Bayern Munichu e filloi ndeshjen me një formacion të fortë, por pa
një sulmues qëndror sikurse që është Mandzukic. Shaqiri startoi dhe
shfaqi paraqitje të mirë në fillim.
Sidoqoftë, ishte sulmuesi boshnjak Vedat Ibisevic ai që i dha goditje
të rëndë Bayernit në minutën e 29-të, duke shënuar për 1-0.
Bayerni tentoi të kthejë rezultatin, por nuk ia doli. Në pjesën e
dytë kur e pa se ekipi i tij nuk po mund të shënonte, Guardiola duket se
u bind se pa sulmues qëndror nuk mund të luajë. U larguan Shaqiri dhe
Kroos, dhe u inkuadruan Pizzarro e Mandzukic.
Bayerni e dominoi sfidën me shumë raste, dhe ishte Pizzarro ai që
realizoi pas asistimit të Thiago Alcantaras në minutën e 76-të për 1-1.
Bayerni provoi të kthente gjërat, dhe kur të gjithë menduan se sfida
mbaroi, ishte Thiago Alcantara ai që realizoi për 2-1 dhe fitoren e
madhe të Bayernit.
Pas javës së 18-të është Bayerni që ka kryesimin në Bundesliga me 50
pikë, 13 pikë më shumë se sa Bayer Leverkusen që ka pozitën e dytë, por
që ka tri ndeshje që nuk di për fitore.
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
Saturday, January 25, 2014
Alex scored a last-minute equaliser to earn Ligue 1 leaders Paris St-Germain a draw at lowly Guingamp.
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Laurent Blanc's side extend their lead at the top to six points, but Monaco can cut the gap to three with a win against Marseille on Sunday.
PSG were lacklustre throughout, with both Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Edinson Cavani unable to assert themselves on the game.
Ibrahimovic's best effort was a 40-yard strike that was pushed around the post by goalkeeper Guy Roland Ndy Assembe towards the end of the first half.
Guingamp had only scored three goals since November before the game but looked dangerous at times against PSG.
Youngster Rachid Alioui volleyed just wide, before his long-range free-kick was turned onto the crossbar by PSG goalkeeper Salvatore Sirigu.
Cavani had an effort ruled out for offside at the start of the second half, but chances were few after that and the game was seemingly heading towards a goalless draw.
However, as full time approached, Guingamp took a surprise lead when striker Yatabare got ahead of Marquinhos to head in, sparking wild celebrations among the home crowd.
Those celebrations were short lived as Alex nodded in minutes later to earn PSG a point.
PSG boss Laurent Blanc: "It is always difficult to win games. We came here to win even if we had a lot of respect for Guingamp.
"It is disappointing but I am still satisfied that we never gave up and came back to get a deserved point.
"We were not as good today. Why? I don't want to hide behind it but the state of the pitch was deplorable. It is the case for both sides but it handicaps the team that plays the most football."
Brazil and its 'relatively simple' World Cup delays
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Mrs Rousseff was speaking on the pitch at the Arena das Dunas in the northern coastal city of Natal, which she had just officially opened with a rather nervous kick of a ball from the centre-spot.In a rare question-and-answer huddle with Brazilian journalists this week, President Dilma Rousseff pronounced with confidence that the beleaguered new football stadium in the southern city of Curitiba would "definitely" be ready for the World Cup.
It was a rare high-point for Brazil - and its World Cup organisers - after a disastrous week during which a high-level Fifa delegation had seen, warts and all, the state of the country's readiness for the tournament that begins in mid-June.
The governing body of world football is not known for precipitating political rows or disputes with its member nations. Quite the opposite, in fact. Fifa officials are often accused of cosying up to politicians and business in host countries in order to help facilitate whichever event may be taking place there.
But, with Brazil, even Fifa has had to speak out.
First stop on the week-long visit was the new Itaquerao stadium in Sao Paulo, which is due to hold the opening match of the tournament between Brazil and Croatia.
A terrible accident at the end of November, when a crane collapsed on part of the roof, not only killed two workers but also pushed back the timetable for the stadium's completion.
“Start Quote
As Fifa's secretary-general toured the site, the crane was still embedded in the roof. Jerome Valcke nodded thoughtfully as local officials outlined their plans to complete the project by early April, barely six weeks before the most important football match since the last World Cup final in 2010.
Sao Paulo is not an isolated case. Six of Brazil's 12 World Cup stadiums missed the end of 2013 deadline.
While such delays are not unique to Brazil, or to the World Cup, they are indicative of a chaotic, troubled process.
Mr Valcke's inspection tour was then due to head west to Cuiaba and north to Manaus where the Arena da Amazonia is also running late. (It was also the site of a fatal accident in December when an untethered worker fell to his death from a roof.)
Dozens of workers the BBC spoke to this week said they had not been paid for weeks and were coming under tremendous pressure to finish the project.
In response, stadium bosses denied anyone was coming under undue pressure and that safety standards had been tightened since the tragedy in December.
Lost opportunity
However, pressing news from southern Brazil forced a highly unusual change to Mr Valcke's plans.
The news from Curitiba was not good. Contractual disputes and financing "issues" among other problems meant the city's new Arena da Baixada was not just weeks but potentially months behind schedule.
What the Fifa team saw shocked them. Mr Valcke said he "did not like it" and was disturbed to see so many delays.
In an announcement that shocked the Brazilian government and its football establishment, Mr Valcke declared that unless things visibly improved before the committee's next visit in early February, Curitiba would be excluded from the tournament and the four scheduled games moved to other grounds.
Later in the week, it was all smiles and handshakes as Mr Valcke and President Rousseff met up in Natal for the inauguration of the Arena das Dunas.
But out of camera shot, as Mrs Rousseff spoke to local officials and dignitaries, Mr Valcke watched on from the stands, frowning and pensive.
'Rush job'
Even in Natal, all is not as it seems.
The United States coach and former German striker Jurgen Klinsmann had earlier in the week described the new venue as "beautiful".
While the pitch certainly looks ready to hold World Cup matches, the exterior structure looks hastily and haphazardly put together.
Lagging and insulation hang out everywhere from the upper areas. The corrugated roof covering has been roughly cut and put in place in what can only be described as a "rush job".
From a distance the Natal stadium resembles the smooth dunes that characterise this stunning part of the country, but close-up it leaves a lot to be desired.
Brazilians are passionate about their football and are rightly proud of their country's unparalleled record in the World Cup.
They also expect their current side to win this tournament on home ground, adding a sixth winner's star to the crest on the famous gold shirt.
But everywhere I travel in this vast country, touring the World Cup venues, I hear the same complaints and misgivings. From Manaus to Cuiaba to Rio de Janeiro, many Brazilians regard the tournament as a lost opportunity.
To start with it has cost the country, and individual state governments, billions of dollars. Initial promises that private finance would cover the cost of building new stadiums evaporated and about 80% of the bill is now being met from the public purse.
More damning, though, are the cancelled or delayed infrastructure projects that were meant to accompany the new stadiums and boost wider development in host cities.
Promised rapid transit systems, light rail, airport upgrades and other transport initiatives have all been quietly shelved or radically downgraded in Manaus, Salvador and numerous other venues.
I am a passionate football fan and consider myself very fortunate to be based in Brazil covering such a huge sporting event, but the more I see of how Brazil is preparing to host the tournament, the more I am convinced the country as a whole will not reap much benefit.
As President Rousseff spoke on the pitch in Natal, no-one thought to ask her how she could be so confident that, somehow, officials down in Curitiba will turn things around in just a couple of weeks.
Who has given her such "guarantees"? Is it just typical Brazilian optimism, or does the president know something which the damning images from Curitiba and Fifa's unusually critical statement failed to convey?
Flying straight from Natal to the global economic forum in Switzerland, Mrs Rousseff made a "courtesy visit" to Fifa headquarters in Zurich.
After a recent spat over Twitter about Brazil's preparation for what is, after the Olympic Games, the second biggest sporting event on earth, the two presidents (Rousseff of Brazil and Sepp Blatter of Fifa) were again singing from the same hymn sheet.
Completing the remaining stadiums and infrastructure projects was "a relatively simple" matter, the Brazilian leader assured the head of world football.
Jerome Valcke and the organisation he runs must share some of the blame for the way these tournaments are scheduled and financed.
Gareth Bale had to be substituted at half-time with an injury as Cristiano Ronaldo scored to help send Real Madrid clear at the top of La Liga with victory over Granada.
Real Madrid2
Ronaldo 56′Benzema 74′
Granada CF0
- FT 90 +3
- HT 0-0
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Gareth Bale had to be substituted at half-time with an injury as Cristiano Ronaldo scored to help send Real Madrid clear at the top of La Liga with victory over Granada.
Wales international Bale was injured by Jeison Murillo's rough challenge with the game still goalless.
Despite that blow, Real took the lead just before the hour when Ronaldo rifled in his 31st of the season.
Karim Benzema then sealed the win, slotting in from Marcelo's cross.
Real top the standings with 53 points, two ahead of Barcelona and Atletico Madrid, who play Malaga and Rayo Vallecano respectively on Sunday.
The two sides could move ahead of Real with victories, but the form of Carlo Ancelotti's side will undoubtedly be concerning for them.
Real have not lost in the league since the end of October and have now won 10 times in their last 11 games.
The home fans' buoyant pre-match mood was heightened as Ronaldo paraded the Ballon d'Or he won earlier this month.
Ronaldo paraded his Ballon d'Or trophy before kick-off and fans celebrated by holding up gold-coloured sheets of paper
Real's intensity was high from the outset as Ronaldo shot just wide inside the opening 10 minutes, before a Dani Carvajal cross was diverted onto his own crossbar by visiting midfielder Manuel Iturra.
Bale, too, was looking bright but took a heavy knock when he clashed with Murillo. The former Tottenham forward managed to continue until half-time but was replaced by Jese Rodriguez at the interval.
Rodriguez's introduction added vigour to Real's attack and Granada goalkeeper Roberto did well to deny efforts from Angel Di Maria and Luka Modric.
But the home side finally made the breakthrough just before the hour when Modric passed to Ronaldo inside the area and the Portugal star worked some space for himself before hitting a low drive into the far corner.
The woodwork then prevented him adding a second as his free-kick smashed against the bar.
However, Real put the game beyond the visitors late on when a fine, flowing move involving Ronaldo and Marcelo was turned home by Benzema for his fifth goal in his last six games.
Real Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti:
"Tonight we will sleep better than we have on other Saturdays, but we have to keep fighting because it is not always easy as the first half today showed.
"After the knock [Gareth Bale] received he didn't feel comfortable. It just disorientated him a little bit and we thought it best to bring him off. He will be fine for the next game.
"
"
Juan Mata: Manchester United sign Chelsea midfielder for £37.1m
Juan Mata: Manchester United sign Chelsea midfielder for £37.1m
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Juan Mata has completed his 37.1m move from Chelsea to Manchester United, the reigning Premier League champions have confirmed.
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Manchester United's season of misery hit new depths as Sunderland won a slapstick penalty shoot-out to secure a Capital One Cup final place against Manchester City at Wembley.
Sunderland stood less than two minutes from Wembley when United
keeper David De Gea hopelessly fumbled Phil Bardsley's shot in the dying
moments of extra-time after Jonny Evans had earlier put United level
over the two legs.
The Black Cats could not hold out and Javier Hernandez's goal seconds from the end spared De Gea but subjected Old Trafford to the drama of spot-kicks that almost descended into farce.
In a blizzard of wild misses and fine saves, only three of the 10 spot kicks were scored.
Before they could celebrate, Sunderland's magnificent 9,000-strong support suffered agonies of their own, with Craig Gardner and Steven Fletcher missing while Marcos Alonso and Ki Sung-Yueng scored before De Gea saved from Adam Johnson when he had the chance to seal the win.
Mannone had the final say against Rafael - sparking scenes of wild celebration among Sunderland's players and fans.
It was a triumph they deserved as their belief never wavered, even deep into injury-time, and a Wembley final will surely act as a tonic in their attempt to stay in the Premier League.
Before kick-off, Old Trafford was buzzing with the news of Juan Mata's imminent arrival from Chelsea - and a largely abject performance from Moyes's team was the perfect illustration of why United are prepared to break the club record transfer fee to land the Spaniard.
And now, barring the extremely unlikely event of this fading United side winning the Champions League, Moyes will end his first season in charge without a trophy.
United were again without injured Wayne Rooney and Robin van Persie but they opened at a high tempo in an attempt to swiftly wipe out Sunderland's lead from the first game and Mannone was called into action to block Hernandez's header as he stole in on Januzaj's free-kick at the far post.
Sunderland , however, were solid and well-organised enough to give United an anxious moment in the 18th minute when Fabio Borini latched on to Johnson's fine pass and sent a spectacular volley inches over the bar.
The mood inside Old Trafford was one of growing frustration but this was eased when they finally broke through eight minutes before the break.
Sunderland had survived a scramble after Darren Fletcher headed Shinji Kagawa's cross against the post and Mannone blocked Welbeck's follow up - but they did not escape for long.
The Black Cats could not hold out and Javier Hernandez's goal seconds from the end spared De Gea but subjected Old Trafford to the drama of spot-kicks that almost descended into farce.
In a blizzard of wild misses and fine saves, only three of the 10 spot kicks were scored.
Paying the penalty
- Manchester United have scored a total of four penalties in their last three shoot-outs
- It was only Man Utd's second defeat in their last 10 League Cup semi-final ties. They last lost at this stage in 2004-05
Danny Welbeck and Phil Jones were off
target for United while Sunderland's heroic goalkeeper Vito Mannone
denied Adnan Januzaj and crucially Rafael, the stop that sent Gus
Poyet's side to the final on 2 March.
Darren Fletcher was the only United player to score and
Moyes once again cut a dejected figure as he walked off defeated at the
end.
Before they could celebrate, Sunderland's magnificent 9,000-strong support suffered agonies of their own, with Craig Gardner and Steven Fletcher missing while Marcos Alonso and Ki Sung-Yueng scored before De Gea saved from Adam Johnson when he had the chance to seal the win.
Mannone had the final say against Rafael - sparking scenes of wild celebration among Sunderland's players and fans.
It was a triumph they deserved as their belief never wavered, even deep into injury-time, and a Wembley final will surely act as a tonic in their attempt to stay in the Premier League.
Before kick-off, Old Trafford was buzzing with the news of Juan Mata's imminent arrival from Chelsea - and a largely abject performance from Moyes's team was the perfect illustration of why United are prepared to break the club record transfer fee to land the Spaniard.
And now, barring the extremely unlikely event of this fading United side winning the Champions League, Moyes will end his first season in charge without a trophy.
United were again without injured Wayne Rooney and Robin van Persie but they opened at a high tempo in an attempt to swiftly wipe out Sunderland's lead from the first game and Mannone was called into action to block Hernandez's header as he stole in on Januzaj's free-kick at the far post.
Sunderland , however, were solid and well-organised enough to give United an anxious moment in the 18th minute when Fabio Borini latched on to Johnson's fine pass and sent a spectacular volley inches over the bar.
The mood inside Old Trafford was one of growing frustration but this was eased when they finally broke through eight minutes before the break.
Sunderland had survived a scramble after Darren Fletcher headed Shinji Kagawa's cross against the post and Mannone blocked Welbeck's follow up - but they did not escape for long.
Juan Mata: Chelsea accept Manchester United's £37m bid
Manchester United have had a bid, believed to be in the region of
£37m, accepted by Chelsea for Spanish midfielder Juan Mata.
The 25-year-old will have a medical on Thursday before completing a move to the Premier League champions.
Mata is expected to sign a four-and-a-half year deal at Old Trafford.
The Spain international, who has won 32 caps, said goodbye to team-mates and staff at Chelsea's Cobham training ground on Wednesday.
Mata at Chelsea
2011-12: 54 appearances, 12 goals, Champions League winner, FA Cup winner2012-13: 64 appearances, 20 goals, Europa League winner
2013-14: 17 appearances, 1 goal
(Stats are for all competitions)
United continue to deny having made a bid
for the playmaker, but it is understood they have made an offer through
intermediaries working on the deal.
Manager David Moyes declined to answer questions on Juan Mata after his side's
Capital One Cup semi-final defeat by Sunderland.
Members of the media were informed before the post-match news conference that Moyes would be answering questions on the game only and when asked afterwards about Mata, the Scot said simply: "We are not saying anything."
Should the deal go, through, it would break United's previous record transfer - the £30.75m they paid Spurs for Dimitar Berbatov in September 2008.
Mata has been linked with a move away from Stamford Bridge after struggling to hold down a regular starting place under Jose Mourinho.
On Tuesday, Chelsea insisted that Mata, who had been voted the club's player of the year two seasons in a row, was not for sale.
But the player, who was part of the Spain squad which won the World Cup in 2010 and European Championship in 2012, has been substituted in nine of his 13 Premier League appearances for the Blues this season, prompting speculation other clubs could bid for him in the January transfer window.
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