Month: October 2019

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The street demonstrations in Hong Kong these past few months have been, in a way, a dramatic payoff in the political fight that Joshua Wong has been waging since childhood. The biggest protests in Hong Kong’s history, they are daily proof of a profound popular defiance against Beijing. But even as the battle for democracy in Hong Kong has surged to a new degree of seriousness Wong has often hovered above the action or worked on the edge of the crowd.

Wong, who rose to international fame as a skinny, bespectacled, teen-age figurehead of Hong Kong’s 2014 Umbrella Movement, spent the first weeks of summer serving a prison sentence for earlier acts of civil disobedience. When he got out, in June, he made his position plain: the new generation of leaderless demonstrators didn’t need him at the helm.

Besides, Wong had other plans. Now a twenty-three-year-old university student, he’s been taking part in the protests but saves most of his energy for projects away from the streets. He travelled last month to Taiwan, Germany, and the United States to shore up international support and ask trade partners to use ongoing negotiations to pressure Beijing. He testified in Congress as lawmakers prepared to vote on the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act, which passed the House last week. He wrote opinion pieces in foreign newspapers. He also announced a campaign for local office, telling supporters that grassroots community activism was crucial to reshaping the political landscape.

Wong’s evolution from defiant teen-age protester to international lobbyist and emerging politician is more than an interesting biography. The struggle over Hong Kong’s fate runs through Wong’s life, and Wong’s life runs through the struggle. He was born in October of 1996, a year before the former British colony was handed back to China in a deal that guaranteed the “special administrative region” half a century of relative autonomy. He will be fifty when that time runs out and Hong Kong enters an unpredictable era. Nobody knows whether, come 2047, Hong Kong will maintain its unique freedoms or be forced into closer alignment with mainland rules. This year’s demonstrations are the latest outbreak of a fundamental clash that will keep flaring in different forms, shaping the lives and possibilities of Wong’s generation into old age. Wong is the child of past spasms of unrest and a likely architect of those to come.

“As long as Xi”—Jinping—“rules China, we don’t see the endgame. We don’t see the end of Xi,” Wong told me this summer. “It seems to be an infinity war. It’s our infinity war.”

I first met Wong on a rain-dark afternoon in August. He slouched against a wall outside a diner in CITIC Tower, the eponymous waterfront landmark housing China’s largest state-run conglomerate, and typed intently on his phone. A slight and unassuming young man wearing baggy shorts and a backpack, he reminded me of a shy teen-ager waiting to get picked up from chess club. We went into the diner, where Wong hardly glanced at the menu before telling the server, “I want everything.”

“You do?” I asked.

Wong laughed, and I realized that I was his unwitting straight man, playing my part just as he’d hoped. “Here,” he said, pointing to a menu choice of beans, eggs, and various breakfast meats.

Having landed his moment of levity, Wong got serious and stayed that way. He frowned in concentration as he moved deliberately from one topic to the next, in a manner that suggested he was checking off a mental list of points he didn’t want to forget. “We now have a sugar-coated rule of law,” he said. “I mean, it seems like we have a certain system, but the reality is that the national system of China can interpret or override any law they want.”

Wong’s first large-scale political fight came when he was still in high school. The Hong Kong government had moved to impose mandatory national-education classes into the schools that would, among other things, praise the Communist Party of China. Wong considered the proposed curriculum reform a naked effort to brainwash the youth of Hong Kong. He and a couple of other students took to the streets and passed leaflets to commuters. Their movement mushroomed until Wong found himself at the head of a powerful citywide outcry against the proposed education reform. The students occupied the national-government headquarters, and, after a ten-day sit-in, the government relented and shelved the new curriculum.

Next came the Umbrella Movement, the 2014 protests in which crowds staged long-running sit-ins, demanding the right to vote in elections free from Beijing’s interference. By that time, Wong had secured his place as one of the most influential leaders in Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement, with all attendant perks and indignities. He was arrested and imprisoned on charges of illegal assembly, accused on the mainland of being a U.S. agent, and nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.

Since then, Wong has undergone a peculiar inversion: as his fame and influence grow overseas, some say his sway on the street has diminished. Much of Wong’s work these days is aimed at an international audience with the hope of winning badly needed support from abroad. “Whereas during previous campaigns he was seen by many as a leader, this time he’s not been seen that way by protesters on the ground,” Antony Dapiran, a Hong Kong-based writer who researched the demonstration movements for his book, “City of Protest,” said. “He’s seen that way by the international community. He’s taken on this role as a sort of statesman or international spokesman.” Dapiran added, “He’s filling a need.”

The city’s perpetually fragile calm began to crack anew this past winter, when the Hong Kong government proposed a bill that would have allowed fugitives to be extradited to mainland China. The prospect of Hong Kongers vanishing into the mainland’s opaque network of courts and jails loomed as a galvanizing threat. People took to the streets, subway stations, and airport by the hundreds of thousands. They have vowed to keep demonstrating until the government meets a list of demands, which include an investigation into police brutality; the resignation of Hong Kong’s chief executive, Carrie Lam; and the right to vote in elections without the meddling of Beijing.

As weeks turned to months and frequent clashes broke out between demonstrators and riot police, resolve hardened on both sides: Lam and her allies complained of “rioters” marauding through the streets; demonstrators accused her of presiding over a thuggish police state. By September, when Lam announced the withdrawal of the extradition bill, it was already too late to calm the streets.

Wong used to talk about “our summer of discontent,” but summer is long gone. Weekends in Hong Kong are now characterized by sporadic and unpredictable street battles. Police have deployed choking clouds of tear gas, rubber bullets, and water cannons against demonstrators, and attacked subway commuters who looked like they might be protesters. On one particularly awful day, police fired a live round straight into the chest of a demonstrator. For their part, front-line protesters have set fires, vandalized businesses, tossed Molotov cocktails, and beaten up both police and people they suspected of being Beijing-backed agents.

When I asked Wong about this fall’s growing violence, he bristled. “That’s the incentive of self-defense and self-protection,” he said. “I think how the Hong Kong police attempt to murder people and to attack journalists and first-aid workers, and the arbitrary arrest, search, and crackdown on people, is far worse than anything done by protesters.”

Lam recently invoked emergency powers in an effort to control what she called “extreme violence.” Availing herself of authority that has gone untouched for half a century, she outlawed the face masks used by demonstrators to shield their identities—part of the ethos of the anonymous, leaderless movement.

A few days after Lam’s announcement, I spoke to Wong by phone as he rushed through the streets, heading to a demonstration. He was worried the government would cancel the election, he said, or even shut down the Internet. He sounded distracted and upset. I asked if he was in a hurry.

“Of course! Every day we’re in a hurry now,” he said. “We already announced the emergency state, and the banks closed already, and people are storing food in their home, and there are people lining up just to get cash from the A.T.M. machine. It’s really hard for me to connect with you.”

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Even if street fighters no longer regard him as their organizer, the authorities still treat him like a threat. Wong was arrested, most recently, in August. He was walking to the metro station when he was grabbed off the street by men in plain clothes, stuffed into an unmarked car, and taken to the police station, where he was charged with unlawfully organizing a rally and released on bail. A week later, on his way to Germany, he was detained at the airport for violating the terms of his bail and held overnight before continuing his journey.

His conflicts with officials have also followed him abroad in recent years. A trip to Thailand, where Wong was scheduled to speak to university students about democracy, was thwarted by Thai immigration officials, who stopped him at the airport and put him back on a plane to Hong Kong. He was also turned away at the border of Malaysia, where the national police chief explained to reporters that the government didn’t want to anger China. In Singapore, a social worker was convicted and fined for organizing an event where Wong—speaking from abroad—gave a live speech via Skype.

Wong’s candidacy for district council, like most of his moves, is partly designed as a provocation. He’s testing officials in Beijing and Hong Kong—will they let him run, or will he be disqualified? “Just let them disqualify me, and then see how many people will come into the streets,” he said. “If they disqualify me, they need to pay the price.”

The district-council elections, scheduled for November, are shaping into another volatile arena in which aggrieved Hong Kongers will battle for the city’s future. Pro-democracy candidates like Wong have launched campaigns across Hong Kong, and young people have been eagerly signing up to vote. The number of registered voters between eighteen and thirty-five is now up more than twelve per cent from last year, according to figures released by Hong Kong’s electoral officials.

Election officials last week dispatched a pair of letters to Wong, demanding that he clarify his position on Hong Kong’s independence from China. The government has argued that candidates who argue for separation or independence from the mainland should not be allowed to run for office, since the region’s status as a part of China is integral to Hong Kong’s Basic Law. Wong has insisted that he’s asking for universal suffrage, not independence, but some of his political foes remain skeptical.

Perturbed by the letters, Wong and other pro-democracy candidates have prepared replacement candidates to take over their campaigns in case they are disqualified. Meanwhile, Wong has repeatedly taken to Twitter to warn that Lam might use emergency law to cancel the election. “Gov is planning to postpone or to suspend the election, under the pretext of ongoing social unrest,” he tweeted on Friday night.

Wong knows that time is not on his side. He argues that China, under Xi, is already starting to unravel the arrangement known as “one country, two systems”—Hong Kong as a part of China, yet governed by a more lenient set of rules. He points to Lam invoking emergency measures as a sign that Beijing will continue to seek greater control over Hong Kong in coming years.

There is every reason to believe that, as long as he stays in Hong Kong, Wong will get old along with this fight. Or perhaps it’s more accurate to say that he will get old inside of this fight. “If we do nothing, things will be even worse,” Wong said. “They’re already winning, so we have nothing to lose. That’s why we say, ‘If we burn, they’ll burn with us.’ ”

The Frenchman scored twice to see off Young Boys, much to the delight of his Manchester United team-mate

Luke Shaw has described Paul Pogba as “one of the best midfielders in the world” after his two-goal display in Manchester United’s 3-0 Champions League win over Young Boys. 

Pogba handed Jose Mourinho’s side the lead 10 minutes before the interval with a superb finish into the roof of the net before coolly slotting home a penalty soon after. 

He then teed up Anthony Martial for United’s third after a marauding run through the middle. 

The French midfielder was far and away the star on the day, as he lifted his side after an otherwise frustrating start. 

Shaw – making his first start since suffering concussion on international duty – hailed his captain’s display and believes he is up with the very best in the game. 

He told BT Sport: “He gets some stick sometimes but we know what quality he has. 

“For me, he is one of the best in the world. He is important as captain. He shows on the pitch what kind of leader he is. 

“Hopefully he can carry that on.”

Shaw admits that United started sluggishly and were indebted to Pogba’s fine strike to help them settle into the opening Group H game. 

“It was extremely difficult in the first half,” he added. 

“We didn’t start bright. The pitch was difficult but we got to grips with it. Paul Pogba came up with a bit of magic for the first goal and that calmed us down a bit.

“It is always tough. The crowd, the pitch and the atmosphere. They were up for it. It is all about the points though and we got them.”

With the three points in hand, the Pogba, Shaw and the Red Devils now look ahead to matches against Wolves, Derby County and West Ham before resuming group play against Valencia, who fell to 10-man Juventus on Wednesday despite a Cristiano Ronaldo red card.

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Manolas tight-lipped on Real Madrid transfer talk

October 24, 2019 | News | No Comments

The Greece international is among those to have been linked with a move to the Santiago Bernabeu, but he claims no discussions have been held

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Roma defender Kostas Manolas is reluctant to be drawn on reports suggesting that he is a transfer target for Real Madrid.

The most recent window saw several performers, across all areas of the field, linked with big-money moves to the Santiago Bernabeu.

Among those reported to have figured on Real’s radar was Manolas, with the 27-year-old centre-half having proved himself over four years in Italy.

The Blancos are already well-stocked at the heart of their back four, with Sergio Ramos and Raphael Varane two of the best in the business, but reinforcements are always welcome.

Manolas, though, is staying tight-lipped when it comes to his chances of one day making a switch to the Spanish capital.

He told Marca of the rumours ahead of a Champions League meeting with the Blancos on Wednesday: “I haven’t spoken to anyone about Real Madrid. I don’t know what I can say. People can say a lot of things but I haven’t.”

It could be that Real rekindle their interest at a later date, especially with Varane continuing to be linked with leading sides across Europe.

Manolas is, however, unwilling to speculate on whether he could be targeted.

He added: “I don’t know. I can’t say that myself. I am a competitive player and I like to give everything. That I can say.”

While Manolas is eager to avoid being drawn into a debate regarding a possible move away from Roma, he is prepared to pick a player from Real that he would like in Italy.

When that question was put to him, he said: “All of their players could play for Roma. It’s normal. 

“[Luka] Modric or Sergio Ramos, who for me is the best defender in the world and it would be a pleasure to play by his side.”

Manolas joined Roma from Olympiakos in the summer of 2014.

He has made 175 appearances for the club to date, but is still waiting on a first piece of silverware.

Italy’s most successful team are about to become a lot more popular worldwide thanks to the signing of the five-time Ballon d’Or winner

There are two strands to the Cristiano Ronaldo transfer. The first is on a football level. Juventus signing Ronaldo should give the club a better chance of winning the Champions League.

They do not need him in order to win Serie A. They have done that seven times in a row without him and are unlikely to meet much resistance this season either.

Listen to anyone connected with Juventus speak and they’ll tell you the objective is the Champions League.

“As a club we have made a step forward and we want to make it count in the Champions League, which has been set as our objective in the next few years,” vice president Pavel Nedved told idnes.cz this week.

But it’s difficult to plot out success in a competition so short. There are only 13 matches – less than 33 per cent of a league season – and an outcome can easily be determined by an injury, a bad call, an off-day. That doesn’t happen so much over the course of a nine-month season.

Ronaldo won’t guarantee the Champions League for Juventus but he is as close as a guarantee as you can get.

Real Madrid have won four of the last five available Champions League titles. The only one they missed out on was in 2015 when Juventus beat them in the semi-finals. But every other year, Real have carried off the glory. Every year Ronaldo has been the top scorer.

He has 121 goals in all in the Champions League now. Seventy of those have come in the past five seasons. And when the big moment comes, you can bet your bottom dollar on Ronaldo making the difference. Granted, that hasn’t always been in finals – although he ripped Juventus apart in Cardiff with two goals in 2017 – but no Real Madrid title-winning season has passed without Ronaldo having a significant say.

Juventus thought they were buying a man in Gonzalo Higuain in 2016 who would get them closer than ever to securing that elusive European crown. It didn’t happen. Higuain wasn’t good enough to displace Ronaldo as the centre-piece of the Madrid attack and again the Portugal captain has come to show him how it’s done.

And now for the second strand. It will not necessarily be the case that Juventus have to first win the Champions League before going on to conquer the world. They can do both in tandem.

Conquering the world is not only about winning football matches and football competitions, it’s about becoming the best-known team on the planet. To put it bluntly, Cristiano Ronaldo is far, far more famous than the team he plays for.

And that would be true of any team. He is a one-man industry with a line in everything from underwear and shoes to hotels and fragrances.

If you were to craft a list of the most famous people in the world right now, you wouldn’t get far beyond the top three before including Ronaldo.

While Juventus will always be the number one team in Italy, that’s not the case outside the Italian borders. Teams like Manchester United, Barcelona and Real Madrid are far more popular worldwide and their advantages in overseas markets leave Juve at a distinct disadvantage. Ronaldo will help shore up that gap.

Where Ronaldo goes, fans follow. In the days following the announcement of his transfer to Turin, Juventus’s popularity on social media soared. At the same time, Real Madrid actually witnessed a dip in their matchday attendances.

“From 5 July to 17 July, Juventus’ Twitter and Instagram followers increased by about 15% and 25%, respectively, marking an increase from around 7 million to more than 8 million in terms of total Twitter followers (considering the main Italian page and the English page), and an increase from 10.1 million to 12 5 million followers for their Instagram account,” noted KPMG ’s Ronaldo Economics report.

It’s the type of move Paris St-Germain have attempted with Neymar and to an extent they have increased in popularity. But Neymar with no Ballons d’Or and Ronaldo with five are still some way apart in pedigree. Juve have signed the real thing.

Juventus might not have much room to grow in Italy but the battle for football’s forthcoming fortunes will be fought by Europe’s biggest clubs in regions including the United States and many parts of Asia.

‘There’s no player bigger than the team’ might be one of football’s old truisms but it belongs in another age. Ronaldo absolutely is bigger than Juventus just as Neymar is bigger than PSG.

There has been a shift in global football consciousness towards the veneration of the individual more than ever before. There are many ways to explain this – from a trend towards the celebrity in general to a communication age where fans can keep up with their favourite stars at their convenience.

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Older fans tend to lament the trends of younger kids not supporting their local teams but this generation are being raised on the internet. Real Madrid, Barcelona, these are their local teams.

Through FUT and Football Manager and Fantasy Football games, casual fans will identify with players who have brought them success and happiness in the virtual world more so than any connection to an average team who happen to be based in geographical proximity.

Fans are attracted to success; they want highlights, they want goals and rightly so. Ronaldo ticks all the boxes.

“The Bianconeri need to strongly capitalize on the acquisition of Ronaldo, especially in merchandising and sponsoring,” notes KPMG .

“The club still lag behind the main European superpowers in this area. In 2016/17 Manchester United FC, Barcelona FC, Real Madrid CF and FC Bayern München recorded €320 million, €288 million, €280 million and €344 million, respectively, more than twice as much Juventus FC’s figure of €120 million.”

KPMG also reports that more than 40 per cent of Juventus’s current sponsors are Italian based and – unlike Manchester United – they haven’t expanded their presence by hooking up with regional partners around the world.

Juventus have already been delivered an insight into the Ronaldo effect. A mere rumour of his signing sent the organisation’s share price skyrocketing by around 32 per cent in the fortnight leading up to his arrival.

By capitalising on his image and his overwhelming strong social media presence, Juventus should be able to grow their brand.

He has over 141 million followers on Instagram – more than anyone in the world other than Selena Gomez – and commands around €300,000 for a single sponsored post. Juventus – meanwhile – have 15.6 million followers with that figure rising sharply in the days and weeks since Ronaldo joined.

Ronaldo will allow Juventus reach new fans, customers, users, whatever you want to call it, on a whole new level.

“Monetising the inherent value in social media is crucial for clubs in order to stay competitive and to enhance their profitability,” says KPMG .

“Club channels also provide a unique setting for partners and sponsors to activate their brands and, ultimately, increase their sponsorship value or return on investment. This is the area in which Juventus FC will have to make a major effort to fully leverage Ronaldo’s investment.”

It’s into countries like Indonesia, India, Malaysia, Pakistan and Vietnam, according to KPMG , that Ronaldo can carry the name Juventus. With his near 123 million Facebook fans, Ronaldo has a reach far greater than any club.

The American collided with James Rodriguez in his side’s 2-0 defeat to the Bundesliga champions and was carried off the pitch in tears.

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Schalke midfielder Weston McKennie looks set for an extensive injury layoff following the seemingly serious leg injury he picked up in a challenge with Bayern Munich’s James Rodriguez in a 2-0 defeat against the German champions.

With Bayern 1-0 up in the 51st minute, the American and Bayern goalscorer Rodriguez competed for a loose ball and the latter caught the former’s left shin, sending him tumbling to the turf in obvious pain, before he had to be carried off the field in floods of tears, to be replaced by Nabil Bentaleb. Robert Lewandowski then notched the second from the penalty spot to put the game to bed.

The injury comes at a bad time for the 20-year-old, who has made 36 senior appearances in his career so far and was just cementing his place for club and country, having earned his fifth and sixth international caps and made his first Champions League appearance against Porto, notching an assist.

It is hoped that the injury is not as severe as first thought, and Schalke are sending the player for a scan to determine the full extent of the damage.

“We feared the worst,” Schalke sporting director Christian Heidel told WA.

“The entire tibia and fibula hurts him a lot.”

This is not the young midfielder’s first major injury setback, having suffered a cracked knee ligament last season. McKennie only missed six games, however, and he will be hoping to bounce back similarly quickly from this one.

McKennie will almost certainly be ruled out of Schalke’s next two Bundesliga matches against Freiburg and Mainz, as well as being a doubt for the USA’s upcoming fixtures against Colombia and Peru.

“We hope it’s not a break, but we can not rule it out,” said manager Heidel later told Reviersport. “He can not stand at all, but we need to get an X-ray and MRI to know more.”

U.S. boss Dave Sarachan has used McKennie as a regular part of his five-man midfield of late, starting him alongside fellow holding midfielders Tyler Adams and Wil Trapp.

The U.S. is also just two months out from taking on England and Itlay in a set of November friendlies that McKennie would have been odds on the feature in, though it now seems as though he could be facing a race to be fit in time for those matches as well. 

The Whites travel to Hillsborough in a bid to retain their top of the table spot in the Championship

Leeds United’s unbeaten run in the league has ended and Marcelo Bielsa’s side will be wanting three points to maintain their position at the top of the table when they play Sheffield Wednesday on Friday night. 

The Whites suffered their first loss of the season against Birmingham City on Saturday afternoon, losing 2-1 at Elland Road.  However, the defeat didn’t affect their position in the table as they currently boast a plus-four goal difference over second-placed Middlesbrough. 

Wednesday are currently in 10th position and won their last game against Aston Villa 2-1 on Saturday.

Game Sheffield Wednesday vs Leeds United
Date Friday, September 28
Time 7:45pm BST / 2:45pm ET


In the United States (US) the game can be live streamed via ESPN+.

US TV channel Stream
N/A ESPN+

 


In the United Kingdom (UK) the game will be shown on Sky Sports Football or streamed via Sky Go. 

UK TV channel Stream
Sky Sports Football Sky Go

 



Position Sheffield Wednesday squad
Goalkeepers Westwood, Dawson, Wildsmith
Defenders Palmer, Van Aken, Fox, Thorniley, Lees, Hutchinson, Baker, O’Grady, Hunt, Hector, Nielsen, Pudil, J.Lee, Penney
Midfielders Jones, K.Lee, Onomah, Pelupessy, Bannan, Reach, Boyd, Abdi, Kirby, Preston, Stobbs
Forwards Fletcher, Winnall, Hooper, Nuhiu, Joao, Matias, Forestieri

Sheffield Wednesday will be without forward Gary Hooper on Friday evening due to injury. 

Sheffield Wednesday starting XI: Dawson, Pelupessy, Fletcher, Bannan, Thorniley, Lees, Reach, Baker, Hector, Penney, Forestieri.

Position Leeds squad
Goalkeepers Peacock-Farrell, Blackman, Huffer
Defenders Ayling, Douglas, Cooper, Jansson, Pearce, Shaughnessy, Diaz, Struijk
Midfielders Forshaw, Alioski, Saiz, Dallas, Harrison, Phillips, Baker, Nicell, Klich, Stevens
Forwards Roberts, Edmondson, Dalby, Clarke

Bielsa’s squad remains depleted with Patrick Bamford, Pablo Hernandez, Kemar Roofe, Gaetano Berardi and Jamie Shackleton all still absent.

Leeds starting XI:  Peacock-Farrell; Ayling, Cooper, Jansson, Douglas; Phillips; Harrison, Saiz, Klich, Alioski; Roberts.



Leeds are favourites to win, with  bet365  pricing them at 6/5 to secure all three points. Sheffield Wednesday’s chances of winning are rated at 5/2 and a draw is also priced at 5/2.

Click here to see more offers for the Championship games, including goalscoring markets, correct score predictions and more.



Marcelo Bielsa’s side are still top of the table despite their unbeaten run ending in a 2-1 defeat to Birmingham City last Saturday.  

Meanwhile, Wednesday are just four points behind and won their last game away at Villa Park. 

Despite Leeds losing last weekend, Bielsa is optimistic about Friday night’s game. 

“You don’t react in the same way after a win as after a loss but after the game we lost we asked some questions together. We built our conclusions together,” Bielsa said ahead of the Wednesday fixture. 

“We’ve had so far two training sessions where each player could express himself. The conclusions are positive ones and I have a lot of hope for Friday’s game.”

The Owls’ manager, Jos Luhukay knows the Yorkshire derby will be difficult for his side but is hopeful for a win. 

 “Last season and this season, the team (Leeds) had quality and a good mix,” Luhukay told his pre-match press conference.

“They are very strong in the transition. It is a team who are good and balanced and it will be a very hard game. 

“We have our home game with the fans behind us. We must enjoy the game, hopefully with a good result and have a nice weekend.”

The last time these sides met, Sheffield Wednesday won 2-1 at Elland Road. 

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The Belgium international midfielder picked up a knee injury early on in the 2018-19 campaign, but he is closing in on a return to full fitness

Kevin De Bruyne has made a welcome return to training at Manchester City after being sidelined with knee ligament damage since mid-August.

The Belgium international, who starred for his country at World Cup 2018 as they secured a third-place finish in Russia, suffered an untimely injury in training.

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He had taken in just one domestic outing at that stage, with City having opened their 2018-19 campaign with a 2-0 victory away at Arsenal.

It was initially suggested that De Bruyne was facing up to at least three months on the sidelines, in what was a serious blow to Pep Guardiola’s plans.

City were, however, always confident that the 27-year-old could be brought back into the fold ahead of schedule.

De Bruyne, meanwhile, was quick to state that he intended to be back on the field in time for a derby date with Manchester United on November 11.

He should be well up to speed by then if his presence back on the training field is anything to go by.

Guardiola revealed ahead of Saturday’s 2-0 victory over Brighton that he expected to have the Belgian back soon, saying: “Yeah, Kevin is making the last steps [in his recovery]. He could start training in next few days, doing part of the sessions. Everything is going well.”

De Bruyne will not be rushed back into action, with City aware of the need to ease him into their plans and avoid taking any risks.

They have another international break coming up, which should give them the chance to work on the fitness of an important figure.

There are two outings to come before then, though, with Hoffenheim set to be faced in the Champions League on Tuesday.

City then head to Anfield on Sunday for a crunch clash with fellow Premier League title hopefuls Liverpool.

De Bruyne will likely be restricted to a watching brief for that encounter, but his return to action may not be too far off as he prepares to provide Guardiola’s side with a timely boost in their quest for major silverware across multiple competitions.

The World Cup-winning midfielder has agreed fresh terms with the Liga giants and will now remain at Camp Nou until at least the summer of 2023

Sergio Busquets has signed new contract with Barcelona through to 2023, with his fresh terms including a €500 million (£445m/$585m) release clause.

The 30-year-old midfielder is a product of the famed La Masia academy system in Catalunya and has spent his entire career to date at Camp Nou.

He has now edged a step closer to hanging up his boots as a one-club man, with Barca tying his services down for the foreseeable future.

The Liga giants have moved to put a new deal in place after seeing Busquets start to generate transfer talk.

Despite his strong ties to the club, the World Cup winner had seen a possible move to England mooted.

A reunion with former Barca boss Pep Guardiola at Manchester City was reported to be a possibility, with the Premier League champions prepared to spend big on a proven performer.

Such speculation has now been brought to a close.

Barca have displayed their commitment to a home-grown talent by renewing his deal once again.

They have also raised the fee required to trigger a buyout from €200m to its current mark at €500m.

That should ensure that they receive no unwanted interest in a prized asset that they have no intention of parting with.

Busquets’ new deal will also allow him to sail past the 500 appearances for the club, with just 10 more outings required to hit that mark.

He will also be hoping to add to his enviable haul of major honours in the years to come.

To date, a modern day icon has won seven La Liga titles, six Copas del Rey, three Champions League crowns, three FIFA Club World Cups, three UEFA Super Cups and six Spanish Super Cups.

Busquets also helped Spain to World Cup glory in 2010 and a second European Championship triumph in 2012.

The Juventus star insists that no player is able to match the achievements of his compatriot and his club team-mate

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Juventus striker Paulo Dybala insists he cannot match the achievements of Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi, and is instead out to be “first among the humans”.

The Argentina international has scored 72 goals in just 147 appearances for the Bianconeri, and at the age of 24 Dybala is among the next generation of players looking to break the duopoly of Juventus team-mate Ronaldo and Barcelona’s Messi.

Alessandro Del Piero has tipped Dybala and PSG star Kylian Mbappe to be take over from the two superstars, but the forward is insistent that no mere mortal can ascend to the throne while the eternal rivals are still playing.

“For that to be the case, Messi and Ronaldo would need to be at the twilight of their careers, but they are still doing extraordinary things,” Dybala said, per La Gazzetta dello Sport.

“Messi and Cristiano are beyond the norm. My objective is to be first among the humans.”

Speaking about other players who could potentially become the best in the world, Dybala has also hailed Real Madeis playmaker Isco, and insists he has always dreamed of being recognised as the finest player on the planet.

“Of the other humans, I like Isco, because he never loses the ball, but Neymar and Mbappé are also excellent players,” he added.

“When I was a child, sitting in front of the campfire, I wished that I could win the Ballon d’Or. If you want to improve, you have to set high targets.”