'A good learning curve' – Virgil van Dijk explains how Liverpool are adapting to new Trent Alexander-Arnold role

Despite Trent Alexander-Arnold's hybrid position still being new to Liverpool, Virgil van Dijk has complimented the diversity it brings to the club.

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Van Dijk talks about new TAA roleSays Liverpool still adapting TAA in a transitional role for the clubWHAT HAPPENED?

Since April, Jurgen Klopp has altered the set-up of the Liverpool side around the strengths of the Englishman. The 25-year-old has been stepping into midfield when the Reds are in possession, while he drops into his old role when defending. He equalised the scoring at the Etihad on Saturday night in a 1-1 draw with Manchester City by shooting into the bottom corner from the outside of the area.

AdvertisementWHAT VIRGIL VAN DIJK SAID

“It’s about mixing it up," Van Dijk said [via The Athletic]. "We started doing that since April and I think we had a very good run where we did well. We’re still learning, he's still learning, adapting in certain situations. City are very good in that they have that proper plan and we are getting better and better at that as well. It’s a new dimension but still working on it and we can only benefit from it."

“I don’t know that’s for the coaches that work with him," he added. "For the moment he’s playing just fine where he is right now. He has that freedom to mix it up and he has to do that because you see teams are working it out at times so he has to be able to switch from staying on the outside and going on the inside as well."

"It’s a good learning curve for him as well and (on Saturday) he did that well because obviously, he was playing against one of the most in-form wingers (Jeremy Doku) at the moment. So to be important with the goal and also his interceptions is very important."

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Alexander-Arnold has played in a more traditional midfield role for England in recent internationals, but Van Dijk has stated that there are no intentions to replicate that at club level for the time being.

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WHAT NEXT FOR ALEXANDER-ARNOLD?

The two defenders will next be in action in the Europa League when Liverpool take on LASK on Thursday, November 30.

Pietersen giving South Africa career 'a thought'

Kevin Pietersen has admitted trying to return to international cricket by playing for South Africa is “a thought in my head”

ESPNcricinfo staff10-Apr-20162:02

Cullinan: No chance of KP playing for South Africa

Kevin Pietersen has admitted trying to return to international cricket by playing for South Africa is “a thought in my head.”Pietersen would become eligible for South Africa in 2018 – four years after his England career was ended following the 2013-14 Ashes when he was sacked by the ECB – at which point he would be 37 years old. The chance of appearing at the 2019 World Cup, to be held in England, could appeal to him.The notion of an unlikely international return for the country of his birth was first suggested by Darren Gough, a close friend of Pietersen, and it has not been completely dismissed.”Yes, it is a thought in my head,” Pietersen said as he began his latest stint at the IPL. “If it happens, it happens, if it doesn’t, it doesn’t. Obviously, playing international is something I have done for a very long time.”Do I miss playing international cricket? Do I miss batting in international cricket? Yes, I do very much so you never know. The eligibility for South Africa is still a year away. So we will have to wait and see but it is definitely still an option.”One of the major fallouts during Pietersen’s England career came during the 2012 series against South Africa when he sent derogatory texts about then captain Andrew Strauss to Graeme Smith.He was left out for the final Test of that series before returning in India, where he helped win the series, before a year later relationships unravelled again during the Ashes whitewash which came to a head when Paul Downton, then the managing director of England cricket, said he had never seen a player so “disengaged” from his team.Earlier this year, when Pietersen was initially linked with South Africa, their T20 captain Faf du Plessis was quick to play down the suggestion. “KP is a player who’s had a great career for England. But certainly, from a South African perspective… he’s English,” he said.Last week, Alec Stewart, the Surrey director of cricket, said that Pietersen was unlikely to appear in English cricket again as he focuses on overseas T20 leagues. It was almost a year ago that Pietersen made an unbeaten 355 for Surrey before being told later the same day by Strauss, England’s newly installed director of cricket, that he would not be recalled by England.

'The biggest waste in football' – What went wrong for ex-France, PSG and Newcastle favourite Hatem Ben Arfa?

The diminutive attacking midfielder always had bags of talent – but never reached his full potential

In 2016, Hatem Ben Arfa arrived at Paris Saint-Germain as a player looking to revive a once-promising career. Five years later, he won a lawsuit against the club for €100,000 (£86,000/$110,000) after making only 30 appearances and scoring three goals. He was perhaps the first, but certainly not the last, in a series of failed signings to arrive in the French capital falling into the category of a world-class talent turned bargain buy, who showed exactly why he had fallen from the top.

Ben Arfa is now remembered in YouTube compilations and adoring tweets. His highlight reel remains impressive, a fixture of football fans’ “streets won’t forget” rhetoric. But those goals, impressive as they were, paint a far kinder picture of the attacking midfielder. Instead, Ben Arfa was an immense talent forgotten, or, as his former agent claimed: "A huge waste – maybe the biggest waste in football of the 21st century."

Once dubbed by himself as equal parts sensitive and impulsive, Ben Arfa is now a reminder of how players destined for greatness can so easily get it all wrong.

Still, it’s not quite that simple. Ben Arfa’s decline wasn’t linear — he was too good for that. Instead, his career was defined by a number of false dawns, a player who seemed to promise that he would reach his best, before failing to do so in the most dramatic of circumstances.

Getty'He was on a different level to the others'

Ben Arfa broke into the Lyon first team as the other half of a promising duo, featuring alongside an 18-year-old Karim Benzema for a team full of talent. And for long stretches, he was arguably better than the man who would eventually light up the Santiago Bernabeu.

"He was on a different level to the others. Everyone was raving about him," Paul Montgomery, a former high-level recruiting advisor for Newcastle, told .

Ben Arfa's quality and technical ability was apparent early on, with the teenager drifting between opponents, and scampering into space with the ball glued to his feet. He would soon be scoring the kind of goals that he became an internet sensation for. The first big one came against Stuttgart in the 2007-08 Champions League, with Ben Arfa darting down the wing, swivelling past two defenders, and blasting home from an impossible angle. He did it again in Ligue 1, weaving through the Toulouse defence before placing the ball into the bottom corner. Two weeks later, he added another for the highlight reel, a 30-yard ping in a 2-0 win over Lorient.

He finished that season eight goals and six assists, a campaign impressive enough to secure a then-significant €12 million (£10.2m/$13.4m) move to Ligue 1 rivals Marseille — despite interest from a host of top European clubs.

AdvertisementGetty'I will never go back to Marseille'

But it was there that the troubles started. Ben Arfa had always had something of an attitude, something he proved by getting into a training ground scuffle with centre-back Sebastien Squillaci towards the end of his time at Lyon. The two came to blows in the dressing room after a hard tackle and verbal exchange at training. Ben Arfa was an unused substitute in the following game. Squillaci, though, was entrusted to come off the bench.

That wasn't an isolated incident. Ben Arfa left Lyon with little grace, dubbing the league winners a small club before his move. And he found himself in hot water within two weeks of his Marseille career, coming to blows with former Liverpool striker Djibril Cisse in training. The France international was swiftly loaned out to Sunderland.

On the pitch, though, Ben Arfa was mesmerising. He scored six goals in his first 11 appearances, immediately worth all of the money Marseille paid, and the controversy that came with him. Still, his attitude would soon outweigh his talent. There was another bust-up, this time with Modeste M'bami before a Champions League clash with Liverpool. He followed it by refusing to warm up against PSG, claiming he was injured. There were missed training sessions, shots at the manager in the media, and a sometimes blatant refusal to pass to his teammates. But in between came moments of magic, more goals, assists and dribbles to fill the highlight reel.

Other oppprtunities would soon arise, though. And Ben Arfa, no longer interested in playing for Marseille, went on strike.

"I will never go back to Marseille,” he told L'Equipe. "It's finished. I am ready to not play for the season. I have my pride, my dignity. I am not a stopgap."

Getty Images'It was a joke how good he was'

Some at Newcastle had wanted to buy Ben Arfa as early as 2005. Montgomery begged the club to sign the then 15-year-old, according to . At the time, he was available for £500,000 ($650,000), yet to pen a professional deal at Lyon. But the Newcastle management hadn't even heard of him, even though he was dubbed a prodigy in France.

Eight years later, the Magpies spent five times that on a loan with a buy option for a 23-year-old with notorious attitude problems. He left Marseille with equal gusto as he did Lyon two years earlier, explaining his departure in no uncertain terms: "Club officials don’t give a damn about me. I’m prepared to put my career on hold if they do not accept the offer from Newcastle. I’m not just a sack of dirty washing or a piece of sh*t."

So, despite all of Ben Arfa's talent, it was a massive risk for the Magpies. Those fears were soon quelled by a goal on his full debut, with Ben Arfa rifling home a shot from 30 yards out in a 1-0 win at Goodison Park.

Those famous attitude issues wouldn't crop up again, if only because a gruesome leg break would end his debut season in October. The following year was arguably Ben Arfa's best in professional football, a campaign that cemented his cult hero status. The Frenchman bagged five goals and added six assists as Newcastle made an unlikely push for fifth place in the English top flight.

"It was a joke how good he was. We’d heard everyone raving about him and you saw it instantly. Natural talent and flair," former Magpies midfielder James Perch recalled.

That season is seldom remembered for Newcastle's overall performance or Demba Ba's 16 league goals. Instead, it was marked by a run that has etched itself into Premier League folklore. You've probably seen it before. Ben Arfa spins around one Bolton defender inside his own half before accelerating down the pitch. He then evades a tackle, dinks the ball over the lunge of another, and finishes past a helpless goalkeeper. It remains one of the best goals in Premier League history, a fixture in YouTube compilations with hyperbolic titles.

And that was the peak of his time in England. Ben Arfa, just 24, spent the last three years in English football falling out of favour with teammates and managers alike. At one point, club captain Fabricio Coloccini approached manager Alan Pardew and demanded that Ben Arfa be benched, threatening that the rest of the team would refuse to play if he was in the lineup.

By the end of things, he was sent out to Hull City on loan, later dubbing himself a 'prisoner' as the Mike Ashley-run Magpies collapsed. Newcastle terminated his contract at the end of 2014, six weeks before its planned expiry.

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Gettyimages'Within 10 minutes, my choice was made'

But Ben Arfa was too good to simply fade away. In January 2015, and still in his prime, he signed for Nice on a free. He claimed, at the time, that he would snub any and all other offers for the mid table French club. Ben Arfa, so often criticised by his teammates at Newcastle for a lack of commitment and poor performances in training, wanted to reclaim the spotlight. He made that clear in his introductory press conference.

"Within 10 minutes, my choice was made," the Frenchman said. "Even if Real Madrid had called at that moment, my mind was made up."

His transformative return would have to be put on hold, though, as he was unable to play for the remainder of a season due to UEFA rules blocking him from playing for a third club in the same campaign. That six-month break seemed to work wonders for his career. Ben Arfa dazzled for Nice the following season, scoring 17 and adding six assists as his side clinched a Europa League spot.

And the highlights were as glorious as expected: quick nutmegs, sharp turns and effortless finishes. Ben Arfa had his dream position, asked to float around and create. Finally, he was an undisputed focal point of a side — and showed exactly what he could do when given license to roam. It resulted in an unlikely recall to a French international side that had subbed him for four years, although he didn't make the squad for Les Bleus' eventual Euro 2016 final loss.

Weston McKennie's time to shine! USMNT star puts in solid shift against Empoli after replacing teammate Timothy Weah in Juventus XI

Weston McKennie and Tim Weah seem to be competing for the same position, with the former getting the start in Juventus' win over Empoli on Sunday.

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McKennie starts at right wingbackFirst start of season for USMNT starWeah named to bench

McKennie started the match at the right wing-back position, having come off the bench in the club's first two matches of the Serie A season. He replaced his U.S. men's national team teammate Tim Weah in the XI, with the ex-Lille man seemingly picking up a knock in Juve's recent draw with Bologna. Weah, though, would ultimately come off the bench late on and nearly pick up an asisst for Juve.

With McKennie in the XI, Juve were able to seal a 2-0 win, taking them to seven points from their first three Serie A matches. That puts them third in the table, behind only Inter and AC Milan, who are perfect with three wins from three to start the season as clubs head into the international break.

Getty ImagesWHAT HAPPENED?

Juventus seized the lead in the 24th minute through Danilo, who took advantage of some chaos in the box. Empoli were unable to clear a Juve corner kick, and, after both teams had several swings at it, it was Danilo that fired it home to put Juve ahead.

The Old Lady had several chances to increase that lead, but were thwarted time and time again. Dusan Vlahovic missed a penalty late in the first half, while Paul Pogba saw a goal ruled out midway through the second due to an offside call on Vlahovic.

Winger Federico Chiesa scored the eventual winner for Juventus with a stunning solo-effort where he rounded Empoli goalkeeper Etrit Berisha to make in 2-0 and seal all three points.

AdvertisementGettyTHE BIGGER PICTURE

McKennie was solid enough in his start out wide, looking comfortable despite only having limited minutes in the position.

Defensively, McKennie was steady as can be, making several tackles while winning 100 percent of his duels. On the attacking end, he left a bit to be desired, giving the ball away a few too many times while failing to really threaten with his crosses. He also had one shot, which was blocked away.

The 25-year-old routinely found himself in dangerous positions, though, especially early on as he made multiple back post runs, but was never found by any of his teammates in those moments.

As for Weah, he came on for a late cameo, replacing McKennie for the game's final moments. And you could argue he was more dangerous in those minutes than McKennie was as his cross towards Arkadiusz Milik was headed off the bar in stoppage time.

GettyUSMNT IMPACT

While it's not ideal for the USMNT to see McKennie and Weah splitting time in a position they likely won't play at the international level, it could be worse.

For now, the key for both will be getting consistent minutes and, at the moment, both are. In a perfect world, McKennie would be starting in Juventus' midfield but, at the moment, he hasn't quite broken into that group.

Can that change going forward? Absolutely, especially if he puts in solid performances in this wing-back role. For now, both Weah and McKennie can focus on the international level, though, as they prepare to play on the wing and in midfield, respectively, over these next two games.

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GettyGOAL'S RATINGS

Weston McKennie (7/10):

A decent shift for the American, who was a bit better defensively than he was in the attacking end. A good option in this position, as he has the workrate and physical ability for it. However, he'll need to be more efficient with the ball at his feet and, because of that, this performance wasn't enough to see him threaten to leapfrog Weah for a regular spot.

Timothy Weah (N/A):

Came on late to replace his international teammate, but did make an impact during his cameo. Should have had a late assist on a fantastic cross to Milik.

'Catastrophe' for Alisha Lehmann and Switzerland! Euro 2025 hosts see funding for tournament cut drastically in controversial move that has caused 'outrage' in parliament

The decision to cut the funding for the 2025 women's European Championship in Switzerland has been labelled a "catastrophe".

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Federal govt cuts Euro 2025 fundsCompetition to take place in SwitzerlandDecision labelled a 'catastrophe'Getty ImagesWHAT HAPPENED?

Swiss publication SRF states the country's Federal Council does not want to spend as much money on the women's Euros, where Aston Villa star Alisha Lehmann will be the face of the tournament, as originally planned. The report says 15 million Swiss Francs (£13.5m) were initially earmarked but that has fallen to 4 million Swiss Francs (£3.6m) – something that has been widely criticised.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT CRITICS HAVE SAID

GLP National Councillor Corina Gredig, who is co-president of the parliamentary group “Euro 25”, said there is outrage in parliament. “If you say now that you don’t have any money, then it will turn into a grumpy tournament," she told SRF.

Meanwhile, SP National Councilor Matthias Aebischer, president of the parliamentary sports group, said this was the wrong message for young girls looking to get into the sport.

He commented: "And now the Federal Council comes and says: We are not giving any money for the 2025 Women’s European Championship in Switzerland. This is simply a catastrophe.”

Thun local councilor Katharina Ali-Oesch added: “Pure disappointment. We were expecting something completely different than what has now come from the federal government and that poses major challenges for everyone."

GettyTHE BIGGER PICTURE

The 2025 tournament is taking place in eight Swiss cities: Zurich, Basel, Bern, Thun, St. Gallen, Lucerne, Sion and Geneva. The fact that funds have been significantly slashed is not a good look for promoting women's football in Switzerland and, arguably, sends a negative message about the game, too. Moreover, the less funds a tournament has, the less likely it will be will run smoothly; plus, they beat France, Poland, and a joint Scandinavian bid to stage the competition – one that others desperately wanted to host.

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WHAT NEXT?

The 14th edition of the women's Euros is scheduled to get underway on July 2, 2025, and will be made up of 16 teams. England will be looking to retain their title when the tournament comes round in just under 18 months' time.

Harry Kane to be reunited with former Premier League rival? Bayern target Palhinha responds to January transfer talk after failed summer move from Fulham

Fulham star Joao Palhinha has denied that he is thinking about a possible move to Bayern Munich in the January transfer window.

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Palhinha almost joined Bayern in summerMidfielder says his focus is on FulhamBayern said to be cooling interest in himWHAT HAPPENED?

Palhinha came close to joining Bayern in the summer transfer window and is even reported to have travelled to Munich for a medical, only for the deal to fall through. Despite signing a new contract with Fulham, he has been linked with a possible January switch and Bayern sporting director Christoph Freund admitted the midfielder is still being monitored by the club.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT PALHINHA SAID

The Portugal international was asked if he is still considering a switch to Bayern, but he insists his focus is on finishing off the month of December with Fulham. He said to (via ): "It's not messing with my head, I'm calm. I'm not thinking much about what will come next. I'm thinking about the seven games we have ahead of us in December, they are complicated games, there is Boxing Day, it all comes together. It's an important month for Fulham and for me too. And that's where my focus is. Whatever has to happen in January will happen."

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Despite their efforts to sign him in the summer, Bayern are not lining up a new bid for him in the next transfer window, reports. Despite this, Fulham are preparing for the possibility of him leaving next month and are eyeing Brazil and Fluminense midfielder Andre as a possible replacement, according to

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WHAT NEXT FOR PALHINHA?

Palhinha, who has scored twice in the Premier League this season, has six more games to play in December with Fulham before the January transfer window opens. The Craven Cottage club are up against West Ham at home on Sunday.

Hard-working Worcestershire eke out rewards

Joe Leach nipped a potential Middlesex recovery in the bud before Tom Fell and Moeen Ali hit half-centuries to keep Worcestershire on top

Vithushan Ehantharajah at Uxbridge22-Jun-2015
ScorecardTom Fell struck an unbeaten 75 to mount a strong Worcestershire reply•Getty ImagesDespite the loss of 16 overs in the morning, Worcestershire were able to maintain control of a game that, not for the first time this season, they have bossed for the first half. Even when it looked like Middlesex were about to begin a substantial tail-wag to take them beyond the 110-over mark, Joe Leach took three wickets in 11 balls to nip it in the bud.The first saw James Harris trapped in front – the ball keeping a touch low – and the second came with the very next delivery as Toby Roland-Jones wafted at one he should have left well alone. Tim Murtagh survived the hat-trick ball from Leach, pushing a single into the off side, before Ollie Rayner inside-edged for another to take Middlesex to 300. Rayner it was whose eventual departure gave Leach figures of 4 for 81.With the wicket of Roland-Jones, Leach moved to 35 for the season, surpassing his total return in 2014 in his sixth Championship match. It also meant that Worcestershire have now collected full bowling points from an incredible 35 of their last 36 Championship matches.Credit must go to their bowling coach Matt Mason, a Western Australian who has forged a professional seam attack that pride themselves on not wasting deliveries. He talks about bowling fuller lengths and being brave as bowlers; looking to hit the stumps more often and bring in all modes of dismissal. “Prepare to be driven as opposed to cut and pulled,” is the mindset he has instilled. Leach’s spell was indicative of that.Like all good coaches, he is self aware – “I’m happy to admit I don’t know everything” – and has a strong desire to learn. He picks the brains of his contemporaries and those who know better, whether they are the bowling coaches of international touring sides or close company. Jason Gillespie is a long-term mentor of his and conversation between the two is regular and fluid. It is from Gillespie that he picked up an equation that he now uses as a guide for his bowlers: economy rate multiplied by strike rate, added to the bowling average.If the bowler ends up with a number under 200, they are doing a lot right. All three of the seam bowlers in the Worcestershire attack fall in to this bracket so far in 2015 (Charlie Morris 191.42; Jack Shantry 138.95; Joe Leach 126.09).”It brings in all facets of bowling,” Mason says, “the cost of your wicket and also your ability to take them. It’s a really good way of giving the guys something to focus on.”Worcestershire’s first innings was a slow and steady affair. What enthusiasm there was around in the fold-up chairs after the rains had come and gone was slowly broken down in a mammoth evening session of 45 overs.Daryl Mitchell took 33 balls to get off the mark, by which time he had already lost his opening partner Richard Oliver, who was adjudged to have nicked Harris’ fifth ball of the match through to John Simpson. Oliver’s reaction suggested it was anything but bat.Mitchell was then joined by Moeen Ali, who was also watchful, timing defensive shots into the off side with great clarity and leaving lots. Three fours came off Harris, whose extra pace on to the bat allowed Moeen some substance for his stylish flourishes.Faced with an over of Rayner before lunch, he displayed a bit of force to hit down the ground and then to midwicket to overtake Mitchell. Post-lunch, you could not have scripted a more Moeen display.Scripted is probably the wrong word – “curated” would be more appropriate. Each signature piece to his game was on show; the timing, the placement, the execution. Even the singles were worth remembering. At times the crowd sighed with pleasure when an immaculate drive found a fielder. Even the shots for none were shots for them.He moved into the forties with an indulgent aerial drive through a vacant cover, before going to 46 by top-edging a hook over the keeper’s head. Fifty was brought up with a lazy dab behind point for his 10th boundary. An even lazier stroke brought about his demise as he chipped a slower ball to Roland-Jones at mid-off.After the demise of Moeen, Tom Fell took it upon himself to entertain the crowd. His drives were sweet and measured; his judgement sound and unwavering. Middlesex “ooooed” and “aaaahed” in a bid to convince him that his off stump was not where he thought it was. But he knew better.Unlike Ali, there are no flourishes to his batting but, at the same time, there seem to be no rough edges either. He knows his game, he knows his shots and he knows that his hands and feet need not to be too far away from his body to make the most of bowler error.Even when he flicks the ball around the corner, there is little follow-through where some might exaggerate with a whip of the wrists in a bid to make it seem the shot was more Kingston, Jamaica than Kingston-upon-Thames. His innings was a microcosm of Worcestershire’s work ethic and has them in a strong position going into day three.

From Serie B to nine-time Scudetto winner – Gianluigi Buffon's greatest moments at Juventus

With the Italian icon having made his last appearance on Sunday, Goal looks back at his remarkable 17-year stay in Turin

Getty ImagesThe most expensive goalkeeper ever

After proving himself the best young goalkeeper in the world at Parma, the 23-year-old Gianluigi Buffon became the most expensive goalkeeper in history when he joined Juventus in 2001 for €52 million, which remains a record.

"Juve are a very big team," the Carrara native said at the time, "and I'm sure we're going to win many trophies together."

He wasn't wrong…

AdvertisementGetty ImagesFigo penalty save

Juventus were 2-0 up on the night, and 3-2 ahead on aggregate, when Real Madrid were awarded a penalty in the 67th minute of the pair's Champions League semi-final second-leg showdown in Turin in 2003.

Ballon d'Or winner Luis Figo stepped up to take it but his spot-kick was superbly read by Buffon, who dived to his right to push the ball away to safety. 

Just six minutes later, Pavel Nedved made it 3-0, thus rendering Zinedine Zidane's late goal purely academic. However, as Juve midfielder Alessio Tacchinardi admitted afterwards, "If Figo's penalty had gone in, the game could have been very different."

Getty ImagesInzaghi save

Juve's appearance in the 2003 final ended in bitter disappointment, with AC Milan triumphing 3-2 on penalties after the two sides had played out an absorbing 0-0 draw after 120 tension-filled minutes at Old Trafford.

Buffon couldn't have done much more to help his side over the line, even saving two spot-kicks, from Clarence Seedorf and Kakha Kaladze, in the shootout.

In addition, Juve would have fallen behind just 16 minutes in had it not been for their goalkeeper, who pulled off a stunning stop from an Inzaghi header that left the Milan forward holding his head in sheer disbelief.

"Even today, I still don't know how he got to that ball," SuperPippo later admitted.

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Getty ImagesStaying at Juventus in Serie B

During a question and answer session with young Juventus fans a couple of years ago, a boy stood up and introduced himself as Lorenzo from Parma.

"Here's my question," he began. "Why did you decide to go down to Serie B with Juventus [in 2006] when you were a World Cup winner, given so many other teams wanted you?"

"Hi Lorenzo," Buffon replied. "Say hello to Parma for me when you go home – it always has a place in my heart.

"Anyway, I chose to drop down into Serie B with Juve because I thought of you. I thought about you because, in football, we talk a lot. But I firmly believe in certain moments you need to replace words with deeds."

Ansu Fati's father is right: Barcelona's 'new Lionel Messi' needs to quit Camp Nou

The forward's love for the club is obvious but a parting of the ways would be best for everyone involved at this stage.

The circumstances in which Bori Fati could have ended his son's Barcelona career were quite extraordinary.

Bori, Ansu's father and agent, called into Spanish radio station , to air out a number of grievances about his son's situation at Barcelona. He complained about Ansu's lack of playing time, he railed against bigger roles handed to other players.

And, perhaps most importantly, Bori called on his son to leave the club he joined as a teenager.

Ansu was apparently blindsided by the outburst and may release a statement of his own, reaffirming his love for Barca. But the damage may already be done.

At the very least, it's another negative development in what should have been a momentous career from a footballer who is still growing.

Indeed, at a time when he should be looking forward to starting against Elche on Saturday, with Raphinha suspended and Ousmane Dembele injured, he is instead dealing with a furore over his future.

It's quite the fall from grace. Just two years ago, remember, Fati was hailed as Barcelona's 'new Lionel Messi' and even handed the No.10 shirt. Now, he can't even nail down a starting spot.

🏆 TOP STORY: Gavi loses first-team status at Barca📣 HAVE YOUR SAY: Who should replace Conte at Spurs?🚨 MUST READ: The cost of top-four failure for Liverpool

He isn't the first teenager to be boxed into the Argentine's influence at Barcelona. Indeed, a string of young talents have been dubbed the second coming of the club legend.

Still, Fati was supposed to be the one that panned out. He was never going to reach Messi's talent, influence or production – no one can. But he appeared, at the very least, to be trending in the right direction.

And now, Fati might slip into a familiar Barcelona trap, another failure in a handful of promising attacking players to see their careers flatlined by expectation.

It might be time for the immensely talented 20-year-old to get out of Camp Nou before that can happen.

The heir to Messi's throne

Everyone knew Fati was good. The Guinea-born winger was accelerated through La Masia and called into the first team before making a single appearance with the reserve side.

He was a real viral sensation, too, his feints and tricks too easily likened to that of Barca's more permanent right winger at the time.

He got his moment in the midst of a miserable season for the Blaugrana. The Catalan club had been ravaged by injuries in 2020, and the soon-to-leave Ernesto Valverde arguably had no choice but to turn to Fati, who was just 16 at the time.

The prodigy seized his chance with aplomb. He became the second youngest player to appear for Barcelona, the youngest to start in the club's history, and the youngest to score and assist in La Liga.

The teenager grew into the side and, by the end of the season, had bagged eight goals across 15 starts.

The quality of the goals were eye-catching, too. Fati wasn't just scoring tap-ins. The teenager loved to cut on to his wonderful right foot and shoot at goal. But he could also score with his head, and make late runs into the box.

The press swiftly jumped onto the hype train, and interest from across Europe followed. A Spain call-up came shortly, as did praise from then-national team manager Luis Enrique. In August 2020, club president Josep Bartomeu vowed to keep him at Camp Nou for life.

And, inevitably, the claims of a Messi successor stuck.

The 2020 season turned sour very quickly, though, with Barcelona failing to win a single trophy for the first time in 12 years. It was all capped off by an embarrassing 8-2 drubbing by Bayern Munich in the Champions League quarter-finals.

Amid all that doom and gloom, though, Barcelona had reason for excitement thanks to Fati.

AdvertisementIMAGO / ShutterstockThe original injury

Sadly, it all started to go wrong soon after.

Fati's first major injury was a freak occurrence.

In November 2020, a Real Betis defender tackled Fati, and his knee twisted awkwardly into the Camp Nou grass. A devastating injury diagnosis followed a day later: the teenager had torn his inner meniscus.

The surgery went as planned but, according to , Barcelona messed up Fati's recovery, asking him to do two rehab sessions a day, rather than the required one.

His knee swelled up and, within two months, he was forced to go under the knife again, this time to fix the original procedure.

But that operation didn't quite work out either, and Fati ended up having a chunk of his meniscus removed altogether.

By the end of it all, Fati had had four operations in six months on the same knee. What should have been a three-month recovery turned into nearly 11.

GettyFurther fitness problems

But even when his knee healed, it became clear that Fati wasn't quite right.

Although he returned to something resembling his old form in November 2021 – bagging goals against Celta Vigo and Dynamo Kyiv – more knocks followed.

His hamstring went once, then a second time. Meanwhile, he was feeling soreness in his right knee. Another operation was recommended, but he said no.

He eventually returned to the fold more permanently at the end of last season, making five appearances, all off the bench.

Fati was crying out for minutes, but Xavi insisted that the player who had thrived as a left winger should operate as a central striker.

Under that duress, Fati failed to score in just over 100 minutes of game time. He tallied five shots on target in five games as Barca's season fizzled out.

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Getty ImagesFinally fit but not firing

But now, something uncharacteristic has happened: Fati is fully fit.

He has still endured the odd knock here, a muscle pull there. But he has made 40 appearances this season, scoring six and assisting four in all competitions.

And glimpses of the Fati of old remain. Goals against Cadiz, Villarreal and Real Betis offered hope. A standout performance against Intercity showed promise. His legs are slower, but the movement, runs and intelligence are still there.

But then, there have been the misses. He skied a free header against Man United that could have changed the fortunes of an unsuccessful European campaign. There was also an accidental block of his own team-mate's shot that would have given the Blaugrana a 2-0 aggregate lead over Real Madrid.

For all of those mistakes, Fati has been slammed by the press, pushed further out of the first-team picture at Camp Nou.

And now Barcelona are winning, Fati no longer has the time to fail. The misses count more than they did then, because there’s intense competition for places, particularly up front.

Playing for Barcelona is a ruthless thing; playing for a successful Barcelona is even more difficult. Fati is just a victim of the team's improvement under Xavi.

However, his struggles at club level are affecting his international prospects. Fati was also meant to be Spain's next great attacker but he didn't even make the squad for the start of La Roja's Euro 2024 qualification campaign.

Worse still, it's been reported that Luis Enrique was talking about Fati when he recently revealed that he regretted taking one player to the 2022 World Cup in Qatar…

Top 10 most controversial VAR decisions in football

With VAR about to be introduced in the Premier League for the first time, Goal rounds up its most memorable (and contentious) decisions

It's fair to say that VAR (Video Assistant Referee) has garnered more critics than fans, with its use in tournaments such as World Cup, the Champions League and Copa America causing more disruption than orderliness.

Sure, the stakes are higher when VAR is used in knockout competitions, but ahead of its first season in the Premier League – which is certain to be eventful – here are some of VAR's most eventful instances across football.

GettyScotland vs Argentina, 2019 Women’s World Cup

The 2019 Women’s World Cup was memorable for many reasons, though its VAR-related controversies were one of the main talking points.

In an eventful round of 16 fixture, Scotland looked to have secured a 3-2 victory over Argentina. There was controversy already when a decision was made to award Argentina a penalty three minutes from full-time, only for goalkeeper Lee Alexander to save it. The real chaos ensued, however, when VAR judged that Alexander was off her line.

The penalty was retaken, and this time Florencia Bonsegundo scored to pull one back for her side, levelling the score at 3-3 and sending Scotland home at the death.

The new goalkeeping rule was already causing ire throughout the World Cup, with the new regulations introduced on June 1 stating that goalkeepers must have one foot at least partly on the goal line when the kick is taken, and neither can stand behind or in front of the line.

AdvertisementGettyArgentina vs Brazil, Copa America semi-final 2019

Argentina vs Brazil’s semi-final match in the 2019 Copa America made headlines not only because of the high-profile nature of the game, but because of the VAR-related controversy that caused Lionel Messi to heavily criticise CONMEBOL.

"There is no doubt, the whole thing is set up for Brazil," he said. "I hope the VAR and referees don't play any part in the final and that Peru can compete but it looks tough to me.

"I did not want to be part of this corruption, we shouldn't have to be part of this disrespect we suffered during the Copa America."

His anger refers to two incidents in the final 20 minutes of the game, when Sergio Aguero was about to run in onto a Messi pass before tumbling over Dani Alves in the box. The ball was then cleared, with Gabriel Jesus bursting forward to play the ball to Roberto Firmino who scored the second goal. In Messi’s opinion, VAR should have awarded a penalty following Alves’ foul, which would have changed the course of the game.

The second incident refers to Arthur seemingly heavily shoving Nicolas Otamendi deliberately with his shoulder as the Argentine international was about to meet a left-wing corner, though no foul was given.

GettyMan City vs Tottenham, 2018-19 UCL

During Man City’s drama-filled quarter-final clash with Tottenham in the UCL, two notable VAR-related events came up. The first was when Fernando Llorente scored to make it 4-3 to Tottenham, therefore sending the Londoners through on away goals.

Llorente scored in the 73rd minute, but on replay, it looked as if the ball was close to hitting his hand or elbow area before falling into the net – prompting calls of handball.

The referee reviewed the incident on the pitch side monitors but ruled out a handball, allowing the goal and incensing the Etihad supporters.

Man City needed to score one more goal to keep their UCL hopes alive, and Raheem Sterling looked to have saved the day in stoppage time when he scored his hat-trick to level the score at 4-4. VAR, though, deemed that when Aguero received the ball at the start of the play, he was offside when the ball touched Bernardo Silva, therefore disallowing the goal and breaking City hearts.

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Getty ImagesManchester United vs PSG, 2018-19 UCL

Handball issues – and debating how deliberate they are – have played an important role in VAR awarding penalties after further review.

Paris Saint-Germain’s last-16 clash with Man Utd in the Champions League was jam-packed with chaos and controversy when, in the 89th minute, Diogo Dalot played a ball into the box as his team were desperately looking for a last-minute goal at the Parc des Princes to keep their quarter-final hopes alive.

Dalot’s ball clearly struck PSG’s Presnel Kimpembe in the box, though VAR was consulted to deem whether or not his movement to block the ball was deliberate (the ball was likely sailing high of the goal otherwise).

To the shock and fury of the PSG side (as well as Neymar, who had been watching from the stands), the referee awarded Man Utd the penalty – and Marcus Rashford dutifully converted in the dying minutes of stoppage time to send the Red Devils through to the last eight.

“This is a disgrace,” Neymar wrote on Instagram. “Four guys who know nothing about football watch a slow-motion replay in front of the television. It was nothing! What can [Kimpembe] do with his hand while his back is turned? Go f*** yourselves!”

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