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Graham Hansen strikes late as Norway beat Finland 2-1

Graham Hansen strikes late as Norway beat Finland 2-1

Reuters6 days ago
SION, Switzerland, July 6 (Reuters) - A late solo strike by Norway forward Caroline Graham Hansen secured a 2-1 victory against Finland in the Women's European Championship on Sunday, as the twice champions took a big step towards qualifying for the quarter-finals.
Norway's second Group A win put them top of the standings with six points. Finland, who defeated Iceland in their opening game, remained on three.
"We buzzed our way to three points in one way or another, but that's what counts in championships. There's a bit to work with, but we won, it helps," player of the match Graham Hansen told Norwegian broadcaster NRK.
Eva Nystrom's own goal put Norway ahead after three minutes as Graham Hansen's cross into the goalmouth hit the Finland defender and slid into the net.
The Norwegians were unlucky not to score again when they hit the woodwork twice within a minute, Ingrid Syrstad Engen's close-range header striking the crossbar before Finland goalkeeper Anna Koivunen tipped Vilde Boe Risa's corner onto the post.
Finland equalised in the 32nd minute when midfielder Oona Siren found forward Oona Sevenius with a precise through ball. Sevenius hammered a left-foot shot into the top right corner to score her first international goal for over a year.
Graham Hansen stepped up to seal the win in the 84th minute, fooling two defenders with quick dribbling as she moved in from the right and dispatched a shot in off the far post.
"When she performs like she did for that goal, not many people are able to do that. Getting her in the most amount of one-on-one situations is something we want," Syrstad Engen told newspaper VG.
Norway, who beat Switzerland in their opening game, could have a place in the quarter-finals confirmed if the hosts beat Iceland later on Sunday, or if the match ends in a draw.
Finland coach Marko Saloranta said his team did not deserve to lose.
"I am very proud of how we played, it feels extremely bad," he said.
Finland face Switzerland on Thursday when Norway play Iceland.
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Dundee lose & St Mirren suffer shootout pain at Arbroath - Scottish League Cup round-up
Dundee lose & St Mirren suffer shootout pain at Arbroath - Scottish League Cup round-up

BBC News

time22 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Dundee lose & St Mirren suffer shootout pain at Arbroath - Scottish League Cup round-up

Steven Pressley suffered home defeat in his competitive debut as Dundee head coach, with Championship side Airdrieonians causing the shock of the opening day of the Premier Sports Cup group rivals St Mirren were held to a goalless draw away to League 1 champions Arbroath and missed out on the bonus point by losing the penalty Motherwell did manage to take an extra point after edging Clyde on spot kicks after drawing 2-2 with their League 2 Ross County lost their shootout after a 1-1 draw away to fourth-tier Championship winners Falkirk fired seven goals without reply away to Highland League side Brechin City and there were wins for Premiership rivals Kilmarnock and St Johnstone. Group A Dylan Tait scored a hat-trick as Falkirk cruised to victory in signing Brian Graham set up fellow veteran Scott Arfield to strike Falkirk's opener and the former Rangers midfielder added the second from the penalty Tait added three more, with winger Alfie Agyeman and forward Ross MacIver adding the the other group game, League 2 side Spartans came from behind to upset Championship visitors Queen's Fowler fired the Glasgow side ahead in the first-half, but Bailey Dall headed the second-half equaliser before Cammy Russell grabbed the winner from the penalty spot. Group B Northern Ireland striker Ronan Hale fired County ahead just before the break against Stranraer, but Tommy Sharp's close-range strike sent the tie into penalties, which the hosts won means second-tier rivals Partick Thistle lead the group after Friday's 4-1 win away to Edinburgh from Cammy Logan, Robbie Crawford, Logan Chalmers and City's Robbie Mahon gave Mark Wilson the perfect start as permanent head coach before Tiwi Daramola's reply for the League 2 side just before the break. Group C Player-manager Rhys McCabe set up Chris Mochrie to coolly slot Airdrieonians ahead early on at Dens Park and Dundee were unable to early goal also settled the group's other game, Luke Rankin's 35-yard drive giving third-tier Alloa Athletic victory away to Bonnyrigg Rose, who are now back in the Lowland League after relegation. Group D Both ties in Group D went to spot add to St Mirren's misery as they were held to a goalless draw in Arbroath before losing 4-2 on penalties, captain Mark O'Hara was sent off for a second booking two minutes from Martin Rennie, Forfar Athletic's summer signing from Clyde, headed his side into the lead before hosts Annan Athletic replied through Aidan Smith's second-half penalty, but it was the visitors who prevailed 4-2 in the shootout. Group E Hamilton Academical, relegated to League 1, scored two second-half goals to ease aside fourth-tier hosts Stirling Smith struck and Kyle MacDonald headed in to give League 1 Accies all three of Midlothian are playing Dunfermline Athletic in the evening kick-off. Group F St Johnstone came from behind to avoid an upset against SPFL newcomers East Lowland League champions led through John Robertson's early free-kick, but summer signing Jamie Gullan replied with a set piece of his own and strikes from Adama Sidibeh and Makenzie Kirk secured the points for the Championship midfielder Dylan Easton scored two penalties in Raith Rovers' 5-1 win away to Elgin Rowe, Lewis Vaughan and Josh Mullin grabbed the Championship side's other goals, with Jack Murray replying for the League 2 hosts. Group G Summer signing James Hilton gave Clyde a shock early lead as he chipped over stranded Motherwell goalkeeper Calum Ward after a defensive Maswanhise soon headed the Steelmen level and put the Premiership side ahead after the break, but Liam Scullion nodded the League 2 hosts back on terms only for Well to win the shootout and the bonus point Morton won 4-2 away to Blues, summer signing Kris Moore, Ali Crawford and Zak Delaney scored for the Championship visitors, with Oliver Colloty's penalty and Seb Ross replying for the League 1 side. Group H Kilmarnock eased to a two-goal win over Highland League champions Brora Rangers in Stuart Kettlewell's first competitive game in charge.A right-foot shot from 18-year-old defender Ben Brannan gave the Premiership side the half-time lead, with summer signing Djenairo Daniels firing the second 10 minutes from Livingston also won on the road, 2-1 away to League 2 champions East Muirhead gave the visitors the lead from close range in first-half added time before Hearts loanee Macaulay Tait extended their advantage from similar distance just after the Slattery's goal from outside the area reduced the arrears before East Fife's Mamadou Bah was sent off for a second bookable offence deep into added time.

How Britain's fluent footballers are finally beating language barriers
How Britain's fluent footballers are finally beating language barriers

Times

time24 minutes ago

  • Times

How Britain's fluent footballers are finally beating language barriers

There he was at Wimbledon, the blazer, sunglasses, tan and swept-back hair — looking every last centimetro an Italian movie star. Except it was good old Scott McTominay. ' Come stai?' ('how are you?') he asked a talkSPORT interviewer. ' Tutto bene?' ('is everything OK?') McTominay's metamorphosis at Napoli is one of the stories of our age and from a British perspective his embrace of local language and culture is as delightful as his success on the pitch. Because, if we're honest, ability to adapt abroad does not come easily to Brits. One of our greatest footballers, after all, was Ian Rush, who, when asked to explain why he couldn't score at Juventus, replied that being in Italy was like being in a foreign country. But McTominay is new school. Since transferring from Manchester United last summer he has taken biweekly Italian lessons with a university tutor, while using several language apps to improve his fluency. His team-mate and Scottish compatriot Billy Gilmour is the same. McTominay now records video messages to fans in Italian and can navigate Italian TV interviews. He's determined to keep getting better. Even more assimilated is Fikayo Tomori, the England centre back who joined AC Milan in 2021 and used lockdown to learn Italian to a high level, speaking it with a native accent. Football's polyglots... and some useful phrases Players who speak a variety of languages Romelu Lukaku Napoli and Belgium striker: English, French, German, Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch, Flemish, Italian, Lingala Henrikh Mkhitaryan Inter Milan and former Armenia winger: English, Armenian, French, Portuguese, Russian, Ukrainian, German, Italian Nadia Nadim AC Milan and Denmark women's forward: English, Danish, German, Persian, Dari, Urdi, Hindi, Arabic, French Amadou Onana Aston Villa and Belguim midfielder: French, German, English, Dutch, Wolof — and is learning Spanish Managers and coaches Mike Arteta Arsenal: Spanish, Basque, Catalan, English, Portuguese, French, Italian (and he claims an eighth: 'Scottish') José Mourinho Fenerbahce: Portuguese, English, Spanish, Catalan, Italian, French Nuno Espirito Santo Nottingham Forest: Portuguese, Spanish, English, Italian, Russian Roy Hodgson English, Swedish, French, Italian, German —and even taught French as a sideline when in South Africa as a player Arsène Wenger French, German, English, Spanish, Italian, Japanese Foreign language cheat sheet (from the Futbol Lingo app) 'Switch of play' Changez le jeu (French), Spiel Verlagen (German), Cambia de orientacion (Spanish), Skipt um Kannt (Icelandic), Zhuanji jingong (Mandarin) 'Penalty spot' Punkt pola karnego (Polish), Penalti noktasi (Turkish), Strafschopstip (Dutch), Nuqtat darbat aljaza (Arabic) 'Referee' Arbitro (Italian, Portuguese, Spanish), L'arbitre (French), Scheidsrichter (German), Domari (Icelandic) …and some interesting idioms (from 'Do You Speak Football' by Tom Williams) 'The Top Corner' in different countries: Spain Donde anidan las aranas (literal translation: 'Where the spiders nest') Egypt Fil maqass ('In the scissors') Brazil Onde dorme a coruja ('Where the owl sleeps') Algeria Wayn yeskon shaytan ('Where Satan lives') 'A nutmeg' in different countries: France Petit pont ('Little bridge') South Korea Alggagi ('Hatching an egg') Jamaica Salad Tammy Abraham learnt enough to conduct interviews in Italian while playing for Roma and two hours of language lessons a day during five years at Borussia Dortmund left Jamie Gittens, Chelsea's new signing, fluent in German. Harry Kane jokes about his continued struggles with German but in March a clip emerged of him taking lessons with a tutor at Bayern Munich that suggested he is better with the language than he lets on. Jude Bellingham learnt some German at Dortmund and threw himself into mastering Spanish after joining Real Madrid, using apps and taking lessons at home. Trent Alexander-Arnold noted his close friend's example and wowed with a long address in fluent Spanish at his Real unveiling. Sensitive to accusations that considerable time was spent plotting his transfer from Liverpool, Alexander-Arnold's camp declined to clarify how long he had been learning the lingo when contacted for this article — but an experienced Spanish-language teacher of footballers said, 'I found it incredibly impressive. That didn't strike me as just a few months' study.' Yet before lapsing into parochial self-congratulation it should be acknowledged that British players are merely beginning to do what those of other nationalities have done for years. Kylian Mbappé spoke Spanish to a higher level at his Real unveiling and started learning Spanish as a 15-year-old because, even at that age, he was planning to play in La Liga one day. McTominay's Napoli team-mate Romelu Lukaku speaks nine languages and at United he played with Henrikh Mkhitaryan (eight languages), Bruno Fernandes (five languages) and Zlatan Ibrahimovic (five languages). He was managed by José Mourinho, speaker of six languages, whose route into coaching began with a stint as Sir Bobby Robson's translator at Barcelona. Sixteen of the Premier League's 20 managers speak at least two languages (including Mikel Arteta, who has seven) but the only bilingual Brit among them is Graham Potter, who has Swedish. However, at the same time as a rise in polyglotism in the game so there is an acceleration towards English becoming football's lingua franca. Take refereeing. A number of Premier League refs speak more than one language, including a certain younger official, who would rather remain nameless, who speaks five. And yet increasingly Fifa and Uefa are pushing referees across the world to learn English. The men's and women's national teams of Belgium — a linguistically divided country — have used English in their dressing rooms since Roberto Martínez introduced the principle nine years ago. Long before he joined Liverpool Arne Slot was coaching and doing team talks in English. He demanded English be used at all times at Feyenoord, even getting dinner ladies to speak to players in English. His reasoning was that a common tongue builds unity and it would be more useful, in their future lives, if Feyenoord's many South American and African signings learnt English rather than Dutch. British players learning languages and English as football's lingua franca appear, at first glance, to be opposing developments, but both have the same root cause. It's that communication has never been considered more important in football. In a marginal-gains world where every advantage is important, the leading coaches see social bonds and successful communicating as super-important to the success of teams. Thomas Tuchel has spoken of little else since becoming England head coach. In Premier League academies, players access GCSE and A-level language qualifications through clubs' education programmes. The Professional Footballers' Association offers language courses to players across the men's and women's game, encouraging members to use them and the PFA considers it critical to have a multilingual leader. Its chief executive, Maheta Molango, speaks six languages and this is seen as vital to helping connect with the union's modern membership. Southampton's Will Still, raised in Belgium by British parents, is an example of a young English manager able to switch tongues to project his message. Footage of Still motivating his former Reims squad in French while switching to industrial English for emphasis is fascinating — and amusing — viewing: ' Ces trois points dimanche … F***ING THREE POINTS ON SUNDAY!' And so on. Roy Hodgson, the father of multilingual English managers, coached in five languages, including French — which he even taught part-time in a school while playing in South Africa. The League Managers Association includes a 'learning a foreign language' module in its diploma in football management and provides a language consultant, Robert Hunt, a former United Nations translator, to help members broaden their language skills. An early linguistic specialist in English football was George Scanlan, a remarkable character who played at junior level for Everton and had a successful coaching career with Marine, but was also head of languages at Liverpool Polytechnic, having studied French, Russian, Persian and Arabic at Christ's College, Cambridge. He was attaché/interpreter for the Soviet Union at the 1966 World Cup and fulfilled a similar role for numerous British and foreign teams, sitting on the Aston Villa bench when they played Dinamo Kiev en route to winning the 1981-82 European Cup. Scanlan became a trusted figure for Sir Alex Ferguson, not only interpreting for Andrei Kanchelskis at United but also co-writing Kanchelskis's autobiography and even helping to broker his transfer to Everton. Phil Dickinson, who studied under Scanlan, has been a key provider of language services to top English clubs for 25 years and his early gigs included interpreting for Eric Cantona. Dickinson was on duty the day Cantona signed for United and it befell him to go through the contract with the Frenchman and ask all the insurance questions. 'There was a certain one,' Dickinson remembers. 'Er, Eric, have you got Aids or ever had Aids? Non, non. OK, that's good.' Dickinson could fill several books with his experiences. One was working for Wigan Athletic during their era of high-profile South and Central American signings. He sat on their bench and in their dressing room to translate Paul Jewell's instructions to the Ecuador international Antonio Valencia. 'The other players would snigger because quite often Jewelly would turn round and tell me off,' Dickinson recalls. 'Like when Antonio didn't take the player on, or just played back inside: 'Fookin 'ell, Phil!' 'Once we had a home game against Watford and Paul brought out a video tactics board pre-programmed to replicate Watford's movements at corners. All these yellowy-orange discs representing the Watford players suddenly flew in all directions and [Jewell] was, 'Lads, it's like the f***ing Red Arrows!' 'There's always that totally untranslatable phrase that is wrapped in culture. Afterwards I said to Antonio, 'Well, the Red Arrows are our kind of acrobatic air force.' But I'm not sure that did the trick.' There was the interpreter who accompanied a Spanish-speaking player's wife to a pregnancy scan and, separated by a curtain for privacy, found themselves saying, 'There's the leg, here's the head.' Another had to talk a South American player's partner through breast-enlargement surgery. These are tales from the era before clubs invested properly in player care, when often the language tutor/interpreter was a foreign signing's only point of contact. Now most Premier League clubs have whole player-care departments. Hugo Scheckter, the former head of player care at West Ham United, Brentford and Southampton, founded The Player Care Group, the largest consultancy and education provider for sporting clubs across the world in player care. Research commissioned by his company showed that 80 per cent of all failed Premier League transfers from 2021-24 arrived from leagues where English is not the native language and Scheckter says, 'When going into clubs, we get them to buy into language learning from the top down. 'When I started in football it was from the bottom up. I'd try to persuade a player to do their English lessons but they wouldn't want to and there were no repercussions. Whereas now, either putting it in the contract or having the manager or director of football behind you, makes it a priority. 'On the pitch, in a high-pressure situation, if a player's English isn't good enough and a team-mate is shouting 'man on' or a manager is shouting an instruction and they can't get it immediately, it slows things down and in the modern game there isn't time for that.' David Moyes used Arteta as go-between when conversing with Marouane Fellaini at Everton and last season Jack Harrison (a Spanish speaker, having had a Costa Rican partner) proved invaluable in helping the Argentine player Charly Alcaraz communicate. Even after three seasons at Liverpool, Darwin Núñez leans on Alexis Mac Allister for language help but some players are linguistic sponges. The formidably bright Amadou Onana, at 23, is already fluent in French, German, English, Dutch and Wolof and has his heart set on learning Spanish — so asks the Villa head coach, Unai Emery, to use the language when speaking to him. Football language is different. At present Hunt is teaching a Spanish coach English. 'You have to be aware of the nuances,' he says. 'When we talk about a player playing deep in England we mean they drop towards their own goalkeeper and in Spanish the exact translation of 'deep' would be ' profundo '. But when you talk in Spanish football about ' profundidad ' you mean playing high up the pitch.' Offering a solution is Futbol Lingo, a brilliant app designed by two Uefa-licensed coaches based in England. One, Pierce Kiembi, speaks six languages and without widespread marketing his app has grown through word-of-mouth to almost 10,000 subscribers. Used by clubs in Spain, Belgium, Colombia and France it provides 1,600-plus football-specific words and phrases (with recordings of how to pronounce them) in 15 languages, including Arabic, Mandarin and Brazilian Portuguese. Users of the Futbol Lingo app can learn useful football phrases in a variety of languages… The vocabulary is provided by native-speaking players and coaches, rather than AI. 'Futbol Lingo won't teach you the whole language but it'll teach you phrases you need on the pitch, in the dressing room, in the boardroom,' Kiembi says. Maybe Carlos Tevez could have done with the app. During seven years in England he avoided learning more than a couple of English words, later claiming this was out of Argentine patriotism: 'I had a cultural problem with the English. I didn't want to learn English. I wanted them to learn Spanish,' Tevez said. One tutor sent to him found Tevez in no mood for a language lesson but rather craving a game of golf. He wondered, as they jumped in Tevez's car, how on earth the Argentinian would ask directions to a course. Tevez just typed 'GOLF' into his satnav and sped off with a grin. It took them to a run-down municipal course an hour away, rather than one more salubrious and local, but Tevez wasn't the type to care.

Anthony Elanga watches on as Newcastle dismantle Man Utd legend's non-league side in pre-season friendly
Anthony Elanga watches on as Newcastle dismantle Man Utd legend's non-league side in pre-season friendly

The Sun

time24 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Anthony Elanga watches on as Newcastle dismantle Man Utd legend's non-league side in pre-season friendly

JACOB MURPHY sent a direct message to £55m new boy Anthony Elanga as Newcastle thrashed Carlisle United. The Magpies finally confirmed the arrival of the Swedish attacker this week from Nottingham Forest. 3 3 And the star watched on from the sidelines as they beat National League outfit Carlisle 4-0 in a behind-closed-doors friendly at their Darsley Park training ground on Saturday, with Manchester United legend Mark Hughes at the helm for the visitors. Murphy, the man who Elanga will be in direct competition with for the right-wing spot, wasted little time in showing he is up for the battle. A long-ranger from Sean Longstaff gave Toon the advantage at the break before Joelinton made it two. Murphy then got his name on the scoresheet, rounding the goalkeeper and a couple of defenders following Harvey Barnes' cutback. And not just content with a goal, the 30-year-old turned provider as his cross was backheeled home by Ben Parkinson to finish the rout. Murphy enjoyed his best campaign at the club last term, scoring seven goals and producing nine assists. Eight of them were for hotshot striker Alexander Isak - someone that his new rival Elanga cannot wait to link up with having done so already numerous times for Sweden. The 23-year-old ex-Manchester United ace said: 'It's someone I know really well on and off the pitch. 'Being able to play at club level will make things a lot better. We'll be able to improve our connection even more. So it's exciting, and not just with Alex, but all around the team. 'The likes of Harvey, of Jacob, who's done fantastic last season, everyone in midfield and defence all played a part to make sure this team got to the Champions League. Update on Kieran Trippier split from wife after being seen with Chloe Ferry 'That was the goal last season and they managed to achieve it. Each and every single one of them played a huge part and I'm just looking forward to playing with everyone.' Most of Elanga's new team-mates returned to start pre-season training on Monday. However, others such as Isak and Tino Livramento are expected to return this week having been given extra time off due to international duty. Elanga looks set to get his first run-out in black and white next weekend when Newcastle travel to Parkhead to face Celtic. They then jet out to Singapore to take on Arsenal in a friendly before flying to South Korea to take on a K-League XI and then Tottenham. Elanga should then get his first taste of St. James' Park as a home player as Toon conclude their pre-season with home matches against Espanyol and Atletico Madrid before kicking off the Premier League campaign at Aston Villa on August 16.

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