“It’s great news for us. Our fans in Japan will be especially thrilled,” explained sporting director Horst Heldt. “We have achieved our goal tying another player down to the club long term in the form of Atsuto, who is incredibly reliable and has played at a consistently high level for a long time.”
Thursday, December 18, 2014
The hard way: Huge joy due to comeback victory
Shaqiri mungkin akan di pinjamkan kepada Wolfsburg
Monday, December 15, 2014
Madrid Will Complete Mega Deal for Reus
Christoph Kramer akan kembali ke Leverkusen musim hadapan
Christoph Kramer Says He Will Return to Bayer Leverkusen Next Summer
Setiap pasukan boleh dikalahkan - Benedikt Höwedes
The Draw for the Last 16 of the UEFA Champions League
The draw for the last 16 of this season's Champions League has been made at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland, throwing together some of Europe's biggest teams as the final in Berlin edges ever nearer.
The 8 seeded group stage winners were paired with the 8 unseeded runners-up, though teams that qualified from the same group were kept apart. At this stage of the competition country protection is also still in force, meaning no two teams from the same national association could be drawn together.
Arguably, the tie of the round sees Manchester City clash with Barcelona for the second year in a row, with Chelsea and French heavyweights Paris Saint-Germain also meeting in a replay of last season's quarter final clash.
Arsenal have been handed a more favourable tie against Monaco, while holders Real Madrid, the only team to finish the group stage with a 100% winning record, will now face Schalke.
The draw in full is as follows:
Paris Saint-Germain vs Chelsea
Manchester City vs Barcelona
Bayer Leverkusen vs Atletico Madrid
Juventus vs Borussia Dortmund
Schalke vs Real Madrid
Shakhtar Donetsk vs Bayern Munich
Arsenal vs Monaco
Basel vs Porto
Seeded group winners will be away in the first leg and at home for the second. The first of the two legs will be played on 17/18th and 24/25th February, with the return matches on 10/11th and 17/18th March.
Sunday, December 14, 2014
Dortmund not 'determined enough' in defeat, says Jurgen Klopp
Borussia Dortmund coach Jurgen Klopp criticised his team for not playing "determined enough" as their Bundesliga struggles continued in a 1-0 loss at Hertha Berlin on Saturday.
Dortmund endured a difficult half that saw Julian Schieber score for Hertha and Henrikh Mkhitaryan lost to a thigh injury.
"A first half like that shouldn't have happened," Klopp said. "We weren't determined enough, and that in a game where so much was a stake."
Dortmund, who failed to put a shot on target until the 70th minute, dropped into relegation playoff spot in 16th place with the loss.
Klopp's men have two chances to move up the table -- at home against Wolfsburg on Wednesday and a trip to Weder Bremen on Saturday -- before the Bundesliga's five-week winter break.
"We have another two games this year to dramatically improve our situation for the second half of the season. That's our mission now."
BVB were coming off a draw in the Champions League that allowed them to finish top of their group, but their domestic form has been a different story. They fell to a ninth defeat in their past 15 games.
"We really have to start picking up three points away from home again," defender Marcel Schmelzer said. "We always do a first step, like against Gladbach or Hoffenheim, but then screw it up again.
"It's a shame for the team and the fans. We really need to start getting results again."
Saturday, December 13, 2014
UEFA coefficient: Schalke04 move up into Europe’s elite
Saturday, December 6, 2014
Philipp Lahm Praises Marco Reus Amid Speculation Of A Move To Bayern Munich
Bayern Munich captain Philipp Lahm has heaped praise on Borussia Dortmund’s Marco Reus, fuelling speculation that he may make the switch to the Bundesliga leaders in the summer.
Reus has been heavily linked with a move away from the club, with the likes of Bayern, Chelsea and Real Madrid all interested in acquiring the player’s signature.
Now Lahm has spoken out about the winger’s abilities and has claimed that he can improve any side, as he looks set to leave the club.
“I can’t say anything. I can only say he’s an excellent player who, without injury, would become a champion," said Lahm.
“A player like Reus will strengthen any team in the world”.
The 25-year-old is now a hot property around Europe and his €25 million release clause is expected to be triggered when the transfer market opens at the end of the season.
Dortmund have already sold a number of their high-profile stars to their Bundesliga rivals Bayern Munich, including the departure of Robert Lewandowski, which has made them favourites to sign Reus.
However, Dortmund are also currently struggling in the German league this season and find themselves bottom of the table, with just three wins from 13 matches.
Despite their poor form, Lahm admitted that he has no advice to offer his rivals, due to the fact he has never been in a relegation battle.
“Advice? I can’t advise them anything because I luckily lack that experience. I never was in this situation."
Tuesday, December 2, 2014
Manuel Neuer deserves for Ballon d'Or 2014
He's already the undisputed No1 custodian on the planet, but soon FC Bayern München's Manuel Neuer could officially be crowned the world's best footballer - period. No goalkeeper has ever won the FIFA Ballon d'Or in its current guise, but Bundesliga Malaysia outlines exactly why 'Supermanu' deserves to buck the trend...
Inpenetrable aura
Neuer's place on the three-man shortlist to lift football's ultimate individual prize is no fluke. Of all the goalkeepers with over 100 appearances under their belts in the Bundesliga's decorated history, the former FC Schalke 04 stopper is the only one to have conceded fewer goals (216) than appearances made (264). Fact.
Forever raising the bar
The 28-year-old World Cup winner doesn't make many blunders either - he hasn't made one for 33 league matches - but on the rare occasion he does, the look of detestation on his face says it all. "I know I can make mistakes," he told The FIFA Weekly. "The main thing is that I make sure I keep the bar high."
Sweeper keeper
It's that self-same will to improve that has seen the Gelsenkirchen native revolutionise the very definition of football's last line of defence. Indeed, for some, the image of the Germany No1 racing out of his own box to foil Algeria's Islam Slimani in the last 16 of the FIFA World Cup in Brazil is one of the enduring images of the finals.
Moves that matter
Unlike any of his predecessors or contemporaries, Neuer also boasts technical ability most wannabe outfield players can only dream of. Be it with his hands, feet, chest or head, there is scarcely a pass Bayern's inimitable goalkeeper-turned-libero cannot make. Just search 'Manuel Neuer' on YouTube. Seeing is believing.
One of a kind
Of course, none of those silky skills would add up to much had he not perfected the bread and butter art of shot-stopping in the first place. There have been inevitable comparisons with Bayern legend Oliver Kahn in that department, but forget the similitude. Neuer might just be the greatest, idiosyncratic talent the game has ever seen.
Sunday, November 30, 2014
Manchester City will join for Reus scramble
Friday, November 28, 2014
PLATINI AND CRUYFF BACK GERMAN 2014 BALLON D’OR WINNER
Friday, October 31, 2014
Atsuto Uchida extends contract with Schalke until 2018
Atsuto Uchida signed a three-year contract extension with FC Schalke 04 on Thursday (30th October), keeping him at the club until 30th June 2018. The Japan international’s previous deal was due to expire at the end of the season.
Monday, October 27, 2014
Choosing A Starting XI For The Bayern Bundesliga's Strongest Squad
Goalkeeper
1
Neuer
Defence
21
Lahm28
Badstuber17
Benatia27
Alaba
Midfield
3
X. Alonso31
Schweinsteiger10
Robben25
Müller19
Götze
Forwards
9
Lewandowski
Sunday, October 26, 2014
We couldn’t apply ourselves - Klaas-Jan Huntelaar
Schalke were unable to score a goal against a well-organised opponent. As a result, there was a huge sense of a disappointment following the final whistle in Leverkusen, signalling a 1-0 defeat for the Royal Blues. schalke04.com has collected the thoughts from the players.
Klaas-Jan Huntelaar:
We didn’t link up with each other enough. We tried to deal with Leverkusen’s pressing in the first 15 minutes and made use of long balls. Unfortunately, we weren’t able to really apply ourselves throughout the game. It was a tactical battle with few goalscoring opportunities for either side. Ultimately, a set piece decided the game. We simply didn’t play enough football. We couldn’t win the second ball often enough and we weren’t able to produce any dangerous moments as a result.
Benedikt Höwedes:
We knew that we needed to be a little more direct to minimise the impact of Leverkusen’s pressing. The plan was going well, but then Leverkusen scored a wonder goal; no keeper would have stopped it. After falling behind, we didn’t see enough of the ball or create enough chances. We have quality players, so we need to be a bit cleverer in our play. Leverkusen attacked us strongly and instead of countering we used the long ball a bit too often. Despite that, I think we played well and are heading the right direction; we’ll pick up points in the coming weeks for certain.
Max Meyer:
The game was even for the majority of the time. Leverkusen found the bit of quality needed to open the scoring. Unfortunately, we couldn’t find an equaliser. I hoped that I would be able to create something once I came on. I will be giving it my all in training this week in the hope of impressing the coach.
FIFA Release Latest World Rankings: Germany Remain Top
Saturday, October 25, 2014
Galatasary 0-4 Borussia Dortmund
Borussia Dortmund put an advantage of one step in the knock-out round of the Champions League after cruising past Galatasary 4-0 at the Turk Telecom Arena.
The Turkish side never looked up to the task and Dortmund were ruthless in discarding them as they march towards the last-16.
Dortmund will take a look at five takeaways from the match.
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Would football be richer without small clubs?
But from a football business perspective, this beauty is sterile desert. Black Forest boars make for fine stews, but they don't buy tickets to games. Thick woods aren't good places to find young players who could become football's next superstars. Nature lovers will adore the woodland city's tinkling waterways where herons fish. But in the increasingly expensive business of football, it is far easier to bag sponsors and revenue in thickly populated urban and industrial areas like Dortmund and Munich.
No accident, therefore, that those cities are home to Germany's biggest teams. Freiburg plays in the same Bundesliga as those giants. But because it is landlocked in southwest Germany, hemmed in by the Black Forest to the east, France to the west and Switzerland to the south, the club isn't in the same league financially and never will be. Freiburg executives accept that fact but also worry that no matter how hard they try, the gap between the haves and have-nots of football seems only to grow.
"This is the end of the world," Keller said of his spectacular vista, "but it's a nice end."
On match day, the overpowering smell of grilling sausages seeps into every corner of Freiburg's Black Forest Stadium. Its capacity of 24,000 is the second-smallest of the Bundesliga. The stadium is so cramped that the pitch is some three body-lengths shorter than it should be. But for less than the cost of watching Arsenal or Manchester United in England's Premier League, a Freiburg fan can take his or her kid to a game and buy drinks and hotdogs for them both.
The likes of Beyonce and Jay Z go to Paris Saint-Germain, transformed by Qatari petrodollars into football's new place to see and be seen. In Gareth Bale, Real Madrid boasts football's first 100-million-euro player. But Freiburg offers football on a human scale.
Club executives speak proudly of how Freiburg lives within its modest means, spends only what it earns, trains young players instead of buying them, hasn't accrued monster debts like so many other clubs in Europe's top leagues and isn't dependent on rich investors' whims.
"A football club is not a toy," Keller, the chairman, said in an Associated Press interview. "A football club is a community of a lot of great people."
Despite losing last weekend to Wolfsburg, Freiburg's players still mingled with their adoring public after the match, signing shirts and posing for selfies with wide-eyed girls who'd written "Freiburg" and "Forward!" in black on their young faces. The stadium bubbled with fervor and the pounding of drums. A fan with a bullhorn led chanting in heaving stands awash with giant flags.
The 2-1 loss made it eight games in a row that Freiburg has failed to win this season. Playing in red, the team was comprehensively out-witted. Wolfsburg, the Bundesliga champion in 2009, fielded expensive stars Kevin De Bruyne, a speedy Belgium international, and Luiz Gustavo, a Brazilian. Both its goals came from a former Freiburg player, Daniel Caligiuri. Double-ouch.
Still, Freiburg fans remained good-humored and philosophical, lingering at the stadium to share beers, cigarettes and chat while their kids played and kicked balls.
"You must be able to suffer sometimes, to take pain," said Burkhard Poschadel, a ticket-holder since Freiburg first won promotion to the Bundesliga in 1993.
But the business realities of the modern game are brutal. For every euro Freiburg earns, Bayern earns roughly eight. Freiburg's big rivals spend more on just one or two players than it spent hiring its entire starting XI.
This has been a bumper financial year for Freiburg, with windfalls from selling two of its best players to richer Bundesliga clubs and because it played in the Europa League last season. Qualifying ahead of bigger teams for that UEFA competition was a fabulous feat of overachievement by Freiburg. Still, its expected revenues of 70 million euros ($89 million) in 2014 are relatively small potatoes for mega-clubs that regularly play in UEFA's even more lucrative Champions League. Dortmund, for example, pocketed 88 million euros ($112 million) for reaching the Champions League final in 2013 and quarterfinals this year.
But working in Freiburg's favor is that it recognizes and embraces its own limitations. Club executives and fans alike say that simply being in the Bundesliga is its own reward. They don't expect to become champions but they do want the adventure to last and hope the team will avoid end-of-season anguish by qualifying as early as possible for the next Bundesliga campaign. They are fiercely proud of their homegrown players and love it if they make life tough for visiting clubs' big-bucks superstars. It can feel like a win when their Davids hold Goliaths like Bayern to a draw.
The financial disadvantages Freiburg labors under can make setbacks more digestible, too.
"People understand our situation and they give the players time," head coach Christian Streich said in an AP interview.
"Another club philosophy," said Andreas Steiert, who runs the club's football school, is "not to complain about things we don't have but to be satisfied with what we have and try to make the best out of it."
The academy is key to Freiburg's survival, because it produces players the club otherwise couldn't afford to buy. The best players also bring vital revenue when, after making names for themselves at Freiburg, the club sells them on. This July, it cashed in on academy graduate Matthias Ginter, selling the defender to Dortmund as his star is rising and he breaks into Germany's national team.
Freiburg invests more in its academy — 6 million euros (US$7.5 million) per year — than it would ever spend to buy a player from another club, said Keller. So important is this conveyor belt of talent that Freiburg has set aside a rainy day fund it would use to keep the school open if — maybe when — the club drops out of the Bundesliga's top tier.
"We need something under our pillow," Keller said. "Our football school is our insurance."
The club also wants to build a larger stadium by the city airport to hold 35,000 people. Freiburg residents will be asked to vote on those plans next February. The view won't be as spectacular but extra revenue from the new ground would aid Freiburg's battle to stay in football's rat-race.
"We have people with a big heart. We have people who love this area, who love the food, the wine and the beer from this area, and they love the football from this area," Keller said. "These (small) clubs are the soul, the real soul, of football."
Sunday, October 19, 2014
Match Report: Schalke 2-0 Hertha Berlin
Goals twenty minutes into each half from Klaas-Jan Huntelaar and Julian Draxler sealed a vital three points for a dominant Royal Blues side at the Veltins Arena.
Huntelaar breaks deadlock
Di Matteo opted for a 4-2-3-1 formation, and, boosted by the return of first-choice centre-half duo Kaan Ayhan and Benedikt Höwedes, his new-look outfit began with vigour. Kevin-Prince Boateng and Draxler linked up well in midfield on several occasions before Huntelaar spurned Schalke's first chance on the ten-minute mark, shooting wide from ten yards out after a low cross from Atsuto Uchida.
Hertha had the next opportunity when Peter Pekarik hammered wide from close range, but Jos Luhukay’s men paid the price for allowing Huntelaar a second gilt-edged chance shortly after. Draxler’s superb cross was met by the Dutchman’s powerful header into the far right corner, bringing the first goal of the new regime after 19 minutes.
Höwedes to the fore
Uchida almost found a way through after being teed up by Roman Neustädter few minutes later, but Hertha, looking to beat their opponents on the break, did have chances of their own, with Salomon Kalou seeing an effort denied by a superb Höwedes challenge. Five minutes before the break, Per Skjelbred’s long-range strike met its match in Ralf Fährmann.
Di Matteo’s half-time team-talk seemed to encourage his charges to build on their lead, and a lovely interchange from Neustädter and Draxler almost brought the second goal immediately, with the latter failing to hit the target. Höwedes, however, was called into action at the other end, with another excellent block from Kalou as the game opened up.
Draxler seals it
Dennis Aogo’s free-kick was almost converted by Neustädter on the hour mark, before Draxler took matters into his own hands. The Germany attacking midfielder's mazy run brought him to the edge of the box, from where his shot took a wicked deflection off Fabian Lustenberger and past a stranded Thomas Kraft.
Hertha’s attempts to hit back were full of effort, yet lacked any real cutting-edge. Kalou nodded wide in the 73rd minute, while Roy Beerens drew an excellent save from Fährmann five minutes later. The chances were too few and far between in the face of Höwedes and Ayhan’s excellent defensive displays, though, as Schalke held on to give Di Matteo the perfect start.
Klopp Fuming After Dortmund Defeat
Jurgen Klopp has voiced his frustration with Borussia Dortmund's performance in their 2-1 defeat at the hands of Koln on Saturday and has insisted that they can no longer afford to make simple mistakes.
BVB created numerous chances and had 16 shots against Koln's five, but it was not enough to prevent defeat at the RheinEnergieStadion, much to the dismay of Klopp.
"We played a style of football that made no sense whatsoever. We were very sloppy in our passing in the first half and made some simple mistakes. This cannot be happening," the Dortmund coach said at a press conference.
"We made things hard for ourselves again. We weren't good enough at the decisive moments, both in defence and in attack. We lacked focus at the back and weren't clinical enough going forward. That's why we still only have seven points.
"We simply didn't do enough against this opponent. We have to turn this situation around. We have to iron out the mistakes. Not tomorrow or the day after tomorrow, but right now.
"We nearly always score and we wouldn't be in this situation if we didn't concede so many goals."
Dortmund sit 14th in the Bundesliga table with seven points from eight games.
Saturday, October 18, 2014
Schweinsteiger on track to return in 2014, says Bayern Munich director Sammer
The midfielder has yet to play this season due to persistent injury problems but Bayern's sporting director says "relief is in sight"
Bayern Munich midfielder Bastian Schweinsteiger is on track to return to action in 2014, according to Matthias Sammer.
The 30-year-old has not made a competitive appearance since the World Cup due to a knee injury suffered during the pre-season tour of America.
However, Bayern sporting director Sammer says Schweinsteiger continues to make good progress in his rehabilitation and should feature before the end of the calendar year.
"There's no reason to say he cannot play more this year," he told Kicker.
"Of course it's possible Basti can come back in 2014, that's not at all unrealistic.
"The relief is in sight. He's made good progress."
Thiago Alcantara has also missed the season so far after damaging his medial ligament in March, though the Spain international returned to team training last month.
Sammer hopes to see him back in action soon but warned they would not rush his return.
"Slowly, slowly," he added when asked how the 23-year-old was progressing. "Now we have to integrate him, but we're looking at it carefully."
Bayern Munich's Thiago Alcantara Suffers Another Huge Injury Setback
Bayern Munich midfielder Thiago Alcantara is facing 'a lengthy absence' after tearing a ligament in his right knee.
The 23-year-old Spanish international has been out of action since March when he tore a ligament in a Bundesliga clash with Hoffenheim, but had to undergo surgery after a brief return in May. Having missed the World Cup in the summer, Thiago was on the comeback trail only to re-injure himself in training on Wednesday.
Bayern tweeted the news shortly afterwards, saying: "Devastating: @Thiago6 (23) has suffered a ligament tear in training. He needs an operation and is set for another lengthy absence."
Speaking on Bayern's official website, Thiago said: "What can I say? Of course, I am profoundly disappointed and desperate at the moment.
"Why always me? But I will not give up. I will fight again. I'm going to get close again and I will celebrate my comeback at Bayern."
Thiago played 20 times across all competitions for Bayern last season, but has yet to make an appearance for the German champions this season. However, Bayern sporting director Matthias Sammer insists Bayern will stand by their young talent in his recuperation.
Sammer said: "We are all shocked and saddened by this re-injury.
"Thiago was so close to his comeback after a long time out but he knows that the whole of FC Bayern is there for him. We will do everything to ensure that he is healthy again and can bring us a lot of titles."
Friday, October 17, 2014
Franz Beckenbauer Wants FIFA Corruption Report To Be Made Public
The former Fifa executive committee member says world football's governing body has no reason to hold onto the report unless it is trying to hide something.
Former Fifa executive committee member Franz Beckenbauer has called for the report into 2018 and 2022 World Cup bids to be made public.
Fifa announced that Russia would hold the 2018 event, with Qatar to act as hosts four years later, back in 2010.
The decision was met with criticism in some quarters, and allegations of corruption within global football's governing body were made before Fifa's chief ethics investigator Michael Garcia subsequently led a probe into the matter.
After briefly being suspended from football-related activity for failing to co-operate with the report, West Germany legend Beckenbauer has since complied and has now called for further transparency.
The 69-year-old, who won the World Cup as a player in 1974 and then as coach in 1990, has also expressed his support for playing the 2022 event in winter, to avoid the searing temperatures in the summer months in Qatar.
"I think they will find an opportunity to find a good result," Beckenbauer said. "But if you ask me personally, for me it's no difference if the report is published or not, it's just my opinion as a spectator.
"If you don't have anything to hide you can just bare the report. If Fifa wants to publish this report they should do it, I can't find anything to be upset about.
"I won't say anything about the vote because it was secret; I will stick to the agreement that was made at this time, also my decision was made under these circumstances. I took part of it, that's right, and I was also surprised that Qatar won.
"Qatar's application was very good, like all others - there were no big differences. There were some reasons why USA, Australia, Korea or Japan were not chosen while Qatar was. You don't have to ask just me but my former colleagues.
"I was in Qatar sometimes and you can't play football in the summer there although they have some mechanics to cool down the stadium to play under pleasant temperature.
"Technically they could do it, but back there I asked myself if it's worth the energy. If you play in winter you don't need to cool down the stadium. The circumstances in winter are perfect. I would suggest to stage the World Cup in winter.
"All I know is that Garcia provided his report. Now the ethical review committee has to evaluate this one. I don't know when they will be ready. We have to wait how the committee will decide."