in position to finish their first mission.

    “We’re not going to overthink it,” defender Tim Ream said. “We win, we’re in.”

    England (four points) leads the group and, by beating Wales (one), would clinch first. A draw would also secure passage to the next stage. The only way the Three Lions would not finish first or second were if they lost to the Dragons by a lopsided score and wasted their hefty goal differential (the first tiebreaker).

    Absent from the World Cup for 64 years, Wales insists: ‘We are still here’

    The outcome of England vs. Wales, though, will have no bearing on the U.S. cause. It’s three points or bust.

    “It’s clear now,” U.S. Coach Gregg Berhalter said. “Any time you’re in a World Cup and you get to go into the last group game controlling your destiny, that’s a pretty good thing.”

    The last time the United States was in such a World Cup predicament was 2010 in South Africa. That campaign also began with a pair of draws, including one against England. Needing three points in the group finale against Algeria, the Americans were on the precipice of elimination when Landon Donovan scored one of the most famous goals in U.S. soccer history — a desperate, full-field team surge in stoppage time that sparking wild celebrations on the Pretoria pitch and back home.

    From the archives: Landon Donovan’s goal means Americans advance

    On a 2022 squad packed with players in their late teens and early twenties, that moment was the one cited most frequently when they’ve been asked to recount their first or best World Cup memory. Donovan is now part of the Fox Sports announcing team in Qatar.

    “Hopefully not as dramatic as that goal,” captain Tyler Adams, 23, said of Tuesday’s prospects. “I don’t want to leave it till the end.”

    They’ve left it to the last game, with not a sliver of room for error, because they’re not scoring goals. Defensively, they’ve been terrific, conceding only a penalty kick. But the scoring drought that haunted them through much of the nervy World Cup qualifying campaign has festered since the summer.

    “At times, we wanted to get even deeper and get the ball in front of goal and give them real problems,” Berhalter said Friday. “But you know, at this level goals aren’t easy.”

    They have not come easy against a variety of opponents. In the past seven matches, the United States has been blanked four times and posted multiple goals once — against Grenada, No. 173 in FIFA’s rankings.

    Another empty performance will send them home.

    An ambitious first-half performance against Wales yielded a goal by Tim Weah, assisted brilliantly by Christian Pulisic. The second half was a slog.

    On Friday, the United States created more high-quality opportunities than England, a surprising development given lingering U.S. issues and England’s 6-2 romp over Iran four days earlier. Again, though, the Americans were missing that finishing touch.

    The Three Lions were panned for their performance. The Sun’s headline said, “Yawn in the USA.” The Daily Mail declared, “Boring, Boring England!” and the Evening Standard called it a “Reality Check as England second-best to USA in deflating World Cup draw.”

    Berhalter stopped short of calling Friday’s match a grand success because, “you need the score to win the game, and we didn’t do that.”

    “We’re close a number of times and we put a lot of pressure on them,” he said. “And we want to keep getting better in this tournament, and that’s our goal.”

    On Nov. 25, the U.S. and England soccer teams tied in an anticipated World Cup matchup. Iran shocked Wales with a 2-0 win, scoring two goals late in the game. (Video: The Washington Post, Photo: Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

    There was no pun intended by Berhalter, who, in his only lineup change after the Wales game, swapped strikers: Haji Wright for Josh Sargent. One of 10 shots against England was on target, not including Pulisic’s bid off the crossbar.

    “If you create 100 chances, at least one of them is going to go in eventually,” said midfielder Weston McKennie, who squandered a golden chance in the first half. “The most important thing was that we created the chances and that we can be a threat. And that will just build.”

    On Tuesday, the Americans will also have to match Iran’s spirit. Team Melli rebounded from the disaster against England to perform with high energy and untethered belief in a 2-0 victory over 10-man Wales. Both goals came in second-half stoppage time, just rewards after attacking with gusto all afternoon and clanging the posts twice in rapid succession during a second-half flurry.

    The Iranians were also coping with unrest back home and the arrest of a well-known player, Voria Ghafouri, for protesting against the Tehran regime. (He is not on the World Cup squad.)

    Iran’s World Cup victory stirs joy, but tensions over protests persist

    Since the World Cup draw in April, the United States-Iran game has been framed as not just a sporting event but a clash of political enemies. On Friday, Berhalter played that down.

    “I played in three different countries and I coached in Sweden,” he said. “And the thing about soccer is you meet so many different people from around the world, and you’re united by the common love of the sport of soccer. I envision the game being hotly contested for the fact that both teams want to advance to the next round, not because of politics or relations in our country. We’re soccer players and we’re going to compete. They’re going to compete, and that’s it.”

    World Cup in Qatar

    The latest: The United States draws with England, 0-0, in its second World Cup game Friday to set up a must-win group finale against Iran. Read the highlights from the Group B matchup.

    Political protest: The looming backdrop to Iran’s World Cup campaign is a nationwide protest movement back home targeting its clerical leadership, and the tensions, inescapable and persistent, are spilling onto the field.

    Highlights: Where on Tuesday there had been Saudi Arabia over Argentina, now there came the spectacle on 73 minutes in Brazil over Serbia. Richarlison’s wonder of a goal cemented Brazil’s 2-0 opening win.

    Perspective: The beautiful game is fine. Suitcases full of cash are better. Read Sally Jenkins on the human rights controversy in Qatar.

    Read original article here

    2022 World Cup: Social media reacts to scoreless USA-England draw

    One of the biggest games in United States men’s soccer history ended in a 0-0 draw as the USMNT battled England to a scoreless standstill in the World Cup group stage. USA fans were ready to cheer on the Stars And Stripes both in person in Qatar and from coast to coast back home. Here are the top fan moments and social media reactions from this monumental match!

    Christian Pulisic shows gratitude for American support

    Christian Pulisic shares a post-game reflection with FOX Sports’ Jenny Taft after the USMNT’s 0-0 draw with England.

    Check out the full highlights here!

    Fans are READY in Qatar…

    …in Santa Claus, Ind….

    …in Kansas City…

    …in Atlanta…

    …and in Denver!

    Let Alexi and Jimmy hype you up!

    FOX soccer analyst Jimmy Conrad is ready for today’s action, joined on the World Cup Now set by U.S. soccer legends Landon Donovan and Carli Lloyd!

    …and for anyone who is not, lead analyst and USMNT legend Alexi Lalas has you covered.

    England legend in the house as well

    Sacha breaks tea-drinking tradition

    FOX Sports soccer analyst and USMNT legend Sacha Kljestan has a habit of drinking tea every morning thanks to his wife, who is English.

    Watch him tell what he did Friday morning instead.

    RJ and J-Mac are READY

    FOX Sports analysts R.J. Young and Jason McIntyre would usually be talking about American football on the day after Thanksgiving. But not Friday.

    Ochocinco has a prime seat!

    Check out the view from where Chad Ochocinco is sitting at Al Bayt Stadium in Al Khor, Qatar:

    Colin reacts to McKennie’s and Pulisic’s near misses

    Weston McKennie and Christian Pulisic had great chance in minute 26 but their shots both went high for heartbreaking misses for Colin Cowherd and many others.

    The in-game chants have started!

    McKennie with the hand-wipe

    Aside from his errant shot, Weston McKennie played a stellar first half and showed plenty of creativity, including using a photographer’s bib to wipe his sweat-soaked hands.

    Consensus: USA outplayed England in first half

    J.J. Watt shows his support!

    The star Arizona Cardinals defensive end (and husband of soccer player Kealia Watt) is decked out to show support for his country.

    USA fans are FEELING it

    The United States is turning up the pressure on England in the second half, and the American fans at Al Bayt Stadium are getting hyped!

    Time for some USA subs?

    The subs have been made

    Gio Reyna makes World Cup debut

    USA star Gio Reyna is finally on the pitch for the first time in the 2022 World Cup as a late sub and social media is thrilled.

    Legendary fathers watch their USMNT sons

    Kane header misses in 93′

    Twitter reacts to the scoreless draw

    POTUS sums up America’s reaction

    President Biden has been vocal in his support of USMNT and issued comments of his own after the scoreless draw.

    Read more from the World Cup:

    Check out the full schedule for the World Cup and how to watch each match live here.


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