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Liverpool appoints Van Bronckhorst as assistant in Slot's new setup
Former Rangers manager Giovanni van Bronckhorst has joined Liverpool as assistant coach to Arne Slot.
Van Bronckhorst, who played for Arsenal and Barcelona during a distinguished career, won titles as a coach in the Netherlands with Feyenoord and Scotland with Rangers.
His most recent role was as coach of Turkish team Besiktas.
Slot has made changes to his backroom staff after winning the Premier League title in his first season in charge at Anfield.
As well as Van Bronckhorst, Liverpool also confirmed the arrival of Xavi Valero for his second spell at the club. He will take over the role of head of first team goalkeeper coaching.
Goalkeeper coaches Fabian Otte and Claudio Taffarel will leave the club, Liverpool said.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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The Hindu
an hour ago
- The Hindu
Diogo Jota's No. 20 jersey to be retired at Liverpool
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First Post
4 hours ago
- First Post
Diogo Jota passes away: From humble beginnings to achieving dizzying heights with Portugal and Liverpool
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More from Football Diogo Jota helped Portugal win the UEFA Nations League along with his childhood idol Cristiano Ronaldo. Reuters 'Doesn't make any sense. Just now we were together in the National Team,' Ronaldo posted on social media. Diogo Jose Teixeira Da Silva was born Dec. 4, 1996 in Porto, Portugal. A clinical goal-scorer, his talent took him from humble beginnings with his local team Gondomar to soccer's biggest stages with Liverpool and Portugal. As a child he dreamed of becoming a professional soccer player. But his route to the top was not straightforward — having to prove himself at lower levels and facing setbacks before securing a move to Liverpool in 2020. He went on to win English soccer's three major trophies during his time at Anfield. 'I was still paying to play football when I was 16 years old,' Jota said in a discussion at Web Summit in 2020. His passion for soccer was developed at an early age. As a boy he would cry when pleading with his father to let him play, rather than attend swimming classes, which clashed with practice sessions. From Gondomar he joined Paços de Ferreira — an unheralded Portuguese team — before a move to Spanish giant Atletico Madrid looked like being his big break. In a way it was, but the transfer did not work out as expected. Jota never played a competitive match for Atletico, but was sent on loan to Porto and then Wolverhampton Wanderers, where he would make his mark in England and eventually earn the attention of Liverpool. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Wolves was a second tier team when Jota arrived on a season-long loan in 2017 and reunited with Nuno Espirito Santo, who coached him during his stint at Porto the previous season. Jota had clearly made an impression on Espirito Santo — scoring nine goals at Porto — and he repaid the coach's faith by doubling that figure as Wolves topped the second tier Championship and won promotion to the Premier League in his first year. The goals kept coming. Ten after making the step up to England's top flight — the most popular league in the world — and 16 the season after. Soon Liverpool, which had just won the title, came calling. Jota said it was 'impossible to say no' to the move worth 41 million pounds ($56 million). 'All of my path since I was a kid and now, to join a club like Liverpool — the world champions — is just unbelievable," he said. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Manager Jurgen Klopp accepted the then-23-year-old Jota was 'far away from being kind of a finished article' but had 'so much potential.' 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He bettered that with 21 the following year as Liverpool won the FA Cup and English League Cup and finished runner up in the Premier League and Champions League. The Premier League title eventually came last season and Jota's winning goal against Everton in April — his last for the club — was a crucial one in pushing Liverpool towards the title. In all Jota scored 65 goals in 182 games for Liverpool. 'His passion, energy and spirit on the field inspired everyone' He followed the Premier League title with triumph in the Nations League with Ronaldo in June — the second time he won the trophy, having previously lifted it in 2019. He was capped 49 times by his country and scored 14 goals. After the Nations League final in June he posed for photos on the field, beaming proudly as he held the trophy. 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Time of India
4 hours ago
- Time of India
From India to Palestine: Who were the five athletes the world of sport mourned on July 3, a day of global sorrow?
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