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French referees ordered not to pause games for Muslim players

Referees in France were told by the country’s football federation not to pause matches to let Muslim players break their fast during the month of Ramadan.

Unlike England’s Premier League which allows it, the practice apparently does not comply with the French Football Federation’s statutes, as several media outlets reported the body saying in an email sent to referees Thursday.

It said it had been brought to the federation’s attention that matches were being interrupted following the breaking of the Ramadan fast.

“The idea is that there is a time for everything. A time to do sport, a time to practice one’s religion,” Eric Borghini, head of the federal referee commission at the federation, told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

He said that the federation had learned that “a certain number of amateur-level meetings have been stopped to allow players observing the fast to hydrate.”

This is not permitted in the regulations, he said, highlighting they included the strict respect of the principle of secularism in football.

English football has taken the reverse decision and will permit matches of the Premier League to pause during the holy month of Ramadan, during which Muslims abstain from food and water from sunrise to sunset. It is being observed this year from March 22.

Asked about the issue, Nice coach Didier Digard said Friday that several Muslim players in the team observed Ramadan without any problems.

Although he said it would be good if France allowed the breaks, he added “nobody cares that they don’t do it. Because we are not in a Muslim country. You have to accept the country you live in,” he told reporters.

Postpone fasting: French national team

Meanwhile, Muslim players in the French national football team were allegedly asked to postpone their fasting for a few days in selection during Ramadan.

French sports daily L’Equipe said on March 23 that the France staff allegedly “recommended” their Muslim players postpone their practice during the five days they spent in selection so that the players’ performance would not be affected during their EURO 2024 qualifiers against the Netherlands on March 24, and Ireland on March 27.

The same source added that Les Bleus staff would not force anyone in the team not to follow his faith but gave “recommendations” about this issue.

Ramadan started on March 23 and will continue through April 21 – the first day of the Eid al-Fitr holiday.

France, with six points, are with Greece, the Netherlands, Ireland and Gibraltar in Group B.

On March 24, France hammered the Netherlands 4-0 in their EURO 2024 qualifying Group B opener at Stade de France. A few days later, Les Bleus took a 1-0 win at Ireland to lead Group B.

There have been several Muslim players in the Les Bleus squad for years, such as Zinedine Zidane, Franck Ribery, Nicolas Anelka, Paul Pogba, Ousmane Dembele, and N’Golo Kante.

Pogba, Dembele and Kante were active players, but the France trio had injury problems this season.

But Monaco midfielder Youssouf Fofana, and Liverpool defender Ibrahima Konate, the Muslim players in France’s team, were selected by Didier Deschamps for the EURO 2024 qualifiers that started last week.

They both played against the Netherlands. Konate was in the starting 11 for the Ireland match, but Fofana was among the substitutes and he did not play in Dublin.

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Fenerbahçe, Başakşehir, Konyaspor take on European rivals

As they prepare for the start of a new season in the Süper Lig, Turkish outfits begin their first international challenge on Thursday in Europe.

Fenerbahçe will host Czechia’s Slovacko for the UEFA Europa League playoff, while Medipol Başakşehir will travel to Iceland to take on Breidablik in the Europa Conference League play-off round. Konyaspor will be in an away against Vaduz in the Europa Conference League playoffs.

In its first match, Fenerbahçe will count on its home advantage against the Czech side with at least three players missing. Ismail Yüksek, booked for a red card earlier, will skip the game, while Altay Bayındır and Mert Hakan Yandaş, two accomplished members of the Yellow Canaries, have still not recovered from earlier injuries. Ferdi Kadıoğlu and new transfer Joshua King, who recovered from their injuries, may return to the starting 11.

The Istanbul-based team had dropped to the Europa League from the Champions League after a home loss to Ukraine’s Dynamo Kyiv. Slovacko secured their spot at this stage of the competition by finishing fourth in the Czech First League in 2021-22.

Coach Jorge Jesus cut 10 players from the match against Slovacko, including Nazım Sangare, Irfan Can Kahveci, Serdar Aziz and new signing Joao Pedro due to past injuries. Another new signing Tiago Çukur, as well as Steven Caulker, Max Meyer, Dimitris Pelkas, Marcel Tisserand and Mbwana Samatta were not included in the team.

Luan Peres and Gustavo Henrique will be in the first match for Fenerbahçe against Slovacko. The two new signings are expected to cover for Kim Min-jae and Serdar Aziz, two key players in the defense.

This is Fenerbahçe’s 243rd game in European tournaments, during which it secured 87 wins, 52 draws and suffered 103 losses.

The Yellow Canaries have long been away from the group stage of the Champions League and their hope to break the curse was dashed when they lost to Dynamo Kyiv in the second qualifying round. Turkish and Ukrainian teams played out a goalless draw in the first leg, before a defeat at home in July.

Fenerbahçe defeated HJK in the playoff round of last year’s competition before featuring in Group D alongside Olympiacos, Eintracht Frankfurt and Royal Antwerp, but they finished third in the section, failing to make it to the knockout round. The team finished second in the Süper Lig last season, eight points behind the champions Trabzonspor, and they are preparing for the start of their new domestic campaign against Ümraniyespor on Aug. 8. After a relatively disappointing run last season, it seeks to reinforce its ranks with new signings, from King to Diego Rossi, Emre Mor and Lincoln.

Medipol Başakşehir is newer to European tournaments. In its 39th game, the Istanbul-based outfit will look to improve its record of 10 wins and nine draws. Otherwise, it may add one more to the 19 defeats and 64 goals it conceded. For coach Emre Belözoğlu, it will be the third match he helmed with Başakşehir in Europe. Under Belözoğlu, Başakşehir secured a draw against Maccabi Netanya first, before a 1-0 victory in the second game, which brought it a spot in the playoffs.

Başakşehir, nevertheless, misses Edin Visca, who left for Süper Lig champion Trabzonspor, as its top scorer against European teams with 14 goals. Belözoğlu himself had scored three against European teams with Başakşehir while he was still a player.

Konyaspor will travel to Liechtenstein for its 15th match in European tournaments when it takes on Vaduz. The team has a less impressive record than other Turkish teams, with only three wins in 14 matches in Europe.

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South American countries launch official 2030 World Cup bid

With the hope of bringing the global showpiece back to its first home, four South American countries launched Tuesday an unprecedented joint bid to host the centenary 2030 World Cup.

“We are in this iconic place where history began,” said Alejandro Dominguez, president of South American football’s governing body CONMEBOL, from the Centenario stadium in Montevideo where the first World Cup final was held in 1930.

Uruguay won that, beating Argentina 4-2, but now the neighbors have joined together – alongside Paraguay and Chile – to bid for the right to host the 2030 global showpiece under the “Juntos 2030” (Together 2030) slogan.

“This is not the project of a government but the dream of a whole continent,” added Dominguez.

“There will be other World Cups but 100 years will be celebrated only once.”

The idea of a joint South American bid for the 2030 tournament was first mooted by Uruguay and Argentina in 2017 and two years later the four potential hosts had been established.

But it has taken until now for them to make their bid official.

And the romantic idea of bringing the tournament back to its first home was central to the plans of the football and sporting authorities from the four countries present at Tuesday’s launch.

The idea of a World Cup was “thought up, analyzed and put into practice here in Uruguay almost 100 years ago,” said Ignacio Alonso, president of the Uruguayan football association (AUF).

“It became the greatest sporting festival in the world,” he said, praising the “guts, courage, intelligence and effort” that went into putting on the first tournament.

Paraguayan Dominguez, though, reminded those present that the symbolic argument would not be enough.

“We cannot rely only on the sentimental, we have to play our part and be in condition” to host the World Cup.

‘Leaving a legacy’

Uruguay’s sports minister, Sebastian Bauza, said the four countries would present their bid to FIFA in May 2023, with the world governing body due to make its decision the year after.

“We have to put on a sustainable World Cup that leaves a legacy for these four countries,” said Bauza, adding that some international banks had expressed an interest in supporting the bid.

The joint South American bid will likely come up against at least two other proposals.

Spain and Portugal have officially submitted a joint bid while Morocco has repeatedly insisted it will bid to become only the second ever African country to host the finals.

The United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland decided in February to abandon a joint bid that would have seen five FIFA member federations hosting the tournament.

There has also been tentative talk of an Israeli bid alongside the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Bahrain.

The 2030 tournament will feature 48 teams and Dominguez said around 14 stadiums would be used for around 80 matches.

By contrast, at the Qatar World Cup later this year, there will be 32 teams playing 64 matches in eight venues.

In 1930 there were only 13 teams and the entire tournament was played in the same city – Montevideo – in just three stadiums.

“It’s more difficult and onerous for a country to plan a candidacy on its own,” said Dominguez.

If successful it would be the first time that as many as four countries host the World Cup.

The 2026 tournament has already been awarded to three countries – Canada, Mexico and the United States.

The last World Cup to be hosted in South America was Brazil 2014.

More than half of the 21 World Cup tournaments already staged have been in Europe.

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Gaming giant EA Sports to become La Liga title sponsor from 2023

Video gaming giant EA Sports will become the title sponsor of the Spanish league beginning in 2023-24, a source close to the agreement confirmed Tuesday.

it will replace Spain-based bank Santander, which is entering its final season as the main sponsor of the second-richest European domestic league.

The league and EA Sports signed a multi-year contract, according to the source, who can’t be named because the person is not authorized to officially speak about the deal.

Other details on the agreement were not immediately available. The league has not yet announced the deal. The Spanish sports daily Marca said EA Sports will pay 30 million euros ($30.7 million) a season to the Spanish league.

It will be the first time that the league, which continues its push to increase its global reach and get closer to the English Premier League, will have an international title sponsor.

It announced a few weeks ago that it was ending its partnership with Santander, which replaced fellow Spanish bank BBVA in 2016.

The agreement with the league comes after EA Sports announced in May that it was ending its relationship with FIFA and changed the name of its best-selling football video game to EA Sports FC.

The Spanish league begins on Aug. 12.

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Debt-ridden Barcelona mortgages future on quick resurrection

Crippled by debt and fielding a team that was no longer among Europe’s elite, Barcelona’s leadership decided there was only one alternative after watching Real Madrid sweep up the major trophies last season.

It chose to double down and spend, spend, spend.

Barcelona will enter the season with immediate hopes of winning after adding striker Robert Lewandowski, defender Jules Kounde and winger Raphinha to an uneven squad composed of promising youngsters and several unwanted players.

But the three signings for more than a combined 160 million euros ($163 million) – making it Europe’s leading spender of the offseason – have come at an even larger cost that will burden the club for the next quarter century.

With Barcelona about to close last season with a financial loss for the fourth straight year and no money to spend on transfers, club president Joan Laporta took the gamble that the only way to save the team and stave off its seemingly unstoppable slide into mediocrity was to mortgage its future.

After receiving the approval of Barcelona’s club members, Laporta’s board sold off 25% of its Spanish league TV rights for the next 25 years for 667 million euros. The club quickly used that cash to make its splash in the transfer market.

“It’s true that I would have preferred not to have had to sell a percentage of the TV rights,” Laporta said this week from New York, where Barcelona completed its preseason tour of the United States. “But the situation was complicated and required us to be brave and take decisions because football does not wait for anyone and our fans, who are used to winning, deserve a Barça that can compete.”

The Catalan club’s shopping spree may not be over. It sold a 25% stake of its Barça Studios production hub for another 100 million euros on Monday.

The club has pledged a third of that much-needed income to new players, a third to savings, and a third to paying off debt that despite efforts to bring it down still stands at 1 billion euros.

The sacrifice of future revenue comes after Barcelona sold the naming rights of Camp Nou. Europe’s largest football stadium will bear the name of audio-streaming service Spotify, as will Barcelona’s shirts at the season opener against Rayo Vallecano on Aug. 13.

Laporta, who inherited a debt-ridden club when he returned to power last year, has also remained a firm backer of Madrid president Florentino Perez’s scheme to establish a Super League.

But not even the Spotify deal and shedding the salaries of Lionel Messi, Luis Suarez, Philippe Coutinho and Antoine Griezmann for practically nothing in return in recent years proved enough to balance the books.

The mismanagement by the previous President Josep Bartomeu, combined with the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, left the club saddled with a massive debt of more than 1.3 billion euros and the largest payroll in football.

Barcelona’s financial difficulties have, predictably, been accompanied by its team’s fall from grace.

Barcelona hasn’t won the league title in three seasons, after having won eight of the previous 11. The team hasn’t lifted the European Cup since 2015, when it won the Champions League for the fourth time in a decade. It won nothing last season after Messi left for Paris Saint-Germain.

All told, the once mighty Barcelona has become known for its economic mess, scandals involving Bartomeu despite his denials of wrongdoing, its inability to retain Messi, as well as humiliating defeats, including a historic 8-2 loss to Bayern Munich.

For Laporta’s critics, it was fitting that Barcelona announced the sale of its second package of TV rights while the team was training in Las Vegas ahead of its friendly “clasico” against Madrid, which Barcelona won 1-0. For some, like former England player Gary Neville, auctioning off TV rights smacked of going for broke.

“Barcelona still pursuing the Super League? This is why! A desperate club (1.2 billion pounds) in debt selling future revenue streams to spend on players today in the ‘Hope’ it pays off! Rolling the dice stuff this with a giant of a club,” Neville wrote on Twitter.

Laporta argues that he had no choice: The alternative was only more losing, fewer fans and dwindling income.

Pressing home the need for the unprecedented measures in June, Laporta told fellow club members that when he took charge after winning club elections in March 2021 the team was nearly bankrupt.

“We couldn’t meet the payroll. We were clinically dead. We restructured the debt, reduced spending and slashed the player payroll substantially, but it still was not enough,” Laporta said. “By finding new revenues and sponsors we went from being dead to the intensive care unit, and now we can finally get back to living a normal life (after selling the TV rights).”

Still, even in the most favorable analysis, the decision is painful.

“From a financial point of view, it is never good news when you sell assets,” economist Marc Ciria, who in 2015 formed part of an unsuccessful presidential run by Laporta but now has no connection to the executive, told The Associated Press.

“Barcelona has spent (nearly) 125 years acquiring patrimony, and TV rights are one of the few assets that is guaranteed to increase in value. But it is also clear that Barcelona, for its status, cannot afford to have another season like the last one.”

Ciria calculates that, not even including inflation, Barcelona has sacrificed at least 1 billion euros, starting with 41 million euros this season, in future TV revenues in exchange of 670 million euros now.

But, for Ciria, the greatest threat to the sustainability of Barcelona is the bloated player salaries. He calculates that just to break even this season the club would need to reduce its salary load to 450 million euros. It stood at 518 million euros before the latest signings, which also include free agents Franck Kessie and Andreas Christensen.

Barcelona is also under pressure to reduce its salary load so it can meet the Spanish league’s financial rules and be able to register its new players so they can play games.

Dani Alves, Adama Traore and Luuk de Jong have all left after finishing their deals, but of its players under contract it has an agreement to transfer Oscar Mingueza to Celta Vigo and has loaned out Clement Lenglet and Francisco Trincao.

Barcelona wants Frenkie de Jong to accept a transfer to Manchester United or take a pay cut. Martin Braithwaite, Samuel Umtiti, and Riqui Puig were all left off Barcelona’s squad for the trip to the United States and the club wants them gone.

Last season, Barcelona flopped out of the Champions League’s group phase for the first time in two decades. It finished a distant second in Spain to Madrid, which also won the European Cup to only increase the frustration of Barcelona supporters.

The additions of a world-class scorer in Lewandowski, a top young center back in Kounde and the flare of Raphinha should provide coach Xavi Hernandez with what he needs to improve a squad featuring Spain midfielders Pedri Gonzalez (19 years old) and Gavi Paez (17).

But one year after Messi’s wife handed him a tissue as he wept while saying farewell to the club he helped make great, Barcelona is at a crossroads where it appears the only two ways forward are renewal or decline.

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England defeats Germany to win historic women’s Euro 2022 title

England women’s national football team ended the country’s trophy drought by winning the Euro 2022 title with a 2-1 victory over Germany Sunday.

In front of a record crowd of 87,192 for any match in the history of the European Championships, Chloe Kelly prodded home a loose ball from close range to end English football’s 56-year wait for a World Cup or Euro victory.

Kelly fought back from an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tear to be fit in time for the tournament and made herself a national hero by being in the right place to pounce when Germany failed to clear a corner in the 110th minute.

The Manchester City winger tore off her shirt in celebration in scenes reminiscent of Brandi Chastain’s famous reaction to scoring the winning penalty at the 1999 World Cup for the U.S.

“This is what dreams are made of, as a young girl watching women’s football,” said Kelly, who broke off a post-match interview to join in a chorus of “Sweet Caroline” with the crowd and her teammates.

“Thank you for everyone who played a part in my rehab. I always believed I’d be here, but to be here and score the winner, wow. These girls are amazing.”

England looked set for victory in the 90 minutes when substitute Ella Toone’s sublime chip over Merle Frohms put the hosts in front.

Germany showed remarkable resilience to bounce back as Lina Magull leveled 11 minutes from time.

But for once, England was not to be denied a major tournament success.

Fortune did not favor Germany, who lost captain and top goalscorer Alexandra Popp to a muscle injury in the warm-up.

But England will feel its time for some luck was due as 12 months on from the Three Lions’ defeat on penalties to Italy in the Euro 2020 men’s final, the nation’s women went one better.

England manager Sarina Wiegman has now led the home nation to the title in back-to-back women’s Euros after leading the Netherlands to victory five years ago.

“The game was so tight, there was a little bit of fight in there, but who cares, we won 2-1,” said Wiegman. “We are European champions.”

Under Wiegman, England is unbeaten in 20 games but was pushed to the limit by the eight-time winner despite missing the massive presence of Popp.

The Wolfsburg striker, who missed the entirety of Euro 2013 and 2017 through injury, had scored six goals in five games en route to the final.

Despite losing its major goal threat and facing the intimidating atmosphere of a full Wembley waiting to party, Germany still posed a threat and came close to opening the scoring early in the second half when Magull prodded just wide.

Kelly strikes

Strength in depth has been one of the key features of England’s success under Wiegman and the Dutch coach turned to Alessia Russo and Toone to turn the tide as they did in the quarterfinal win over Spain.

The changes worked to perfection once more as Toone timed her run through the heart of the German defense to latch onto Keira Walsh’s through ball, showing great composure to coolly lift the ball over Frohms.

Lesser sides than the eight-time champion would have been broken, but Germany immediately pushed forward in search of an equalizer.

The excellent Magull smashed a shot off the post and Popp’s replacement Lea Schueller should have converted the rebound rather than rolling the ball into the arms of the grateful Mary Earps.

Martina Voss-Tecklenburg’s side was not to be denied, though, and fittingly it was Magull who sent the game to extra time as the Bayern Munich midfielder slotted Tabea Wassmuth’s cross into the roof of the net.

The German attack was further blunted by Magull’s withdrawal at the end of 90 minutes due to a knock, and both sides felt the pace of a physical encounter in the extra 30 minutes.

England just had enough left in the tank to finally get the job done as Germany failed to deal with the second ball from a corner and Kelly’s telescopic right leg flicked the ball home.

After decades of disappointment, a major tournament trophy has come home for England fans.

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Messi, Neymar lead PSG rout of Nantes for Champions Trophy win

Lionel Messi opened the scoring and Neymar scored twice as French champion Paris Saint-Germain beat French Cup winner Nantes 4-0 to win the Champions Trophy on Sunday.

Messi, the record seven-time Ballon d’Or winner, netted midway through the first half. Taking a deflected pass from Neymar, he went past goalkeeper Alban Lafont before scoring with a fine finish.

Neymar expertly guided a free kick into the top left corner in first-half injury time to put coach Christophe Galtier’s side 2-0 up at Bloomfield Stadium in Tel Aviv, which hosted the game for the second straight year.

Veteran defender Sergio Ramos made it 3-0 in the 57th minute from close range and Neymar converted a penalty in the 82nd after being fouled by Jean-Charles Castelletto, who was sent off.

Galtier, who guided Lille to the league title against the odds in 2021, now has his first trophy at PSG. He replaced Maurico Pochettino after he was fired.

Antoine Kombouare, who once coached PSG, helped Nantes win its first trophy in 21 years when it won the cup.

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England’s Euro 2022 delight could spark boom for women’s football

Euro 2022 began with organizers defending the choice of small venues, but 25 days later a record European Championship attendance of 87,192 at Wembley for the final witnessed England at last win a major international tournament.

The Lionesses’ legacy could change the face of the women’s game in England for future generations.

A record television audience for a women’s football match in the U.K. of 17.4 million tuned in to watch Sunday’s tense 2-1 victory in extra time over Germany, as Chloe Kelly scored the winner.

Sarina Wiegman’s squad changed perceptions on top of winning the hearts of the host nation.

An Ipsos poll published Monday found that 44% of the British public – and 64% of football fans – said they are more interested in watching women’s football following Euro 2022.

England’s women now have a platform their predecessors could only dream of and they used it to push the message of equality off the pitch.

“In most workplaces across the world, women still have a few more battles to face,” said captain Leah Williamson.

“For every change of judgment or perception or opening the eyes of somebody who views women as somebody with the potential to be equal to her male counterpart, I think that makes change in society.

“That’s a powerful message that we have the power to send, in a typically male-dominated environment.”

Football fans cheer during a victory party at Trafalgar Square, London, England, Aug. 1, 2022. (AFP Photo)

England supporters celebrate a goal against Germany in the Women's Euro 2022 final, London, England, July 31, 2022. (AP Photo)

Bridging the gap

There remains a huge income gap for women’s football to close on the men’s game.

Prize money of 16 million euros ($17 million) for the 16 competing teams at Euro 2022 pales in comparison with the 331 million euros handed out to the 24 nations at the men’s Euro 2020 last year.

UEFA defended that gulf by saying it would make a “significant loss” in running the tournament due to a five-fold increase in spending on infrastructure and facilities.

But a tournament of record crowds – with total attendance more than doubled from Euro 2017 in the Netherlands – and TV audiences will ripple around the rest of the continent.

“We expected a lot but to be honest we didn’t expect so much,” UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin said at a women’s football forum Sunday.

“The numbers are amazing, but it’s not only the numbers that are important. The matches are great and the technical skills have been unbelievable.

“Maybe some people – sponsors, broadcasters and everyone else – should start thinking that it’s worth investing in women’s football.”

England players celebrate on stage at an event at Trafalgar Square, London, England, Aug. 1, 2022. (AP Photo)

England players celebrate on stage at an event at Trafalgar Square, London, England, Aug. 1, 2022. (AP Photo)

World Cup to come

With less than a year to the start of the 2023 World Cup in Australia and New Zealand, the Euro has revived some of the momentum lost for the women’s game during the coronavirus pandemic.

The 2019 World Cup in France was also seen as a launching pad for the popularity of the women’s game. However, just a year later, it was often treated as an afterthought as associations, clubs and leagues scrambled to get the men’s game back up and running during lockdowns.

Euro 2022 itself was supposed to take place in 2021 but was moved back to accommodate a 12-month delay to the men’s Euro 2020.

England’s women did not play a match for nearly a year between March 2020 and February 2021.

Such a scenario is now unthinkable with a new generation of girls idolizing the likes of Beth Mead, Alessia Russo and Ella Toone just as much as Harry Kane or Raheem Sterling.

“The moral purpose of what we have tried to do here in England is just as important as the business purpose of winning teams,” said the English Football Association’s (FA) director of women’s football, Sue Campbell.

“We think we can improve the lives of girls and women in society by the way we deliver football in the community and on the international stage.”

Even Queen Elizabeth II joined in the congratulations to label the Lionesses “an inspiration for girls and women today, and for future generations”.

The last time England won a major tournament, at the 1966 World Cup, women’s football was still banned by the FA.

Now its time to thrive has come.

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Saudi Arabia interested in hosting 2026 football women’s Asian Cup

Saudi Arabia and three other countries – Australia, Jordan and Uzbekistan – have submitted Expressions of Interest to host the 2026 Women’s Asian Cup, the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) said Monday.

If selected, Saudi Arabia, whose women’s football team only played its first match in February this year, will host its first official international women’s tournament.

Although recent reforms have given women in Saudi Arabia more freedoms, many of their rights remain restricted. Saudi women were banned from attending fixtures in stadiums until 2017.

Australia last hosted the Women’s Asian Cup in 2006, while the 2018 edition was played in Jordan. Uzbekistan has not previously hosted the tournament.

“The AFC will now work with all Bidding Member Associations on the delivery of the necessary bidding documentation in accordance with the bidding process with a decision to be finalized and communicated in 2023,” the AFC said.

China claimed a record-extending ninth Women’s Asian Cup title after beating South Korea in the final of the 2022 tournament, which was hosted by India.

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Nunez trumps Haaland as Liverpool beats City to Community Shield

Liverpool drew first blood against Manchester City ahead of the new Premier League season as Darwin Nunez made an instant impact for Jurgen Klopp’s men to win the Community Shield 3-1 on Saturday.

In a tale of two big summer signings, Nunez came off the bench to win a penalty and score his first goal since a 75-million euro ($77 million) move from Benfica, while Erling Haaland had a City debut to forget.

“He’s good,” said Klopp on Nunez, who has been criticized for his preseason performances. “Today we played the smart passes. We saw Darwin in dangerous situations. He used the spaces and finished well too.

“All the subs made a real difference. It was the most important thing I learned today, that the boys are ready.”

Trent Alexander-Arnold’s blistering strike gave Liverpool a deserved halftime lead in Leicester.

But it was City’s other new forward who hauled Pep Guardiola’s men back into the game after the break as Julian Alvarez equalized.

Tying down Mohamed Salah to a new three-year deal was Liverpool’s other major piece of summer business and the Egyptian was deadly from the penalty spot after Nunez’s header was handled by Ruben Dias.

The Uruguayan then got his own glory moment by stooping to head home in stoppage time before tearing off his shirt in celebration.

Victory saw Liverpool win the traditional season curtain-raiser for the first time since 2006 and lay down an early marker in what is expected to be another battle between the sides for the Premier League title.

City held off the Reds to win the Premier League for a fourth time in five years by a point in a thrilling finale to last season.

Guardiola’s men had to come from 2-0 down on the final day of the campaign to beat Aston Villa and were again guilty of a slow start.

Salah was the provider for the opening goal as he laid Thiago Alcantara’s crossfield pass back to the edge of the box and Alexander-Arnold smashed in off the post with the aid of a slight deflection off Dias.

City had played just two preseason friendlies to Liverpool’s four and took half an hour to find its feet.

Haaland howler

Haaland was denied by Liverpool stand-in goalkeeper Adrian with his first sight of the goal.

However, the Norwegian should have opened his City account moments later as he failed to properly connect with Joao Cancelo’s inviting cross.

“It’s good for him to see the reality of the new country, new league,” said Guardiola on Haaland’s first taste of English football.

“He was there. Today he didn’t score – another day he will score.”

Nunez was given his chance to shine on the hour mark but fluffed his first big chance when Ederson prevailed in a one-on-one.

At the other end, City’s new South American striker also got his career in England off to a flying start.

Alvarez’s arrival at the Etihad has gone under the radar in the hype surrounding Haaland.

But the Argentine, who scored six goals in one Copa Libertadores match in May, is also regarded as one of the world’s most exciting young forwards.

Alvarez was quickest to react to the rebound after Adrian saved Phil Foden’s initial effort and the goal stood after a video assistant referee (VAR) review for offside.

It needed another the intervention of VAR for Liverpool to restore its lead seven minutes from time.

Referee Craig Pawson pointed to the spot after seeing a replay of Nunez’s header coming back off the arm of Dias.

Salah was deadly as ever from 12 yards as he drilled into the bottom corner despite Ederson going the right way.

Nunez then ended any doubt over the result when he pounced on Andy Robertson’s header across goal.

But City’s miserable day did not end there as Haaland hit the bar with the goal gaping deep in stoppage time.

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