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LyrArc brings in selected articles from many of the world's top publications.

Articles are selected by experts and you can see the gist of the important articles.


The Guardian Original article ›
The Guardian Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
This is what Real Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti said during the game in Valencia, Spain. 

"If a stadium insults a player racially the game has to stop, and I would say the same if we were winning 3-0. Stop the game there is no other way. The referee says the fans have to be informed first, and then if it continues we stop the game. But for me, he doesn't need to inform them. I am curious to see what happens now."

The incident in which Vinicius Jr, 22 years, was given racial insults in the Real Madrid Valencia La Liga game has led to repercussions all over the world. 

The Guardian Original article ›
France 24 Original article ›
The Guardian Original article ›
NYTimes.com Original article ›
BBC Sport Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Football Interview: Eder Sarabia and Setien -Elche Football Club in Communidad Valenciana, a small club, eighth in La Liga, with a Bilbao born coach. A story of resilience, being honest and a good person, playing football the right way. Eder calls it "jatorra," from a Basque word. His career ended at age 24, following his mother's advice he studied engineering. He developed another career by coaching youngsters in Basque country feeder clubs. Followed Setien to Las Palmas, Real Betis, and to Barcelona for a year, and was made coach at Elche in Communidad Valenciana.

dw.com Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
DW. com looks at the controversial effort of privage equity firms Blackstone and Carlyle to buy stakes in Bundesliga soccer clubs. Approval of 24 of 36 clubs sets out a plan to attract 1 billion euros of funding for digitalization, internationalization, in return for an 8% share of TV rights revenues for a period of 20 years. Experts say any effort to take international preference for the Premier League will be difficult. There is also the 50+1 rule in Germany where the ownership stays with the clubs not investors, so that the ticket prices are affordable for the club fans and the clubs belong to the fan base. For the fans and locals the situation is better without private equity.

France 24 Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
PSG's effort to enter the finals of the Champions League soccer after its win over Atalanta scoring 2 goals in the final minutes. It meets Leipzig just as Paris battles a second wave of the coronavirus after reopening.

WSJ Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Worsenign outbreaks of coronavirus in the midwest U.S. comes with resumption of sports games on Oct. 23. Campuses at Michigan State, Minnesota and Nebraska see infection rates in the general population of over 5%. Rates are also high at the University of Michigan  in Ann Arbor. Community viral spread factor is missing in the effort to restart sports games, and has drawn criticism from local governments.

BBC Sport Original article ›
The Guardian Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
The German approach to soccer with fans running the sport is seen with envy in Britain, Italy and Spain, now that the Super League plan to split off the richer well known teams into a Super League has failed miserably. It did not last 48 hours before the organizers, a Liverpool billionaire and others apologized. Fans were angry that the clubs built into their local communities in London, Manchester and other British cities were being taken away from them. Noteworthy is that German teams and French teams at the top of world soccer never joined in the Super League plan. In fact Borussia Dortmund made a vigorous protest. Bayern Munich stayed out, so did Paris St Germain. Klopp and Guardiola were the first to protest. In this report Uli Hesse of The Guardian tells us why German clubs are rooted in their communities. German clubs started as amateur clubs run by volunteers and remained that way till some professionalism was brought in by 1963. The communities and fans are very much a part of German clubs, which are not seen as part of the larger entertainment industry as in the US and Britain. The clubs are still run as part of the communities and fans in the local area. There are some Austrian entrepreneurs, but owned by locals and fans, and nothing like what is happening in the British or American approach to soccer. Most of the clubs were set up in Germany to support multiple sports in their communities. So that track and field was part of Dortmund, and chess was part of Bayern Munich Club sports. After the disaster with the fans British prime minister Boris Johnson has called for a review, and this includes bringing back the original spirit of the sport as community based and owned by fans or the local community, not business interests and billionaires from outside. ...
DW.COM Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Ralf Rangnick is one of the most influential persons in German soccer, known to the public as "football professor." He coached Schalke and now takes up the job of coaching AC Milan.

dw.com Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
DW.com gives this detailed account of the developments in the Luis Rubiales case in Spanish football, including comments made by Spain's leading footballer Andres Iniesta on the need to restore the integrity of Spanish football and the women's game. Iniesta's statement begins with the words, "as a father of three daughters and a husband..," that he was saddened by the events that have affected the wonderful history created by Spanish footballers during the World Cup and the image of Spain and Spanish football in the world. Spain and Portugal, Morocco are a contender for the World Cup hosting in 2030 which could depend on how this case is resolved, says DW.com.

The Times Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
This report in The Times remembers Alex Ferguson, manager of soccer team Manchester United for the wonderful way he motivated his players, by appealing to players hearts. One player who went through that period under Alex remembers Sir Alex talk about the work ethic of shipyard workers and miners, the culture of Manchester United, the importance of making your family proud, and not "letting yourself down."

The Guardian Original article ›
BBC Sport Original article ›
The Guardian Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Donnarumma saves against Aston Villa helped PSG win 5-4 in Aggregate. Luis Enrique calls the goalie "sensational."

DW.COM Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Germany's soccer coach Joachim Low spells out his strategy in the upcoming World Cup. Germany is trying to win a consecutive World Cup, a tough feat. Low says luck and outside influences can play a role, though planning will help. He describes the role of the coach in this report as a visionary, looking to the future, the contact person, special relationships with players. Kamilla Jarzina talked to Low for this interview.

The Guardian Original article ›
Economist Original article ›
The Times Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Turning Manchester city into the hardest team to play is hard thought and hard won says this report in The Times. It says it does not run naturally with Pep Guardiola's idea of beautiful attacking football and his one of his finest achievements. This was seen in the game with Atletico Madrid with few shots on goal by Atletico Madrid. This could be decisive in the game with Liverpool.

The Guardian Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
After winning the Nation's League final over Netherlands next we will see her playing soccer in the Olympics. Aitana Bonmati talks about her life and experiences. Bonmati has given a boost to women's soccer with her talents, hard work and resilience, and by reaching out to fans all over Europe and the world. Alex Ibaceta interviews Spain's Bonmati in The Guardian. She started out playing with the boys because there were no girls to play with. She signs up for the town's football team Club Depotiu Ribes and Club de Football Cubelles playing with boys. As a cadete (14-15 years) she had to switch to playing on women's teams. This was a change at first as she had to learn to interact with girls. She says we had worse general conditions in life simply for being girls and even more in football. These were years when there was no professional women's soccer. She thought she wold play for a few years and then go to the US for studies, considering the University of Oregon. This is when she gets called to the women's first team. Bonmati talks about her mentality, not just the talent and hard work, but the mentality of sacrifice, resilience, fight and want to be better every day. To every young girl trying out a new sport, she describes this- it is a journey that is not pretty at times, there are bad moments, but these bad moments are what make you better as you learn to keep improving and know how to keep getting better. And to take on difficulties as opportunities. When she was goinghome from training with her father, they would use public transport and get home at 1 am. Looking back to where she is now idolized by young girls , what she has been able to accomplish she says it was not down to luck but all the hard work throughout the years. ...
The Times Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
The story told here about a Frenchman Arsene Wenger who is made the new manager of Arsenal in 1996. A complete outsider who is thought of as knowing nothing about English football is faced with changing the culture and ways of thinking at Arsenal. His first encounter with the media and reports about a visit he made to the South of France leading to calls for him to resign is revisited here from his new book.

DW.COM Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
2G+ concept in Bundesliga means that football stadiums in Germany are filling up to capacity with fans who are double vaccinated or tested not required to wear masks. Small groups of fans not fully vaccinated are separated in separate locations in the stadium requiring masks and social distancing. German states are experimenting with this new concept after some 570 days when stadiums were closed.

Political messages and protest messages are rampant in stadiums as they reopen says DW.com


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