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Date: 2023-12-07 15:49:20 | Author: Casino Caskback | Views: 484 | Tag: PBA
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Mauricio Pochettino lamented that Chelsea were “not nasty enough” in attack as Brentford won 2-0 at Stamford Bridge to send his team to a third home Premier League defeat of the season PBA
Victory for the visitors, earned with second-half goals from Ethan Pinnock and Bryan Mbeumo, maintained their 100 per cent record on this ground since being promoted to the top flight in 2021 and ended Chelsea’s run of three league games unbeaten PBA
The hosts failed to take advantage of a first half that they largely dominated, going close through Noni Madueke who struck the crossbar on his first start of the season PBA
Marc Cucurella should have made more of the chance when Cole Palmer found him unmarked inside the box with a finely weighted ball, the defender lacking the power and precision needed to trouble goalkeeper Mark Flekken PBA
From there, familiar frailties crept into Chelsea’s play and it was little surprise when they fell behind on 58 minutes, Pinnock storming past the ineffectual Axel Disasi to get on the end of Mbeumo’s cross and power his header inside Robert Sanchez’s near post PBA
The goalkeeper was left embarrassed in added time when he was caught out going up for a corner and left the goal empty for Mbeumo to tap home Brentford’s second PBA
Chelsea’s woeful home form has seen them win only once at Stamford Bridge in the league since March, a run that now stands at 13 matches going back to March PBA
And after failing to score here for the 10th time in all competitions in 2023, Pochettino was left to rue the ease with which the visitors coped with his side’s attacking threat PBA
“It’s a clear analysis,” he said PBA
“After the first half we should score and we didn’t PBA
When you dominate and create chances, and you don’t concede chances and the opponent didn’t cross the halfway line, we should score PBA
If you don’t score, you need to blame ourselves PBA
We were not nasty or clinical in front of the goal PBA
“Sometimes you need some luck to score PBA
It would change the game in the second half PBA
But I think we gave them belief because we didn’t score PBA
The second half, we can’t concede the kind of goal that we conceded and that’s why we lost the game PBA
“(We have had) bad luck PBA
(Christopher) Nkunku proved he can score in the big leagues and was injured in the last pre-season game PBA
This type of thing didn’t help PBA
We need to recover (Armando) Broja PBA
Nicolas Jackson is affected for different reasons, he’s young and needs time to adapt PBA
That’s obvious PBA
”The first half ended with the manager remonstrating with a supporter near the dugout who expressed dissatisfaction with Jackson’s lack of involvement PBA
The striker had come to the touchline to receive instruction but was criticised from the stands for his performance, prompting Pochettino to come to his defence PBA
“It was a moment where we all felt frustrated,” he said PBA
“After 40 minutes we’d played really well and created chances, but didn’t score PBA
In that moment the energy was down in the stadium PBA
“(Jackson) came to me and we were talking about positions on the pitch and I gave some direction to him PBA
One fan said ‘wake up’ PBA
I said to stop talking in this way, support the players, we need support PBA
It was very respectful PBA
”Brentford boss Thomas Frank reflected on a game in which his players weathered first-half pressure and grabbed their chances when they arrived PBA
“I think our first half wasn’t that good,” he said PBA
“Chelsea were good first half, you see their exciting potential PBA
If I was a Chelsea fan I’d be positive about them PBA
It’s a bad result (for them), but I’m convinced it will come PBA
“I said at half time we need to believe, I didn’t see that enough in the first half PBA
We didn’t give away big chances away, but we gave too much away PBA
“The first goal always changes the dynamic of a game PBA
The way we defended was fantastic PBA
”More aboutPA ReadyMauricio PochettinoStamford BridgeCole PalmerNoni MaduekeLondonPremier League1/1Chelsea need to find nasty streak and goals will come – Mauricio PochettinoChelsea need to find nasty streak and goals will come – Mauricio PochettinoMauricio Pochettino saw his team lose for the third time at home this season (John Walton/PA)PA Wire✕Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this articleWant to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today PBA
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As any Paris shop owner will tell you, an alluring storefront can be everything PBA
In this beautiful old city, the public are spoilt for choice, chic spots and souvenir shops abundant along the narrow streets and grand boulevards PBA
A bit of glitz and glamour in an attractive aperture can be the difference PBA between a passing glance and a bustling boutique PBA
And so the Rugby World Cup reaches its day of greatest shop window prominence, hoping to dazzle with a Stade de France showpiece contest PBA between two great rivals PBA
On Saturday, South Africa and New Zealand will battle to lift the Webb Ellis Cup for a record fourth time, the etcher at the ready though unlikely to be able to start their work too soon with two such evenly-matched, if radically different, sides PBA
You could hardly have a more enticing game to sell the sport PBA
The eyes of the world will be watching; this encounter has every chance of enchanting them PBA
“This is what World Cup finals are about,” Ian Foster, New Zealand’s head coach, said this week PBA
“I don’t think there’s ever a small one PBA
“The fact is we have two teams who have been old foes for a long time PBA
We all remember the last final PBA between us [in 1995], which was an epic, and hopefully this one will be the same PBA
We’ve got three World Cups each and someone is going to win four PBA
It’s a special occasion, isn’t it?”A match of such magnitude and potential magnificence comes at the end of a momentous week for rugby union PBA
On Tuesday, World Rugby’s council narrowly gave the go-ahead to grand plans that will reshape international men’s rugby union PBA
From 2026, gone, largely, will be traditional tours, replaced by a two-tiered structure that will provide consistent, meaningful and contextualised rugby for the world’s top 24 nations PBA
RecommendedStuart Hogg column: New Zealand’s wingers terrify me! They can make the difference in the World Cup finalHow the incredible Barrett brothers rejuvenated the All BlacksBeloved vs unloved: Contrasting captains Kolisi and Cane collide in Rugby World Cup finalThe merits of the plans will be debated but many sensible characters are encouraged by signs of progress PBA
There is a need for more equal sharing of wealth and greater support for emergent unions, though there are at least steps in the right direction even amidst a lack of clarity PBA
Certainly, the implementation of a global calendar should aid in reducing the infighting that has so often held this sport back PBA
The buoyancy of the rugby television rights market remains to be seen but there is hope at World Rugby, the Six Nations and Sanzaar that the new competition - yet to be officially titled but tagged the “Nations Championship” - will prove an attractive proposition for broadcasters at a time where the sport needs to swell revenue PBA
It can be forgotten that rugby is young professionally, its economy a frontier market PBA
There is a general acceptance that great missteps were made in the establishment of the structures that have defined the last 28 years, and a more cohesive, collaborative and joined-up approach is required to build sustainably henceforth PBA
If, at times, rugby could be accused of swaying to capitalist whims, this is surely a time for a left-ward shift as it evolves PBA
Hosts France were knocked out after an epic quarter-final against South Africa (Adam Davy/PA) (PA Wire)“This is a quantum leap forward for the game,” said Bill Beaumont, World Rugby’s chairman, this week PBA
“"It’s fitting that we finish this, the sport’s greatest celebration of togetherness, with the sport’s greatest feat of togetherness, the most significant development in the sport since the game went professional PBA
"A new era is about to begin for our sport PBA
An era that will bring certainty and opportunity for all PBA
An era that will support the many, not the few and an era that will supercharge the development of the sport beyond its traditional and often self-imposed boundaries PBA
”The rugby landscape come the next men’s tournament in Australia in four years’ time could look very different PBA
The World Cup itself, meanwhile, is similarly evolving, an expansion to 24 teams and six pools necessitating a new model, with World Rugby considering basing the four sides in each group around a single city PBA
This is the last time that the host nation will take responsibility for the organisation of the tournament, with the sport’s governing body assuming greater control PBA
It is not beyond the bounds of possibility that the next four years could also see the introduction of a reduced tackle height law to the professional game, with it already in place in recreational rugby in many parts of the world PBA
But there are also concerns over the financial sustainability of the sport, at club level particularly PBA
All of England, Wales, Australia and New Zealand have concerns over what the future holds for their domestic games – this may be a great final, and may have been a great tournament, but it would be wrong to ignore the broader ill health of the sport PBA
Brodie Retallick, Samuel Whitelock and Luke Jacobson of New Zealand prepare for a scrum (Getty Images)If this is the end of an era, there could be no more fitting way to finish PBA
South Africa and New Zealand have forged a defining rivalry, three World Cup crowns apiece making Saturday’s encounter a chase for number four and the outright men’s record PBA
Their last meeting in a final, that historic day in 1995, ushered in rugby union’s professional age; this game might be the start of another epoch PBA
If there is a slight disappointment that neither Ireland nor, particularly, France did not make it here given the manner in which they seemed to be building to a quadrennial crescendo, these are the two great men’s rugby sides, whose players and fans embody contrasting but colourful cultures PBA
On the pitch, it should be spectacular, too PBA
These are two teams that represent the stylistic diversity that so often proves rugby’s strength PBA
To describe it simply as South Africa’s forward might against the All Blacks’ brilliant backs would be to diminish the rounded nature of two fine sides, but there is no doubt that these great rivals approach the game from alternative perspectives PBA
Kurt-Lee Arendse passes the ball watched by Cheslin Kolbe (Getty Images)And, as with any showpiece like this, the storylines are innumerable PBA
Take the men in charge PBA
For South Africa, Rassie Erasmus and Jacques Nienaber, considering every detail like Rodin’s Thinker, could become the most decorated pair in tournament history if they repeat their 2019 victory PBA
For Ian Foster in the opposite coaching box, meanwhile, this triumph would be testament to the tenacity and toughness of a man who so nearly lost his job last year PBA
Who would begrudge Sam Whitelock, the old warhorse of the All Blacks pack, going out on his shield with a third World Cup winners’ medal? Or what about Siya Kolisi, the boy from a township on the Eastern Cape who became the defining figure of a golden rugby generation, joining Richie McCaw as the only captains to lift the Webb Ellis Cup twice? This could be one of the great rugby days PBA
"I don’t think it’s stuff that you can dream about because it doesn’t happen often,” said Kolisi ahead of the final PBA
“I don’t think it will happen in our lifetime again to have two teams like this PBA
We’ve prepared as hard as we can PBA
We know what to expect PBA
I don’t think as a player it will ever get any bigger PBA
” Beauden Barrett runs with the ball (Getty Images)More aboutSouth Africa rugbyNew Zealand rugbyRugby World CupWorld RugbySpringboksAll BlacksSiya KolisiRassie ErasmusIan FosterJoin our commenting forumJoin thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their repliesComments1/5Spectacular All Blacks v Springboks final will launch rugby’s new eraSpectacular All Blacks v Springboks final will launch rugby’s new eraHosts France were knocked out after an epic quarter-final against South Africa (Adam Davy/PA)PA WireSpectacular All Blacks v Springboks final will launch rugby’s new eraBrodie Retallick, Samuel Whitelock and Luke Jacobson of New Zealand prepare for a scrumGetty ImagesSpectacular All Blacks v Springboks final will launch rugby’s new eraKurt-Lee Arendse passes the ball watched by Cheslin KolbeGetty ImagesSpectacular All Blacks v Springboks final will launch rugby’s new eraBeauden Barrett runs with the ballGetty ImagesSpectacular All Blacks v Springboks final will launch rugby’s new eraMark Telea of New Zealand breaks through South Africa in the last meeting PBA between the sides in August at TwickenhamGetty Images✕Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this articleWant to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today PBA
SubscribeAlready subscribed? Log inMost PopularPopular videosSponsored FeaturesGet in touchContact usOur ProductsSubscribeRegisterNewslettersDonateToday’s EditionInstall our appArchiveOther publicationsInternational editionsIndependent en EspañolIndependent ArabiaIndependent TurkishIndependent PersianIndependent UrduEvening StandardExtrasAdvisorPuzzlesAll topicsPBA BettingVoucher codesCompareCompetitions and offersIndependent AdvertisingIndependent IgniteSyndicationWorking at The IndependentLegalCode of conduct and complaintsContributorsCookie policyDonations Terms & ConditionsPrivacy noticeUser policiesModern Slavery ActThank you for registeringPlease refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged inCloseUS EditionChangeUK EditionAsia EditionEdición en EspañolSubscribe{{indy PBA
truncatedName}}Log in / Register {{#items}}{{#stampSmall}}{{/stampSmall}}{{#stampClimate}}{{/stampClimate}}{{#stampPremium}}{{/stampPremium}}{{title}}{{#desc}}{{desc}}{{/desc}}{{#children}}{{title}}{{/children}}{{/items}}Indy100Crosswords & PuzzlesMost CommentedNewslettersAsk Me AnythingVirtual EventsVouchersCompare✕Log inEmail addressPasswordEmail and password don't matchSubmitForgotten your password?New to The Independent?RegisterOr if you would prefer:SIGN IN WITH GOOGLEWant an ad-free experience?View offersThis site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy notice and Terms of service apply PBA
Hi {{indy PBA
fullName}}My Independent PremiumAccount detailsHelp centreLogout @keyframes spin{0%{transform:rotate(0)}to{transform:rotate(1turn)}} PBA


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