Showing posts with label Antoine Griezmann. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Antoine Griezmann. Show all posts
Monday
England’s Harry Kane wins World Cup Golden Boot
England’s Harry Kane won the World Cup Golden Boot award as top scorer with six goals.
The Tottenham star topped the chart by two goals ahead of a group including Antoine Griezmann and Kylian Mbappe, who both scored in France’s 4-2 defeat of Croatia in Sunday’s final.
Kane is the first England player to win the coveted prize since Gary Lineker 32 years ago.
He scored twice against Tunisia in England’s first match in Russia and then bagged a hat-trick in a 6-1 romp against Panama.
Manager Gareth Southgate rested Kane for the third group game against Belgium but the captain returned to score from the penalty spot against Colombia in the last 16.
He failed to add to his tally in England’s next three games — the 2-0 quarter-final win over Sweden, the 2-1 semi-final loss to Croatia nor the 2-0 third-place play-off defeat by Belgium.
Joining Griezmann and Mbappe on the four-goal mark were Russia’s Denis Cheryshev, Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo and Belgium’s Romelu Lukaku.
World Cup top scorers:
6 goals: Kane (ENG) – Golden Boot winner
4 goals: Cheryshev (RUS), Ronaldo (POR), Griezmann (FRA), Lukaku (BEL), Mbappe (FRA)
3 goals: Cavani (Uruguay), Costa (Spain), Dzyuba (Russia), E. Hazard (Belgium), Mandzukic (Croatia), Mina (Colombia), Perisic (Croatia)
2 goals: Aguero (Argentina), Coutinho (Brazil), Granqvist (Sweden), Inui (Japan), Jedinak (Australia), Khazri (Tunisia), Modric (Croatia), Musa (Nigeria), Neymar (Brazil), Salah (Egypt), Son Heung-min (South Korea), Stones (England), Suarez (Uruguay)
source: sports.inquirer.net
Labels:
Antoine Griezmann,
England,
FIFA World Cup,
Football,
Golden Boot,
Harry Kane,
Kylian Mbappe,
Sports,
World Cup
Sunday
France, Portugal head for Euro 2016 final showdown
The Euro 2016 final on Sunday sees a match between hosts France and Portugal that will unleash a clash between one of the world’s greatest players ever Cristiano Ronaldo and would be pretender Antoine Griezmann.
After 50 matches over a month of football that has seen stunning shocks by Iceland and Wales, Ronaldo is counting on his side producing one more upset so he can finally win an international trophy.
Portugal will have to beat a French side who have found new inspiration from Griezmann — the tournament’s leading scorer on six goals — and being willed on by a nation avid to rediscover the feelgood factor.
With the country still on terrorist alert after the November 13 attacks in which 130 people died, more than 3,400 police will be on the Champs Elysees in Paris alone when the match starts at the Stade de France at 1900 GMT.
Rival coaches Didier Deschamps of France and Fernando Santos of Portugal have been desperately trying to shield their teams from the sky high hopes of two nations.
Deschamps, who captained the French side that won the 1998 World Cup and the Euro title in 2000, said he could feel the adrenaline pumping.
Deschamps wants to play
“It’s an exceptional moment, a privilege, a unique chance because there is a title at the end,” Deschamps said of the final.
“What you need to do is approach it as relaxed as possible while being at the same time totally focussed on the match,” he added.
“On the bench, there is a frustration in not taking part, but I can’t do that anyway. But I’m fine, I don’t feel any pressure, no stress, just adrenaline and that’s positive.”
France have put in some stylish performances, including their 5-2 win over Iceland to end the giant killing run of the team that dumped England out of the contest.
France captain Hugo Lloris said the team wants to put their name in the football history books to redeem themselves for a player revolt at the 2010 World Cup that made them a national disgrace.
The troubles were worsened by the exclusion of star striker Karim Benzema over an alleged sextape blackmail attempt.
“We have come through a crisis in French football,” the Tottenham Hotspur goalkeeper said. “We have climbed back up the slope, we have done it step by step.”
Lloris said that Sunday’s final is “the chance to go into French football history.”
France with home advantage in the 85,000 capacity stadium, Griezmann, star midfielder Paul Pogba and the calming influence of Lloris start as favorites.
But they acknowledge the omnipresent danger of Ronaldo on the pitch.
Santos has succeeded by building a team around the superstar striker and winning “ugly” when necessary to get to the next round.
Portugal’s 2-0 win over Wales in the semi-final was the first in the tournament achieved within 90 minutes.
Veterans such as defender Pepe and Ricardo Quaresma have played lynchpin roles on days when Ronaldo has failed to fire.
Portugal have been criticized for some of their European Championship performances but Santos said he does not care.
He also says France are the favorites but believes Portugal can win.
“Let them carry on saying that Portugal won without deserving it,” he said.
“I will be very happy if they say that again tomorrow. I will go home very happy.”
Portugal have never fully recovered from losing the 2004 Euro final to Greece when they hosted the tournament.
Ronaldo who shed tears as a 19-year-old at that match said this week he wants to be “crying with joy” on Sunday.
Ronaldo’s Real teammate Pepe is fully fit again after missing the semi-final through injury. Pepe said Portugal were strong because they want to win.
“I’ve been at a very demanding club for 10 years and I’ve been playing for Portugal since 2008,” he said when asked about his own ambition to win at the age of 33.
“I have three European Championship and two World Cup campaigns to my name.
“I have always been very demanding of myself. I don’t like to lose, I want to help my team. That makes me play at the highest level and to be recognized at the highest level.
“The most important thing is to always want more,” he said.
source: sports.inquirer.net
Friday
Griezmann’s double gives France 2-0 win over Germany in semis
MARSEILLE, France—France is heading back to soccer’s elite, and Antoine Griezmann is the man leading the way.
Griezmann scored both goals to give France a 2-0 win over world champion Germany on Thursday and a place in the European Championship final against Portugal.
It was a victory built as much on German errors as it was on Griezmann’s skill, with a handball in the box and a poor defensive pass paving the way for his goals.
But that didn’t matter to the fans who made Marseille’s Stade Velodrome ring with the sound of the “Marseillaise,” France’s national anthem. Their team won this tournament in 2000, two years after lifting the World Cup, but it hasn’t had a trophy since then.
Developed as a player in Spain, Griezmann has been the star of the show for France, leading a high-scoring team with six goals, twice as many as any other player in the tournament.
“I think there’s a lot of happiness around France tonight,” said coach Didier Deschamps, whose team faces Cristiano Ronaldo’s Portugal on Sunday at the Stade de France.
“This team has everything it needs to be loved, I’m very proud… It’s fabulous to be in the final.”
Griezmann, who could have completed a hat trick in the 86th minute but shot straight at goalkeeper Manuel Neuer, was already looking ahead.
“We’re very happy,” he said. “We have to keep our feet on the ground. We still have a match to go.”
For Germany, defeat cost it the chance to add the European title to the World Cup it won in 2014.
It had gone 50 years unbeaten against host nations at major tournaments, dating back to its loss to England in the 1966 World Cup final and encompassing a famous 7-1 humbling of Brazil in the 2014 World Cup semifinals.
While a repeat of the Brazil rout was never on the cards, Germany could have scored more than once as it dominated the first half. But it was denied by poor shooting from Thomas Mueller, who ended his tournament scoreless, and a save by Hugo Lloris to block Emre Can’s bouncing shot.
France took the lead from the penalty spot in first half stoppage time after Bastian Schweinsteiger handled the ball in an aerial challenge with Patrice Evra.
Griezmann stepped up to score, striking the penalty hard to Neuer’s right.
“I really wanted to take a penalty in a big match like that. I was very composed, I didn’t think twice,” Griezmann said.
It was the second time in as many games that Germany had given away a spot-kick for handball. Jerome Boateng blocked the ball with an arm above his head in the quarterfinal against Italy.
“It’s just bad luck, just an unlucky action,” Germany coach Joachim Loew said of the penalty. “In a challenge, when you’re jumping, there are movements that you can’t really control.”
Trailing in a match for the first time in the tournament, Germany could not recover its previous dominance after halftime. It then had to cope with losing key defender Boateng, who picked up an ankle injury after an hour.
The German defense had not conceded from open play all tournament, but it fell apart for Griezmann’s second goal in the 72nd minute. A sluggish pass by Benedikt Hoewedes to right back Joshua Kimmich was cut out by Paul Pogba and Neuer could only palm away the midfielder’s cross to Griezmann, who finished with ease.
Germany responded well and could have pulled one back when Kimmich hit the post, before Julian Draxler sent a free-kick narrowly wide and Hoewedes headed over.
“We had chances to come back,” Neuer said. “We played a good European Championship and it’s very bitter to go out.”
Loew insisted his team had played better than France but had been denied by “bad luck,” including the injuries and suspensions that hit four key players – Boateng, as well as defender Mats Hummels, midfielder Sami Khedira and forward Mario Gomez, with the latter three missing the game.
Loew, who is under contract until the 2018 World Cup, said he was not sure of his future.
France, while not always reassuring in defense, came through victorious in its first game of the tournament against genuinely top-class opposition.
After the final whistle, France’s jubilant players celebrated with the fans by performing the “Huh” chant made famous at the tournament by Iceland.
Across France and in the French team, the attention was firmly on the diminutive Griezmann after another decisive performance. “He’s our little man that gives us that bit extra,” teammate Olivier Giroud said.
source: sports.inquirer.net
Labels:
Antoine Griezmann,
Euro 2016,
Football,
France,
Germany,
Olivier Giroud,
Soccer,
Sports,
UEFA Euro 2016
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