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    Africa has talent on and off football pitch to succeed but needs structure to compete with European wages

    IN AFRICA itself, professional football doesn’t do so well, certainly not the club leagues.I’m afraid that, for all the solemn promises and grandiose schemes from Fifa, this will continue.
    The footballing structure in Africa needs improvement if it is to compete with EuropeCredit: Getty
    Morocco made history as the first African nation to make a World Cup semi-finalCredit: Getty
    It is truly history-making that Morocco reached the World Cup semi-finals.
    It shouts to the powerhouse football countries that elite-level coaching in the lesser developed world is first-class.
    And the skills are by no means taught by expats, all five countries that made it to Qatar were head-coached by Africans.
    So, we know they have the talent both on and off the pitch to succeed on a world stage.
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    Where the difference lies is that the average footballer in Africa, from Morocco to Zimbabwe, earns £7,000 a month while the average Premier League wage is more than £250,000 a month.
    This is not a reflection of talent, but a direct reflection on the difference in the domestic leagues’ organisational structures as well as the broadcast rights and sponsorship revenue that each generate.
    The knock-on effect for the African domestic game is that outstanding footballers are quickly made to realise that fortunes are made in Europe, way beyond national boundaries, where top football is easier to come by and wages are much, much higher.
    Now the USA, Japan and the oil states are also tempting their players, emptying Africa of many riches. As ever.
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    Much of Africa is football barmy but actual progress on their own fields has been gradual, not least because of the lack of equipment, issues around fan safety and the mere fact trim grass is not readily available.
    That has never stopped boys or, increasingly, girls playing the game but unforgiving pitches, from sand to rock, take some overcoming.
    Fifa have plans to help.
    Publishing accounts isn’t their strong point but it is believed they have spent £2.5billion on worldwide assistance in the last six years.
    Divide that among about 200 countries and include too many fat, old committees and employees with a liking for posh offices, pleasant hotels and fleets of cars of their own.
    Fifa profit on the Qatar competition alone is about £7bn.
    In the long run, old-fashioned free-market economics will probably work better than dutiful charity because by all accounts the footballing countries of Africa teem with scouts watching out for talent.
    In time, I hope big TV fees and richer citizens may boost domestic clubs to the point where, say, 20 would form national Premier Leagues which pay players competitive salaries and retain their talent.
    Back in 1977, Pele predicted: “An African nation will win the World Cup before the year 2000.” That didn’t happen but they are edging closer.
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    The precedents for the standard of domestic African football are not good.
    And it isn’t going to be much helped by the plan to have at least nine teams from the continent playing at the expanded World Cup 2026 if the focus remains on individual talent playing outside of Africa, rather than national team development inside of Africa. More

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    Sergio Aguero joins Argentina camp and is sharing room with Lionel Messi again ahead of World Cup final vs France

    SERGIO AGUERO has joined up with the Argentina squad and is sharing a room with Lionel Messi.The 34-year-old was forced to retire last year due to health issues, but will be cheering on his old team-mates during Sunday’s World Cup final.
    Sergio Aguero has joined up with the Argentina campCredit: Reuters
    Aguero has been reunited with his best pal Lionel MessiCredit: Getty
    Aguero and Messi have been close friends for nearly two decades – and were Argentina room-mates even in their youth team days.
    Upon the former’s retirement, Messi went into this tournament WITHOUT a room-mate at all – preferring to go alone than with anyone other than Aguero.
    Upon his arrival in Qatar, however, Aguero has reunited with his best mate, and is sharing a dorm room with him just like old times.
    Such is their close relationship, that Messi is godfather to Aguero’s son Benjamin, 13.
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    The Manchester City legend isn’t the only star that has been invited into the Argentina camp.
    Boss Lionel Scaloni has also invited players that missed the tournament through injury.
    Tottenham’s Giovani Lo Celso was in attendance at their semi-final win over Croatia.
    While Joaquin Correa and Nicolas Gonzelez are expected to join up before Sunday’s showpiece event.
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    Messi and Aguero have been great pals since their youth team daysCredit: Getty
    Aguero’s presence, however, will mean the most to Messi.
    Upon his mate’s retirement last year, the PSG star released an emotional statement.
    It read: “Practically a whole career together, Kun.
    “We lived very beautiful moments and others that were not so, all of them made us unite more and be closer friends.
    “‘And we are going to continue living them together off the pitch.
    “With the great joy of lifting the Copa America so little ago, with all the achievements you achieved in England.
    “And the truth is that now it hurts a lot to see how you have to stop doing what you like the most because of what happened to you.
    “Surely you will continue to be happy because you are a person who transmits happiness and those of us who love you will be with you.
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    “Now a new stage of your life begins and I am convinced that you are going to live it with a smile and with all the illusion that you put into everything.
    “All the best in this new stage !!! I love you a lot, friend, I’m going to miss a lot being with you on the pitch and when we get together with the National Team !!! @Kun Aguero.”
    Giovani Lo Celso has also joined up with the Argentina campCredit: Getty More

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    We have no money and no way of getting home to Argentina but seeing our hero Messi lift World Cup is all we care about

    ARGENTINA is the economic basket case of the world, with incredible 88 per cent inflation and four in ten of the population living in poverty.Its citizens are so poor — with an average wage of just £320 a month — that virtually all have two or three jobs and work 16-hour days in a desperate struggle to pay rocketing bills.
    Argentina fans have put financial worries aside to travel to Qatar to watch the World CupCredit: Dan Charity
    Fans have flown en masse to watch Lionel Messi attempt to win the World CupCredit: Dan Charity
    Messi is playing at his last World Cup and attempting to win the one trophy missing from his collectionCredit: Getty
    But an incredible 60,000 of the country’s soccer fans have somehow begged and borrowed their way 8,200 miles to Qatar to cheer on their heroes in the national team.
    And blue and white-shirted supporters were all smiles yesterday — because they have Lionel Messi and an unshakeable belief that they will win the World Cup tomorrow.
    Genius Messi — playing in his last World Cup at 35 — goes head-to-head with superstar rival Kylian Mbappe and France in tomorrow’s final at Doha’s Lusail Stadium.
    Argentina fans in the 89,000-seat venue will outnumber the French by at least ten to one, creating an astonishing wall of sound.
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    But their dream of ending their nation’s 36-year wait for soccer’s Holy Grail is the only ray of hope for a country blighted by economic woes.
    Argentina has spent more time in recession than almost any other nation since the 1950s and has had double-figure inflation for decades.
    The Argentine peso has also lost 30 per cent of its value in recent months and lack of cash reserves, foreign investment and confidence in President Alberto Fernandez’s regime has sent inflation to that amazing rate of 88 per cent — with predictions it will top 100 per cent in the New Year.
    Argentina fans are expected to outnumber France supporters 10 to one at the finalCredit: Getty
    ‘WE DESERVE SOME JOY’
    But tens of thousands of fans have travelled to Qatar from Argentina — where prices have been skyrocketing faster than in any other G20 nation.
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    In contrast, many England and Wales fans — with UK inflation at around just nine per cent — shunned Qatar’s pricey tournament.
    But despite Argentina’s problems at home, even senior politicians in the capital Buenos Aires believe winning the World Cup is now the impoverished nation’s top priority.
    Asked whether lifting the trophy was more important than tackling inflation, Labour Minister Kelly Olmos shrugged: “We must constantly work against inflation, but one month won’t make a huge difference.
    “We want Argentina to be champions — the Argentine people really deserve some joy.”
    Nicolas Orellano from Buenos Aires says he has no idea how he will get homeCredit: Dan Charity
    Lawyer Nicolas Orellano — who also runs a wine business in Buenos Aires to help make ends meet — used all his savings and borrowed money from his girlfriend to go to Qatar.
    He flew to Spain, then on to London to catch a flight to Dubai, then travelled by bus and train through Saudi Arabia to the capital, Doha.
    Nicolas, 30, is now virtually penniless and is living in a bustling Argentine fan commune in Barwa Barahat Al Janoub, south of Doha, dubbed “Little Buenos Aires”.
    Yesterday fans there were roasting a lamb donated by Argentina’s ambassador to Qatar on a makeshift barbecue beneath a giant Messi banner as footy anthems blared from a loudspeaker.
    Nicolas said: “I have no money and no idea how I’ll get home but there is no way I can leave, now we’re so close to seeing Lionel Messi lift the World Cup.
    “Our politicians back home have let us down but our football team has not — they are the only hope we have.
    “It is a special kind of madness which brings us here when we have so little.
    “My girlfriend supports me and loaned me $500 (£410) when my cash ran out.
    “But I know some people who have sold their homes to find the money to travel to Qatar.
    “The people of Argentina are suffering but they love it that so many of us are here and are even donating money to us so we can stay and support the team.
    “I still don’t have a ticket for the final but would give anything and everything to be there, having been to five games so far — and I’m sure we will win.”
    Accountant and part-time meat trader Javier Mahmud, 36, had been struggling to save a deposit for his first home in Buenos Aires with partner of 15 years Carla Barletta, 34.
    But Carla supported his decision to clear out their entire savings account to travel to Doha via Egypt and Lebanon.
    Javier, at his third World Cup, said: “We have the best fans in the world who are giving everything to be here.
    “Our country is in a terrible state economically but Lionel Messi will repay us by winning tomorrow.
    “I have very little money left and no ticket for the final but I still hope to find a way of being there after following the team this far.
    “I’ll be flat broke when I get home, with no money to buy Christmas presents, but I won’t care and my family will understand. The only gift we want is the World Cup.”
    Fridge repair man Sergio Pendola, 30, from Buenos Aires, flew to Doha via Spain and Saudi Arabia to see his third World Cup finals.
    He said: “Diego Maradona is our god but Lionel Messi has a chance to become another god if he wins the World Cup for us — and he won’t let us down.
    “He has Maradona’s passion now because there are so many fans here willing him to win.
    “There is no question that he is the best footballer on the planet now and Kylian Mbappe will be no match for him.
    “Our fans are the 12th man for the team. I’ve spent my entire $6,000 (£4,920) savings and borrowed another $4,000 (£3,280) — but many here have sacrificed much more.
    ‘FOOTBALL IS ALL WE HAVE’
    Fan Evelyn Galiano has the middle name Milagros — Spanish for miracles — because she survived being born six months premature.
    But she said: “We do not need another miracle — we have Messi.”
    Evelyn, 26, is working in Andorra as a chef, but told her boss she needed a month off to see her idols.
    She said: “It is the last World Cup for Messi, that’s why I am here, and it has been beyond all my expectations.
    “I’m travelling alone but three of the guys here ran out of money for accommodation and are staying in my room.
    “They are staying for free — I wanted to help them. I feel completely safe because we are all fans together.”
    Mauro Fernandez, 32, a chef from Buenos Aires, travelled from Thailand via Madrid to get to Doha.
    He said: “I paid 400 US dollars (£328) for the Holland match and 600 (£492) for Croatia but I have run out of money.
    “They are asking more than 1,000 (£820) for the final ticket so I may have to watch it on a giant screen but I will go to Lusail, so I can be with the fans and see the players.
    “For me it is all about seeing Messi lift that trophy. I’ve been here for ten days and I’m not sure how I will get home.
    “I know Messi is better than Mbappe, he is the best.
    “There will be 50,000 Argentina fans at the final, there are more flights coming in from Buenos Aires. Yesterday they were completely full.”
    Gaston Didier-Lardet, 33, from San Luis, near the Argentine city of Mendoza, made the 12-hour, 6,500-mile flight from Australia, where he was working at a mine.
    He is now living in a low-rise block in the Argentine fan village, and said: “This is not the Sheraton but the atmosphere with the fans is just great.
    “It feels like home — we are surrounded by fans, we have barbecues and music.
    “I am a Messi soldier — he is proof of total sacrifice.
    “I’ve got a ticket for the final and I am very lucky. I am nervous and will not sleep, but I am looking forward to it.
    “I’ve probably spent around $10,000 (£8,200) but it is hard to explain why — I just had to be here.
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    “I’ve heard crazy stories of people selling their houses, their cars, possessions, anything to see Messi lift that World Cup.
    “We know it is his last chance and he is a God to us. I think he is going to do it.”
    Argentina are biddingto win their first World Cup since 1986Credit: Dan Charity
    Argentina fans have made stadiums in Qatar feel like home for the playersCredit: AFP
    Argentina fans roast a lamb donated by Argentina’s ambassador to Qatar on a makeshift barbecueCredit: Dan Charity
    Argentina fans’ tributes to the great Diego Maradona are easy to spotCredit: Dan Charity More

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    Which France players could miss the World Cup 2022 final against Argentina through illness?

    FRANCE are in the World Cup final against Argentina and they’ll be hoping they have a fully fit squad available.Les Bleus have been clinical so far in Qatar, topping their group before beating Poland, England and Morocco en route to the final.
    Five players missed training for France in preparation for ArgentinaCredit: Reuters
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    But against Morocco, France were missing two of their stars.
    And for their huge clash with Argentina in the final, they could be without some more big stars.
    A mix of injuries and a bug which has swept its way through the French camp has caused their personnel crisis.
    Which France players could miss the final through illness?
    Against Morocco, both Dayot Upamecano and Adrien Rabiot were missing through illness.
    “In Doha, temperatures have fallen a little bit, you have air conditioning which is on all the time,” France boss Didier Deschamps said.
    “We’ve had a few cases of flu-like symptoms.
    “We are trying to be careful so it doesn’t spread and players have made great efforts out on the pitch and obviously their immune systems suffer.
    “Dayot Upamecano felt sick immediately after the match (against England).
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    “It happens when you make such an effort, your body is weakened and you are more prone to be infected by these viruses.
    “We are taking all necessary precautions, we are trying to make sure it doesn’t spread but viruses are of course infectious and we have to take precautions against it.
    “We separated him from others and Adrien as well.”
    And since the Morocco game, both centre-backs Raphael Varane and Ibrahim Konate, who started against the African side, have reportedly been struck down with flu, missing training on Friday.
    Kingsley Coman also missed training with the flu after feeling feverish in the week.
    Aurelien Tchouameni and Theo Hernandez also skipped training on Friday, but they’re suffering with respective hip and knee problems.
    Rabiot and Upamecano are expected to be back for the final.
    But it remains to be seen whether Tchouameni, Hernandez and Varane will be okay to start.
    Konate is likely to start from the bench. More

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    I knew Harry Kane would miss second World Cup quarter-final penalty against France from two tell-tale signs, says Deeney

    I DON’T want to sound like an arrogant know-it-all here but I was sure Harry Kane was going to score his first penalty against France — and I was just as certain he was going to miss his second.When I watch a match on TV, I can tell you whether a player is going to be successful with a spot-kick, almost 100 per cent of the time.
    Harry Kane missed his second penalty against France – and it proved costlyCredit: Getty
    I’ve been taking penalties for years and like anyone who’s done the job regularly, I’ve missed a fair few.
    When I watched England’s World Cup quarter-final defeat by France, I thought Kane looked laser-focused for that first penalty, even though there was a long delay and he chose to re-spot the ball.
    Of course, he hammered it home in trademark fashion.
    But for the second, something wasn’t right about his breathing and his eyes were everywhere. I wasn’t surprised when he skied it.
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    I’d love to know what his heart rate was. My guess is a steady 85 to 100 beats per minute for the first one and as much as 145 to 160 for the second.
    None of this is meant as a dig at Kane — anything but.
    He is now England’s joint-highest goalscorer of all time and one of the most consistent penalty-takers you will ever see.
    I’ve heard from someone at Spurs that if Harry has a match on Saturday, he’ll have decided where he is going to stick any penalty kick by the Tuesday.
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    What he probably won’t have done is think about the prospect of a second penalty in the same match.
    Only two or three times in my career have I taken two spot-kicks in the same game.
    Just a couple of months ago, at Hull, I scored one penalty then ballooned the second one.
    Taking a second penalty can really scramble your mind.
    And I’m talking Hull v Birmingham in the Championship when we were winning 2-0.
    Not England v France in a World Cup quarter-final, late in the game, when Kane would surely have been thinking, “If I miss this, we’re out.”
    He’d have been feeling a nation willing him to score and the whole world watching him.
    Something wasn’t right about his breathing and his eyes were everywhere. I wasn’t surprised when he skied it.Troy Deeney on Harry Kane’s penalty miss
    The pressure, the spotlight, the responsibility of taking that second one must have been immense.
    Then there is the fact Kane was up against Hugo Lloris, his friend and team-mate of ten years, a guy he will have taken thousands of penalties against — that is an added complication which will have played with his mind.
    There is nothing like the pressure of taking a penalty. It is the loneliest feeling in football.
    Even if there’s a strong camaraderie in your team, this is all on you.
    As a footballer, especially as a striker, so much of what you do is instinctive and based on good technique — but not when it comes to stepping up from 12 yards.
    Then it has far more to do with mentality — and the psychology of it is fascinating.
    I’ve had plenty of team-mates who have told me that taking penalties is easy. And on the training ground, it is.
    MY TOP TIPS FOR EURO 2024I HOPE Gareth Southgate stays as England boss and leads them into Euro 2024 — after going deep in three successive tournaments, he has earned the right to decide on his future.
    But I’d still like to see England being more positive.   Here are three players I think can make an impact at the next Euros . . . 
    IVAN TONEYEngland didn’t have a genuine like-for-like back-up for Harry Kane in Qatar and Brentford’s Toney is the best long-term candidate.He is also the only Englishman better at taking penalties than the captain.
    RICO HENRYThree Lions  are short of left-backs and Toney’s Bees team-mate is a great option — excellent going forward but also dependable in defence.  
    EBERECHI EZECrystal Palace’s forward is a real livewire and could be Raheem Sterling’s long-term successor.

    But when you’re taking a penalty in a match, even a routine league game, you have so much time to think — a minute, sometimes two or more.
    It can feel like an out-of-body experience, like it’s not really you, almost as if you’re looking down on yourself.
    You start thinking whether your family are watching, all kinds of things.
    If that happens, you have to reset yourself. Breathing techniques help.
    One I learned was from the SAS, designed for when they plunge into extremely cold water — four short breaths, four long breaths. That can help.
    Probably the most high-pressure penalty I’ve taken was for Watford against Wolves in an FA Cup semi-final at Wembley in 2019, when we were 2-1 down in the 94th minute with the chance to force extra-time.
    It’s still not a World Cup quarter-final but, for my club and myself, that was a massive moment.
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    There was a huge delay before I took that one. And I suddenly felt my left leg trembling uncontrollably.
    That has never happened to me before or since. I had to stamp my leg down three or four times to get rid of the trembling before I focused.
    I scored and we ended up winning 3-2, but the experience of missing a penalty — especially one that costs your team — hits you in the guts like nothing else.
    As soon as Kane is back at training, I feel certain he will be practising penalties even more than usual.
    Kane faces a two-week wait before his next match, at Brentford on Boxing Day.
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    He will wish it was sooner, just to get that next goal, to score that next penalty. Only then can he even begin to get that miss out of his system.
    Harry Kane comforted by manager Gareth SouthgateCredit: AP More

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    Watch a young Lionel Messi produce carbon copy of no-look World Cup assist against Holland in incredible rare footage

    LIONEL MESSI produced a wonderous no-look assist against the Netherlands en route to the World Cup final. But now new footage has emerged showing Messi created a carbon copy of the goal before he made it pro.
    Lionel Messi produced a strikingly similar goal to his effort against HollandCredit: Twitter / @ElMalaguero
    In both he is seen dribbling past a defenderCredit: Twitter / @ElMalaguero
    Messi then pings a no-look pass into the path of a team-mateCredit: Twitter / @ElMalaguero
    The delighted team-mate of the GOAT is delighted to be assistedCredit: Twitter / @ElMalaguero
    Messi has been in terrific form in Qatar and has the chance to win the trophy he has not yet baggedCredit: PA
    The clip, which emerged on Twitter, showed footage of Messi’s incredible assist against Holland paired with the footage of a young Messi in a youth football game.
    As the clips play out, the similarities are unmistakable.
    In both, Messi dribbles with the ball infield as he shakes loose his markers – with the only difference being him shaking off two defenders as a kid as opposed to only Nathan Ake in Qatar.
    After creating a bit of space for himself, he then plays an incisive pass into the path of a team-mate who slots the ball home.
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    Fans online were left raving about the striking similarities.
    One user said: “Was destined to be the greatest from the very beginning. 🐐”
    A second said: “Class is permanent form is permanent for Messi.”
    A third added: “Born to play football. He should not be allowed to retire. 😭”
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    Another user joked: “The Dutch had 25 years to prepare for that smh (shake my head).”
    Messi has been enjoying a fantastic World Cup in Qatar thus far and has helped guide his nation to the final, where they will face the challenge of reigning champions France – 17 years on from Messi being sent off 40 seconds into his international debut.
    He produced a particularly mesmerising performance against Croatia in the semi-final which left one of the defenders of the tournament – Josko Gvardiol – looking like an amateur.
    However, Gvardiol took it in his stride and declared he was glad to play against Messi despite being on the losing side against Argentina.
    Messi’s exploits saw a crowd of fans flock to a house which had been reported to be his Grandma’s, however it turned out to be just another woman. More

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    Chelsea stars ‘expected Kovacic and Ziyech to be first players back from World Cup’, claims Croatia star

    MATEO KOVACIC is proud he and Hakim Ziyech proved their Chelsea team-mates wrong.The Blues sent 15 players to the World Cup and Croatia’s Kovacic and Morocco attacker Ziyech are the surprise last-men standing.
    Chelsea team-mates Mateo Kovacic and Hakim ZiyechCredit: Reuters
    Midfielder Kovacic, 28, said: “The African teams have played great football and I’m so glad, especially for Morocco to have come this far.
    “I was in contact with Ziyech before the World Cup and my other club-mates. The others expected me and him to come back home first.
    “But here we are, almost at the end. We’re happy to have done it.”
    Morocco and Croatia made it through to the final weekend, while Chelsea players in other big teams fell by the wayside.
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    Croatia boss Zlatko Dalic said: “Morocco is definitely the most pleasant and biggest surprise.
    “They are like us four years ago. No one expected them to go so far.
    “They have deserved to be where they are, they matured and went to a higher level with every game.
    “They have grown into a team full of energy and self-motivation.
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    “Spain, Germany, England, the Netherlands, not to mention Italy — who did not even participate — those are all great teams.“But they didn’t reach the semi-finals, so could have done more.
    “This is a unique World Cup and the two teams in this play-off were not among the favourites.”
    The match could the last World Cup appearances for a number of Croats — including 37-year-old captain Luka Modric.
    But Dalic is confident that the midfielder will stay on for the Euro 2024 qualifying campaign.
    He said: “Knowing how he feels about football and the national team, I’m quite sure he will — but it is his decision only.
    “This might be the last World Cup for the golden generation.
    “We have eight players with us from the last World Cup. That means we have 18 who were not, so we can already speak about a new Croatian team.
    “We must maintain the excellence. We must not ruin what we have achieved, we must follow it up.”
    Croatia arrived as a football team and as a nation at the 1998 World Cup, where they won the third-fourth place play-off.
    I was in contact with Ziyech before the World Cup and my other club-mates. The others expected me and him to come back home first.Mateo Kovacic
    Dalic said: “It was the first medal for the national team.
    “It also achieved recognition for Croatia because it had only just gained independence.”
    Today’s game means a lot and Kovacic added: “We remember how important it was for Croatia and how proud we were at the time.
    “We only hoped that one day we would be in the same situation — fighting for the medal.
    “This would be the second time in four years to come back home with a medal.”
    The only sour note was struck when Dalic was asked about Qatari referee Abdulrahman Al Jassim taking charge of this match.
    He said: “Fifa has taken a huge risk. I hope that after the match we aren’t talking about the ref.”
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    Whatever happens, Kovacic and Ziyech will have plenty to talk about with their Chelsea team-mates when they return to England.
    Mateo Kovacic ahead of Croatia’s match with MoroccoCredit: Getty More

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    English referee Anthony Taylor ‘was BLOCKED from working World Cup final after Argentina qualified’

    ENGLISH referee Anthony Taylor has reportedly been blocked from refereeing the World Cup final between Argentina and France. The showpiece event in Qatar will stage the battle between Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappe on Sunday. 
    Anthony Taylor has reportedly been blocked from refereeing the World Cup finalCredit: Getty
    And it will be officiated by Pole Szymon Marciniak after Taylor was overlooked. 
    According to The Times, English refs were unable to be involved in any Argentina match due to ill-feeling around the Falkland Islands.
    So it eliminated Taylor’s chances of selection for the final between reigning champions France and Argentina. 
    It is believed Fifa’s appointment system say that ensuring neutrality is deemed as a top priority and means that English referees would not be put on matches involving Argentina and vice versa.
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    Despite no suggestion refs would be influenced, the aim is to avoid any situations where the teams involved could complain about bias.
    Animosity around the Falklands War was displayed again this week after Argentina’s semi-final win over Croatia.
    Players were heard singing a chant popular with their fans called Muchachos – which references the Falklands War and aims insults at England and Brazil.
    Nicolas Otamendi filmed shirtless Argentina players singing “Ingleses putos de Malvinas no me olvido”, which has a rough translation of “f***ing English in the Falklands, I don’t forget”.
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    The full chant goes: “Brazilian, what happened, the five-time champions screwed up.
    “Messi went to Rio and he left with the cup [in reference to their Copa America win on Brazilian soil]. We are the Argentine band and we will always cheer them on, because we have the dream of being the world champion.
    “I’m like that, I am Argentinian, f***ing English in the Falklands, I don’t forget. I’m like that, I encourage you, I follow Argentina everywhere.”
    Argentina players sang an anti-English song in wild dressing room celebrations More