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    Gareth Southgate in line for £4million bonus if he achieves World Cup glory with Three Lions

    ENGLAND manager Gareth Southgate is in line for a £4million bonus if he can lead the Three Lions to World Cup glory.It is almost three times as much as the £1.5million he was offered to win the 2018 World Cup.
    England manager Gareth Southgate is in line for a £4million bonus if he can lead the Three Lions to World Cup gloryCredit: AFP or licensors
    England’s first Group B game will be against Iran on November 21Credit: PA
    Southgate, 52, has already banked £500,000 for qualifying for the tournament, which kicks off five weeks today.
    England’s first Group B game will be against Iran on November 21.
    A source said: “Gareth has been offered bonuses for each stage of the World Cup and stands to pocket a fortune if he brings home the trophy.
    “It’s entirely normal that footballers and the management are incentivised.
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    “That said, Gareth is already on record as having described managing England as the highlight of his career.
    “He is a proud Englishman and would love nothing more than to win a major trophy for the nation.
    “His motivation is to ensure he and his team do their best for the country. Any money he earns along the way is incidental to that.
    “He’s not financially driven and is very conscious of the cost of living crisis.”
    Most read in The Sun
    During Covid, Southgate took a voluntary 30 per cent pay cut and did not take a rise in his basic salary when he was awarded a new three-year contract by the FA in November last year.
    His current deal is worth £6million a year and runs until 2024.
    Southgate and the FA declined to comment. More

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    British firm set to release range of goods using name of footie legend Diego Maradona

    A BRITISH firm is set to release a range of goods including booze using the name of footie superstar Diego Maradona.Podium Ventures has signed a deal with the late Argentinian forward’s sisters, Lili and Rita.
    A British venture capitalist firm has applied to the Intellectual Property Office so they can release a range of goods using Maradona’s nameCredit: Getty
    Now they’ve applied to the Intellectual Property Office to trademark DM10, Lo Del Diego, OMFC, and D10S under numerous classifications including non-alcoholic and alcoholic beverages.
    It now plans to launch drink, food, clothing and games under the brand of Maradona Global.
    They also want to bring out a range of toiletries such as talcum powder.
    Maradona was voted Fifa Player of the 20th Century in 2000.
    READ MORE ON MARADONA
    But the man who led Argentina to World Cup glory in 1986 with his “Hand of God goal” battled cocaine addiction and died of a heart attack aged 60 in 2020.
    Podium boss Sanjay Wadhwani said: “I am thrilled to have the honour of building Maradona Global to share the story of a remarkable man.”
    “From media and entertainment, gaming, apparel and footwear, to food and beverage and the metaverse, Maradona Global has ambitions to create unique opportunities for brands to be able to ‘work’ with Maradona again.”
    Meanwhile, the shameless ref of the 1986 match is still planning to sell the winning ball at auction next month – which could win £3million.
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    England fans to be outnumbered by Iranians ten to one at opening World Cup game

    ENGLAND fans will be outnumbered ten to one by Iranians at the opening game.The Three Lions were allocated 2,489 seats for the November 21 clash and are believed to have struggled to fill the allocation.
    Iranian footie fans will outnumber Three Lions supporters more than ten timesCredit: Alamy
    But at least 30,000 Iranians will hop across the Persian Gulf to the 45,400-seater venue in Doha.
    England fans have balked at the cost of travel, accommodation and £13 pints but support could be boosted by expats.
    England have 4,158 tickets for the USA match at the 60,000-capacity Al Bayt Stadium in Al Khor on November 25.
    Only the Wales match four days later is oversubscribed.
    READ MORE WORLD CUP 2022
    At least 7,000 England supporters travelled to Kaliningrad for the final group stage match in June, 2018.
    Demand from travelling fans peaked in 2006 when a colossal 19,000 England fans clamoured to tickets to see the star-studded 2006 team led by David Beckham in Germany.
    This year’s tournament is set to be the most expensive World Cup yet, with the oil rich Middle Eastern state poised to spend a staggering £200 billion.
    But the cost-of-living crisis has combined with huge travel costs and compelled the vast majority of England fans to stay home.
    Most read in The Sun
    The FA said: “We’re expecting to see just two to three thousand England fans travelling out to Qatar this year, which is very low for a World Cup.
    “Some fans have tickets to the semi-final and final so the numbers should increase.”
    Dozens of disgruntled football supporters have taken to social media to protest the cost of travelling to Qatar.
    Mohamed Amiin said: “I don’t understand why people want to go to Qatar to watch the world cup – everything is so expensive, and it will be a culture shock for most people, so it will be chaos I reckon.
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    “Why waste money there?”
    Another fan tweeted: “Football is for the elite. We can’t afford Qatar.” More

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    Tottenham in transfer battle with Brentford to sign Sunderland wonderkid Dennis Cirkin

    BRENTFORD are set to rival Tottenham for Sunderland’s highly rated left-back Dennis Cirkin.The Bees are looking at the England youth star, 20, as a potential long-term replacement for Rico Henry, 25, if he leaves.
    Dennis Cirkin is a transfer target for Brentford and TottenhamCredit: Getty
    Tottenham are also tracking their former youth team star and he may have a decision to make during the next window in January.
    The Black Cats only signed Cirkin from Spurs last year.
    But the Championship side may be tempted to make a quick profit and cash in on the left-back.
    SunSport exclusively revealed last week that Spurs were interested in re-signing their former academy star.
    Read More In Football
    The defender came through the ranks at Tottenham after moving to London from Ireland aged three.
    Spurs then surprisingly let him go last summer, allowing him to move up north.
    The defender was sold to the Black Cats for an undisclosed fee.
    Cirkin has played 50 times in total for Sunderland since joining from Spurs in August 2021.
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    The left-back has featured nine times in the Championship this season.
    He scored in today’s 2-1 win over Wigan after missing the last five weeks through injury. More

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    Best premier league ground for away fans named – and it might surprise you

    SPURS have ended their trophy drought — if only by being named tops for visiting fans.The North London club, who last won anything 14 years ago, were voted best away day experience.
    Tottenham were well ahead of rivals Arsenal and Newcastle in the rankingCredit: PA
    They scored 7.11 for their new £1.2billion 62,850-seater stadium, the £5.19 price of a pint and £3.80 cost to park.
    Tottenham, who won the League Cup in 2008 and were last champions in 1961, were well ahead of rivals Arsenal and Newcastle — both given 6.14.
    The Magpies boosted their total thanks to selling pints for £4.90.
    Aston Villa and Brentford were next in the poll, organised by the Online Betting Guide. Bottom of the Prem, just as in real life, were Leicester City, who scored a meagre 2.46.
    READ MORE ON Premier league
    Also in the table’s relegation zone were West Ham — charging £7.60 a pint — and Southampton, where visitors face a 23-minute walk to a bus stop or station.
    Spurs fan Mike Hardy said: “Polling top is surely worth a trophy. And beating Arsenal is as satisfying as finishing above them in the Prem each season.”
    Most read in The Sun More

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    ‘I’m still selling £3m match ball from Maradona’s Hand of God goal against England’, says shameless ref

    THE rubbish ref flogging the Hand of God football says he does not care about the backlash in England.The Sun yesterday tracked Ali Bin Nasser, 78, to his shabby flat where he told us: “I’m still selling.”
    Bin Nasser, 78, described England as the home of footballCredit: Darren Fletcher
    The ball could fetch £3million at auction in London next monthCredit: Getty
    He claimed he did not see Argentina’s Diego Maradona punch the ball past Peter Shilton in the 1986 World Cup quarter final.
    He kept the Adidas Azteca — the only ball used in England’s 2-1 defeat — and stashed it in a cupboard.
    It could fetch £3million at auction in London next month.
    Gary Lineker, who scored in the match, and Three Lions fans have accused the ref of cashing in on his clanger.
    READ MORE ON THE WORLD CUP
    Told of the furore yesterday, Bin Nasser hit back: “I’m still selling it. I don’t care what you think.”
    His sons are thought to live in two other flats in the £150,000 building in the Tunisian city of Ariana.
    Bin Nasser told us: “You should not be coming to my house. Go away. The company is responsible for me and the ball. I’ve signed a contract and can’t talk to anyone.”
    Earlier, Bin Nasser had said England was the home of football and he hoped the buyer “is in a position to put it on display or share it with the public”.
    Most read in The Sun
    Lineker has said: “How the hell did the referee end up with the ball?
    I’m so thrilled he’ll cash in on his cock-up.”
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    I’m A Celebrity signs England football star for this year’s show

    Lioness Jill Scott has signed up for the new series of I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!The midfielder, 35, retired after playing in the game that beat Germany 2-1 in the Uefa Women’s final in July.
    Lioness Jill Scott, 35, has signed up for the new series of I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!Credit: AP
    It has long been rumoured that ITV wanted a Lioness to enter the jungleCredit: Rex
    But her expletives gained almost as much attention as her ball skills when a clip of her swearing at Germany’s Sydney Lohmann went viral.
    A TV insider said: “Jill became an instant star following that memorable moment, with most Brits forgiving the minor outburst.”
    “It was always rumoured that ITV wanted one of the team in the jungle and Jill is a natural choice.”
    Jill presented an award at the NTAs this week and joked that she was skint and had been forced to sell her winner’s medal.
    READ MORE ON JILL SCOTT
    I’m a Celeb returns to the Australian Jungle next month.
    Other stars include former rugby player Mike Tindall, DJ Chris Moyles and comic Seann Walsh.
    Most read in The Sun More

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    From team that won match without scoring to game’s first black player – Gary Lineker reveals incredible football stories

    FOOTBALL is the one thing that has always been in my life. I used to be in the box as a player, now I’m on the box as a presenter.
    Gary Lineker has shared with us five of his favourite incredible football storiesCredit: Getty
    Gary’s new book 50 Times Football Changed The World is filled with inspirational tales
    Football has a long and rich history with so many memorable moments, unforgettable tales and incredible stories from across the world which all show the numerous ways the game has been a force for good.
    I’ve put 50 of the most fascinating, educational and inspiring tales in my new book, 50 Times Football Changed The World.
    Here I’m sharing five of my favourites.
    READ MORE ON GARY LINEKER
    The first black professional footballer in the world
    ARTHUR WHARTON was born in 1865 in Jamestown, Gold Coast, West Africa, which is now Accra, in Ghana.
    Not much is known about Arthur’s early life, but when he was 19 he moved to Darlington to train as a missionary.
    Arthur Wharton, who played for Darlington FC., was the first black professional footballer in the worldCredit: NNP
    Arthur was born in 1865 in Jamestown, Gold Coast, West Africa, which is now Accra, in Ghana, moved to Darlington when he was 19Credit: Sharon Doorbar
    Most read in The Sun
    It wasn’t long before he started playing as goal- keeper for Darlington FC.
    He was said to be an entertaining performer with a phenomenal punch, by which they meant punching the ball, not his opponents (hopefully)!
    He also used to catch the ball between his legs and he would sometimes pull the crossbar down (it was only made of tape in those days) so shots would miss.
    That would certainly get a red card today.
    It wasn’t long before he moved to Preston North End, one of the biggest teams in England at that time, then Rotherham Town, Sheffield United, Stalybridge Rovers and Ashton North End, before finishing his career at Stockport County in 1902.
    As a professional, Arthur earned a lot of money, so he would often donate part of his wages to help people in need.
    Unfortunately, after retiring from football, his life was hard.
    He gradually spent all the money he made from his sports career and had to work as a coal miner to support his family.
    He passed away in 1930 and was buried in an unmarked grave.
    For many years afterwards, Arthur and his great achievements as a true sports pioneer went unrecognised.
    He was finally given the footballing recognition he deserved in 2003, when he was welcomed into the English Football Hall of Fame, having paved the way for so many of the talented players we see today.
    Arthur paved the way for so many of the talented players we see today (pictured: Marcus Rashford)Credit: AFP
    The team that played on the sea
    NOTHING makes you want to grab a football and kick it around quite like watching an incredible match.
    And that’s exactly what happened when the children from a fishing village called Koh Panyee, in Thailand, were watching the 1986 World Cup finals.
    Children from a fishing village called Koh Panyee, in Thailand made a football pitch in the seaCredit: EPA
    But there was one not-so-small problem . . . Koh Panyee is in the sea.
    It is a floating village built on stilts. No one had ever been able to play football there because . . . well, there just wasn’t space.
    The children really, really wanted to play, though, so they came up with a brilliant idea — if the village could float, then so could a football pitch.
    So they began gathering bits of wood and old rafts, took a boat just a little way out on to the sea and started building a surface they could play on.
    It was like no other pitch in the world. Sharp nails jutted out from the wood.
    There was no barrier between the edge of the pitch and the sea.
    And splinters were a real hazard for their bare feet.
    But the children loved it — despite having to jump into the water to retrieve the ball an awful lot.
    When they entered their first proper tournament, Panyee realised they were actually really good. All that playing on their floating pitch had paid off.
    They have become one of the best youth teams in southern Thailand, winning seven regional titles on the trot between 2004 and 2010.
    Today they have a smooth new pitch, which even has a fence to stop the ball going into the water.
    The village has also benefited from tourists coming to see the incredible pitch and hear the team’s amazing story.
    It just shows what you can do with determination, courage, teamwork . . . and a few bits of wood.
    When the worst team in Britain didn’t give up
    MADRON is a village in Cornwall. About 1,600 people live there and it also has a football team, Madron FC.
    At the start of the 2010–11 season, they were in the first division of Cornwall’s Mining League.
    Madron FC. were branded the ‘worst team in Britain’ but they eventually won a match after 30 straight defeatsCredit: SWNS:South West News Service
    They began the season full of hope and positivity and were ready to give it their all.
    But in their first game they lost 11-0. Ouch! And things didn’t get better.
    As the season progressed, Madron lost 16–0, 29–0 (yes, twenty-nine) and 9–0.
    Later in the season, when they played against Illogan Reserves, they lost . . . wait for it . . . 55–0.
    That means Illogan scored a goal nearly every two minutes. One of their players scored ten goals — more than three hat-tricks.
    Madron were branded in the newspapers as “the worst team in Britain”.
    Some teams might give up after a defeat like that, but not Madron.
    The following weekend they put on their game faces once again.
    Could they bounce back from that defeat with a victory? Well, no — this time they lost 22–0.
    By the end of the season they were bottom of the table with zero points, having lost every single game.
    Their goal difference was minus 395.
    But throughout the season Madron had continued to try their best, week in, week out.
    As one of the players said: “I’d rather play for a bad team that has fun than a good team that you don’t enjoy playing for.”
    The following season Madron lost their first game 8-2. But their second game ended 4-3 — to Madron.
    After 30 straight defeats and 407 goals conceded across both seasons, they had finally won.
    The Madron players ran around the pitch, did laps of honour, cheered, shouted and high-fived one another. It was as if they’d won the league.
    Their hard work had finally paid off. They showed the true value of believing in yourself and never giving up.
    Referee who took on football authorities and a dictator
    IT’S not easy being a referee. Every match is a battle.
    But in the case of Lea Campos, the battles started long before she even got on to the pitch.
    Lea Campos had to take on football authorities and a dictator to fulfil her dream of becoming a refereeCredit: Museu do futebol
    Lea was born in Brazil in 1945 and loved playing football.
    Unfortunately, women were banned from playing organised sports in those days.
    Instead, she was encouraged to take part in beauty pageants.
    She won quite a few, and one helped her back into football.
    Cruzeiro is one of Brazil’s biggest football teams, and after winning the title Queen of Cruzeiro in 1966, Lea got a job with the club where she helped to promote it by speaking to journalists and organising player interviews.
    She realised the love of football she’d had hadn’t gone away.
    Lea still wasn’t allowed to play, but she discovered there was nothing to stop her becoming a referee.
    In 1967, she did an eight-month course and became one of the first female referees in the world.
    Even though she was qualified, the Brazilian sporting authorities — led by a man, João Havelange — still wouldn’t let her on the pitch.
    She was told women’s bodies weren’t suitable for the sport.
    Lea wasn’t going to stand for that, though. In one of the beauty contests she had met an army commander.
    She asked him if he could arrange for her to have a meeting with the president of Brazil, Emílio Garrastazu Médici.
    But Médici was a brutal leader who ruled the country with violence.
    What was he going to think about a woman requesting to be a referee?
    Over lunch, the president told Lea that one of his sons was a big fan of hers.
    Then he handed her a letter.
    It was a written request for Havelange to let her become a referee.
    And everyone knew you didn’t say no to the president.
    Lea went on to referee 98 matches in Brazil.
    Fans might still disagree with a lot of referees’ decisions, but one thing we can all agree on is that what Lea Campos did was incredibly brave — and has helped to change the world’s opinion on female referees.
    When a team won without scoring a single goal
    THERE were four teams in the play-off tournament to decide Madagascar’s 2002 champions — Adema Analamanga and Stade Olympique de l’Emyrne, who were big rivals, and Domoina Soavina Atsimondrano Antananarivo and Union Sportive Ambohidratrimo.
    In the penultimate game of the tournament, L’Emyrne were leading 2–1 but, with full time approaching, the referee awarded their opponents, Antananarivo, a penalty.
    L’Emyrne scored an own goal approximately every 30 seconds as a protest in their match against Adema
    The players and manager of L’Emyrne were certain the penalty should not have been awarded but, despite their complaints, the referee didn’t change their mind (they rarely do) and Antananarivo scored the spot kick.
    The final result was 2–2.
    This meant L’Emyrne couldn’t win the tournament.
    The manager and players were convinced the referee had been biased — and at their next match, the last game of the tournament against their arch rivals Adema Analamanga, they decided to protest.
    The game kicked off, and as soon as a L’Emyrne player got the ball, he did something very odd.
    Instead of running towards Adema’s goal, he ran towards his own team’s goal and scored an own goal.
    It was 1–0 to Adema. L’Emyrne kicked off again and this time . . . the same thing happened.
    They scored another own goal, making it 2–0 to Adema. And it happened again, and again.
    Adema’s players couldn’t believe what they were seeing.
    The spectators couldn’t believe it either, and many of them started demanding their money back.
    But still the game went on, with L’Emyrne scoring an own goal approximately every 30 seconds.
    By the time the final whistle blew it was 149–0 to Adema — without any of their players touching the ball.
    It was very odd, and in some ways very funny, but the Madagascan football authorities didn’t think so.
    L’Emyrne’s manager, Ratsimandresy Ratsarazaka, who organised the protest, was banned from coaching for three years and four players were also banned for the rest of the season.
    Read More on The Sun
    It truly was an amazing, game-changing moment.
    One team did something extraordinary to stand up for themselves and to let everyone know that they weren’t going to put up with what they believed to be cheating. More