Rabu, 30 November 2022

Argentina coast past Poland 2-0 to top World Cup Group C - Al Jazeera English

Second-half goals from Alexis Mac Allister and Julian Alvarez cap a return to form for the South American giants.

Argentina coasted past Poland in a 2-0 victory on Wednesday night to top Group C and confirm their place in the last 16 of the World Cup, signalling a return to form for the South American giants after a poor start to this year’s tournament.

Alexis Mac Allister and Julian Alvarez’s second-half goals capped a dominant display by coach Lionel Scaloni’s charges at Stadium 974 – which was packed to the rafters with tens of thousands of raucous Argentinian supporters – to set up a clash with Australia on Saturday.

After a goalless first 45 minutes, Mac Allister got on the end of Nahuel Molina’s cross just one minute into the second period and, despite making weak contact, he saw his shot creep over the line with Polish keeper Wojciech Szczesny beaten.

The second goal was the result of patient buildup play which saw Argentina shift the ball around before Enzo Fernandez made a defence-splitting pass for Julian Alvarez, who found space in the box and smashed it into the top corner to effectively kill the game in the 67th minute.

Poland were lifeless throughout but managed to also squeeze through to the knockout phase on goal difference at the expense of Mexico, who beat Saudi Arabia 2-1 in Group C’s other match.

They will meet defending champions France in the last 16 on Sunday.

Argentina's Alexis Mac Allister scores their first goal
Mac Allister opened the scoring for Argentina immediately after half-time [Issei Kato/Reuters]

Messi misses from the penalty spot

The first half’s defining moment came in the 39th minute when Argentina captain and talisman Lionel Messi failed to convert from the penalty spot on his record-breaking 22nd World Cup match, one more than the late Diego Maradona managed for La Albiceleste.

Poland were up in arms when Argentina were awarded the penalty after a VAR check for a foul on Messi when Szczesny’s glove brushed his face as the Paris St Germain forward rose up for a header at the far post.

But Szczesny was up to the task and despite the Argentina fans raising the decibel levels inside the arena, he kept his composure and guessed correctly, diving to his left and using one hand to swat aside Messi’s effort.

Not to be deterred, Messi never stopped surging forward and he was a menace to Poland all throughout the game with his dribbling ability and vision.

His glittering performance stood in stark contrast to that of Poland’s star striker Robert Lewandowski, who was deprived of service and virtually anonymous for the duration of the match.

Messi, 35, has admitted this will likely be his last World Cup outing while Lewandoski, 34, has said he is unsure if he will make it to the 2026 edition in North America but would like to do so.

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2022-11-30 21:05:28Z
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Maple Leafs extend win streak to five games as Marner enters record book - Sportsnet.ca

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2022-12-01 03:05:00Z
1678325746

2022 FIFA World Cup: How Canada can finish with a win vs. Morocco - Sportsnet.ca

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2022-11-30 15:28:00Z
1649686472

As Flames dominate Panthers, fans give Tkachuk mixed welcome upon return to Calgary - Sportsnet.ca

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2022-11-30 06:54:00Z
1676917592

Alex Ovechkin Washington Capitals down Vancouver Canucks - TSN

VANCOUVER — Alex Ovechkin's always enjoyed playing on the road.

That showed Tuesday when he hit yet another milestone, scoring twice as his Washington Capitals downed the Canucks 5-1 in Vancouver.

The 37-year-old Russian now has 403 road goals, passing Wayne Gretzky for the most in NHL history.

“It's always nice when you beat the Great One," Ovechkin said. "It doesn't matter what kind of milestone it is. It's history.”

Breaking records is nothing new for the future Hall of Famer and watching history be made has been a treat for his teammates.

"I think he has 13 goals this year and I want to say like eight or nine have been like a new record. So it's been cool," said Washington centre Dylan Strome. "Any time you pass Wayne Gretzky in anything, it deserves a standing ovation, which he got."

Anthony Mantha chipped in a goal and an assist for the Capitals (10-11-3), while John Carlson and Martin Fehervary also scored. Washington's Darcy Kuemper stopped 31-of-32 shots.

Nils Hoglander had the lone tally for the Canucks (9-11-3), who got 23 saves from Spencer Martin.

The result snapped a three-game win streak for Vancouver.

"It’s frustrating. Because when you lose games, it should never be about your compete level and battle level," said Canucks centre J.T. Miller. "It’s frustrating because they didn’t out-skill us today, they didn’t out-system us. They literally just out-battled us and created their own chances.”

Ovechkin put away his first goal of the night 5:35 into the game. As Quinn Hughes came around from behind the net, he picked the puck off the Vancouver defenceman's stick and batted a quick shot in to give Washington the early 1-0 lead.

It was his 135th game-opening goal, tying Jaromir Jagr for the most in the NHL's history books.

Ovechkin's 403rd road goal came 11:52 into the opening frame, when he blasted a one-timer from the faceoff circle for his 13th of the season.

“(Ovechkin) was really good in the first and I thought we were really good in the first so it was nice to get out and get a jump like that," said Capitals coach Peter Laviolette. "He certainly led. We knew we needed to have a good first period, have a good game and you need your best players to do that.”

Hoglander got the Canucks on the board 13:55 into the first with his second goal of the season. The Swedish winger collected the puck from Miller and cut across the crease, tucking a backhanded shot between the post and Kuemper's skate.

The play extended Miller's point streak to nine games with four goals and seven assists across the stretch.

Forty seconds later, the Capitals regained a two-goal lead. Alone at the top of the crease, Anthony Mantha fired a wrist shot past Martin to put Washington up 3-1.

Lars Eller registered an assist on the play, marking the 200th helper of his NHL career.

“It could have been 6-1 after the first period, quite frankly, with the amount of chances (Washington) had," said Canucks head coach Bruce Boudreau.

The veteran NHL bench boss coached the Capitals from 2007 to 2011 and said Ovechkin is always going to score.

"On his second goal, it looks like ‘Oh, maybe (Martin) should have had it.’ But I’ve seen (Ovechkin) score 100 goals like that," Boudreau said. "He’s got a shot that finds its way in.

"Spencer’s been great for us. He’s probably a bit like the other players tonight. They weren’t ready to play and it showed on the scoreboard.”

Carlson put away the lone tally of the second, chipping in a loose puck from the low hash marks 18:47 into the period to give Washington a three-goal cushion.

Ovechkin nearly netted a hat trick when Vancouver pulled Martin in favour of an extra attacker with just over six minutes left on the game clock, but his rocket of a shot skimmed the outside post of the empty net.

Fehervary went on to seal the score at 5-1, flipping a high puck into the Canucks' zone and into the unmanned crease 15:57 into the third.

The result gives the Capitals a sweep of the two-game season series. They also took a 6-4 win over the Canucks in Washington on Oct. 17.

POWER-LESS PLAY

Washington went 0-for-1 with the man advantage Tuesday and Vancouver went 0-for-3.

UPS AND DOWNS

Vancouver assigned winger Vasily Podkolzin and defenceman Jack Rathbone to the Abbotsford Canucks Monday, then recalled forward Phillip Di Giuseppe from the American Hockey League club on Tuesday.

UP NEXT

The Canucks continue a four-game homestand Thursday when they host the Florida Panthers. The Capitals take on the Kraken in Seattle the same night.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 29, 2022.

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2022-11-30 07:02:41Z
1674531502

Ovechkin passes Gretzky for NHL road goals mark, Capitals defeat Canucks - NHL.com

VANCOUVER -- Alex Ovechkin scored twice to pass Wayne Gretzky for the most road goals in NHL history, and the Washington Capitals defeated the Vancouver Canucks 5-1 at Rogers Arena on Tuesday.

Ovechkin opened the scoring from the right side of the net following a giveaway by Quinn Hughes at 5:35 of the first period to tie the record with 402 road goals. He then passed Gretzky with a one-timer from the top left circle to make it 2-0 at 11:52.

"It's always nice when you beat the Great One," Ovechkin said. "It doesn't matter what kind of milestone it is. It's history.

"It seems like we always have fun on the road, spend time more together and I think everybody enjoys it."

Video: WSH@VAN: Ovechkin scores 2nd goal of game

Anthony Mantha had a goal and an assist, and Darcy Kuemper made 31 saves for the Capitals (10-11-3), who ended a six-game road losing streak.

Washington, which has won three of its past four games overall, got goals from three lines. 

"That was a good 60 right there," Mantha said. "We were hard on them, obviously made good O-zone plays and the puck bounced our way."

Spencer Martin made 23 saves for the Canucks (9-11-3), who had a season-long three-game winning streak end.

"We feel like we've come together and we're getting better and better and building, so to come here and have a game go that way is disappointing," said Martin, who started for the third time in four games. "And I take a lot of responsibility for this loss because the goalie has a unique way to affect the game and I felt like early in the game, I didn't do enough to give us a chance."

Ovechkin set the tone early for the Capitals, who did not lead at any point in their four previous road losses.

"He was really good in the first and I thought we were really good in the first so it was nice to get out and get a jump like that," coach Peter Laviolette said. "He certainly led. We knew we needed to have a good first period, have a good game and you need your best players to do that."

Video: WSH@VAN: Ovechkin ties Gretzky for most road goals

Ovechkin's first goal was his 135th game-opening goal, tying Jaromir Jagr for the most in NHL history. His second put him at 793 for his career, eight behind Gordie Howe for second in NHL history. 

"I think he has 13 goals this year and I want to say like eight or nine have been … a new record," said Dylan Strome, who made the cross-ice pass on the second goal. "I'm sure you will see the video of the reaction we had after the game when we found out so it's pretty cool. So cool moment. Anytime you pass Wayne Gretzky in anything, it deserves a standing ovation, which he got."

Nils Hoglander pulled the Canucks within 2-1 at 13:55 of the first period when he skated out of the corner, across the crease and beat Kuemper to the far post. J.T. Miller had the assist on the goal to extend his point streak to nine games (11 points; four goals, seven assists).

Mantha responded 40 seconds later to make it 3-1. He received a pass from Marcus Johansson and scored blocker after being left alone atop the crease between three defenders.

"We know that's a desperate team over there as well, so it's disappointing when you don't come out and don't execute and get outcompeted pretty much period by period there," Miller said. "It's frustrating because when you lose games, it should never be about your compete level and battle level. It's frustrating because they didn't out-skill us today, they didn't out-system us. They literally just out-battled us and created their own chances."

Video: WSH@VAN: Carlson increases Capitals' lead in 2nd

John Carlson made it 4-1 at 18:47 of the second period with a chip shot from the bottom left hash marks, and Martin Fehervary scored into an empty net with 4:03 left in the third for the 5-1 final.

Once they got back to the locker room, though, the focus was on Ovechkin. 

"This one is unreal, obviously, beating the Great One and he becomes No. 1 in that aspect," Mantha said. "I don't even think he knew about it until after the game so good for him, and obviously, there's more records that are going to get broken."

NOTES: Ovechkin has 160 multigoal games in the NHL, second to only Gretzky (189). ... Capitals forward Lars Eller had an assist on Mantha's goal, his 200th NHL assist and his 200th point with the Capitals (83 goals, 117 assists). … Carlson has scored five goals in his past nine games. … Canucks forward Elias Pettersson had his point streak end at six games and was minus-5 in 17:04 of ice time. 

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2022-11-30 05:53:40Z
1674531502

NHL Highlights | Panthers vs. Flames - November 29, 2022 - SPORTSNET

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2022-11-30 04:58:04Z
1676917592

Ovechkin breaks a different Gretzky record - NHL

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2022-11-30 03:46:10Z
1674531502

Selasa, 29 November 2022

FIFA charges Croatia after fans taunt Canada goalkeeper Milan Borjan at World Cup - CTV News

DOHA, QATAR -

FIFA opened a disciplinary case against Croatia on Tuesday because of its fans' taunts aimed at Canadian goalkeeper Milan Borjan, who has Serbian family ties, during the teams' World Cup game.

FIFA said the charge against the Croatian soccer federation was "due to the behaviour of its fans" and cited rules relating to discrimination and security at games. It followed a formal complaint by Canada Soccer.

Borjan was born in an ethnic Serb region of Croatia that was part of the conflict that split the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s.

Borjan's family left their hometown in 1995 when it was taken by Croatian forces amid stories that ethnic Serbs fled on tractors.

During Canada's 4-1 loss on Sunday, one banner displayed by Croatia fans used a flag of tractor manufacturer John Deere and changed the marketing slogan to target Borjan. The abuse was especially loud in the second half when Borjan's goal was right in front of the Croatia fans.

Canada Soccer said it wrote a formal letter to FIFA "registering displeasure and disgust" at the banner.

"Canada Soccer asked for a full explanation as to how these props and actions were permitted in the stadium and how FIFA will address this matter," the organization said in a statement. "We have also requested a formal apology."

Borjan was 13 when his family moved to Canada -- initially Winnipeg and then Hamilton a year later. He plays his club football for storied Serbian club Red Star Belgrade.

The 35-year-old has won 71 caps for Canada.

FIFA gave no timetable for a verdict in the case which would typically be judged with a fine for the federation.

In the first disciplinary verdict of the World Cup on Tuesday, FIFA imposed a 10,000 Swiss francs (C$14,000) fine on the German soccer federation for not bringing players to the news conference that is mandatory one day before a game.

Coach Hansi Flick appeared alone Saturday in breach of tournament rules to meet international media in Doha ahead of the team playing Spain.

With files from The Canadian Press.

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2022-11-29 21:44:15Z
CAIiEEocPBoh9_5jP1RgcuHIGdsqGQgEKhAIACoHCAow6f-ICzDjj4gDMJTFnwY

FIFA opens disciplinary case against Croatia for fan taunts of Canadian goalkeeper Milan Borjan - CBC Sports

FIFA opened a disciplinary case against Croatia on Tuesday because of its fans' taunts aimed at Canadian goalkeeper Milan Borjan, who has Serbian family ties, during the teams' World Cup game.

FIFA said the case against the Croatian soccer federation was "due to the behaviour of its fans" and cited rules relating to discrimination and security at games. It followed a formal complaint by Canada Soccer.

Borjan was born in an ethnic Serb region of Croatia that was part of the conflict that split the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s.

Borjan's family left their hometown in 1995 when it was taken by Croatian forces amid stories that ethnic Serbs fled on tractors.

'We support Milan'

During Canada's 4-1 loss Sunday, one banner displayed by Croatia fans used a flag of tractor manufacturer John Deere and changed the marketing slogan to target Borjan. The abuse was especially loud in the second half when Borjan's goal was right in front of the Croatia fans.

"We support Milan. There's a big history behind that [and] most educated people know about it. So he kind of educated us on it a little bit before the game [against Croatia]," Canadian midfielder Jonathan Osorio told reporters on Tuesday.

"We kind of knew what he was going to go through in that game. We told him 'we are behind you at all times.' Unfortunately there were some discriminatory things that happened in the game toward him. Of course, nobody, I think, tolerates that, not in Canada. I hope the right thing is done by everything that has happened."

Croatian soccer federation spokesman Tomislav Pacak wouldn't comment on the specific case but said the organization "always condemns any sort of racism, any form of discrimination and we call on the fans and every individual not to behave in that manner."

Borjan was 13 when his family moved to Canada — initially Winnipeg and then Hamilton a year later. He plays his club football for storied Serbian club Red Star Belgrade.

FIFA gave no timetable for a verdict in the case, which would typically be settled with a fine for the federation.

The 35-year-old has won 71 caps for Canada.

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2022-11-29 16:53:50Z
CAIiECQN48iUgUmhyb3VnyTEvcYqFwgEKg4IACoGCAowodZhML36DTD2waAG

FIFA opens disciplinary case against Croatia for fan taunts of Canadian goalkeeper Milan Borjan - CBC Sports

FIFA opened a disciplinary case against Croatia on Tuesday because of its fans' taunts aimed at Canadian goalkeeper Milan Borjan, who has Serbian family ties, during the teams' World Cup game.

FIFA said the case against the Croatian soccer federation was "due to the behaviour of its fans" and cited rules relating to discrimination and security at games. It followed a formal complaint by Canada Soccer.

Borjan was born in an ethnic Serb region of Croatia that was part of the conflict that split the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s.

Borjan's family left their hometown in 1995 when it was taken by Croatian forces amid stories that ethnic Serbs fled on tractors.

During Canada's 4-1 loss Sunday, one banner displayed by Croatia fans used a flag of tractor manufacturer John Deere and changed the marketing slogan to target Borjan. The abuse was especially loud in the second half when Borjan's goal was right in front of the Croatia fans.

Borjan was 13 when his family moved to Canada — initially Winnipeg and then Hamilton a year later. He plays his club football for storied Serbian club Red Star Belgrade.

The 35-year-old has won 71 caps for Canada.

FIFA gave no timetable for a verdict in the case which would typically be judged with a fine for the federation.

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2022-11-29 15:01:39Z
1656686231

Panthers @ Oilers 11/28 | NHL Highlights 2022 - NHL

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2022-11-29 05:55:49Z
1670292242

Senin, 28 November 2022

Brazil vs. Switzerland Highlights - FIFA World Cup 2022 - TSN

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2022-11-28 18:26:34Z
1659031057

World Cup 2022: Croatian coach criticizes John Herdman for avoiding handshake - Yahoo Canada Sports

Zlatko Dalić said Canada head coach John Herdman must

Zlatko Dalić said Canada head coach John Herdman must "learn some things" after he seemingly avoided shaking hands with the Croatian coach following a 4-1 loss on Sunday. (Getty Images)

After shocking the world with a masterful display in their first World Cup game since 1986, the Canadian men’s national team were emphatically humbled in their second match against Croatia. The 4-1 loss not only eliminated them from contention with a game to spare, but served as a reminder to respect the success and caliber of their opponents.

During his post-match comments following the game against Belgium, head coach John Herdman claimed they would go on to “F Croatia.” As runners-up in the 2018 World Cup, the Croatian side unsurprisingly took umbrage to a comment like that, letting it serve as motivation as they dispatched Canada comfortably.

At full-time, John Herdman was nowhere to be seen, heading straight down the tunnel without shaking hands with Croatian head coach Zlatko Dalic.

“He wasn't there and that's his way of doing things. He's obviously mad. He is a good coach, he is a high-quality professional, but it will take some time for him to learn some things,” said Dalic. “Whether I lose or win, I always congratulate the other head coach.”

While Alphonso Davies opened the scoring just 68 seconds in, it would all go downhill from there. Croatia’s midfield trio of Luka Modrić, Marcelo Brozović, and Mateo Kovačić sliced through Canada with ease, creating chances every time they touched the ball, and enabling the four unanswered goals that led them to victory.

The Croatian boss wasn’t the only one to remind Canada to watch their comments next time around. Andrej Kramarić — who scored a brace in a Man of the Match performance — thanked Herdman for the extra boost in motivation, adding that “In the end, Croatia demonstrated who eff'd whom."

After scoring their first-ever goal at a men’s World Cup, Canada will now look to take their first points in the tournament as a potential spoiler when they face off against Morocco on Thursday.

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2022-11-28 16:07:24Z
1656686231

South Korea vs. Ghana Highlights - FIFA World Cup 2022 - TSN

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2022-11-28 15:42:56Z
1659973707

Minggu, 27 November 2022

After taking Canada so far, an over-reliance on emotion proved their undoing at the World Cup - The Athletic

John Herdman shouted, clenched his fists in anger and walked with his head down, alone, into Canada’s dugout.

The wall of aggressive noises from what felt like hundreds of nearby Croatians must have been deafening. The sound had begun to ramp up eight minutes earlier when Andrej Kramaric scored Croatia’s first goal and a small handful of his vitriolic teammates approached Herdman, possibly using a variety of the same curse word he had used four days earlier when describing their team.

But it was when Marko Livaja scored Croatia’s second goal, taking the lead for the 2018 World Cup finalists, that Herdman bowed his head for the first time in this World Cup.

It was a lead Croatia would not relinquish. Despite Alphonso Davies scoring Canada’s first ever men’s World Cup goal with a stunning header in just the second minute, Croatia stomped on Canada because they could and, after Herdman’s comments, they wanted to. They had the tactical precision, the intelligence to execute their decision-making and, perhaps most importantly, the experience that made a 4-1 win over Canada look easy.

They could weather a Canadian storm that felt like it was built on vibes and vibes alone at times. Because when Herdman walked back into the dugout, his head down for the first time in what felt like his entire time as Canada’s coach, he may have realized what happens when a team relies too heavily on emotion.

Canada’s hopes of advancing out of the group stage are now dead, and it was a series of poor decisions that sunk them.

Over a lengthy qualifying campaign, upstart teams have the opportunity to learn from their mistakes and correct them. But in a short World Cup run, the margins for error are thin, and mistakes have a way of compounding at an alarmingly quick rate.

Throughout this World Cup run, one of the go-to phrases used by Canada’s players, coach and staff was that Canada was indeed a “football nation.”

It’s the right attitude: you’re at the dance. Act like you belong.

And there were genuine moments — most of an entire game against the No. 2 ranked team in the world, in fact — where they did look like they belong.

But if this team wants to be considered as a “football nation,” one that can routinely be CONCACAF’s best, they cannot make the kinds of decisions predicated on emotions that they did against top-quality teams like Belgium and Croatia, who use experience and tactical know-how to beat down opponents.

And they have to be ready for those decisions to be questioned.

For a little under two years, the vibes around this team have been impeccable: the brotherhood, the positivity, the sword, the belief that this team is on the upswing and can grow the game in their country in an unprecedented way. It was difficult to question this team because of how far they’ve come in such a short amount of time. Their progress, and results throughout CONCACAF were real and deserved to be celebrated.

Those results somehow feel far in the distance now, and the questions surrounding this team must intensify in order to maintain that progress.

First, there are the two words that will likely be the ghost rattling around in Herdman’s closet for some time now: “F— Croatia.”

Herdman must have known, even in some small part, what he was doing.

There are a few things that have become hallmarks of Herdman’s entire ethos, and meticulous preparation is one of them. This is the man who, you’ll remember, sends 64-page documents to what he calls his “tactical architects” on his team about each of Canada’s opponents.

How could he possibly have not known that saying on camera he told his team they were going to “F— Croatia” would lead to an intensified opponent the following game?

Want to know if it had an effect on the Croatia team?

“These are words that have motivated the whole of Croatia,” forward Andrej Kramaric, who scored two goals on the night, said after the game. “I want to thank the coach of Canada for the motivation. He could have chosen better words. He could have formulated it a bit differently. In the end Croatia demonstrated who F’d whom.”

Now, maybe Croatia would have played just as well against Canada. But the point is we’ll never know. A team that was already more talented and experienced than Canada was also served extra motivation on a platter. To be clear: there’s no issue about the message that Herdman delivered within the confines of a team huddle. But the results of sharing that message with the media are now evident. Again, this Canada team sometimes veers more towards relying on their heart than their head, and this was when it went too far.

Tactically, Canada defended in a poor manner on all four goals. That needs to be clear. But the most prevalent tactical mistake on the day was the decision to both start 39-year-old Atiba Hutchinson and leave him in the match.

It didn’t take long to see that Hutchinson couldn’t keep up with the pace of the game, and a mix of questionable decision-making in his defending and a lack of speed was partly to blame for Croatia’s first and third goals, in particular.

Hutchinson was playing in his 100th game for Canada and deserves the entire country’s respect for how loyal he’s been to the team and how well he’s played for so long. But in the end, the loyalty Herdman had in Hutchinson burned the team’s chances. Croatia’s midfield had outmaneuvered Hutchinson and exposed his advancing age. Herdman not bringing Hutchinson off at half, or even sooner, might not feel like the most pressing issue to fix with this team, but it might have been the one that put them under an inescapable knife.

What’s curious, however, is that Herdman said after the match that while he might have wanted to take Hutchinson off, the veteran midfielder asked to stay on. Leaning too heavily on loyalty instead of making necessary tactical adjustments was a clear error to nearly everyone else watching the game.

“I thought (Hutchinson) was just next level in that first half,” said Herdman. “I was really, really happy with his performance. A real leader tonight. I asked him in about the 55th minute, because that was the plan to bring him out at that time. I asked him how he was, and he said he wanted to keep going.”

Herdman said that the team needed leadership, and that’s why he kept him in instead of opting for 20-year-old Ismael Kone.

But why opt for intangibles when it was clear the opposition had figured them out tactically?

On the day, playing Hutchinson was just one of the tactical mistakes this Canada team made. As prepared as they claimed to be, they capitulated against a smart, talented team.

Milan Borjan, for one, was out of answers after the game.

“We started to press but then we pulled back, and I don’t know why,” said Borjan.

Jonathan Osorio had some answers worth following. Canada fell apart on the day in the middle of the park.

“Their midfield three is the key to everything, I feel,” said Osorio. “They figured out the spaces, they figured out our formation, they figured out our pressing cues. And they started to use those cues to their advantage because there are three against two in the middle. And they took advantage of that. And as soon as they saw the spaces open up, you saw their midfielders going out into spaces, dragging guys out and leaving the third man open. They’re a very smart team.”

This is all good information, but not new information.

Osorio clutched Luka Modric’s jersey that he swapped for, and smiled when asked about getting a memento from his “idol”.

But the gap between that idol and the Canada team was just too large to overcome.

Finally, it’s in the rearview mirror, but still visible: That there wasn’t a clear penalty taker decided before the tournament and that Alphonso Davies took the penalty against Belgium because he was feeling confident in the moment, only to have it saved, is curious. Had Canada converted that penalty, they might have been able to get a result against Belgium. And their World Cup hopes would still be alive.

But relying on confidence in the moment instead of adhering to a predetermined plan?

That’s heart, not the head.

After Croatia’s fourth goal on Sunday, Herdman tilted his head and threw his arms out wide. He was out of answers. He began walking, once again, to his dugout.

In so many ways, this year and this World Cup represented big steps forward for Canada men’s soccer, but they could have been even bigger if not for those costly judgment errors in recent days. Both Herdman and the team have a little under four years to reflect on this experience, to refine their process, and to create the kind of meaningful World Cup experience they so desperately want.

(Photo: David Ramos – FIFA/FIFA via Getty Images)

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2022-11-27 23:47:19Z
1669113963

Riots in Belgium, Netherlands after Morocco win at World Cup - CTV News

BRUSSELS -

Riots broke out in several Belgian and Dutch cities after Morocco’s 2-0 upset win over Belgium at the World Cup Sunday.

Police detained about a dozen people after they deployed water cannons and fire tear gas to disperse crowds in Brussels and eight more in the Northern city of Antwerp. Two police officials were injured in the Dutch port city of Rotterdam. By late evening Sunday, an uneasy calm had returned to most of the cities involved.

Dozens of rioters overturned and torched cars, set electric scooters on fire and pelted cars with bricks. Police moved in after one person suffered facial injuries, said Brussels police spokeswoman Ilse Van de Keere.

Brussels mayor Philippe Close urged people to stay away from the city center and said authorities were doing their utmost to keep order in the streets. Even subway and tram traffic had to be interrupted on police orders.

“Those are not fans, they are rioters. Moroccan fans are there to celebrate,” Close said. There were also disturbances in the city of Antwerp and Liege.

“Sad to see how a few individuals abuse a situation to run amok,” said Interior Minister Annelies Verlinden.

Police in the neighbouring Netherlands said violence erupted in the port city of Rotterdam, with riot officers attempting to break up a group of 500 soccer supporters who pelted police with fireworks and glass. Media reported unrest in the capital Amsterdam and The Hague.

Morocco's victory was a major upset at the World Cup and was enthusiastically celebrated by fans with Moroccan immigrant roots in many Belgian and Dutch cities.

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2022-11-28 02:31:18Z
CAIiEH5iwAb_Yjrw0puZKU8I6lcqGQgEKhAIACoHCAow6f-ICzDjj4gDMJTFnwY

Kramaric BITES BACK at Canada coach's comments Was it fuel for Croatia's win? | ESPN FC - ESPN UK

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2022-11-27 22:45:00Z
1656686231

Canada eliminated from men's World Cup contention despite Alphonso Davies's historic goal - CBC Sports

Canada wasted little time Sunday ending its scoring drought at the men's World Cup via Alphonso Davies but could not hold off Croatia, losing 4-1 to end its hopes of reaching the tournament's knockout round.

Ranked 12th in the world and runner-up to France four years ago in Russia, Croatia is filled with talent from top clubs and its class showed in rallying from an early 1-0 deficit.

Two goals by Andrej Kramaric and one by Marko Livaja accounted for the Croatian comeback. Lovro Majer added a stoppage-time goal in the 94th minute on a two-on-none attack.

"I am disappointed in the result. It was not easy," said Davies. "We did our best, we fought the entire game. We're looking forward to the next game and hopefully we get some points."

The 41st-ranked Canadians started with a bang with a Milan Borjan goal kick finding Cyle Larin at midfield. Larin controlled the ball deftly with his foot and sent it over to Tajon Buchanan down the right flank. Buchanan surged ahead, took two touches, lifted his head and sent in a cross that Davies, soaring through the air high above fullback Josip Juranovic, headed home past goalkeeper Dominik Livakovic.

The tac-tac-toe goal came just 67 seconds into the match. But it was actually 36 years in the making — a goal worthy of Canada's first at the men's soccer showcase. Davies' teammates mobbed the 22-year-old from Edmonton by the corner flag and the entire country celebrated.

WATCH | Davies scores historic goal:

Alphonso Davies makes history with first Canada Soccer goal at a Men's World Cup

3 hours ago

Duration 2:39

Host Andi Petrillo is joined by former Canadian men's international player Jimmy Brennan to break down the historic first goal scored by Alphonso Davies at the 2022 FIFA World Cup.

Perhaps a little too soon.

It marked Davies' 13th goal for Canada — and the first with his head — in 36 appearances. And it no doubt helped make up for his missed penalty in the Canadians' opening 1-0 loss to No. 2 Belgium.

But Croatia regains its composure and, using its precision, took over the midfield and began to open up the Canadian defence — scoring twice to lead 2-1 at the break.

But for a while, it was all Canada with the Canadians in the crowd of 44,374 chanting "this is our house" after the Davies goal.

Davies was feeling it, nutmegging Inter Milan's Marcelo Brozovic in the 22nd minute as the Canadians stroked the ball around the immaculate pitch at the Khalifa International Stadium.

Then the tide turned.

Kramaric tied it in the 36th minute, taking a pass from Ivan Perisic that went through Alistair Johnston's legs. The Hoffenheim forward then cooly beat Borjan, from an acute angle, with a well-placed left-footed shot to the corner of goal.

Mateo Kovacic had a hand in the goal, faking out Stephen Eustaquio to make room for the pass to Perisic.

Fortunate bounce

Livaja put Croatia ahead in the 44th minute after a slashing run by Juranovic carved open the Canadian defence. The Croatian right back beat Davies to start his run and, after a fortunate bounce in traffic, slotted the ball between Steven Vitoria's legs to Livaja, whose shot went past the outstretched arm of a diving Borjan.

Kramaric made it 3-1 in the 70th minute, elegantly shifting the ball away from Kamal Miller to make room for a left-footed shot through Canadian captain Atiba Hutchinson's legs. Tottenham's Perisic again played provider.

The Croatian fans sang while the Canadians watched quietly.

WATCH | Soccer North — Canada vs. Croatia post-match reaction show:

Canada vs. Croatia post-match reaction show

7 hours ago

Duration 36:07

Watch as Andi Petrillo and guests take a look at the Canada vs. Croatia game at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

The Canadians came into the contest — the first-ever meeting between the two countries — needing at least a point to keep alive their hope of advancing out of the group stage with coach John Herdman calling it "one of those do-or-die games."

Croatia also needed a result after tying Morocco 0-0 in its opener.

The Canadians will go home after wrapping up tournament play Thursday against Morocco — which will mark their first-ever World Cup game against a non-European opponent. They will hope to leave on a winning note.

The stadium echoed with "O Canada," with the Canadian section in the stands belting out the lyrics. And Davies quickly turned up the volume.

Trailing 1-0, Croatia thought it had tied the game in the 26th minute when Kramaric scored, only to see the offside flag go up for a move in the buildup. Borjan then got his body in the way of a Livaja shot.

Croatia outshot Canada 5-1 (4-1 in shots on target) in the first half.

Herdman sent on Jonathan Osorio and Ismael Kone to start the second half replacing Larin and Eustaquio, who had taken a knock in the first half. Davies left the midfield to join Jonathan David up front.

Osorio came close minutes later with a curling shot that beat the 'keeper but flashed wide. At the other end, Borjan came up big to deny Kramaric.

Canada head coach John Herdman was asked in an interview Wednesday what he said to his players in a huddle after losing to Belgium. "I told them they belong here, and we're going to go and eff—- Croatia." On Sunday, he was he was quick to compliment Croatia, calling it a "top top top top football team." (Martin Meissner/Associated Press)

Junior Hoilett was sent on to add to the Canadian attack, with the defence shifting to a back three. Burly forward Lucas Cavallini came on later as Herdman rolled the dice.

Hutchinson makes 100th appearance for Canada

Hutchinson marked his 100th appearance for Canada.

The 39-year-old from Brampton, Ont., is the oldest outfield player at the tournament and the second-oldest ever to feature at the World Cup finals after Cameroon's Roger Milla (42 years 29 days in 1994). The veteran midfielder made his senior debut for Canada in January 2003.

Hutchinson, who captains Besiktas in Turkey, took his lumps in the game with cotton wool stuffed up his nose in the second half to stop bleeding.

While Hutchinson holds the Canadian men's caps record, Christine Sinclair is Canada's all-time leader in national team appearances with 319.

Canada went into the game winless in its last 13 matches against UEFA opponents (0-8-5) dating back to a 1-0 win over Belarus in March 2011.

Croatia, meanwhile, came into the match having lost just one its last 17 outings (11-1-5). The Croats were beaten 3-0 by Austria in June in UEFA Nations League play a loss they avenged in September in a 3-1 win.

The Canada-Croatia game was played against a backdrop of friction in the wake of Herdman's emotional post-game message to his players following the Belgium loss.

Asked in a pitch-side interview what he had said in a post-game huddle, Herdman replied: "I told them they belong here and we're going to go and eff—- Croatia. That's as simple as it gets."

That sparked an immediate response from Croatian tabloids and a stern lecture Saturday from Croatian coach Zlatko Dalic about the need for respect.

Damage done

Herdman maintained his message to the players was were simply "to remind them that there's another task ahead." And he was quick to compliment Croatia, calling it a "top top top top football team."

But the damage had been done. Perhaps fittingly, Canada wore all black Sunday.

Herdman made one change to his starting lineup with Larin coming in for Hoilett, and switched to a 4-4-2 formation.

Borjan, who plays his club football for Red Star Belgrade in Serbia, started in goal behind a backline of Richie Laryea, Vitoria, Miller and Johnston.

Hutchinson, Eustaquio, Davies and Buchanan were in the midfield behind David and Larin.

The Croatian roster features eight players with previous World Cup experience including star midfielder Luka Modric, appearing in his third tournament.

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2022-11-27 21:56:58Z
1656686231

Canada wins Davis Cup behind Felix Auger-Aliassime, Denis Shapovalov - ESPN

MALAGA, Spain -- Felix Auger-Aliassime fell to his back behind the baseline then waited for teammates to race off Canada's bench and pile on top of him.

A few minutes later, the Canadians finally could lift the Davis Cup.

"I think of us all here, we've dreamt of this moment," Auger-Aliassime said.

Canada won the title for the first time Sunday, beating Australia behind victories from Denis Shapovalov and Auger-Aliassime.

Auger-Aliassime secured the winning point when he downed Alex de Minaur 6-3, 6-4 after Shapovalov opened the day by rolling past Thanasi Kokkinakis 6-2, 6-4.

Seven years after leading Canada to the top of junior tennis, Auger-Aliassime, Shapovalov and their teammates finally got to lift the biggest team trophy in their sport.

"We wanted to grow up and be part of the team and try to help the country win the first title," Shapovalov said, "so everything is just so surreal right now."

Shapovalov had dropped both his singles matches this week and needed treatment on his back during a three-set loss Saturday in the semifinals to Lorenzo Sonego of Italy that lasted 3 hours, 15 minutes. But the left-hander moved quickly around the court Sunday, setting up angles to put away winners while racing to a 4-0 lead in the first set.

Auger-Aliassime then finished off his superb second half of the season by completing a perfect week in Spain. He twice had kept the Canadians alive after Shapovalov dropped the opening singles match, and on Saturday he replaced his weary teammate to join Vasek Pospisil for the decisive doubles point.

This time, Auger-Aliassime made sure the doubles match wouldn't even be necessary. After his teammates poured onto the court to celebrate with him, they got up and danced around in a circle.

Canada had reached the final only once, falling to host Spain in Madrid in 2019, when Rafael Nadal beat Shapovalov for the clinching point after Auger-Aliassime had lost in the opening match.

But with Auger-Aliassime having since surged up the rankings to No. 6, the Canadians are a much more formidable team now. They won the ATP Cup in January and finally added the Davis Cup crown to the junior Davis Cup title Auger-Aliassime and Shapovalov led them to in 2015.

Australia was trying for its 29th title and first since current captain Lleyton Hewitt was part of the title-winning team in 2003.

But it was finally time for the Canadians, who were given a wild card into the field when Russia was suspended because of its invasion of Ukraine.

"Look, I think we were very close today," de Minaur said. "Just wait until the next time we get the same matchup. Hopefully we can get the win and prove that we can do it."

But Canada will be tough to beat as long as Auger-Aliassime and Shapovalov play.

Shapovalov is just 23 and Auger-Aliassime 22, but both already have been Grand Slam semifinalists. Auger-Aliassime ended 2022 as one of the hottest players on the ATP Tour. He won all of his four titles this year, including three straight weeks in October.

He also beat Carlos Alcaraz in the previous Davis Cup stage in September, just after the Spaniard had won the US Open to rise to No. 1 in the rankings. That victory helped send the Canadians into the quarterfinals, which they started this week by edging Germany.

"They're not kids anymore, that's for sure. Not after today -- well not after the last couple of years," said Pospisil, the team veteran at 32. "They've been crushing it."

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2022-11-27 16:39:03Z
1665299096

Alphonso Davies scores Canadian men’s national team’s first-ever World Cup goal - Sportsnet.ca

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2022-11-27 16:05:00Z
CBMidmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNwb3J0c25ldC5jYS9zb2NjZXIvYXJ0aWNsZS9hbHBob25zby1kYXZpZXMtc2NvcmVzLWNhbmFkaWFuLW1lbnMtbmF0aW9uYWwtdGVhbXMtZmlyc3QtZXZlci13b3JsZC1jdXAtZ29hbC_SAXVodHRwczovL3d3dy5zcG9ydHNuZXQuY2Evc29jY2VyL2FscGhvbnNvLWRhdmllcy1zY29yZXMtY2FuYWRpYW4tbWVucy1uYXRpb25hbC10ZWFtcy1maXJzdC1ldmVyLXdvcmxkLWN1cC1nb2FsL3NuLWFtcC8

History made as Canada crowned world champions for first time - Davis Cup

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  1. History made as Canada crowned world champions for first time  Davis Cup
  2. Canada advances to Davis Cup final with win over Italy  Sportsnet.ca
  3. Berrettini & Fognini v Auger-Aliassime & Pospisil | Italy v Canada | Davis Cup Final 8 Highlights  Davis Cup
  4. Lorenzo Sonego outlasts Shapovalov in Davis Cup semis, giving Italy early lead  CBC Sports
  5. Kevin Krawietz compares Germany's DC loss to Germany's World Cup defeat  Tennis World USA
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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2022-11-27 14:20:39Z
1665299096

'I knew this team could play better': Canucks finally pulling together more complete game - Sportsnet.ca

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2022-11-27 07:35:00Z
1664640504

Sabtu, 26 November 2022

Marner extends point streak to 16 games, Maple Leafs beat Penguins - Sportsnet.ca

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2022-11-27 03:13:00Z
1672903970

Messi keeps Argentina’s World Cup hopes alive with sublime strike - Al Jazeera English

Lionel Messi opened the scoring against Mexico with a wonderful goal from range, as Argentina earned a 2-0 victory.

Superb goals by Lionel Messi and Enzo Fernandez have earned Argentina a 2-0 win over Mexico in a pulsating atmosphere at Lusail Stadium on Saturday.

The result breathes new life into the South American side’s World Cup campaign after they suffered a stunning defeat in their Group C opener against Saudi Arabia.

Argentina knew another defeat would send them out of the tournament, but they started poorly, struggling to cope with Mexico’s high press as Messi was denied time and space to operate.

Messi broke the deadlock in the 64th minute, arrowing a low shot through a crowd of defenders into the corner, equalling Diego Maradona’s Argentina record of 21 matches and eight goals at the World Cup.

The Argentinian fans, who made up the majority of this 88,966-strong crowd, erupted. More than 5,000 Argentina fans already live in Qatar.

Lionel prepares to take a corner.
Messi took the corner which led to a goal for Enzo Fernandez [Dylan Martinez/Reuters]

Enzo Fernandez sealed the victory in the 87th minute with a wonderful arcing strike. From an Argentinian corner won on the left side, Fernandez was able to slalom himself towards the corner of the penalty box before unleashing a strike of some quality that curled into the top right of the goal.

In doing so, Fernandez became the youngest player to score at a World Cup for Argentina since Messi himself in 2006.

“Today starts another World Cup for Argentina,” Messi said after the final whistle. “I tell people the same thing, that they continue to believe.

“The first half we didn’t play as we should and in the second, when we calmed down, we started to play the ball better.”

Mexico, who have now lost all four of their World Cup clashes with Argentina, have one point and must beat Saudi Arabia, who have three points, to have any chance of making the Round of 16, as they have in the past seven World Cups.

Karima Mohammed of Egypt cheers on Mexico with a raised fist as wears a sombrero with the letters Mexico written on it and a Mexican flag drapes his body.
Karima Mohammed of Egypt was just one of Mexico’s euphonious mass of supporters at the Lusail Stadium [Julio Cortez/AP]

With the prospect of an Argentina elimination ahead of this game, tensions were high on and off the ball in a scrappy first half, with the two sets of fans creating an electric atmosphere inside and outside the stadium.

The opening period did not live up to the match’s billing, with neither team wanting to commit too many players forward, and, save for a free kick by Mexico’s Luis Chavez in the ninth minute that sailed past the goalmouth, there were few chances.

Mexico’s high-pressing game stifled most of their opponents’ attack and Argentinian talisman Messi struggled to find any space to manoeuvre in a congested midfield.

But in a serious blow to Mexico, skipper Andres Guardado, a veteran of five World Cups who until then had been a commanding presence in midfield, was taken off injured in the 42nd minute.

The Mexicans still carved out two more chances before the break with Alexis Vega first curling a free kick over the wall for keeper Emiliano Martinez to save and, minutes later, thundering a shot over the bar.

The South Americans looked more determined after the break but had no real chance before their 35-year-old captain dragged them out of trouble with his second goal of the tournament, reviving his chances of winning a first-ever World Cup title.

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2022-11-26 21:22:30Z
1658688329

Canada advances to Davis Cup final with win over Italy - Sportsnet.ca

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2022-11-26 15:40:00Z
1665299096

Lionel Messi, Argentina beat Mexico FIFA World Cup Qatar Group C - TSN

LUSAIL, Qatar (AP) — Lionel Messi was almost in tears as he grabbed and shook his jersey in front of Argentina’s celebrating fans, then blew a kiss and looked to the sky.

With one of the most important goals of his career, Messi led Argentina to a 2-0 victory over Mexico on Saturday to ignite his team's World Cup chances.

His dream of winning soccer’s biggest prize in likely his last attempt is still alive.

Messi took a touch from Angel Di Maria’s pass across the face of the area and drove a low shot from 25 meters (yards) into the bottom corner to give Argentina the lead in the 64th minute.

His arms outstretched, he ran toward the team's supporters who were celebrating behind the goal and was soon mobbed by his teammates. He whirled his arms in an emotional response to scoring his 93rd — and perhaps most crucial — international goal.

“We knew we had to win today, that another World Cup was starting for us," Messi said, "and we knew how to do it.”

Substitute Enzo Fernandez added a second goal in the 87th minute, ensuring Argentina bounced back from a 2-1 loss to Saudi Arabia that ranked as one of the World Cup's biggest ever upsets.

Argentina is second in Group C ahead of its last match against first-place Poland on Wednesday, and might need to win it to advance.

“We can’t let our guard down now,” Messi said. “All of our matches are finals now. We can’t mess up.”

It was an eighth World Cup goal for Messi, the same number scored in the tournament by rival Cristiano Ronaldo and also Diego Maradona — the Argentina great with whom he is so often compared.

For some, Messi needs to win the World Cup — the only major title missing from his collection — to join the ranks of Pele and Maradona as soccer’s greatest ever players. Thanks to this win, it could still happen.

“We already know for many years he is the world's best player,” Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni said. “Messi should enjoy this World Cup. All fans enjoy seeing him play.”

Scaloni made five changes from the Saudi Arabia game in a bid to inject some more energy into the team but initially they made little difference in what proved to be a tense game lacking in quality. Argentina’s build-up play was slow and Mexico had little problem snuffing out its opponent's attacks.

Messi was often seen walking around the field and mostly found himself with two defenders on him each time he got the ball. Frustration was starting to show on his face before the first half had even finished as he implored his teammates to relax.

Indeed, the goal Messi scored came from one of the first times he found himself in space.

Argentina's fans inside the 89,000-seat Lusail Stadium hugged each other. Some cried. Argentina defender Lisandro Martinez fell to the ground and appeared to bury his face in the turf.

“I don’t think during the match he found many spaces in the last third of the field,” Mexico coach Gerardo Martinez, an Argentine who led his native country from 2014-16, said of Messi. “But he only needs a few seconds to be the difference.”

The momentum of the game changed completely and Mexico suddenly became ragged, with substitute striker Julian Alvarez proving much more effective for Argentina than Lautaro Martinez, the player he replaced.

Fernandez's goal was his first for Argentina and it was an excellent one. He feigned to go to his left before shifting the ball to his right foot and curling a shot high and beyond Mexico goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa.

Argentina's substitutes poured onto the field to join the celebrations at the same stadium where there was so much despair after the shocking loss to Saudi Arabia.

“Against Poland, we will try to ...," Scaloni said, before correcting himself. “No, we will win this game.”

MEXICAN LONGEVITY

Mexico midfielder Andres Guardardo became the sixth male player to feature at five World Cups. The 36-year-old follows two Mexicans — Antonio Carbajal and Rafa Marquez — as well as Lothar Matthaus, Cristiano Ronaldo and Messi. Guardardo didn’t last the first half, coming off in the 42nd minute because of injury.

GROUP PERMUTATIONS

Poland leads Argentina and Saudi Arabia by one point with one match to play. Mexico is last and will next face the Saudis.

___

Steve Douglas is at https://twitter.com/sdouglas80

___

AP World Cup coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/world-cup and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni made five changes from the Saudi Arabia game in a bid to inject some more energy into the team but they initially made little difference.

The momentum of the game changed completely after Messi's goal, his 93rd in internationals and his second of the tournament after a penalty against Saudi Arabia.

___

Steve Douglas is at https://twitter.com/sdouglas80

___

AP World Cup coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/world-cup and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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2022-11-26 20:57:54Z
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Croatian coach feels disrespected by Canadian coach's comment at FIFA World Cup - Toronto Sun

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DOHA, Qatar — Croatia head coach Zlatko Dalic said he felt disrespected by Canada head coach John Herdman for his comment in a group huddle following a loss to Belgium on Wednesday.

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After the emotional 1-0 loss at the Ahmad Bin Ali Stadium, Herdman gathered his troops on the field and gave an impassioned speech.

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When asked following the game what he told his team, Herdman admitted he told his group to ‘F’ Croatia, in reference to Canada’s second game at the 2022 FIFA World Cup.

On the eve of the game Sunday (11 a.m. ET) at the Khalifa International Stadium, Croatian coach Zlatko Zlatko Dalic was again asked about the comment at the pre-match press conference here on Saturday.

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“Canadians must have respect for us and this way of putting words together is not a sign of respect,” Dalic said through an interpreter. “We are the runners up (2018 World Cup), it wasn’t Brazil or Spain or any other country. We are the runners up, we were second in the world, we are worth of respect the way we played, the way we behave, the way we respect all others, is the reason we are worthy or respect.

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“I shall not focus or comment on other people’s comment. We will be prepared, be fit and we will demonstrate respect from Canada and from everyone else. We expect respect just as we exercise this view.”

Croatia was a surprising World Cup finalist four years ago in Russia, beating England in the semifinal before losing to France. Along the way, Croatia also beat Argentina in the group stage.

Croatia was held to a scoreless draw in its opening match by Morocco on Wednesday. Croatia concluded the group stage against Belgium on Thursday.

“The Croatia team deserves respect from everyone; we have proven that by the way we’ve played with our conduct at the World Cup; since the very beginning we’ve deserved respect and dignity,” Dalic said. “We have two (World Cup) medals in the last 30 years and we’re up there with Germany and France and countries like that have such an achievement. We respect everyone equally so we expect our opposing teams to respect us. We are worth of their respect.”

Croatia striker Ivan Perisic was also asked for his thoughts on Herdman’s comments.

“I second the head coach,” he said. “And I cannot wait for the match to begin.”

Email: dvandiest@postmedia.com

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2022-11-26 12:45:25Z
1649686472

Jets plan to reach out to league after Stars tie game on controversial goal - Sportsnet.ca

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2022-11-26 05:20:00Z
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