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Unforgettable Moments Of Qatar 2022 World Cup

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From start to finish, a World Cup of controversy

At the start of every World Cup tournament, the FIFA president usually says something like, “this will be the best World Cup ever.” True to form, FIFA’s leader, Gianni Infantino, said exactly that during his pre-tournament briefing at the Qatar National Convention Centre last month.

Given all the uncertainty, protests and angst about holding this World Cup in Qatar, it seemed like a stretch.

But the competition on the field was stellar. From the surprises, shocks and upsets in the group stages to the excitement of the knockout rounds – and arguably the best final ever – this World Cup has excelled.

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Argentina’s thrilling win over defending champion France in a penalty kick shootout gave star Lionel Messi the one trophy that he had not been able to capture during his lengthy career.

That was how the World Cup ended. But it’s not how it began. For that, one has to go back a dozen years.

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From start to finish, a World Cup of controversy

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Controversies stuck to this World Cup from the moment, in 2010, when then-FIFA president Sepp Blatter opened an envelope and announced the voting result for the 2022 tournament.

“Qatar!”

Members of the Qatari delegation hugged, but others immediately asked “Qatar?”

The U.S. government would later detail how Qatar won the bid through bribing members of FIFA, soccer’s international governing body. Allegations Qatar denied.

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But in 2010, those asking “Qatar?” had more practical concerns.

Searing heat in the Persian Gulf nation during the World Cup’s traditional summer slot. No facilities or infrastructure. A conservative, autocratic government.

Qatar and FIFA officials dealt with the first two concerns – a first-ever World Cup shift to November / December for a cooler tournament; a stunning, 12-year transformation costing a reported $300 billion turned Qatar and its largest city Doha into a World Cup ready destination.

The other major human rights controversy that preceded and ran through this event was the treatment of thousands of migrant workers who essentially built the World Cup.

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Abuses were well chronicled in the media, and to the very end of the tournament, rights groups called on FIFA and Qatari officials to provide compensation for the many workers who endured hardship, even death, due to their labor.

The officials noted recent labor reforms in Qatar, and insisted a framework already exists to help workers.

But in his closing news conference, FIFA president Gianni Infantino failed to commit to a compensation fund, when he was asked whether the governing body would share in its expected $7.5 billion in revenue from the tournament.

“We are defending human rights,” Infantino said, without explaining how that statement squared with the controversies that stuck to what he called, the best World Cup ever.

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The shocks and surprises

The biggest surprise of the tournament, arguably, came on the third day in group play. Saudi Arabia shocked Argentina 2-1 in one of the greatest World Cup upsets ever. Messi is one of the finest to ever play the game – but one trophy had eluded him: a World Cup title. But the opening loss to Saudi Arabia ended up being just a speed bump. Argentina gelled to win the group, zip through the knockout rounds and win the final.

READ ALSO: List Of World Cup Winners

Another surprise came in the middle of the tournament – before a game. Portugal coach Fernando Santos shocked the sporting world when he didn’t put star Cristiano Ronaldo in the starting lineup for the last two Portugal matches. The 37-year-old Ronaldo has dazzled on the pitch for decades – but wasn’t his usual dominant self at this World Cup.

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The United States makes this list too. After failing to qualify for the 2018 World Cup, the U.S. returned and did not lose a game in group play – and made it to the knockout round. But it would be another early exit with a round of 16 loss to the Netherlands.

The early exits (and, in some cases, very early exits) of traditional European powerhouses shocked many a soccer/football fan. Belgium didn’t even make it out of group play. Portugal, Spain and Germany all bowed out … and Italy didn’t even make this tournament. The biggest surprise of this tournament, Morocco, is covered just below.

While much has been written on Qatar’s human rights record, prohibitions of stadium beer and questionable awarding of the World Cup, once the tournament began it operated smoothly. Transit around the small country was easy – not to mention having all eight stadiums within an hour of each other was a fan’s dream. Past World Cups have required expensive plane trips between games.

The Atlas Lions roared

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Morocco’s spirited and historic run to the semifinals will forever be part of this World Cup’s story. As the first national team from an African and predominantly Arab nation to make it that far, the Atlas Lions inspired millions of fans beyond their North African country.

As Morocco stormed through the tournament, winning its group and then notching knockout stage wins over traditional European powers Spain and Portugal, fans in Qatar wrapped in all things red and green made the term “cheering” seem way too tame. They sang. They chanted. They whistled at the opposition – have you ever heard 50,000 people whistling? The ears still are ringing.

READ ALSO: Qatar 2022: Ronaldo’s Manager Sacked After World Cup Exit

And they roared. As their team on the pitch roared back, with its play.

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In the end, Morocco’s run, highlighted by a defense that didn’t allow an opponent to score a single goal until the semifinals, ended against a stout and seasoned opponent – the defending champions from France.

But the run resonated in a major way

There have been 88 semifinalists in the history of the men’s World Cup — 85 have been from Europe and South America.

Morocco, is only the third semifinalist not from those soccer-power continents.

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But as Moroccan coach Walid Regragui said during the tournament, his team’s breakthrough wasn’t a miracle. It’s the result of hard work.

And planning

Thirteen years ago, Morocco opened a national training center, the Mohammed VI Football Academy. It was a multi-million dollar investment that appears to have paid off in Qatar.

And an indication that while what happened at this tournament didn’t quite take down the sport’s world order, it represented plates shifting underneath.

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Morocco, with this team and a growing pipeline, is positioned to prove Qatar wasn’t a one off. And as the next World Cup explodes from 32 teams to 48, traditional soccer outsiders are bound to be inspired. and emboldened to think with planning and work and, maybe a little magic, getting inside isn’t impossible.

First use of women referees

There’s always grumbling about referees — calls they made or didn’t — “no way was that offside,” to “that wasn’t a foul,” and, of course, “he just flopped.” But at this World Cup referees made news for another reason. For the first time ever, women officials were used at the men’s tournament. Six women – including Kathryn Nesbitt of the U.S. — officiated both on and off the field. And, an all-female crew, officiated the Germany/Costa Rica match.

The FIFA decision to use women referees happened in a country with restrictive women’s rights.

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Saying goodbye

It may be the last World Cup we see Messi wearing an Argentina uniform or Ronaldo donning one for Portugal or Luka Modri sporting the red and white checkerboard for Croatia. For decades they each have shined for their countries at many, many tournaments and given countless fans joy (and sometimes heartbreak).

We also say goodbye to the three journalists who died while covering this World Cup. American sportswriter Grant Wahl — perhaps the preeminent U.S. soccer reporter — collapsed during the Argentina-Netherlands quarterfinal. An autopsy determined he died of an aortic aneurysm (a burst blood vessel).

ITV sports director Roger Pearce “passed away suddenly” last month and Qatari photojournalist with Al Kass TV, Khalid al-Misslam, “died suddenly” earlier this month.

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2026 and beyond

READ ALSO: FULL LIST: 2022 World Cup Prize Money Breakdown

The stage is set for 2026 when the U.S. will co-host the next World Cup along with Mexico and Canada. As mentioned earlier, FIFA is expanding the number of teams from 32 to 48. It’s not clear yet how the tournament will be organized or the format used to advance.

One thing is clear – it will be hard to top the 2022 tournament. But in four years, we bet FIFA will say that the 2026 World Cup will be the best ever.

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WAFU B U17 Championship: CAF Declares Nigeria 100% Clean

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The Confederation of African Football today declared that all 20 players presented by Nigeria for the WAFU B U17 Championship starting in Accra, Ghana on Wednesday have passed the examination in flying colours.

The declaration of eligibility of all the 20 players is testimony that the tests conducted on the players by the Nigeria Football Federation before the team’s departure were perfect, and sets the tone for the country to have a full squad to defend the title she won last year, also in Ghana.

An ecstatic Head Coach Manu Garba said: “We are happy about the results. Having the whole squad to prosecute the tournament somewhat puts our minds at rest.

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The Eaglets begin their defence of the title when they confront their counterparts from Burkina Faso at the University Stadium on Thursday, 16th May with kickoff set for 3pm Ghana time (4pm Nigeria time), before matches against Niger Republic on Sunday, 19th May (6pm Ghana, 7pm Nigeria) and Togo on Wednesday, 22nd May (4pm Ghana, 5pm Nigeria).

The match against Niger Republic will also hold at the University Stadium while the clash with Togo will take place at the Accra Sports Stadium.

 

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Crystal Palace Thrash Man Utd 4-0 To Leave Ten Hag’s Future In Doubt

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Manchester United are at risk of failing to qualify for Europe next season after a dismal 4-0 thrashing at Crystal Palace left the Red Devils eighth in the Premier League.

Michael Olise scored twice, either side of goals from the in-form Jean-Philippe Mateta and Tyrick Mitchell, as the Eagles’ resurgence since the appointment of Oliver Glasner as manager continues.

The time for a change of boss at Old Trafford could be coming soon as Erik ten Hag fails to arrest a slide in his second season in charge.

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United have only been absent from European competition once since the 1989-90 season.

That came after finishing seventh in David Moyes’ sole campaign 10 years ago and the Scot was sacked with four games of the season to go.

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United have never come lower than seventh in the Premier League era but are staring that possibility in the face with title-chasing Arsenal to come at Old Trafford on Sunday.

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Ten Hag has routinely cited injury problems as mitigation for his side’s struggles.

The Dutchman was forced to cobble together a makeshift backline as Casemiro deputised out of position at centre-back, alongside 36-year-old Jonny Evans.

Captain Bruno Fernandes was also absent as his proud record of never missing a club game in his career due to injury came to an end.

But there was little excuse for the lack of fight or quality on show from a United side, whose sole Premier League win in their last seven games came against relegated Sheffield United.

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Palace are unbeaten in their last five as former Eintracht Frankfurt boss Glasner’s project takes shape.

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The south London club will have to ward off interest in Olise and Eberechi Eze if they are to kick on to even better things under the Austrian next season.

Olise has attracted interest from United, Manchester City and Chelsea and showed why as he eased through the middle of the visitors’ defence before firing low past Andre Onana.

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United failed to muster even a single shot on target in the first half but were unfortunate not to level against the run of play.

Casemiro’s looping header dropped into the net after Rasmus Hojlund clashed with Palace goalkeeper Dean Henderson and was harshly penalised for a push.

But a two-goal half-time lead was the least Palace’s superiority deserved.

Mateta has been a man transformed under Glasner and hammered home his ninth goal in 11 games after skipping past the leaden-footed Evans with ease.

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There was no response from United after the break on a night which could be the final straw for the club’s new leadership group when deciding Ten Hag’s future.

Some heroics from Onana briefly kept the scoreline down as he saved from Eze, Will Hughes and Mitchell in quick succession.

But he was powerless to deny Mitchell a rare goal from close range as United were cut open from a set-piece.

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Onana was then caught out by the power of Olise’s strike that flew past the Cameroonian.

The margin of the defeat took United’s goal difference to -3 which tells the tale of a sorry season for the 20-time English champions.

The FA Cup final against Manchester City offers Ten Hag one last shot at redemption, should he survive in charge until on May 25.

However, based on this evidence, United fans will fear double-chasing City could run riot at Wembley to inflict the ultimate humiliation.

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Bayer Leverkusen Extend Unbeaten Run To 48 Games With Win At Frankfurt

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Bundesliga champions Bayer Leverkusen extended their season-long unbeaten run to 48 games with a 5-1 win at Eintracht Frankfurt on Sunday.

With Xabi Alonso forced to watch from the stands due to a yellow card suspension, Leverkusen turned on the style, winning with goals from Granit Xhaka, Patrik Schick, Jeremie Frimpong and penalties from Exequiel Palacios and Victor Boniface.

Alonso left midfield lynchpin Florian Wirtz, who turned 21 on Friday, out of the squad with Thursday’s second Champions League semi-final against Roma in mind, but Leverkusen had no problems in attack.

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Xhaka opened the scoring with a long-range effort, before Frankfurt equalised through Hugo Ekitike, who scored for the third game in succession.

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Schick headed Bayer Leverkusen back in front just before half-time and World Cup winner Palacios scored a third from the penalty spot on the 58-minute mark.

The floodgates opened in the final stages, with Frimpong scoring just five minutes after coming on and then won a penalty with three minutes remaining.

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Boniface converted the spot kick for Leverkusen’s first win in Frankfurt for six years.

Bayer Leverkusen, who are unbeaten in 48 across all competitions, need to avoid defeat in two remaining league matches to become the first team to go unbeaten through a Bundesliga season.

Alonso’s side have a 2-0 advantage ahead of Thursday’s second Europa League semi-final leg at home and are through to the final of the German Cup, keeping their dreams of an incredible unbeaten treble alive.

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– Union on the edge –

Earlier on Sunday, Bochum won 4-3 at Union Berlin, pushing the hosts closer to the drop just months after they were playing in the Champions League.

In the top division since 2019, Union Berlin finished fourth last season and were playing Champions League football against Real Madrid as recently as December.

Having built their success on home form, a lethargic Union were 3-0 down by half-time thanks to a Maximilian Wittek brace and a goal from former Berliner Keven Schlotterbeck.

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Coach Nenad Bjelica made three changes at the break and they had their desired impact immediately.

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Yorbe Vertessen and Chris Bedia, both of whom came off the bench, scored in a three-minute period to cut the deficit to one.

With Union on the march and looking for an equaliser, Bochum scored again, Philipp Hofmann heading in from close range.

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The home side gave their fans hope again just four minutes later, Benedict Hollerbach again cutting the deficit to just a goal.

Union fought but could not score the equaliser and now sit just two points clear of Mainz in the relegation playoff spot.

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Mainz play at promoted Heidenheim later on Sunday and could leapfrog Union into safety.

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Leeds loanee Brenden Aaronson, one of three Union players to be subbed on at half-time, criticised his team’s first-half performance.

“It was one of those days when we didn’t show up and that’s all there is to it.

“We need to band together and fight like we did in the second-half. That’s what we need to take away from this game.”

Bochum moved five clear of the drop with two games remaining this season.

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