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Wales fan hospitalised after fall from stands during Belgium match
Wales fan hospitalised after fall from stands during Belgium match

Reuters

time8 hours ago

  • Sport
  • Reuters

Wales fan hospitalised after fall from stands during Belgium match

BRUSSELS, June 9 (Reuters) - A Wales football fan was taken to hospital on Monday after falling from the stands during their World Cup qualifier against Belgium at King Baudouin Stadium. The unnamed supporter fell from the upper tier into the lower tier amid celebrations when Wales equalised with a third goal, according to the Football Association of Wales. "He was conscious and speaking and has now been taken to hospital for further checks," the FAW said in a statement, while no further details about his condition have been released. Belgium secured a late 4-3 home win against Wales, inflicting their first defeat under new manager Craig Bellamy, following a winning goal from Kevin De Bruyne two minutes from time.

Wales football fan in Belgium hospital after stadium fall
Wales football fan in Belgium hospital after stadium fall

BBC News

time8 hours ago

  • Sport
  • BBC News

Wales football fan in Belgium hospital after stadium fall

A Wales football fan has been hurt after falling from the stands during Monday night's World Cup qualifier in man, who has not been named, fell from the upper tier into the lower tier at the King Baudouin Stadium in has been taken to hospital in Brussels but was "conscious and speaking", the Football Association of Wales is believed the support fell during celebrations among the 4,500 travelling fans when Wales equalised with a third went on to lose 4-3 to Belgium following a late goal, a first defeat for new manager Craig Bellamy. An FAW statement read: "We can confirm that one male fan fell from the upper to lower tier during the match at the King Baudouin Stadium in Brussels this evening."He was conscious and speaking and has now been taken to hospital for further checks."

The best year of my life – Craig Bellamy relishing unbeaten start as Wales boss
The best year of my life – Craig Bellamy relishing unbeaten start as Wales boss

The Independent

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • The Independent

The best year of my life – Craig Bellamy relishing unbeaten start as Wales boss

Craig Bellamy has enjoyed the 'best year of my life' as he plots to take Wales a step closer to the World Cup in Belgium on Monday. Bellamy remains undefeated after nine games – five wins and four draws – and the Welsh record of 10 matches unbeaten, set under Mark Hughes between 2001 and 2003, will be equalled by avoiding defeat in Brussels. The Group J qualifier at the King Baudouin Stadium will be the final fixture of Bellamy's first 12 months in the job after his appointment last summer. 'It would be a huge push (to win for qualification). But whatever it will be, it rolls on if we get beat,' said Bellamy. 'But it's going to happen. Do I live in fear of it? Not at all. I don't live that way. 'I've had so many setbacks in my life, it's OK. I'm still here. And I've actually just had the best year of my life. This has been the best. 'How did I get that at 45? It's what I've been waiting for but, at the same time, it's like I don't know what's around the corner. I don't. 'But I know what I'm going to do. Enjoy everything. The good, the bad, whatever it is. 'Maybe I look too deep into stuff or maybe not. I try not to. But we're here for a tiny, short time.' Group leaders Wales are six points clear of Belgium after beating Liechtenstein 3-0 on Friday. The Dragons have taken seven points from their first three qualifiers, while Belgium began their campaign with a 1-1 draw in North Macedonia on Friday. That six-point gap has put early pressure on Belgium, who have won only one of their last eight games and are under new management in former Napoli and Lyon boss Rudi Garcia. Bellamy, however, has played down what protecting Wales' unbeaten record against Belgium – eighth on the FIFA world rankings – would mean to him. 'It's always nice, but I don't live waking up every morning thinking like, 'oh, please, don't lose this',' said Bellamy. 'No. Play well. We've done everything we could. That's the honest truth. 'This week's been top. And it's been top since I've just loved every moment because they train, they work, they show up, and to have that is amazing. 'I don't to have say, 'that wasn't good enough, no, we need to be sharper'. Never once I had to. So they give you energy.' Wales are again without Leeds winger Daniel James, who has failed to recover from illness after missing the Liechtenstein win. Nottingham Forest full-back Neco Williams also misses out after rolling his ankle against Liechtenstein. Bellamy said: 'Dan just couldn't recover from his illness. It knocked him back a bit. It's a shame but it's OK. 'We'd love Neco, we'd have loved everyone, but we don't have them.' 'I've never once moaned about it before and I'm not going to start now. We have good enough players. 'Of course we'd like them but they're not going to be here. Let's make sure they're in a good position for when they come back.' Cardiff defender Dylan Lawlor has been called in as cover for Williams.

The main talking points as Wales prepare to face Belgium in World Cup qualifying
The main talking points as Wales prepare to face Belgium in World Cup qualifying

The Independent

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • The Independent

The main talking points as Wales prepare to face Belgium in World Cup qualifying

Wales head to Belgium for Monday's crunch World Cup qualifier in confident mood. Craig Bellamy extended his unbeaten start as manager to nine games with Friday's 3-0 victory over Liechtenstein as Wales went top of the group. Here, the PA news agency looks at the main talking points surrounding the Brussels clash at the King Baudouin Stadium. Bellamy on the attack Wales boss Bellamy wasted no time in outlining his Brussels battle plan after beating Liechtenstein made it seven points from nine in World Cup qualifying. 'We go there and I'm not camping,' Bellamy said. 'I'm not sitting back. It's not in my make-up. I can't do it.' These were bold words from Bellamy, who knows Belgium present the acid test of his Wales reign. Wilson – from boy to man Harry Wilson was very much a boy when making his Wales debut in Belgium 12 years ago. At the age of 16 years and 207 days he became Wales' youngest-ever player – a record he still holds to this day. A dozen years on and Wilson is now Wales' main man, his second-half header against Liechtenstein his fifth goal in seven games since Bellamy took charge. No Neco real blow for Wales The only sour note of the Liechtenstein win was the early loss of Neco Williams to injury. The Nottingham Forest full-back, one of the few Premier League regulars in the Wales squad, has been a stand-out player under Bellamy and will be a real miss in Brussels. Jay Dasilva replaced Williams on Friday and set up Wilson's goal with a fine cross, but Ben Davies could revert to left-back in Brussels with Chris Mepham partnering Joe Rodon at the heart of the defence. 'Difficult' Doku to haunt Bellamy? Bellamy coached Jeremy Doku during his time as Anderlecht Under-21 coach and admits the Manchester City winger was 'difficult' to work with. But Bellamy said Doku's drive was 'insane' and that he helped him become a better coach. Doku has reached the Premier League via Rennes and could now return to haunt Bellamy on the international stage. Has Belgium's golden glow faded? The FIFA world rankings would have it that Belgium are the eighth best team in the world. But Belgium, who once topped the rankings, have only one win in eight games and began their World Cup campaign with a disappointing 1-1 draw in North Macedonia on Friday. Former Lyon boss Rudi Garcia was perhaps a curious choice to take over as head coach in January, and only a few ageing members of the so-called 'Golden Generation' such as Kevin De Bruyne and Romelu Lukaku remain.

Wales have new mindset under Bellamy
Wales have new mindset under Bellamy

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Wales have new mindset under Bellamy

World Cup qualifier: Belgium v Wales Venue: King Baudouin Stadium, Brussels Date: Monday, 9 June Kick off: 19:45 BST Coverage: Live on BBC One, S4C, iPlayer, BBC Radio Wales and Radio Cymru, the BBC Sport website and app, plus live text commentary. Advertisement Wales have a new mentality under Craig Bellamy, according to a player who watched him help do the same at club level. Connor Roberts was part of the Burnley team that stormed the Championship as Bellamy assisted manager Vincent Kompany on their way to the title. Now the full-back is part of a Wales side enjoying an unbeaten start to Bellamy's first senior role as manager and its renewed ambition to reach the 2026 World Cup. Bellamy's team saw off group minnows Liechtenstein 3-0 in Cardiff on Friday, teeing up Monday's trip to qualification favourites Belgium. The 45-year-old has already stated Wales will take the game to the top seeds, while midfielder David Brooks says the team will be heading to Brussels to go for the win. Advertisement Asked whether it showed a mindset shift from past Wales sides, 62-cap Roberts said: "Yes is the straightforward answer. "The manager has come in – and obviously I know him from his time at Burnley – and we will go toe-to-toe with any team. "I'm not saying we'll win every single game but one thing is for sure, we will give everything and try and do the right things and try and win every game we play." Wales eased to a win over Liechtenstein with goals from Joe Rodon, Kieffer Moore and Harry Wilson, and Roberts added: "Of course it's big switch to go from playing Liechtenstein to Belgium, but we have to keep being ourselves and not change, keep the good habits that we've been learning and trying to integrate over the last nine months, do what we need to do to win the game. Advertisement "And why can't we go [to Belgium] and dominate and put in a really good performance? That is the aim, that is the plan and hopefully we can achieve that." Bellamy has publicly spoken about not wanting to be seen as underdogs, a message clearly heard by players as they gear up for a key game in the campaign. Wales lead Group J after two wins and a draw from their opening three games. And their comfortable night in Cardiff against Liechtenstein was made even more enjoyable with news of Belgium conceding late to draw in North Macedonia in their opening fixture. It saw Belgium manager Rudi Garcia tell reporters his side "have to win" against Wales. Advertisement But Bournemouth's Brooks says Wales haven't changed their thoughts because of the result in Skopje. "We fancied ourselves from minute one," Brooks said. "It's not as though we felt Belgium needed to slip up for us to have a chance, we were going to go there and try and win anyway. "We both dropped points [in North Macedonia] but they're not a pushover team. We will be going to Belgium to try and get three points."

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