Barrios exalta características da Libertadores e duelo paraguaio com Gatito

MatériaMais Notícias

Depois de fazer o gol que confirmou a classificação do Grêmio contra o Botafogo as quartas de final da Libertadores em Porto Alegre, o atacante Lucas Barrios comentou sobre a dificuldade dos duelos que caracterizam o torneio mais importante de clubes na América do Sul.

Para fazer esse comparativo, Barrios chegou a insinuar que nem mesmo instâncias que envolvem seleções possuem esse nível de tensão e disputa como a Liberta:

“É difícil, a Libertadores é assim, se briga. Não é como as Eliminatórias ou a Copa América, são jogos totalmente diferentes. Não quero depreciar outros campeonatos, mas a Libertadores é muito linda de se jogar, é lindo de se brigar por essas coisas. Precisamos agora descansar porque o que a gente fez. O que fizemos até agora foi bom, mas ainda não ganhamos nada, pés no chão.”

A respeito de estar enfrentando o seu companheiro de seleção, o goleiro do Botafogo Gatito Fernández, o centroavante gremista comentou que tem uma boa relação com ele:

“A verdade é que o Gatito é um bom amigo, concentramos juntos na seleção. Sabíamos que ia ser um jogo lutado como foi, mas o time está de parabéns, brigou sempre. Há que parabenizar também o Botafogo que fez uma grande Libertadores, mas hoje conseguimos o gol e graças a Deus passamos a fase seguinte.”

آل بايس: عصابة مسلحة تعتدي على مهاجم برشلونة وعائلته وسرقة منزله

كشفت صحيفة “آل بايس” الإسبانية أن هناك عصابة من اللصوص قد تهجمت على منزل مهاجم الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بنادي برشلونة، بيير إيمريك أوباميانج، في الساعات الأولى من الصباح بعد مباراة بلد الوليد.

وتواجد أوباميانج على مقاعد بدلاء برشلونة في مباراة بلد الوليد يوم أمس، الأحد، ولم يشارك الجابوني الدولي من قبل المدير الفني، تشافي هيرنانديز، في اللقاء الذي انتهى بنتيجة 4-0 لصالح البلاوجرانا.

كانت الحادثة فجر اليوم، الإثنين، ووفقًا للشهود أن هناك رجالا مقنعين يسرقون لاعب برشلونة بالأسلحة ويضربونه في منزله في مدينة “كاستيلديفيليس”، ومعهم سيارة “أودي” بيضاء.

اقرأ أيضًا.. وكيل سواريش يرد عبر بطولات على أنباء إبلاغ الأهلي للمدرب بالرحيل

تعرض أوباميانج للاعتداء والسرقة في منزله، دخل ما لا يقل عن أربعة أشخاص إلى حديقة منزله وهددوا المهاجم الإفريقي بالأسلحة النارية والقضبان الحديدية، كانوا سيضربونه بها، لكن اللاعب بخير هو وعائلته لكنه أصيب بجروح طفيفة بعدما تعرض لضربة على ذقنه بقضيب حديدي.

في وقت وقوع الحادث، كان أوباميانج برفقة زوجته وأطفاله، أصيبت زوجته بإصاباته طفيفة هي الأخرى بعد ضربة في الرأس، كلاهما بخير والإصابات ليست خطيرة، كما أفادت مصادر الشرطة لقناة “RAC1” الكتالونية، لكن المهاجم وزوجته كانا مستلقيين على الأرض لمدة ساعة.

وتؤكد الشرطة أن العصابة التي هجمت منزل أوباميانج منظمة وخطط للهجوم في وقت مسبق، كان الهدف من ذلك الهجوم هو أن يفتح المهاجم الجابوني خزنته الشخصية لسرقة محتوياتها، في الوقت الحالي، لا يعرف اللاعب الأشياء التي سُرقت منه بالضبط.

أبلغ أوباميانج بنفسه الشرطة عما حدث، الذين فوجئوا بعنف هذا الاعتداء، لكنهم يستبعدون تكرار هذا الأمر في الأشهر القادمة.

الصفقة السابعة.. باريس سان جيرمان يقترب من ضم جناح فالنسيا

يواصل نادي باريس سان جيرمان نشاطه في نافذة الانتقالات الصيفية الجارية، والتي تقترب من نهايتها، إذ تنتهي مساء الخميس الأول من سبتمبر 2022.

وكان باريس سان جيرمان قد تعاقد مع 6 لاعبين حيث ضم فينتها من بورتو، وفابيان رويز من نابولي، بجانب ريناتو سانشيز من ليل، فضلًا عن نوردي مويكلي من لايبزيج، وهوجو إيكيتي من ستاد ريس، كما قام بتفعيل بند الشراء في عقد نونو مينديز لينضم إلى النادي بصفة نهائية.

اقرأ أيضًا.. باريس سان جيرمان يراقب مستقبل لاعب تشيلسي

وذكر الصحفي الإيطالي المُتخصص في الانتقالات، فابريزيو رومانو، أن باريس سان جيرمان أصبح على وشك التعاقد مع كارلوس سولير، لاعب وسط فريق فالنسيا.

وأوضح أن باريس سان جيرمان سيدفع 21 مليون يورو (18 مليون ثابت + 3 ملايين متغيرات) لحسم الصفقة.

ومن المتوقع أن يسافر سولير إلى باريس في الساعات القليلة القادمة للخضوع للكشف الطبي، والتوقيع على عقود انتقاله إلى نادي الإمارة الفرنسية حتى 30 يونيو 2027.

Reencontro com a LDU: Torcida do Fluminense forma fila por ingressos

MatériaMais Notícias

Quinta-feira é dia do Fluminense e sua torcida reencontrarem a LDU, carrasco do clube nas competições continentais neste século. Para largar na frtente do confronto pelas oitavas de final da Copa Sul-Americana, o time de Abel Braga conta com o apoio da torcida, que formou filas na manhã desta segunda-feira.

Nas redes sociais, o clube das Laranjeiras divulgou imagens dos torcedores no Maracanã.A expectativa é de um grande público.Confira na galeria de fotos.

Além do Maracanã, palco do jogo, há bom movimento da torcida na Sede das Laranjeiras e na Loja Oficial do Fluminense, no Shopping Nova Iguaçu. O Flu divulgou a última parcial de entradas vendidas: 20 mil ingressos até esta tarde.

RelacionadasFluminenseFluminense x LDU: Ingressos à venda com promoção para sócio-torcedoresFluminense06/09/2017FluminenseAbel resume: ‘Muito decepcionado com 1º tempo, mas orgulhoso do 2º’Fluminense10/09/2017FluminenseHenrique Dourado cumpre promessa mas lamenta empate: ‘Sabor amargo’Fluminense10/09/2017

O elenco do Fluminense se reapresenta no CT Pedro Antonio nesta segunda-feira, às 15h – sem a presença da imprensa. A semana será toda voltada para o duelo com a LDU. Na terça e na quarta, as atividades serão na parte da tarde.

Broad and Swann give England control

Stuart Broad produced a bowling performance to rival that of Andrew Flintoff at Lord’s as Australia felt their grip on the Ashes being prised away, finger by finger, on a sensational second day at The Oval

The Bulletin by Andrew Miller at The Oval21-Aug-2009
Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsStuart Broad wrecked Australia’s top order with a stunning spell•Getty Images

Stuart Broad produced a bowling performance to rival that of Andrew Flintoff at Lord’s, and Graeme Swann chimed in with four vital wickets on a dry and dusty track, as Australia felt their grip on the Ashes being prised away, finger by finger, on a sensational second day at The Oval. Responding to England’s first-innings 332, the Aussies collapsed from a confident but never comfortable 61 for 0 at lunch to 160 all out shortly after tea, conceding a first-innings deficit of 172 in the process, as well as every ounce of the momentum they had established during their fourth-Test triumph at Headingley.Australia did recover from that nadir to claw back some lost initiative, claiming three key wickets in the closing overs of the day as the frailties of England’s dodgy batting card were exposed once again. Nevertheless, with Andrew Strauss remaining unperturbed on 32, and England’s lead extended to an already imposing 230, the majority of the demons remain with the side facing the prospect of batting last on a dustbowl that has more in common with Kanpur than Kennington. In particular, the manner of Alastair Cook’s dismissal – caught at slip as Australia’s part-timer, Marcus North, ripped an offspinner across his bows – was ample proof of the traumas that lie ahead.It was a stunning and memorable day’s play dredged from the depths of Australia’s worst nightmares, and their desperate afternoon session – in which they lost eight wickets for 72 in 24.4 incredible overs – is shaping up to be the decisive passage of play of the summer. Each of those eight breakthroughs was greeted with riotous acclaim by an absorbed and pumped-up crowd, as England’s bowlers surfed a wave of emotion to exploit once again the peculiar frailties of an Aussie batting order that, for all its myriad successes this summer, has now failed calamitously in three of their five first innings in the series.The star of England’s show was Broad, who was thrown the ball for the second full over after a 50-minute rain delay, and responded with a full and straight 12-over spell that perfectly exploited a pitch showing increasing signs of uneven bounce. He claimed the first four wickets to fall for eight runs in the space of 21 deliveries, and then – after Swann had extracted the obdurate pairing of North and Simon Katich – wrapped up his second five-wicket haul in consecutive innings by yorking Brad Haddin for 1.Fifteen wickets in all fell in the day, including (way back in the mists of time) that of James Anderson, whose first Test duck after six years and 54 innings might have been a portent of the chaos to come. Though Australia somehow reached lunch unscathed after 20.2 overs of hard graft, Shane Watson and Katich had been forced to scrap for every one of the 61 runs in their opening stand. Watson in particular tempted fate with three consecutive lbw appeals in the space of seven deliveries, but after the resumption, he fell to the very first delivery he received from Broad, nailed plumb lbw for 34 to prise open the floodgates.Jonathan Trott took a sharp, low catch to remove Michael Clarke•Getty Images

Ricky Ponting was the next man in, and though he emerged to loud acclaim – the boos of Edgbaston a distant memory – his personal jitters were transparently plain to see. Sensing that the wicket was already a minefield, he got off the mark with an under-edged cut for four off Broad, and then survived a frenzied lbw appeal in the next over as he shouldered arms to Flintoff. But before he could settle, Broad cramped him on the back foot, and he inside-edged a loose drive onto his middle stump for 8.Three Broad deliveries later, and Mike Hussey’s traumatic series had taken another turn for the worse, as he thrust out his front pad and was sent on his way lbw for a duck – the decision looked tight on the replay, but stone-dead to the naked eye. And when Michael Clarke, Australia’s star of the summer, drove fiercely into the covers in a bid to impose some authority, he picked out the debutant Jonathan Trott, who swooped superbly to cling onto a stinging low catch.From 73 for 0, Australia had drifted listlessly to 93 for 4, with only the obdurate Katich providing any sort of sheet-anchor. He opened the face of his bat to steer Broad through the gully to move to 49, but then at the other end, Swann got into the act – in a somewhat fortuitous fashion – as North thrust his bat and pad forward to a non-spinning delivery on middle stump, and was adjudged lbw for 8 despite evidence that the bat had won the race.North grinned wryly as he departed the crease, but there was little he or Australia could do to halt England’s momentum, and in his next over, Swann claimed the vital wicket of Katich, who once again played for non-existent turn on a pitch creating demons in the mind, and popped a facile chance off his bat and pad-flap to Cook at short leg for exactly 50. Nine balls later, and Broad was back on centre stage. Haddin came down late on a stump-splattering yorker, and Australia’s last recognised batsman had joined the procession.Mitchell Johnson did what he could to jump-start a flatlining innings, smacking Swann for two lusty fours in a single over, but with tea looming he became the eighth casualty of the session, stunningly snaffled by Matt Prior behind the stumps, who read the big turn off the pitch, and moved sharply to his left to cling onto an edged drive.Australia limped to tea on 133 for 8, and though Stuart Clark was hugely unfortunate to be adjudged caught at short leg for 6 when his bat was nowhere near the ball, Peter Siddle thrashed a skittish 26 not out as he and Ben Hilfenhaus hung around long enough to haul their side past the 150 mark. But Flintoff claimed his share of the limelight by yorking Hilfenhaus for 6, to complete an incredible and series-transforming two-and-a-half hours of cricket.Still the procession of wickets was not over, however. With a session and three days in which to cement their advantage, England felt no need to rush their reply, but with the score on 27, Cook’s unconvincing series came to an end as North nailed him for 9, before Ian Bell was somewhat unluckily extracted for 4, as he got on top of a short ball from his nemesis Johnson, only for Katich at short leg to hold onto a remarkable reflex catch inches from the turf. One over later, and Katich was back in the action when Johnson found Paul Collingwood’s splice with an effort ball, but Trott provided convincing and confident support for his captain, Strauss, to enable England to finish on a high.

Leeds: Campbell reacts to Swift links

Pundit Kevin Campbell believes Leeds United could make a ‘great’ addition by bringing Reading midfielder John Swift to Elland Road, Football Insider report.

The Lowdown: Leeds’ lack of midfield additions…

Leeds currently have just four senior midfield options on the books at this moment in time, one of which is Adam Forshaw, who started his first league game in over 700 days prior to the international break.

Jamie Shackleton has also been used at right-back, with the Whites yet to make a permanent senior midfield addition during Marcelo Bielsa’s tenure in charge.

Their last permanent senior midfield addition was Forshaw back in January 2018 in a deal worth £4.5m from Middlesbrough, but it appears as if they may finally now bolster their ranks in the winter window.

The Latest: Swift links; Campbell reacts

Recent reports have suggested that it is Leeds who are leading the way for Swift’s services in the New Year, with Phil Hay revealing earlier in the week that the Reading man is a player Bielsa loves.

Campbell, who features on Sky Sports, was asked for his thoughts on Swift by Football Insider.

This is what Campbell had to say, believing the Whites need a midfield addition and feels Swift could be a ‘great signing’, should director of football Victor Orta get a transfer over the line.

“I’ve watched him a few times.

“With Bielsa being a fan of his, I can see that being a great signing – they need another midfielder.

“They need some fresh blood in that squad at Leeds United. It will lift spirits all around the club.

“He’s a good player and I have no doubt that he would help them in the Premier League.”

The Verdict: First major January signing under Bielsa?

The Whites tend to do most of their major transfer business under Bielsa in the summer, so this could be one of few key permanent deals in January.

Bringing Swift to Yorkshire could be a wise move to ensure Leeds have enough midfield options for the second half of the season and avoid being dragged into a relegation battle.

The £25,000-a-week star can play as an eight or a ten and has been in fine form in the Championship this season, scoring eight and registering seven goals in 17 appearances.

It seems like a no brainer, but Leeds will have to battle Burnley, Sheffield United and Wolves in the race for Swift’s services.

In other news: Third Leeds man may now return from injury v Spurs as source shares update. 

Flintoff's fitness under the spotlight again

As Australia’s batsmen rumbled onwards against a toothless, swing-less attack, the state of Andrew Flintoff’s fitness became a significant cause for concern

Andrew Miller03-Aug-2009

Andrew Flintoff took several moments longer to get up after falling down during his delivery stride•Getty Images

It was, on the face of it, a dull final day at Edgbaston – the least enthralling of the series so far, as England’s slim victory prospects were thwarted almost as early as the first hour. But in Ashes cricket, nothing takes place without subtext, and as Australia’s batsmen rumbled onwards against a toothless, swing-less attack, the state of Andrew Flintoff’s fitness became a significant cause for concern.A fortnight ago on the final day at Lord’s, Flintoff produced the finest spell of his career – a ten-over rampage to seize the second Test and push England into the ascendancy in the series. Today, he was a pillion passenger at best, with just 11 laboured overs in the entire day, and none at all in the drifty final session. While he has rarely got the rewards his wholehearted style deserves, it is almost unheard of for him to go an entire Test without a single wicket – the last time it happened was in Perth in December 2006 when England surrendered the Ashes, and before that you have to rewind to July 2003.Instead of one of the flamboyant celebrations that lit up Lord’s, the enduring image of Flintoff’s effort came when his left ankle crumpled in his delivery stride, midway through his second spell. Back-to-back contests are notoriously tough for fast bowlers at the best of times, but seeing as Flintoff endured two further injections in his ragged right knee just to take the field for this match, Friday’s fourth Test at Headingley cannot come along quickly enough for Ricky Ponting’s newly uplifted Australians.”You could see he went downhill pretty quickly during the course of this game,” said Ponting, “so his injury is probably taking more of an effect than we realise as well. But we’ll see what happens on the morning of the game. It’s been visible over the last couple of days, he’s been struggling more than he did during the Lord’s Test. When he bowled yesterday he was hobbling a bit and he only bowled 11 overs today. No doubt they protected him late this afternoon, knowing how big a figure he is for the team.””There wasn’t as much in this wicket for him as there has been on previous wickets,” countered Andrew Strauss. “It was one of those wickets where the more you hit the deck, the slower it came off, and at the back of my mind I’m conscious that when the conditions aren’t really helping him, there’s no point in tearing him to death. There’s obviously some soreness there, but I don’t think anything has deteriorated massively over the course of the game. But he needs to rest up well because back-to-back Tests are hard for any bowler. We’ll see how he is for Thursday.”The Flintoff factor is becoming a double-edged sword for England – Australia will continue to fear and respect him so long as he remains in the side, but it’s becoming increasingly hard for the selectors to know how best to deal with such a talismanic figure. Though Strauss suggested that his momentum-seizing innings of 74 had been a bonus, the reality is that it muddied the waters even further. Had Flintoff merely been performing as a pace man, then Steve Harmison could step in at Headingley as a like-for-like replacement. Instead, to rest Flintoff on Friday with the Ashes up for grabs would risk unsettling the entire balance of the current team.Andrew Flintoff had a rare, wicketless Test at Edgbaston•Getty Images

“If he’s fit to play then we want to play him, if he’s not, we won’t, because the Headingley Test is a massive Test,” said Strauss. “It’s an opportunity to win the Ashes, and we want to play our best team in every game we play. But we’ve got to be conscious that if he’s not fit enough to do his job, he won’t play.”He will be assessed tomorrow, and he knows what he needs to do with his injury,” Strauss added. “A lot of it comes down to how he feels with his own body – he’s got to be honest about that and he has been so far. He’s obviously desperate to play in the last two games, and we’re optimistic he’ll be fine, but I think he realises that if he’s not fit he won’t help us.”England did everything they could to force Flintoff onto centre stage for this final day at Edgbaston – even, arguably, to the detriment of their own match prospects. When play resumed with a 28-over-old ball, all eyes turned naturally to the man who wrecked Australia’s first innings, James Anderson who, like Ben Hilfenhaus, had found the best swing-bowling conditions around the 30-over mark, when the lacquer had started to come off the still-hard ball. Instead Flintoff galloped in for seven largely ineffectual overs, and when Anderson eventually struck with his sixth ball of the day, an hour into the session, the deficit had been written off and Australia were starting to feel comfortable at the crease.”We weren’t expecting it to swing straight away this morning, so we thought it important to set the tone and Fred’s obviously very good at that,” said Strauss, who felt that Graham Onions at the other end had served as a barometer for the moving ball. Ponting, however, expressed his surprise at the move. “The ball has started to swing at the exact time that England had [it] this morning,” he said. “Flintoff was their best bowler at Lord’s, but the wicket and conditions here, being slow, didn’t suit his bowling as much, it suited Anderson and Onions more.”All of which adds up to a curious conundrum for England, who have shown a worrying lack of penetration at three crucial moments of all three Tests. When the ball swings, as it has done in the first innings at Lord’s and on the second morning at Edgbaston, the bowlers – principally Anderson – have filled their boots with alacrity. But in Australia’s only innings at Cardiff, and then for long and untroubled spells in the second innings of the next two Tests, they have rumbled along with barely a moment’s alarm, as the series century count – currently 6-1 in their favour – amply testifies.”When a wicket’s flat, it’s flat, and it’s very hard to conjure something out of nothing,” said Strauss, which is why Flintoff’s bone-jarring performance at Lord’s stands out for the manner in which it bucked the trend. But for that very reason, there is simply no point in playing him if he is anything less than 100% fit. England, to give them their due, have said that all throughout this saga, but at the same time, it will take a gutsy call to withdraw him so close to the finishing line, with absolutely everything at stake – including his own legacy in Test retirement.”I think we can cope without him,” said Strauss. “We’ve had to do it a number of times in the last two years, so it wouldn’t be anything new to us. Generally the bowlers have stepped up when he hasn’t played, but at the moment he’s in great nick with both ball and bat, so we don’t want to play without him if we can help it. You have to swing with the punches you get, and if [he’s unfit] we’ve got a good enough squad to be able to deal with that.”

Villa predicted XI under Steven Gerrard

Aston Villa have a new manager at the helm after the club’s hierarchy decided to replace Dean Smith with Steven Gerrard following a run of five consecutive defeats.

The Villans lost talisman Jack Grealish over the summer but replaced him with a plethora of attacking talent in Leon Bailey, Danny Ings and Emi Buendia.

However, Smith proved unable to get the best out of his new-look side and was relieved of his duties with the Midlands outfit sitting in 16th position in the Premier League table and just two points above the relegation zone.

And while the arrival of Gerrard was a surprise to many, the former Rangers boss will bring a new wave of hope and optimism to Villa Park following his impressive exploits north of the border.

Figuring out which system extracts the best from his current squad will be the first task in hand for the 41-year-old, and with the likes of Ings and Douglas Luiz coming back to full fitness imminently, he should have plenty of options to choose from.

With that in mind, here’s how Football FanCast thinks Gerrard’s best XI looks like, with three changes from the side that started Smith’s last game in charge against Southampton…

It would be a huge shock to see the former England international line up with anyone other than Emiliano Martinez in between the sticks after an extremely impressive 18 months with Villa.

Ahead of the South American shot-stopper will likely be a rather familiar back four too.

Although Manchester United loanee Axel Tuanzebe has been filling in at centre-back of late, Matt Targett, Tyrone Mings, Ezri Konsa and Matty Cash should complete the defensive unit on a regular basis.

Gerrard predominantly opted to play a 4-3-3 formation during his time in Scotland, and we expect him to do the same following his move to Villa.

Therefore, an engine room made up of Luiz, John McGinn and Buendia is likely to feature on a regular basis, with Gerrard also favouring the guile and creativity of an attack-minded player in the centre of the pitch, meaning the £11.7m-rated dud Anwar El Ghazi will drop to the bench.

In attack, the former Liverpool legend may be tempted to make a bold move regarding Ollie Watkins. The 25-year-old made his name as a right-winger, and he could find himself back out wide to accommodate Danny Ings, with Bailey taking up residency on the opposite flank.

And, in other news…Lange could seal dream AVFC deal with “fantastic” £5.4m-rated ace, Gerrard “loves him” 

Após provocarem eliminação do rival, o último round: Jair x Rueda

MatériaMais Notícias

O cumprimento entre os técnicos, tradicional no mundo do futebol antes dos jogos, fugirá do trivial no Botafogo x Flamengo de hoje. Será a quinta vez, o último round de Jair Ventura contra Reinaldo Rueda. Nos dois primeiros, duas vitórias alvinegras sobre o Atlético Nacional da Colômbia, que acabou eliminado da Libertadores. Nos outros dois, empate e vitória rubro-negra, que avançou na Copa do Brasil e derrubou o Glorioso. A partida será no Estádio Nilton Santos, às 19 horas.

– Começamos a ver o trabalho do Rueda, o Flamengo está parecido com o que era o time do Atlético. Ele gosta de usar diagonais e fazer o jogo com os externos. Fez muito com o Atlético e fez agora também com Berrío. Antes não tinha tanto. Segurou muito as linhas de quatro, o time fez dobra nas laterais… chamaram atenção, contra o Nacional, as jogadas de escanteios dele, que são difíceis de marcar. Espero que ele não tenha tempo para treiná-las (risos). Será mais um grande jogo, é um grande treinador, e que nós possamos ter um resultado melhor dessa vez – espera Jair.

O duelo da vez é pelo Campeonato Brasileiro, ninguém será eliminado. Mas a distância do Time da Gávea para o de General Severiano, na tabela, é curta: quatro pontos. No início da temporada, a reformulação pela qual a então equipe de Rueda não conseguiu fazer frente ao entrosamento dos botafoguenses. Para o mata-mata brasileiro, o treinador colombiano fez o suficiente para travar o rival nas duas partidas, apesar de ter chegado ao Flamengo às vésperas da semifinal.

– A dificuldade grande é o calendário. Tivemos que assumir 72 horas antes do duelo contra o Botafogo, e depois Brasileirão e depois a outra semifinal contra o Botafogo. Foi muito intenso, fiquei recebendo informações e isso na primeira semana de diagnóstico. As facilidades estão na estrutura, logística e na receptividade do grupo. São os dois extremos, está sendo intenso – analisa Reinaldo Rueda.

RelacionadasBotafogoPara embalar! Botafogo terá sequência em casa e mira o G6Botafogo08/09/2017BotafogoSem revanche, sem tabu: contra o Fla, Botafogo quer ‘fazer diferente’Botafogo08/09/2017FlamengoFla tenta diminuir ansiedade por decisão e mira volta ao G4 no BrasileiroFlamengo08/09/2017

لاجازيتا: تشيلسي يحتاج 150 مليون يورو لضم لياو من ميلان

ادعت صحيفة “لاجازيتا ديلو سبورت” الإيطالية أن نادي تشيلسي يحتاج توفير 150 مليون يورو من أجل التعاقد مع جناح الفريق الأول لكرة القدم بنادي ميلان، رفائيل لياو، في الميركاتو الصيفي الحالي.

يرغب تشيلسي في ضم البرتغالي الدولي إلى صفوفه في الأيام المقبلة ولكن الصفقة صعبة للغاية بسبب المبالغ المالية المطلوبة رغم انتهاء مدة الشرط الجزائي وقيمته 150 مليون يورو في يوليو الماضي.

لكن ما زال النادي الإنجليزي مطالبًا بنفس المبلغ إذا رغب في ضم لياو لأن اللاعب مطلوب منه دفع 16.5 مليون يورو لناديه السابع سبورتنج لشبونة بعد فسخ تعاقده من جانب واحد في عام 2018.

اقرأ أيضًا.. تفاصيل خلاف الخطيب مع ياسين منصور وعلاقة سواريش بـ استقالة مجلس إدارة شركة الكرة

المشكلة الثانية هي أن نادي ليل الذي لعب لياو ضمن صفوفه من حقه 15% من أي عملية بيع مستقبلية وهذا بند موجود في العقد مع ميلان عام 2019.

لم تبدأ المفاوضات بين ميلان وتشيلسي حتى الآن ولكن كانت هناك محادثات بين وكيل لياو، خورخي مينديز، والنادي الإنجليزي، ولكن مبلغ 150 مليون سيتضمن قيمة الصفقة إلى ميلان بجانب عمولات الوكيل ومستحقات الأندية السابقة للبرتغالي.

إذا لم يتوصل الناديان إلى اتفاق وبقي لياو في ميلان سيبدأ الأخير مفاوضات تجديد عقده الذي ينتهي بعد موسمين تقريبًا في يونيو 2024.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus