sexta-feira, 8 de junho de 2018

International Friendly: France vs USA – Lineups, Preview & Prediction

France vs USA
International Friendly
Date: Saturday, 9 June 2018
Kick-Off at 20:00 UK
Venue: Groupama Stadium (Decines-Charpieu).
France have connected a three-game winning streak and host USA for their Friendly on Saturday desperate to retain such a consistency ahead of the trip to Russia. They’ve bagged wins over Russia in March, Republic of Ireland in May, and Italy in early June – which will have them very confident ahead of the clash at Groupama Stadium!
USA have no high stakes involved as they failed to make it to the World Cup amid a thriller CONCACAF campaign and Dave Sarachan has been trying out some new options since then, seeing quite mixed success. Stars and Stripes have earned two wins in their last five outings, with two draws and a single loss seen along the way.
However, the loss to Republic of Ireland came just a week ago and it saw a streak of two wins in a row ended, which will come as a disappointment. Les Bleus will now hope to capitalize on that and outclass the World Cup absentees with a rotated line-up, lifting their team spirits still early in June.

France vs USA: Head-to-head

  • France have beaten the rivals 1-0 in the sides’ only head-to-head clash so far.
  • The sides have never met for a competitive matchup and this will be the first clash in seven years.
  • Both have been scoring and conceding goals recently so we expect a more thrilling contest this time around.

France vs USA: Predictions

We will now back France to bag a win but not without a goal conceded, as we stick our necks out for a Home win & Both teams to score at an eye-catching 3.60. We have seen them regularly concede goals and this could be further evidence for such a bet despite coming as heavy favourites to win.
USA have bagged at least a goal on each of their last four trips away from home and although they’ve struggled to return to the winning ways, we do feel they’ll put on a solid challenge on the day too. We thus hope to see goals at Groupama Stadium and we’ll also go for Over 2.5 goals FT at 1.65.

France vs USA Betting Tips

  • France to win & Both teams to score @ 3.60
  • Over 2.5 goals FT @ 1.65.

Didier Deschamps only has one opportunity left to fine-tune his tactics ahead of the World Cup when France host the USA at the Stade des Lumieres.




After a 3-1 victory over the Italians in the first of their pre-World Cup friendlies, there’s a feeling of cautious optimism engulfing the France camp ahead of their trip to Russia.
Nothing is, as of yet, set in stone for the Frenchman, and there’s a number of first team places up for grabs, with the likes of Olivier Giroud and Ousmane Dembele still pushing to start Les Bleus’ opener against Australia on June 16th.
For the States, this is a chance for the national team to test themselves against FIFA’s number seven ranked nation and prove to the world that they are a team fit for international competition after missing out on this summer’s tournament.

Last Time Out

France 3-1 Italy
Mario Balotelli could not add to the goal he scored on his return to international football as France ran out 3-1 winners in a heavyweight European clash in Nice at the beginning of the month.
The French began the game energetically and centre back Samuel Umtiti -who recently extended his Barcelona contract to 2023- took advantage of a loose ball in the box, following a Salvatore Sirigu save from Kylian Mbappe, to open the scoring in the eighth minute.
REUTERS/Eric Gaillard 
France continued to bully the Italians and N’Golo Kante saw a low shot palmed onto the post, before Antoine Griezmann doubled the lead from the penalty spot after a foul from Rolando Mandragora on Lucas Hernandez.
Although Leonardo Bonucci pulled one back in the 36th minute, Ousmane Dembele put the game to bed with a delightful curling effort from the edge of the box after previously hitting the crossbar.
Ireland 2-1 USA
The Irish came from behind to beat the United States on John O’Shea’s international departure. On his 118th cap for his country, the 37-year-old Sunderland defender was given a stirring reception as he was substituted in the first half.
REUTERS/Jason Cairnduff
Martin O’Neill’s side were on the wrong end of a three-game losing streak, which looked set to continue when Bobby Wood put the Americans in front in injury time at the end of the first half. However, Graham Burke equalised after converting debutant Darragh Lenihan’s shot.
Substitute Alan Judge ensured the streak was over with a 91st minute winner to send Dave Sarachan’s young side home with a loss.

France Lineup

Deschamps opted for a front three of Mbappe, Griezmann and Dembele in the 3-1 victory over Italy, but he’s likely to chop and change his forwards to give alternate systems and personnel an opportunity to impress.
This could see the likes of Thomas Lemar and Olivier Giroud start against USA as Deschamps still settles on his first choice starting XI.
Benjamin Mendy could also come in for Atletico Madrid’s Lucas Hernandez, with Corentin Tolisso and N’Golo Kante making way for Steven N’Zonzi and Blaise Matuidi in the middle.

USA Lineup

Bobby Wood could keep his spot up front after scoring last time out against Ireland, whilst Sarachan will continue to explore the effectiveness of Timothy Weah on the flank.

Key Battle: Olivier Giroud vs Cameron Carter-Vickers

If Olivier Giroud starts up front for France, Deschamps will be looking to take advantage of his aerial strength with balls into the Chelsea striker for him to knockdown or hold-up to bring the likes of Lemar and Florian Thauvin into play.
Giroud won 40 aerial duels in his 13 Premier League appearances for Chelsea -at a rate of 3.08 per game- and it’s a useful tool to have in any team’s arsenal if the ground game isn’t seeing success.
REUTERS/Charles Platiau
Cameron Carter-Vickers, however, the young American centre back on loan from Tottenham at Ipswich Town, has a slight height disadvantage against Giroud -measuring five centimetres shorter- and will have his work cut out from him in dealing with aerial balls.
The 20-year-old, though, won 60 aerial duels at Ipswich, at a more successful rate of 3.75 per game, though he has previously looked unassured when dealing with physical threats from Premier League strikers.

Talking Points

Getting the best out of Paul Pogba
How to get the best out of Paul Pogba is the million pound question, with neither Deschamps nor club manager Jose Mourinho seemingly able to find a solution to the issue of Pogba’s perceived shackling.
REUTERS/Eric Gaillard
The 25-year-old wasn’t at the peak of his powers last time out against Italy and was, surprisingly, booed by his own fans after a woeful shot in the 3-1 victory, prompting calls from his manager to “raise his level of play.”
Partnered with Kante and Tolisso in a midfield three didn’t seem to work for Pogba, so Deschamps may opt for two defensive midfielders to release the Manchester United number six from his shackles.
The Timothy Weah experiment
Son of former FIFA World Player of the Year winner George Weah, Timothy has shone since his debut for the USA first team, scoring on his first international start against Bolivia, becoming the fourth-youngest player ever to score for the United States.
REUTERS/Jason Cairnduff
Weah is known for his blistering pace and electric dribbling and Sarachan will be hoping he can continue to cause problems for opposition defences, especially against Benjamin Mendy, who has been out of action for a majority of the season and is hoping to regain form ahead of the World Cup.
Benjamin Mendy vs DeAndre Yedlin
As mentioned, Mendy has spent most of Manchester City’s title-winning season sidelined through injury and was fairly lucky to earn a call-up to the World Cup squad, with the Frenchman hoping to return to form ahead of Les Bleus’ opener.
By contrast, DeAndre Yedlin thrived for Rafa Benitez’s Newcastle United side, who comfortably survived the drop.
REUTERS/Lee Smith
The 24-year-old assisted two goals, created 19 chances and completed 24 take-ons, but the attacking side of his game will likely be kept on a tight leash given the need to defend against whoever starts on France’s left, be it Lemar, Thauvin or Mbappe.
Similarly, Mendy, if selected, will have to contain the burgeoning threat of Timothy Weah, although France will spend the majority of the game on the front foot.

Prediction: France 3-0 USA

The strength in depth in the French squad is, frankly, astonishing and Deschamps has a variety of options to choose from, all of which likely spell defeat for the Americans.
Sarachan’s young squad are some way off France’s level and won’t have much joy in Lyon.

France vs. United States | 2018 International Friendly Match Preview



France vs. United States
International Friendly
Groupama Stadium — Lyon
Saturday, June 9 — 3 pm ET
WATCH: ESPN, UniMás, UDN
After a 2-1 loss to Ireland last Saturday in Dublin (a step up in competition from the 3-0 win over Bolivia on Memorial Day) the young US national team will face the ultimate test Saturday when they take on World Cup contender France in Lyon.
The match will be the final for Dave Sarachan’s side until a busy fall, which includes a friendly against Mexico on Sept. 11 in Nashville and reportedly matches against Brazil, Colombia, Argentina, England and Italy.
“France is going to be a really good test for us and a very good experience for everyone on this team. We’re all excited,” Columbus Crew SC goalkeeper Zack Steffen said. “I think we just go in with our game plan and want to show everybody who’s watching what we’ve got and go in and play as a team, work for each other, have fun and enjoy the experience.”

United States Outlook

A modest four-match unbeaten streak came to an end last Saturday in Dublin when Alan Judge netted the 90th-minute winner to send the US to a 2-1 defeat to Ireland. The Yanks led 1-0 at the break thanks to Bobby Wood’s 12th international goal in first-half stoppage time.
Graham Burke leveled for Ireland, which bounced back from a 2-0 loss to France to improve to 6-2-2 all-time vs. the United States.
New York Red Bulls defender Tim Parker, Fulham's Luca de la Torre and Levante’s Shaq Moore each came off the substitute’s bench in the second half to make their USMNT debuts, while midfielders Julian Green (right foot) and Kenny Saief (right knee) were held out of the squad due to injuries.

France Outlook

This match serves as the World Cup sendoff for a France squad that has lofty expectations in Russia later this month. Didier Deschamps’ team ran roughshod over Ireland, winning 2-0, on May 28 with Chelsea’s Olivier Giroud and Nabil Fekir from Lyon striking before halftime.
They followed that up with a 3-1 victory over Italy in Nice on Friday with Barcelona’s Samuel Umtiti and Atletico Madrid striker Antoine Griezmann gave France a two-goal lead before the half-hour mark. Leonardo Bonucci pulled the Azzurri within a goal in the 35th minute, but Barcelona forward Ousmane Dembele put the game away with a 63rd minute goal, his second for Les Bleus.

History

The United States are 0-3-0 all-time against France and have been outscored, 10-0. Loïc Rémy came off the substitute’s bench to score the 72nd-minute winner in a 1-0 victory for Les Bleusin front of 70,018 fans at Stade de France on Nov. 11, 2011

Players to Watch

United States — Zack Steffen. After a rusty Bill Hamid made some blunders, including one that resulted in Ireland’s equalizer, fans on social media were clamoring for Steffen in net against France. The Crew SC goalkeeper has been outstanding in MLS play, having set a club shutout streak that spans five matches and 505 minutes.
France — Paul Pogba. The midfielder had an uneven first year with Manchester United, butting heads with Jose Mourinho on more than one occasion. While his return to the Reds will be one of the summer’s biggest questions, there is no doubt Pogba can be extremely influential with France. A return to his prior form at Juventus could put France on the podium next month.

United States Roster

Pos.PlayerClubCaps/Goals
GKBill HamidMidtjylland6/0
GKZack SteffenColumbus Crew SC2/0
GKWilliam YarbroughClub Leon3/0
DCameron Carter-VickersIpswich Town3/0
DEric LichajNottingham Forest15/1
DMatt Miazga Chelsea 6/1
DShaq Moore Levante1/0
DErik Palmer-Brown Manchester City1/0
DTim Parker New York Red Bulls1/0
DAntonee RobinsonEverton1/0
DJorge VillafanaSantos Laguna18/0
DDeAndre YedlinNewcastle United51/0
MTyler AdamsNew York Red Bulls4/0
MJoe CoronaClub Tijuana22/3
MLuca de la TorreFulham1/0
MJulian GreenStuttgart9/3
MWeston McKennieSchalke3/1
MKeaton ParksBenfica 1/0
MRubio RubinClub Tijuana8/0
MKenny SaiefAnderlecht 2/0
MWil Trapp Columbus Crew SC5/0
MTim WeahParis Saint-Germain3/1
FAndrija NovakovichReading2/0
FJosh Sargent Werder Bremen2/1
FBobby Wood Hamburg38/12
    

France Roster

Pos.
PlayerClubCaps/Goals
GKAlphonse AerolaParis Saint-Germain0/0
GKHugo LorisTottenham Hotspur97/0
GKSteve MandanaOlympique Marseille27/0
DLucas HernandezAtletico Madrid4/0
DPresnel KimpembeParis Saint-Germain2/0
DBenjamin MendyManchester City 6/0
DBenjamin PavardStuttgart5/0
DAdil RamiOlympique Marseille35/1
DDijibril SidibeMonaco 16/1
DSamuel Umtiti Barcelona  18/2
DRaphael Varane Real Madrid  41/2
MN'Golo Kante Chelsea 23/1
MThomas Lemar Monaco 11/3
MBlaise Matuidi Juventus   66/9
MSteve NzoziSevilla4/0
MPaul Pogba Manchester United  53/9
MCorentin Tolisso Bayern Munich8/0
FOusmane Dembele Barcelona11/2
FNabil FekirOlympique Lyon 11/2
FOlivier GiroudChelsea 73/31
FAntoine Griezmann Atletico Madrid53/20
FKylian MbappeParis Saint-Germain 14/3
FFlorian Thauvin Olympique Marseille 4/0

These USMNT prospects are young and eager to leave home

Under ordinary circumstances, the U.S. national team’s friendly against France on Saturday afternoon in Lyon would be a tune-up for the 2018 World Cup, which kicks off in Russia June 14.
But there’s hardly anything ordinary about U.S. soccer lately. The Yanks, who failed to qualify for the World Cup for the first time since 1986 last fall, will be watching the action in Russia from the sofa.
The failure to qualify has left many to wonder where America’s soccer compass is pointed; The men’s senior program has an interim coach and a fractured player pool with an aging core; on Thursday, ex-U.S. women’s national team goalkeeper and former U.S. Soccer Federation presidential candidate Hope Solo said she wouldn’t support the joint U.S.-Canada-Mexico bid to host the 2026 FIFA World Cup; and for months, media stories have outlined serious splits within U.S. soccer.
Which brings us back to Saturday’s match in Lyon.
Interim U.S. coach David Sarachan is sending out a very raw, highly inexperienced, fairly baby-faced group of players to do battle with Les Bleus, a European soccer power with an outside shot of challenging for the World Cup in a few days.
It doesn’t matter that the U.S. has never scored against the French, let alone procured a win or a draw. The objective Saturday will be to give the upstart Americans – average age just a shade over 23 – a positive stepping stone through competing against an elite foe in a tough foreign environment.
Youthfulness isn’t the only notable thing about Sarachan’s 24-man roster. Eight of the players are American-born prospects who moved to European clubs or academies between the ages of 14 and 17.
In this octet are Weston McKennie, a central midfielder at Schalke 04 in Germany who developed out of the FC Dallas academy; Bobby Wood, also in Germany as a striker for Hamburger SV who already has 12 international goals; and Keaton Parks, a 20-year-old, attack-minded midfielder from Plano, Texas who made four first team appearances with Portugal’s Benfica last year.
Having domestic talent in Europe certainly isn’t anything new, but most of the time American players opt to go to college, or make a pit stop in Major League Soccer, before going abroad.
“It’s more accepted, and a pathway has opened,” former U.S. defender Alexi Lalas, who will serve as an analyst in Russia for Fox Sports, said about high school-age prospects moving to Europe. “Many places, like Germany, have very publicly valued and embraced American talent, and for the players, it’s a unique and very valuable experience.
“As to the pluses and minuses of going overseas versus the more traditional route of going to college, nothing about the more traditional path precludes you from being a good player, or even a great player.”
Some of the best players in American history, including Clint Dempsey, Claudio Reyna, Brad Friedel and countless others, attended college. But many coaches, including former U.S. national team coach Jurgen Klinsmann, have expressed uneasiness about the long-term role college soccer will play in player development.
Even so, American soccer is adjusting to a shift of its own making.
The recent rise of youth academies across Major League Soccer – where players like McKennie and his national teammates, such as Matt Miazga (Chelsea via New York Red Bulls) and Wil Trapp (Columbus Crew) had a chance to develop – has decreased MLS teams’ reliance on college players.
Meanwhile, teenage phenoms who leave the U.S. for a new challenge have started to pave their own way. Few American players have the backing to leave home as young as age 14 and completely envelop themselves in soccer. An evaluation of the last eight World Cup rosters showed that only three American-born players since 1990 – John O’Brien, Aaron Johansson, and Landon Donovan – have left the U.S. before college to play in Europe, found success and went on to play in a World Cup.
Today, most of Sarachan’s recent call-ups have made enough of an impact to merit first-team play or going on loan to a lower division team.
That’s to say nothing of Christian Pulisic, who left Hershey, Pa., at 16 and rose through the ranks at Borussia Dortmund, eventually becoming the youngest American player to score in Champions League. Pulisic played in the U.S.’ 3-0 win against Bolivia on May 28, but he won’t feature against France on Saturday, for rest.
As Sarachan cautioned following the Bolivia victory, these American prospects deserve just as much patience as they do excitement. They’re still, mostly, very raw at the international level and are only slowly coming into their own as European club players.
Regardless, their recent success could motivate others to go abroad as well. For the national team, which has seen a number of core members leave top European teams to return to the U.S. in recent years, having players like Josh Sargent, McKennie, and Pulisic make it on their own is a way of replenishing the pool of players competing abroad.
After all, MLS hasn’t sold an American player to a European team in more than two years, according to transactions listed on MLSSoccer.com.
“It’s the viable path that you dream about,” said Lalas, who played at Rutgers and transferred to Padova in the Italian Serie A after the 1994 World Cup. “These players understand that they have more education, more benefits than at any time in U.S. soccer history. The current generation has no idea how little existed back then. … that’s an acknowledgement of how far we’ve come, for these players to grow up in a world where these possibilities exist.”

Here’s the USMNT full roster for France

GOALKEEPERS (3): Bill Hamid (Midtjylland), Zack Steffen (Columbus Crew SC), William Yarbrough (Club León)
DEFENDERS (9): Cameron Carter-Vickers (Tottenham Hotspur), Eric Lichaj (Nottingham Forest), Matt Miazga (Chelsea), Shaq Moore (Levante), Erik Palmer-Brown (Manchester City), Tim Parker (New York Red Bulls), Antonee Robinson (Everton), Jorge Villafaña (Santos Laguna), DeAndre Yedlin (Newcastle United)
MIDFIELDERS (10): Tyler Adams (New York Red Bulls, Joe Corona (Club America), Luca de la Torre (Fulham) Julian Green (Stuttgart), Weston McKennie (Schalke), Keaton Parks (Benfica), Rubio Rubin (Club Tijuana), Wil Trapp (Columbus Crew SC), Tim Weah (Paris Saint-Germain)
FORWARDS (3): Andrija Novakovich (Reading), Josh Sargent (Werder Bremen), Bobby Wood (Hamburger SV)

Stefan Aigner, Colorado Rapids agree to mutually part ways

COMMERCE CITY, Colo. – Stefan Aigner is no longer a member of the Colorado Rapids.
Aigner and the Rapids agreed to mutually terminate his three-and-a-half-year contract, the club announced Friday.
A highly-touted signing acquired from German club 1860 Munich, Aigner, 29, signed with the Rapids last July, making nine appearances (five starts) for Colorado in 2017, scoring two goals and chipping in an assist.
At more than $845,885 in compensation for 2018, Aigner was the fourth-highest paid player on the team.
But under current head coach Anthony Hudson, the midfielder had featured in just 11 minutes of action – with the manager citing a variety of reasons including preseason injury and a lack of fitness as reasons for Aigner’s absence from the lineup.
Hudson gave a lengthy interview two weeks ago with local Denver TV station 9News (KUSA) detailing his side of the situation with Aigner, but the midfielder had been made unavailable to reporters to get the other side of the story.
“I don’t know. It’s strange. I don’t know,” Hudson told Pro Soccer USA on what had changed with Aigner’s situation since being praised by Rapids GM Padraig Smith for his preseason training regimen with Bundesliga side Hoffenheim in the preseason.
“The bottom line is we want players here that will fight for the club, want to fight for the team and be here for the team,” Hudson continued. “I just don’t think that we’ve seen that.”
Following Wednesday night’s 2-0 elimination loss to Nashville SC in U.S. Open Cup play, the Rapids are now on a run of eight-straight losses across all competitions. Colorado is currently in Houston in preparation for Saturday night’s match against the Houston Dynamo.

Philadelphia Union vs. Toronto FC | 2018 MLS Match Preview



Philadelphia Union vs. Toronto FC
2018 MLS Regular Season - Week 15

Talen Energy Stadium — Chester
June 8 - 8 pm ET
WATCH: TSN 1/3/4/5, ESPN+
The Philadelphia Union have lost just one of their first seven games at Talen Energy Stadium.  they’ll look to keep that form going against a Toronto FC side that joins the Colorado Rapids as the only MLS teams without a road win this season.
Toronto, though, are unbeaten in their last eight matches against the Union (6W-2D), outscoring them 18-6 and keeping three clean sheets, per Opta.

Philadelphia Union

The Union (5-6-3) saw their season-high four-match unbeaten streak snapped Saturday night when their nine-man squad fell to Atlanta United3-1, at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
The match got off to a bizarre start for the visitors, with Haris Medunjanin and Alejandro Bedoya both sent off for second bookable offenses in the 19th minute. Josef Martinezconverted his first of two penalty kicks en route to his fifth MLS hat trick, and Fafa Picaultscored the lone goal for the Union.
Philadelphia rebounded well in the US Open Cup fourth round, blasting the Richmond Kickers, 5-0, on Tuesday night.
“It has been a wild week,” Union coach Jim Curtin said. “I think we have a team that is playing really well. I won’t let Atlanta and the negatives that happened in that game effect the group and I think it is a credit to them how even the heart they showed in that game is something extraordinary. That one is in the past now.”
  • Suspended: M - Alejandro Bedoya, M - Haris Medunjanin
  • Suspended after next caution: None
  • International duty: None
  • Injury Report: OUT: D - Richie Marquez (sports hernia surgery), D - Joshua Yaro (concussion)
Projected Starting XI
(4-2-3-1, right to left)
GK: Andre Blake — Keegan Rosenberry, Mark McKenzie, Auston Trusty, Raymon Gaddis — Warren Creavalle, Derrick Jones — Marcus Epps, Borek Dockal, Fafa Picault — C.J. Sapong
  • Notes: Since May 1, Andre Blake has a league-best 34 saves in seven games (79.1% save percentage). He made 21 saves in the first seven games of the season (67.7% save percentage). … Philadelphia has lost just one of their last 11 MLS home matches, scoring 26 goals and allowing 11 in that time. They are looking for their third four-game home winning streak in the last two seasons.

Toronto FC

It looked like a massive win against an Eastern Conference opponent was in the making for Toronto FC (3-7-2) when Victor Vazquez (PK) and Tosaint Ricketts gave the visitors a two-goal halftime cushion and Sebastian Giovinco made it 3-0 in the 57th minute.
But Federico Higuain scored the dramatic 90th-minute equalizer to cap a remarkable comeback for Columbus Crew SC in a 3-3 draw that certainly felt like a loss for the reeling Reds.
“Against Eastern Conference opponents, you've got to take something from each one,” TFC coach Greg Vanney said. “Disappointing to leave two points in Columbus, no doubt. Going there we knew it was going to be a challenge.”
  • Suspended: None
  • Suspended after next caution: None
  • International duty: None
  • Injury Report: OUT:  F - Jozy Altidore (foot surgery), D - Drew Moor (quadricep strain), M - Ager Aketxe (hip flexor), D - Chris Mavinga (hamstring strain); DOUBTFUL: D - Ashtone Morgan (hamstring strain); QUESTIONABLE: D - Justin Morrow (calf strain)
Projected Starting XI
(4-4-2, right to left)
GK: Alex Bono — Auro, Jason Hernandez, Michael Bradley, Gregory van der Wiel — Jay Chapman, Liam Fraser, Jonathan Osorio, Ryan Telfer - Sebastian Giovinco, Victor Vazquez
  • Notes: Ricketts’ goal last weekend was his sixth as a substitute since joining Toronto, tied for the most by any player since the start of the 2016 season. … The Reds have conceded 14 goals in their five awauy games. They allowed 22 goals in 17 regular season away matches in 2017.

All-Time Series

  • Overall: Philadelphia Union 6 wins, 26 goals … Toronto FC 8 wins, 28 goals … 6 draws
  • At Philadelphia; Union 4 wins, 12 goals … Toronto FC 2 wins, 9 goals … 3 draws
  • Last meeting at PhiladelphiaPhiladelphia Union 2, Toronto FC 2 (March 11, 2017)

Officials

Referee: Baldomero Toledo
Assistant Referees: Eduardo Mariscal, Brian Dunn
4th Official: Marcos Deoliveira
VAR: Jorge Gonzalez