Sport
Ruben Amorim: Man Utd’s new boss plays down expectations after beating Man City
Firstly, let’s deal with the reality of where Amorim finds himself now.
He was joking before the game when he said a Sporting victory over City would make United feel another Sir Alex Ferguson was arriving.
There was a huge amount of added interest in the game in Manchester. Those of a United persuasion, fans and club officials alike, were delighted with what they saw. To some, it made a mockery of City’s private insistence that Amorim was not a name on their wish list for when Pep Guardiola eventually leaves.
But nobody, Amorim said, should read too much into events at the Jose Alvalade Stadium.
“I already said previously you cannot transport one reality into another,” he said. “At Manchester United you cannot play exactly like this. You cannot play so defensively and so there we will have to adapt. Clearly it is really difficult to beat this team and to beat Pep Guardiola. And he is not a worse manager than me.
“It will be a completely different world, a different team, we won’t have that much time to train and we will begin from a different starting point. People can make their own judgements but I say to the people of Manchester that this was a one-off.”
Amorim’s observations about his defence are worth further examination.
The most obvious difference being widely analysed is that Amorim plays three central defenders.
Against City, that turned into a back five for long stretches of the game.
Yet that is one of the attractions. Inside United they believe labelling Amorim as someone who plays with three central defenders is too simplistic.
How that shows itself can change, it is argued. This could be through inverted full-backs, more orthodox wing-backs – which is what Geovany Quenda and goalscorer Maximiliano Araujo tried to be when they weren’t being pushed back – or central defenders stepping forward into midfield areas.
In front of them are two sitting midfielders, beyond that two narrow forwards and, up top, the excellent Viktor Gyokeres.
If Amorim sticks to the formation, does he have the personnel to make it effective?
If not, will he have to compromise to the extent Erik ten Hag did, where his eventual team bore no relation to the style he was supposed to be bringing with him from Ajax.
Sport
‘Punished for having a big booty? Game has gone’ say fans after unfortunate VAR decision in Champions League
A STURM GRAZ player was punished for having “big booty” in an unfortunate VAR call.
The Austrian side were beaten by Borussia Dortmund in the in the Champions League last night.
Donyell Malen netted the 85th-minute winner for the German side as they won 1-0 at Signal Iduna Park.
However, the hosts were fortunate as VAR was forced to check the goal due to the tightness of the Serhou Guirassy’s position in the build-up.
Upon further inspection, it was clear that Guirassy was onside, but only thanks to the rear of Emanuel Aiwu.
Fans could not help but feel bad for the defender who came unstuck due to his kiester.
One posted: “Punished for having a thick stack? Game has gone.”
A second wrote: “Booty too Big.”
A third commented: “I like big butts and I can not lie – Dortmund.”
A fourth said: “He’s assisting Dortmund there, cheeky decision by VAR.”
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Another added: “Saved by the butt.”
The goal helped Dortmund seal the win to take the record in the competition to three wins from four games.
After the game, manager and former Liverpool star Nuri Sahin priase his side’s performance as he insisted their energy levels were not “normal”.
He told Dazn: “We completely controlled the game, apart from one phase between the 60th and 70th minutes.
“We need to score our first goal earlier, that opens the door. We didn’t manage to do that. Up to the box, we were good and the plan worked out.
“When you score the goal, the spaces get bigger. In the end, we got our reward.
‘I’m glad that we kept clear heads and got the job done. I told Donny that he needed to bring some intensity to the game.
“I have to take my hat off to them. The way the boys ran, it wasn’t normal.”
New Champions League format is a snorefest
By Dan King
UEFA sold the idea of expanding the Champions League from 32 to 36 teams, with each playing eight games instead of six in the opening phase, as a way of creating more competitiveness and excitement.
The biggest clubs would have two matches against their peers, rather than having to wait until the knockout stage to meet.
The smaller clubs would meet teams of a similar level twice and have a chance of tasting victory that was so hard to achieve if you were the bottom seed in a group of four.
Ignoring for a moment the fact that the real motivation was the simple equation of more games = more money, the theory itself already looks flawed.
None of the matches between European giants has delivered a compelling contest yet.
And why would they? At the start of the long season with more matches in it, why would any team with ambitions to win things in the spring, go out all guns blazing in the autumn?
Especially when they know they have six games NOT against big sides to make sure they accrue enough points to qualify at least for the play-off round (and even more games).
There is even less jeopardy than before.
Read the full column on the Champions League format fail and why everyone – including YOU – needs a rethink.
Motorsports
Did a 5mm inter tyre tread difference decide the Brazilian GP?
The rain-affected Brazilian Grand Prix delivered what was perhaps the biggest shock podium of the Formula 1 season so far.
Max Verstappen‘s charge from 17th on the grid to the front had been anticipated by very few people, and it marked his first triumph since the Spanish Grand Prix back in June.
Right behind the Dutchman were the two Alpine cars of Esteban Ocon and Pierre Gasly, who scored more points for the squad in a single afternoon than they have all season so far.
The joy of the top three was in contrast to the struggles that other teams faced in the wet conditions, with recent benchmark squads McLaren and Ferrari struggling with a lack of pace.
World championship contender Lando Norris was fighting front-locking problems, while Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc described his SF-24 as pretty horrendous to drive.
“We were just not fast enough,” declared the Monegasque after the race. “The car was extremely difficult to drive and very, very pointy, very digital, very oversteery.”
While Verstappen and the two Alpines were certainly given a helping hand to their result by the red flag that handed them a free tyre change, it would be wrong to say that this was a fluke result won by a roll of the dice.
Even after the red flag resumption, the trio were the fastest cars on track, showing that the end result was certainly more down to how the relative cars performed in the wet.
It is a well-known phenomenon that some cars are more suitable for wet conditions than dry, as multiple elements come together to help drivers overcome deficiencies that are exposed in the dry.
Pierre Gasly, Alpine
Photo by: Alpine
One factor that almost certainly helped Alpine was the fact that the wet masked one of its main weaknesses: engine performance. With the tricky conditions more about managing throttle input than simply having the most power, the squad was on a much more level playing field than it is in the dry.
But one other interesting element popped up as a factor that could explain the shuffling of the order in the wet – and that is the aero impact of wet-weather tyres.
The current generation of ground-effect cars are very sensitive to ride height, and just a couple of millimetres of difference in ground clearance can have a pretty big impact in terms of downforce levels, with all the juicy performance coming as close to the track as possible.
So with the diameter of the inter tyre that most teams use being 5mm greater with its tread pattern than the slick (725mm compared to 720mm), there is a direct impact on where the car platform is running compared to where it sits on a slick.
And it must be remembered that teams were already finding that they could not run as close to the ground as they would have liked in Brazil because of the Interlagos bumps, so those cars already falling out of the ideal window will have been further pushed away by running on inters.
But it is not just the minuscule ride-height impact that can make a difference when it comes to the aero impact of the tyres, because sidewall stiffness is perhaps an even more important element.
How the tyre deforms under cornering load, and when downforce is applied, has a big impact on the car’s aerodynamics, which is why teams put a lot of effort into ensuring that their cars are optimised to take the changing shape of tyres into account.
That is why wind tunnel tyres are designed to replicate in perfect scale the sidewall deformation that real-life tyres have.
A change of sidewall stiffness and a subtle impact on ride height is certainly more than enough to alter the aero map of a car, potentially shifting the balance and making what is a benign car in the dry quite pointy in the wet.
Haas team principal Ayao Komatsu, whose own team seemed to be worse off on the inter than the slick, said it was not a new phenomenon for his squad – as Spa earlier this year had exposed problems of his car losing rear downforce when put on to rain-weather tyres.
Pirelli tyres on the car of Oscar Piastri, McLaren MCL38
Photo by: Steven Tee / Motorsport Images
“The amount of aero balance we need to take out just shows the rear of the car is weak on the intermediate tyres, which is a new problem this year,” he said.
“You design the car with your wind tunnel tyres for dry conditions, obviously. Then, I can’t remember when we first ran the inters or wet, but straight away we lost so much stability.”
On the flip side, the Red Bulls and Alpine certainly seemed to be a step ahead of the opposition in the wet.
What the data says
While teams do not yet have answers as to whether the aero influence of the tyres was decisive in Brazil, analysis of lap times definitely points to some shift in trends.
Most interesting is that the Brazilian GP weekend, with its dry sprint event and wet rain race, offered us a snapshot of performance differences across the two conditions.
And while qualifying comparisons are not totally indicative, because some cars did not show their full potential in the same conditions as others, they do at least show how some teams moved around in the pecking order – with Alpine and RB certainly looking relatively better in the wet and Ferrari dropping back.
The below results show the fastest car from each team in Q3.
Sprint qualifying result – Dry
Qualifying – Wet
But a more accurate gauge of the pace of the cars, and how things moved around from the dry to the wet, comes from race pace.
Looking at the fastest car from each team, based on clean racing laps – so not including pitstops nor restarts – we get the following data set.
Sprint – Dry
Race – Wet
Red Bull and Mercedes’ pace was certainly much improved in the wet relative to its rivals, while McLaren and Ferrari fell back.
And Ferrari’s was perhaps the biggest drop-off, as Alpine and RB proved to be quicker over the stints.
Sport
Man City: Former player Jim Whitley on CBBC Jamie Johnson acting role
In 2001, Whitley left Manchester City on a free transfer and returned to his adopted home by signing for Wrexham, going on to be named player of the season in his first campaign.
It was during his time with Wrexham that Whitley rediscovered a passion for singing, which he says he had neglected upon leaving the school choir. It returned when a solo artist visited the club to collaborate on a song.
“She wanted all the Wrexham lads to record the chorus line,” Whitley explains.
“The guy who was doing the sound liked my voice. He pulled me aside and asked if I’d like to come and do a guest spot in a theatre that the artist was performing at.”
An opportunity arose afterwards to play Sammy Davis Jr in a production with a West End cast.
Whitley told BBC Sport that he found himself moving more into this world as injuries piled up, saying it “filled a void” when he retired from football.
Football
Jason McAteer: Roy Keane-Mick McCarthy film ‘will be blockbuster’
“It’s gonna be a blockbuster! I don’t think Roy’s gonna come out too well in this film to be honest.”
Jason McAteer is looking forward to seeing Saipan at the cinema. After all, the former Liverpool midfielder is set to be portrayed in it.
However, the tale of the infamous bust-up between Roy Keane and Mick McCarthy at the 2002 World Cup is not a great memory for him.
Steve Coogan has been cast as Republic of Ireland manager McCarthy, with Éanna Hardwicke taking on the Keane role as they depict the fallout, which took place on the small Japanese island of Saipan and resulted in the captain leaving the camp.
McAteer, 53, first got wind of the project via a text from an actor friend in Ireland.
“It was a picture of this kid and he asked ‘do you think this guy can play you in a movie?” he told the BBC podcast, Sacked in the Morning. “Obviously it was Brad Pitt – I’m joking.
“He said they’re making a film about Saipan and I was like ‘shut up’. I asked was it a documentary and he went ‘no, it’s a big movie’.”
Manchester United midfielder Keane had angered the FA of Ireland by giving a newspaper interview in which he criticised training facilities, including a “rock hard” pitch and missing equipment.
McCarthy’s decision to send Keane home triggered a media frenzy and divided supporters.
“There was always tension between Roy and Mick,” McAteer remembered. “It went back from when they played together.
“When Mick was (Republic of Ireland) captain and Roy was a young kid, they clashed a number of times.
“Then Mick got the manager’s job and Roy became one of the best midfielders in the world, so it was always a difficult relationship.”
Sport
Man Utd fans in meltdown over ‘Amorim way’ as video of Sporting scoring sublime goal from kick-off against City emerges
MANCHESTER UNITED fans are buzzing over the ‘Amorim way’ after Sporting’s sensational team goal against Man City.
Sporting thrashed Pep Guardiola‘s side to inflict a third defeat in a row for the Citizens – their worst run for six years.
Viktor Gyokeres stole the limelight with a hat-trick, but it was Maximiliano Araujo’s goal which captured United fans’ attention.
It came immediately after half-time with the scoreline 1-1 after Gyokeres cancelled out Phil Foden‘s early opener.
From kick-off Sporting played the ball back to centre-back Ousmane Diomande, a £70million United transfer target, who then started a brilliant passing move.
Sporting moved the ball quickly from defence to midfield and Pedro Goncalves dropped his shoulder brilliantly to deceive Mateo Kovacic.
A clever run from Gyokeres dragged a defender away from his team-mate, with Goncalves moving into acres of space as he dribbled closer to goal.
He then slipped in Araujo who had also made a brilliant run, and the midfielder made no mistake with the finish as he fired beyond Ederson.
City were caught off guard, a rarity for them, and United fans are excited to see similar football under Amorim at Old Trafford.
One fan reacted saying: “His way.. the Amorim way.”
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Another added: “That’s Amorim ball.”
A third wrote: “Now it’s Man United Way 😁”
And another commented: “We hope this is what he’s bringing to Manchester United.”
Amorim has built a reputation for free-flowing attacking football at SPorting with his side scoring 52 goals in 17 games this season.
Sport
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