
Triantis misses Australia camp with 'a lot on his mind'
Sunderland midfielder Nectar Triantis, who has just finished his second loan period at Hibernian, has withdrawn from the Australia squad with his club future uncertain. (The Herald, external - subscription required)
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Footy fans slam TV giant for showing boy crying his eyes out at Carlton vs North Melbourne AFL match - but others say the 'snowflakes' need to 'harden up'
Footage of a young Carlton fan crying in the stands during his team's loss to North Melbourne has left AFL fans divided, with many slamming broadcaster Fox Sports for keeping the camera on the distressed youngster. The Blues sunk to their worst defeat of the season as they fell to the Kangaroos by 11 points on Saturday, leaving their fans furious as they failed to beat one of the league's worst teams. Viewers saw footage of the young supporter with Carlton trailing the Roos 84-45 in the final quarter, with Fox using short grabs of him during its recaps of the match as late as Monday afternoon. 'That is a summation of what's happened for the Blues with that poor young fella. Mum and Dad have brought him to the footy today, full of hope,' commentator Mark Howard said. 'That's bad parenting,' joked Howard's colleague, Brisbane Lions great Jonathan Brown. However, many footy fans didn't see anything funny about the footage as they blasted Fox for featuring the boy so prominently. 'Fox needs to stop zooming in on upset fans. It's not just uncomfortable, it's invasive and exploitative. You don't know why someone's crying. Maybe it's not even about the game. And filming crying kids for broadcast? That's not storytelling, it's just gross,' one viewer wrote. 'Whoever decided to put that crying boy to air should be ashamed of their decision. Imagine how they'll feel when they know they were shown on TV crying, let alone everyone who'll now share it online. F***ing ghouls. And now it'll be on all the news and footy shows just to ensure this poor kid has zero chance of escaping its negative impacts,' another said. 'They should be zooming in on fans but kids crying is not right,' added a third. 'That poor little fella who is a Carlton supporter & was crying is about to become a meme. He doesn't deserve that. His day is bad enough as it is!' another posted. Comments like those drew waves of approval from fans posting messages like 'Agree 100%', 'Good call' and 'Spot on'. They also left a lot of other footy fans in disbelief as they said Fox had done nothing wrong - and anyone who says differently is a 'snowflake'. 'Sanitising sport of its emotion would rob it of everything that makes it great,' one wrote. 'Oh my this is soft,' another posted. A large portion of supporters felt the footage was too intrusive While broadcasters commonly show fans' emotional reactions during matches, fans like this one felt a line was crossed during Saturday's game 'It's part of the entry policy you accept when buying a ticket. Unlucky, just bottle it up like the rest of us,' a third said. Another used sarcasm to get their point across, writing, 'Networks shouldn't zoom in on fans celebrating a win. It's invasive and no network should show actual fans.' 'You also get a lot of ecstatic fans who also like to be on cam for a bit of fame. Don't ruin the fun. I blame the team if anything,' another fan wrote. Other comments in the same vein included 'Australia is the land of snowflakes', 'Grow up - shows the passion of the game', Why??? What's wrong with crying and being passionate?' and 'They're at a live football match ffs in the public eye how can it be invasive if you don't want people to see your emotions then stay home lol'. After the loss, Carlton coach Michael Voss reacted to his team being heavily booed by fans at halftime, three-quarter time and after the match. 'It's not time to isolate, it's time to come together,' Voss said of the booing. 'We love coming to the ground and having the supporter base we have and the passion that our supporters have, but we share in their disappointment.' Voss produced a furious spray at three-quarter time and while it looked like it was targeted at the midfield group, he insisted it was to the whole team. The Blues' loss to the lowly Kangaroos leaves them 10th on the ladder 'That's not acceptable the way that we played through that period of time ... it just didn't sit with the mids,' he said. 'North Melbourne were much too good around the contest for us. 'I felt like for a middle patch there, they probably bullied us.' Finalists in the past two seasons, Carlton slumped to 6-8 and will sit two games outside of the top eight by the end of the round. The unexpected result will turn up the heat on Voss, who has been under pressure since Carlton's calamitous round-one loss against wooden spooners Richmond. Asked if he was coaching for his future over the next two months, Voss simply put the focus on Carlton's next game against Port Adelaide on Thursday night. 'It's more about staying present to where we're at ... the competitor in me is about getting better tomorrow,' he said.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Manchester City hit Al Ain for six in one-sided Club World Cup romp
Manchester City will jet into the inland heat of Orlando's Camping World Stadium for a 3pm showdown with Juventus on Thursday that will decide who claims Group G and so (probably) avoids Real Madrid and faces off against either Salzburg or Al Hilal in the last-16. At a Mercedes-Benz Stadium akin in scale, football-venue-wise, to the Death Star, Pep Guardiola went one better than his pre-match declaration and fielded a completely fresh XI that cuffed aside Al Ain, the behemoths of the Emirati game. City entered the break 3-0 to the good, making the second stanza a hunt for the four more unanswered goals that would pull them ahead of the Italian giants in the standings. Inside a venue with the roof on and air-conditioned to a pleasing coolness, conditions were apt for what could be characterised a duck-shoot: the record 14-times Pro League victors in the sights of a Guardiola unit that wrestled throughout to find a relentless rhythm. When Oscar Bobb gave City a 5-0 lead - the substitute weaved over from the right and slid in – five minutes of regulation game-time remained. Next, Rayan Cherki, another replacement, fired past Khalid Eisa and when, moments later, an Erling Haaland toe poke set Phil Foden up at point-blank range City's seventh should have come. But, to Guardiola's visible disgust, Foden hit the goalkeeper's feet, and by the final whistle City remained in second place. Even those of an Al Ain persuasion rated their hopes of even a heartening performance in the low percentages yet City were, largely, disjointed before, then after İlkay Gündoğan's ninth-minute breakthrough. Here, Bernardo Silva swung in a corner from the right, the Emiratis could not clear, the ball bobbbled to the German, and a half-swivel took him on to his left foot with which he dinked in a ball aimed for the lurking Haaland. Except this beat Eisa and bounced sweetly – for City – in: Gündoğan's cheeky grin suggested fluke but neither he or any teammate cared. All evening, City never threatened to be the mesmeric pass-and-move proposition of the vintage Guardiola years. Matheus Nunes, patrolling the right, booted one cross straight out. Rayan Aït-Nouri, in a first start at left-back, burst into the area, slalomed past two, three defenders, and flopped over. But class usually tells. So when Facundo Zabala hauled down Nunes and was booked, Claudio Echeverri applied a dash. From a diagonal to the right of goal the Argentinian arrowed the ball straight home, leaving Eisa a statue. Why the keeper failed to move a foot or so to his left to beat out the free-kick is a mystery Sherlock Holmes might struggle to solve. Despite their odd bits-and-pieces mode, City could have wandered off for their interval refreshments 6-0, not 3-0, up. Joško Gvardiol's header pinged off Eisa's right post and Haaland spurned two chances you would expect him to pot. One with his left foot from the left flirted with the goal and missed. One with his right from the right was a carbon copy – again rolling wide. But the stanza did end with the No 9 on the scoresheet, via the spot, after the VAR ordered the referee, Mustapha Ghorbal, to the pitchside monitor. This came after Ramy Rabia flung Manuel Akanji to the turf in the area. Ghorbal, awarding the penalty, might have sent off the No 25 but he saw yellow only. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion Unlike the FA Cup final when Haaland refused the responsibility – Omar Marmoush took and missed against Crystal Palace – he did step up and registered, stroking the ball low into the right corner. As City began their second half search for more goals, Echeverri's work was done: Foden, the star act of the opening 2-0 win over Wydad, his replacement. Ait-Nouri, again, bobbed and weaved in from the left and claimed a corner. It led to another – on the right – that Foden floated over and Vladimir Ivić's unit survived. City's shape was the 4-1-4-1 that has often been Guardiola's preferred configuration across his nine years piloting the team. With Foden now on, those in white had a man who knows how to orchestrate the attack and, when Rodri entered for the last half an hour, they had their chief conductor – the player who runs the whole show. Off went a near-anonymous Nico González for the Ballon d'Or holder. The Spaniard was joined by Bobb as Guardiola reached for Al Ain's jugular, the forward replacing a defender, Abdukodir Khusanov. The now three-man rearguard soon watched as Foden, darting over from his No 10 berth to the left, slid over a ball Haaland galloped onto, twice letting go piledrivers that were repelled by Eisa, admirably. Early on in the opening 45 minutes Nassim Chadli roved along the right, but from a tight angle failed to beat Stefan Ortega. Now, the same. This time a dance across City's area created a straighter route to goal yet, again, his radar was wild. Part of Gundogan's stellar career is built on his eye for a finish and he soon show Chadli how to do the business where it counts, as nifty Silva footwork preceded a pass that put City's No 19 in. From here, regulation Gundogan stuff: two strides were followed by a dink over Eisa that this time he certainly meant.


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Ilkay Gundogan double helps Man City thrash Al Ain at Club World Cup
Ilkay Gundogan scored twice as Manchester City thrashed Al Ain 6-0 to secure their place in the last 16 of the Club World Cup. The Premier League side were far too strong for their Abu Dhabi-based opponents under a closed roof at Atlanta's spectacular Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The result seemed certain from the moment Gundogan, who has been linked with a move to Galatasaray, opened the scoring – perhaps fortuitously – by lobbing the keeper after eight minutes. Teenager Claudio Echeverri marked his first City start by adding the second from a free-kick and Erling Haaland made it 3-0 at half-time from the penalty spot. Gundogan finished off a neat move after 73 minutes before substitutes Oscar Bobb and Rayan Cherki struck late on to ensure City and Juventus will progress from Group G. The two sides will meet in Orlando on Thursday to settle top spot, with Real Madrid potentially lying in wait in the first knockout round. City, who made 11 changes from their opening win over Wydad Casablanca, were quick to take charge, although it was not obvious if Gundogan intended his chip as an attempt on goal. The Germany midfielder beat a challenge and delicately lofted the ball in the direction of Haaland at the back post, but no extra touch was required as the ball dropped into the net. Despite their clear superiority, City did still have some awkward moments at the back and one such saw Nassim Chadli break through on goal but Stefan Ortega touched the former Morocco youth international's shot behind. There was a lengthy delay as Echeverri, making his first City start, required treatment following a collision. The Argentinean's problem was clearly not too serious as moments later he stepped up to curl in City's second after Matheus Nunes was hauled down after 27 minutes. Haaland could have added another within seconds after robbing Park Yong-woo and rounding Khalid Eisa but he shot across goal from a tight angle. As the first Mexican waves of the evening gathered momentum, Josko Gvardiol went even closer when he headed against the post. Haaland dragged another effort wide after being played in by Bernardo Silva but he finally got his goal after City were awarded a penalty in first-half stoppage time. The referee initially ignored City's claims after Manuel Akanji was wrestled to the ground by Ramy Rabia but the decision was changed after a VAR review. Haaland, who attracted criticism after handing a penalty to Omar Marmoush – who subsequently missed – in the FA Cup final, calmly sent the keeper the wrong way. Nunes went close to adding to the score after a clever flick and turn but his volley flew narrowly side. Phil Foden, who came on at half-time, picked out Haaland with a low cross from the left but Eisa denied him with a double save. The fourth goal came when Gundogan took a pass from Silva and brilliantly dinked over Eisa. City rammed home their advantage in the closing minutes as Bobb fired a shot inside the post and new signing Cherki struck with a low effort from the edge of the area.