رومانو: "تمت".. ريال مدريد يحسم صفقته الصيفية الرابعة

أنهى نادي ريال مدريد تعاقده مع صفقته الرابعة خلال سوق الانتقالات الصيفية الحالية، بحسب ما أكده الصحفي الموثوق فابريزيو رومانو.

وأكد رومانو عبر حساباته الرسمية أن ألفارو كاريراس غادر البرتغال بالفعل متجهًا إلى إسبانيا، ومن المتوقع أن يُعلن ريال مدريد عن الصفقة خلال الساعات المقبلة، إذا سارت الأمور وفقًا للخطة.

وأشار الصحفي الإيطالي إلى أن الإعلان الرسمي قد يصدر في غضون 24 ساعة، مؤكدًا أن الصفقة تمت بنسبة 100%.

اقرأ أيضًا | بعد رباعية باريس.. 6 مشاهد سيئة لـ أسينسيو مع ريال مدريد

ويأتي انضمام كاريراس بعد تعاقد ريال مدريد مع دين هويسن، ترينت ألكسندر أرنولد في صفقة انتقال حر من ليفربول، إضافة إلى التعاقد مع الموهبة الأرجنتينية فرانكو ماستانتانتو.

ويُعد ألفارو كاريراس أحد المواهب الصاعدة في مركز الظهير الأيسر، حيث سبق له اللعب في مانشستر يونايتد، ولفت الأنظار في بنفيكا وهو أحد ناشئي ريال مدريد بالفعل لكنه رحل بسبب عدم الحصول على فرصة في المشاركة.

صفقة كاريراس جاءت بعد مفاوضات مطولة مع بنفيكا حيث حاول ريال مدريد ضم اللاعب قبل كأس العالم للأندية، لكن النادي البرتغالي رفض عدة عروض غير مرضية ماليًا بالنسبة للنادي البرتغالي.

Man Utd consider shock loan swoop to sign Harry Kane's Bayern Munich team-mate as Ruben Amorim looks to beef up Red Devils squad

Manchester United are eyeing a loan move for Bayern's Joao Palhinha as Ruben Amorim looks to add steel to his midfield after missing out on Ederson.

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Man Utd eye loan deal for Bayern's PalhinhaAmorim wants to solidify Utd's midfieldBayern ready to let Palhinha leave on loanFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

United are exploring a loan move for Bayern Munich midfielder Palhinha after being priced out of a deal for Atalanta’s Ederson. The 29-year-old defensive midfielder, who joined Bayern for £48 million ($65m) from Fulham last summer, has struggled to lock down a regular starting spot and could be allowed to leave temporarily, with internal talks ongoing between the Bavarians and the Red Devils, according to GiveMeSport.

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Amorim is eager to add a Premier League-proven midfielder to his squad as funds are limited following the £62.5 million ($83.4m) signing of Matheus Cunha. Palhinha fits the profile, and his experience in England could help stabilise a midfield lacking physical presence. United are also prepared to offload Alejandro Garnacho, among others, to free up resources for the loan signing of Palhinha.

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Bayern initially preferred a permanent sale, valuing the Portuguese star at around £30 million ($40m), but are now considering a loan to help Palhinha rediscover form. He still has four years left on his contract, worth close to £200,000 per week with bonuses, meaning Bayern are in no rush to sell. United view him as a low-cost, tactical fit under Amorim.

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Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT FOR PALHINHA?

The Red Devils will likely wait on Bayern’s final stance before progressing with a formal offer. If green-lit, Palhinha could arrive in time for pre-season and be available for United’s Premier League opener against Arsenal on August 17.

Another Nunez disaster: Liverpool make first move to sign £100m star

It’s all going on down Anfield Road.

Liverpool’s business stretch should be a processional march toward the Premier League title, 12 points ahead of second-place Arsenal. However, it ain’t over til the fat lady sings, something those of a Reds persuasion will know only too well.

There’s plenty of noise coming from Liverpool circles right now, and understandably so. Trent Alexander-Arnold is all but set to leave for Real Madrid when his contract expires at the end of the term, while the futures of Virgil van Dijk and Mohamed Salah remain up in the air.

Ultimately, Los Blancos usually get what they want, adding Trent to a list of recent Bosmans including Antonio Rudiger and Kylian Mbappe. For sporting director Richard Hughes, business as usual. He’s got plenty to do on the incoming front, but just as much in regard to sorting out those who need to be sold.

Who Liverpool need to sell this summer

On Wednesday evening, news broke that Newcastle United have placed Jarell Quansah at the top of their list of targets for the summer.

The Liverpool centre-back, 21, has been reduced to a bit-part role under Arne Slot and – we’re all thinking it – such a sale could be used to facilitate a move for Alexander Isak (we can dream).

While Conor Bradley stands a swinging chance of stepping into Trent’s boots next year, signing a left-back is one of Slot’s most urgent demands; indeed, Bournemouth’s Milos Kerkez is being pursued and pointers suggest this one may come to fruition.

This would mean one of Andy Robertson or Kostas Tsimikas would need to leave. The defenders combine for around £235k per week, so adding a hungry third to the mix wouldn’t make sense without concessions.

Up top, much more uncertainty reigns. Salah may yet leave (perish the thought) and the general profligacy of Liverpool’s other forwards calls for dramatic action. That is to say, the likes of Diogo Jota, Darwin Nunez and Luis Diaz are all endangered species on Merseyside, surely playing for their future over these final weeks of the campaign.

Darwin Nunez warming up for Liverpool

While it would be ridiculous to allow all of these attacking players to leave, some certainly will. Liverpool, of course, will need to strengthen, and a fast-rising star has been added to the wish list as the window prepares to swing its shutters wide.

Liverpool lining up new forward

According to the Daily Mail, Liverpool have begun work on a new signing, making their first enquiries about Southampton teenager Tyler Dibling, with the fleet-footed winger attracting significant attention as the transfer window draws near.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

Interest in the youngster is fierce. Southampton are effectively condemned to relegation from the Premier League in their first season back but Dibling, 19, has shone throughout.

Manchester City and Tottenham Hotspur are also regarded as firm suitors, but the reality is many, many more will want a shot at his signature.

And that signature, by the way, won’t come cheap. The England U21 international is actually reported to be worth a mind-boggling £100m, a valuation Saints are headset on maintaining through the summer months.

What Liverpool should do about Tyler Dibling

Dibling is a terrific young player, proving through his breakout season that he’s got the skill, athleticism and confidence to succeed at the highest level.

Southampton's TylerDiblingin action with AFC Bournemouth's Dean Huijsen

Fast-tracked to the front of the Southampton hierarchy, Dibling has scored four goals and added two assists across 30 matches in all competitions, but in truth, numbers reveal little more than the prologue of his season.

Remarked to be an “unreal talent” by analyst Ben Mattinson, Dibling’s dribbling ability and willingness to take on fearsome Premier League defenders has earned him acclaim. Moreover, a youthful knack for competing across a range of positions has allowed Russell Martin and then Ivan Juric to maximise his output.

Right winger

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Centre-forward

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Dibling has completed 39 dribbles in the top flight this season, ranking him joint-16th in the division with one fewer carry than Liverpool’s Diaz. This may not appear particularly noteworthy, but he’s a force of forward drive who continuously looks to make things happen in an outfit where not much positivity goes on at all.

He also ranks among the top 5% of Premier League wingers for fouls drawn per 90, as per FBref, an eel-like running style to leave opponents unstuck, forced into hacking him down.

But there’s an elephant in the room, one which suggests Liverpool should not actually move to sign Dibling. Let’s revisit Southampton’s financial demands: payment totalling £100m.

This would mean Liverpool need to break the bank to sign a largely untested teenager with little assurance that he will meet that lofty valuation down the line.

Dibling might be combative and electric, but he’s only created two big chances across the Premier League campaign, as per Sofascore, yet to assist.

To sign Dibling in keeping with St. Mary’s current demands, Liverpool would eclipse the club-record £85m fee paid to Benfica for Nunez’s services in 2022.

Darwin Nunez warming up for Liverpool

Nunez, who was 22 at the time, was hand-picked by Jurgen Klopp following a stunning 2021/22 campaign that saw him fire 34 goals from 41 matches for the Eagles, including two in the Champions League against Liverpool.

Having come close to leaving Liverpool for Saudi Pro League club Al-Nassr in the summer, the Uruguay international is expected to be sold at the end of the season, having scored just seven times under Slot’s wing and with just eight Premier League starts besides, scarcely missing any football due to injury or illness this term.

In hindsight, Liverpool paid over the odds on an untested talent who was ostensibly tasked with replacing Roberto Firmino in the long term. Now, Dibling may well be taking Salah’s long-held place on the right flank, and is this really a move to ignite the requisite output needed to stay at the front of the European pack?

Moreover, with Ben Doak, also 19, enjoying such a fine season on loan with Middlesbrough in the Championship, is there really just cause to lodge such a mammoth figure on a player of a similar ilk, one who may actually hamper the Scotland international’s development?

When Southampton fall, there’s a chance that they will be forced into lowering their valuation, but unless it’s far more affordable, giving Liverpool plenty of room for investment elsewhere, this may be one Liverpool need to accept they won’t win.

Klopp was brewing a bigger star than Trent but he left Liverpool for £0

Liverpool might wish things had worked out differently for this player

ByJoe Nuttall Mar 27, 2025

Unadkat joins Sussex for County stint

The left-arm fast bowler will be reunited with India and Saurashtra team-mate Cheteshwar Pujara

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Aug-2023Fast bowler Jaydev Unadkat is set for his first stint in the County Championship after signing with Sussex, where he will join his India and Saurashtra team-mate Cheteshwar Pujara.Unadkat is set to be available for at least three of Sussex’s remaining four matches, starting with the game against Durham on September 3. He could, however, miss the team’s final match, if he returns to lead Saurashtra in the Irani Cup, which starts on October 1.”I have been following the team’s recent run of success and I had a nice conversation with Paul [Farbrace, Sussex head coach] and it looks like I can definitely add value and contribute towards the team’s goals,” Unadkat said in a statement. “The English County Championship has a wonderful legacy, and I was keen to grab the opportunity whenever I can and it seems to be the right time for me at this point in my career.”I hope to add to the laurels that my dear friend and team-mate, Cheteshwar, has been adding aplenty while representing Sussex for the last couple of seasons, and more importantly helping the team win games.”Unadkat recently turned out for India in their two Tests against West Indies, but went wicketless. He did however pick up a wicket in the only ODI he played on the tour.Unadkat, 31, has played 103 first-class matches, including four Tests. He has picked up 382 first-class wickets at an average of 22.58 and an economy of 2.94.He captained Saurashtra to their maiden Ranji Trophy title in 2020, taking 67 wickets in that campaign, which is the most by a fast bowler in a single season.He then led them to a second title this year, claiming the Player-of-the-Match trophy in the final against Bengal.”We are delighted that Jaydev will join us for the September championship period, he is a quality bowler and a great guy to have join our squad at an exciting time of the season,” Sussex head coach Farbrace said. “His record is outstanding, and we will be looking for Jaydev to share his experience with our developing team.”

ODI World Cup: Hyderabad to go ahead with hosting back-to-back games

The BCCI has told the Hyderabad Cricket Association (HCA) that it won’t be possible to make any schedule tweaks for the upcoming ODI World Cup after concerns were raised about hosting back-to-back matches. On Sunday, the HCA had alerted the Indian board that the local police was worried about providing adequate security for two matches – New Zealand vs Netherlands on October 9 and Pakistan vs Sri Lanka on October 10.The HCA has relayed the BCCI’s message to the Hyderabad Police, who have now assured that adequate security will be provided to all four teams. The HCA has also got the nod from the BCCI to let both Pakistan and Sri Lanka to train at the Gymkhana Ground in Secunderabad ahead of their clash on October 10. The HCA was understood to have been unsure as to whether all four teams can get adequate practice at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium in Hyderabad.Related

  • HCA raises concern about World Cup schedule

Sri Lanka will travel to Hyderabad on October 8, after having played a day-night match in Delhi on October 7, against South Africa. Both Pakistan and Netherlands will open their campaign in Hyderabad, contesting each other on October 6, and will remain there for their second group match. New Zealand, who play Netherlands on October 9, will reach Hyderabad after playing the tournament opener against England on October 5 in Ahmedabad.

The tickets for the World Cup will go on sale on August 25, just over 40 days before the first game of the tournament on October 5.

Scouting Benjamin Cremaschi: Inter Miami and USMNT’s rising midfield star learning from Lionel Messi

GOAL takes a look at what makes the rising midfielder one of the hottest commodities in MLS, and why his future is in Europe

Benjamin Cremaschi seemingly came out of nowhere. He was an unknown commodity, a teenager of Argentine-American heritage who grew up playing local soccer and rugby in Miami.

But his rise has been otherworldly. After earning his first senior start at the MLS level in 2023, he's now being touted as the next great American soccer player – and his potential? And that's barely scraped the surface of it.

Playing alongside Lionel Messi, Sergio Busquets and Luis Suarez at Inter Miami, representing his country at the Olympic Games, making his senior U.S. men's national team debut, and putting forth a mindblowing performance against FC Porto – one of Europe's biggest teams – at the FIFA Club World Cup, Cremaschi is making his way up the ladder for both club and country.

Now, after surrounding himself with some of the best minds in the American game at the moment, he's looking to climb higher and higher.

"Obviously being around these guys [Messi and Suarez], you learn a lot," Cremaschi told GOAL earlier this year at the January USMNT camp. "You learn how they take care of their body, how they work in training. I think every single player in the club at Inter Miami tries to absorb everything they do, everything they show, and I think it's important to have people like that, to have people who played at that level.

"Obviously, they're amazing people. They try to help out with everything they can do. I'm super happy to have them there, and obviously, I try to translate what they show and what they do into my game."

Watch every FIFA Club World Cup game free on DAZNStream now

The 20-year-old signed a new long-term contract extension with Miami towards the end of the 2024 campaign, but that hasn't turned away potential suitors, either. The midfielder has been linked with a transfer to some of Europe's top clubs, including 2025-26 Champions League teams in Tottenham Hotspur and Juventus, both of whom are reportedly monitoring him this summer.

Cremaschi is just playing his game, and by doing so, he's catching the eyes of the world. But who is he, and genuinely, where did this all kick off? GOAL scouts the midfielder who could be the next great American midfielder, while being the first to learn his trade from Messi himself.

  • Where it all began

    "I've said it before, I think if I lived in Argentina, if I was born in Argentina, I think I would've played rugby, not soccer," Cremaschi told MLS and Apple TV commentator Taylor Twellman in 2024. "I did play rugby here when I was little, but it got to a point where I had to choose, and I thought I had more of a future in soccer, in this sport, and that's the route that I went."

    Well, safe to say he made the right call.

    Cremaschi, born in Miami to Argentine parents, grew up with Spanish as his first language. His family held strong connections to Argentina, even though they lived in South Florida. As a kid, he played for Key Biscayne Soccer Club and Weston FC, and even won the 2021 U16 MLS NEXT Cup with Weston. However, that's also the tournament where things changed for him – the competition where he realized there might be something real here with a potential career in the game.

    In 2021, he signed with Inter Miami as an academy player, where he quickly shot up the ranks of the program. At the U17 level, he helped the reach the semifinals of the Generation Adidas Cup and also earned an MLS NEXT All-Star selection the same year. In that gane, he went on to score an equalizing goal for the Eastern Conference All-Stars, spearheading them to victory in the match.

    In the same season, he also made his professional debut for Inter Miami II in MLS NEXT Pro and became a regular with the team, scoring five goals and recording an assist in 13 appearances.

    Come December 2022, he became the fifth Homegrown signing in Inter Miami history, signing a first-team deal with the club, and from there? It's all become history.

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    The big break

    Cremaschi made his senior debut for Miami in February 2023 and became a mainstay in the lineup after a few months of integrating himself into the XI. Then, in July 2023, it was announced that Messi was signing for the club – and that changed everything.

    Immediately after joining the club, the Argentine spearheaded Miami to a Leagues Cup title, claiming the first piece of silverware in club history for the . That competition also served as Cremaschi's big breakout moment, and having it come alongside Messi? That's the stuff of dreams.

    He featured in all seven games, starting six, including a run that saw him score the go-ahead strike against FC Dallas in the Round of 16 before bagging the game-winning penalty kick in an ensuing shootout later that evening. It was an electric moment; it was a match where he announced himself to all of MLS as the next star in the making.

    “This is the best thing that could’ve happened to me,” said Cremaschi in August 2023 after their Leagues Cup triumph. “Having Tata [Martino] and those three players [Messi, Busquets, Jordi Alba], people with a lot of experience who have been at elite levels. To absorb everything from them is great, not just for me but for every young player at the club.”

    Across all competitions, he played in 41 matches in his rookie season, scoring two goals. He even earned his first international call-up in September of that year, just days after lifting the Leagues Cup with the South Beach club. He went on to be nominated for U.S. Soccer's Young Player of the Year, as well.

    Six months changed his life and the trajectory of his career, and now, he's rising further and further up the ranks.

  • Biggest strengths

    It's a trait that often gets overlooked, but stamina, stamina, stamina.

    Cremaschi is a legitimate workhorse on the pitch. Constantly running, making tackles, pushing harder and harder both on and off the ball, the 20-year-old is the ideal midfielder for any manager with a system focused on pressing and a quick transition-based game.

    On the ball, he possesses tidy footwork and absolutely lovely right foot that has a drill of a shot, but where he really shines is off it.

    He's grown immensely over the past two years and has demonstrated an understanding of finding space and position off the ball, while learning how and when to make runs, which has become crucial to his role under Javier Mascherano this season. He has shown a willingness to adapt and learn different spaces on the pitch, while creating chances and opportunities for those around him as well.

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    Room for improvement

    Cremaschi still has yet to figure out what his best position is. Since signing for Miami, he's largely been used as an attacking midfielder, and it's widely expected that's where his career goes. However, his development with the has stagnated a bit this season because they are not playing with a traditional No. 10 most times, and Cremaschi has been used off the bench just in an attacking role more often than not as a result.

    Against Porto at the CWC, though, something different was tried by Mascherano, and it worked – extremely well.

    Cremaschi was deployed as a No. 8 in the midfield alongside Sergio Busquets and put on a masterclass performance in the center of the park. He was everywhere, all over the pitch, and locked down the midfield alongside the Spanish legend.

    So now, the question begs: where does Cremaschi fit in the grand scheme of things with Miami? What about the USMNT?
    The 20-year-old needs to figure out what his best position is, and once he does, he needs to push for regular starting minutes with it. For Inter Miami this season, he's started 10 matches, making 13 appearances in MLS action, with one goal and three assists. He's on track to better his 2024 account in the league, so that's a start, but he needs to define his position on the pitch so that his upward trajectory remains on course.

Smith-Chathli stands sets up Stars to power into Rachael Heyhoe Flint eliminator

Sparks’ hopes evaporate in steep chase as Davidson-Richards, McDonald-Gay share six

ECB Reporters Network16-Sep-2023South East Stars secured qualification in the Rachael Heyhoe-Flint Trophy in the most emphatic style with a 152-run victory over Central Sparks in a winner-takes-all clash at Edgbaston.Stars captain Bryony Smith led from the front with a blistering 97 from 81 balls, with ten fours, three sixes, and supported by Kira Chathli (61 off 92) powered her team to a hefty 283 for 7. Spinners Hannah Baker (2 for 46) and Georgia Davis (2 for 47) imposed some mid-innings control for Sparks.Sparks would have qualified themselves if they had chased down the target but their reply never took flight. Only Maddy Green, with 39 off 48 balls, passed 20 against a disciplined attack led by Alice Davidson-Richards and Ryana MacDonald-Gay, who both claimed three-fors.Put in, Stars lost an early wicket when Alexa Stonehouse skied a slog at Emily Arlott, but it was an isolated success with the new ball for the bowlers as Chathli and Smith added 125 in 21 overs for the second wicket.After Chathli chipped Baker to mid-off and Smith fell three short of a deserved century when she top-edged Davis to midwicket, the innings lost momentum in the middle before a late fillip came from Chloe Hill (34 off 24) and Maddie Blinkhorn-Jones. They batted intelligently to add 57 in 48 balls for the eighth wicket to lift the total from around par to imposing.Under some scoreboard pressure, Sparks needed a strong platform but lost both openers in three balls from McDonald-Gay. Eve Jones was strangled down the leg side and then Bethan Ellis edged a lovely outswinger to wicketkeeper Chathli.Green and Abi Freeborn counterattacked with brief success to take the score to 50 in ten overs but the departure of Freeborn, lbw to Paige Scholfield, triggered a collapse. Davidson-Richards removed Ami Campbell, caught at deep midwicket, and Katie George who top-edged a scoop and was well caught by Chathli running back towards fine leg.When Green, having hit six fours, was bowled by Danielle Gregory, it was 102 for 7. Sparks needed something miraculous from their tail but Stars closed the game out without alarms.

Aniversariante, Róger Guedes soma expressivos números no Brasileirão desde estreia pelo Corinthians

MatériaMais Notícias

Róger Guedes, artilheiro do Corinthians na temporada com 13 gols, completou 26 anos neste domingo (2), um dia após marcar um dos gols da vitória corintiana por 2 a 0 sobre o Cuiabá, pela29ª rodada do Brasileirão.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasCorinthiansEntenda por que Fausto Vera, do Corinthians, tira a cor verde de suas fotos nas redes sociaisCorinthians02/10/2022CorinthiansEmoção da família e papo com ‘veterano’: a semana de estreia de Arthur Sousa pelo CorinthiansCorinthians02/10/2022CorinthiansANÁLISE: Corinthians é letal e não se complica contra o Cuiabá, mas precisa evoluir para a Copa do BrasilCorinthians02/10/2022

+ ‘Trio parada dura’ do Corinthians brilha em vitória sobre o Cuiabá

Através de suas redes sociais, o Timão desejou feliz aniversário ao camisa 10 e postou gols marcados pelo atleta vestindo o manto alvinegro.

O atacante chegou ao clube do Parque São Jorge no segundo semestre de 2021. Desde então, ele se tornou a principal arma ofensiva da equipe, tanto com Sylvinho quanto com Vítor Pereira no comando técnico.

Em 74 jogos disputados, Guedes já marcou 20 gols e distribuiu sete assistências pelo clube alvinegro, atuando principalmente na ponta pelo lado esquerdo.

+ Veja tabela e simule as próximas rodadas do Brasileirão

Pelo Brasileirão, tanto na temporada passada quanto na atual, o camisa 10 lidera o Corinthians em gols marcados (15), chutes certos (51), faltas sofridas (95) e duelos ganhos (212), segundo o SofaScore.

Desde que Róger Guedes fez sua primeira partida com Yuri Alberto no comando de ataque corintiano, o camisa 10 tem três gols e duas assistências, participando de um gol a cada 165 minutos. Contra o Cuiabá, a dupla balançou as redes pela segunda partida consecutiva.

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Hathurusinghe deflects Shakib vs Tamim talk, wants focus to be on making final four

Says the final four is a realistic goal and a call on who will open in Tamim’s place will be taken on the morning of the Afghanistan match

Mohammad Isam06-Oct-2023

Chandika Hathurusinghe did not give away much during his pre-match press conference•AFP via Getty Images

These days, a public appearance by a member of Bangladesh’s team management inevitably means a flurry of questions about the Shakib Al Hasan-Tamim Iqbal issue.It was no different for Bangladesh coach Chandika Hathurusinghe ahead of the team’s first World Cup game, against Afghanistan in Dharamsala. Hathurusinghe, though, deftly deflected most of these questions, saying it was his job to keep the pressure off his team.When asked whether Bangladesh would be better off without Tamim facing up to Fazalhaq Farooqi, Hathurusinghe called it a “weird question”. When asked about Shakib’s scathing attack on Tamim, Hathurusinghe just smiled.Related

Hathurusinghe: Our batting let us down with 'high expectations'

Scenic Dharamsala offers Bangladesh, Afghanistan chance to grab early points

Bangladesh's unlikely heroes step up as race for World Cup spots heat up

Tamim hits out at BCB; claims he would have been fit in time for World Cup

Shakib: Tamim 'childish' and 'not a team man'

Hathurusinghe himself had caused a stir last month when he said that people should “wake up” if they were dreaming about Bangladesh winning the World Cup. Speaking to Dhaka-based newspaper , Hathurusinghe had said: “For whatever reason, our captain [Shakib] was appointed five weeks ago. I came six months ago. This is not ideal [so close to a World Cup]. But it doesn’t mean Bangladesh can’t do anything good in the World Cup…”Bangladesh’s biggest achievement is three wins in a campaign. So if someone is dreaming that we will win the World Cup, I will tell them to ‘wake up from their sleep’. It is possible to do something better than before. We are keeping our goal big – to reach the semi-finals.”Later, when these comments were pointed out to Tamim during the New Zealand series, he expressed surprise, saying, “I definitely think we should dream. You won’t achieve it if you don’t dream. Our Under-19 team never went past the quarter-finals but because they dreamt big, they became champions [at the 2020 World Cup]. This is our seventh World Cup, so when are we going to have a dream?”The question popped up again in Dharamsala, and Hathurusinghe responded: “My job is to take the pressure off from the players. People can dream, can aim. They can have goals. We are trying to have a good World Cup, win matches. Our aim is to get into the semi-final. It can be a dream.1:43

Steyn: It will be spin vs spin, and Shakib vs Rashid

“We all want to win the World Cup. Since you asked me our realistic goal, if we can win four or five matches we can get into the semi-finals. This is our first target. We have a good enough team to do this. We have to reach the semi-finals stage.”On the actual cricket front, foremost among the big questions is who will step into Tamim’s shoes at the top of the order? Will it be young Tanzid Hasan or will Mehidy Hasan Miraz remain their preferred opening option, particularly as coach and captain believe Mehidy is effective against offspinner Mujeeb Ur Rahman, who is likely to take the new ball alongside Farooqi? The surface, too, will need to be taken into account, with talk of the Dharamsala pitch perhaps not aiding the spin trio of Mujeeb, Rashid Khan and Mohammad Nabi, who have often dominated Bangladesh across formats.”We have two options [to take Tamim’s spot]. We will be in a better place to make that decision tomorrow morning,” the coach said. “We will see if we bat first or second, and then take a decision. Wicket looks really good for one-day cricket. It has a nice covering of grass. I think it will be a really good sporting wicket. We are expecting high scoring in this ground. We will decide the combination tomorrow morning.”Often, a big win has papered over many cracks for Bangladesh. This World Cup opener, against Afghanistan, is a game which Bangladesh desperately need to win, and for more than just the two points.

'Bringing the party to the games' – How sizzling South American fans are cranking up the volume at a 2025 FIFA Club World Cup that has, at times, seemed sedate

Four of six CONMEBOL teams advanced to the CWC knockouts, with passionate supporters adding much needed flavor

Some were taking over nightclubs at 6 a.m. Everyone else had gone to bed.

One man supposedly burned his car. He wanted the write off for the insurance cash to fly to America.

One group shut down the Brooklyn Bridge. It was just another evening.

And there have been many, many more scenes across the country this summer. There was always belief that South American fans would bring a certain flavor to the Club World Cup. What perhaps wasn’t expected, though, was just how significant that impact would be.

While attendance for games has varied greatly across the tournament, South American fans have provided the rhythm, jump and thump to keep the whole tournament rolling along. And with the knockout phases looming – and a handful of South American sides having qualified for the round of 16 – their impact on the Summer of Soccer in America will only continue.

“We have that mentality, that first we need to be all united," Adriano Batista Branco, head of the Palmeiras consulate of New York, told GOAL. "All the Palmeiras supporters need to be united and cheering for the team, and supporting them all the time."

Getty Images'Welcome to the real world'

Most of the discussion about fans leading up to, and during, the CWC has been statistical. FIFA saying 1.5 million tickets have been sold. Only 3,000 fans showing up to a game in Orlando. All very clinical.

What South American sides have offered, though, is something more tangible. Their existence in this tournament comes in volume, but it is also quantifiable in passion. They exist in tradition, scene and ritual – transplanting an entire culture from one continent to another.

They exist in success, too. All four Brazilian clubs advanced from the group stages of the tournament – and in relatively comfortable fashion. They hold a combined record of 6-5-1. Palmeiras and Flamengo won their groups. Botafogo did the unthinkable and beat reigning Champions League holders PSG in the group stage.

“Before the tournament started, everyone thought we had no chance against two top opponents from major European leagues," Botafogo captain Marlon Freitas said. "We've shown the value of Brazilian football. We are champions of South America, and we deserve respect."

Pep Guardiola, Manchester City’s legendary manager, was far from surprised by the result.

"I like how all the games are tight, except one or two, and people are surprised, European teams lose. Welcome to the real world. Welcome to the real world my friends," he said.

There is history here. For 44 years, the best team in South America and best team in Europe played each other in the Intercontinental Cup. Organized in conjunction between UEFA and CONMEBOL, the contest was effectively a forum for bragging rights.

It became a controversial contest in the late 1960s after a violent second leg saw long-term bans handed out to multiple players. But after a rebrand and return, the competition chugged along, and allowed for some famous upsets for South American sides over European clubs. That tension has carried through until today – and has been on display at the Club World Cup.

AdvertisementAFP'The cemetery of football is full of favorites'

You would have thought that Botafogo won the World Cup final when the final whistle went in their group game with PSG on June 19. Goalkeeper John looked up to the sky. The bench sprinted onto the pitch, dodging blue PSG jerseys and they gathered in their own penalty box in celebration.

The fans in the stands threw their drinks in the air. Manager Renato Paiva just smiled.

It had, in truth, been a pretty ugly 1-0 win in brutal conditions at the Rose Bowl. But Botafogo didn’t care. After beating Seattle to open their tournament, it was the victory over a European that they needed to make it out of the so-called group of death. Their manager, had, in fact, seen it coming.

“The cemetery of football is full of favorites,” he said in wonderful fashion before the game.

The fans were less poetic, but perhaps more forthright in their support. PSG supporters flooded out of the Rose Bowl at full time. The Brazilian ultras were still in the stands, drumming and dancing an hour later.

Getty Images Sport'We have the ultras'

For Adriano Batista Branco, it was a no brainer. The Club World Cup had been circled on his calendar for a long time. The founder of Palmerias' official New York fan group had started preparing for it since the day the draw was finalized, in December 2024.

For him, that meant cultivating a whole fan experience that would last for as long as the team was in the tournament. He knew, for example, that there would be a heavy influx of fans from Brazil – as well as visitors from around the United States.

“We have supporters from the Consulate of Chicago, of Toronto, of Dublin, also New Jersey. And then we have the ultras from Sao Paolo,” Batista Branco said.

He organized the mass gathering of Palmeiras fans in Times Square that made headlines on the eve of the tournament. He coordinated buses and travel to make the inevitable journey from Legends Bar in Midtown Manhattan to MetLife Stadium. And he knew that there had to be events in between.

He organized rowdy boat tours around the Statue of Liberty, and helped piece together a party that effectively shut down the walkway of the Brooklyn Bridge. He figured a couple of hundred people would show up. The actual number, he figured, was at least twice that.

And at the game, he wanted the party to be even bigger. Palmeiras-Porto was the CWC’s first taste of South American fan culture. And what an experience it was, the majority of MetLife Stadium’s lower bowl a sea of green.

Before the game, there were further festivities, traveling fans shutting down a nearby shopping mall in the middle of what might otherwise have been an average Sunday for the hundreds of families that had trundled in from New Jersey suburbia.

“I felt like it was our stadium in Sao Paolo. It felt like home,” Batista Branco said.

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Getty Images Sport'We just want to have attention'

Ricardo has lived in the United States for 15 years, splitting time between New York and Miami. It was fortunate for him, then, that the draw meant that his beloved Fluminense played in those two cities.

The avid fan, like his Palmeiras compatriot, went to work pretty quickly after the draw was announced. He had contacts within the club, and wanted, too, to cultivate a fan experience. And traditions have been upheld wonderfully. The standard stuff is here – the music, the banners, the chanting, the food. To him, a lifelong fan of the club, it seems as close to the real thing as possible. It helped, too, that 10,000 fans from Brazil flew in to join the party.

"Initially, we didn't think that many people were going to come. It's been a lot. It's kind of like a mini World Cup that we're living," Ricardo said.

But more important to Ricardo is the respect that his side – and South American football in general – has earned from their performances.

"Sometimes we just want to have attention and show the rest of the world our game. So I think that since in the beginning, when the teams were undefeated, and has started well, bringing the party and the atmosphere to the games, there was this kind of like, 'Oh, OK, we're doing well in South America,'" he said.

Fluminense have been in the U.S. before for preseason friendlies. He has experienced those. And the atmospheres there tend to be good, he said. But they can also get stale, held in the middle of nowhere in the July heat against a random European team. What gives this thing authenticity, he said – beyond tradition – is the way that the fans have interacted with each other.

He walked through Penn Station and around Times Square, and saw jerseys of his own club, but also of Palmeiras and Esperance de Tunis. Seeing a culture come to life – with South American football at the forefront – has meant the world.

"What's gonna stick with me so far is actually the experience of being in New York and having everybody there, but not only our fans, but also like the fans of other teams," he said.

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