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Easton rescues point for Raith Rovers against Queen's Park

Easton rescues point for Raith Rovers against Queen's Park

BBC News14 hours ago
Update:
Date: 90'+5
Title: Post
Content: Match ends, Raith Rovers 1, Queen's Park 1.
Update:
Date: 90'+5
Title: Full Time
Content: Second Half ends, Raith Rovers 1, Queen's Park 1.
Update:
Date: 90'+3
Title: Post
Content: Foul by Scott Brown (Raith Rovers).
Update:
Date: 90'+3
Title: Post
Content: Michael Ruth (Queen's Park) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Update:
Date: 90'+1
Title: Substitution
Content: Substitution, Queen's Park. Darryl Carrick replaces Josh Fowler.
Update:
Date: 90'+1
Title: Post
Content: Fourth official has announced 4 minutes of added time.
Update:
Date: 90'
Title: Post
Content: Attempt missed. Callum Fordyce (Raith Rovers) header from the centre of the box misses to the left following a corner.
Update:
Date: 89'
Title: Post
Content: Corner,Raith Rovers. Conceded by Charlie Fox.
Update:
Date: 89'
Title: Post
Content: Corner,Raith Rovers. Conceded by Carlo Pignatiello.
Update:
Date: 86'
Title: Post
Content: Corner,Raith Rovers. Conceded by Ricky Waugh.
Update:
Date: 86'
Title: Post
Content: Attempt missed. Josh Mullin (Raith Rovers) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the right.
Update:
Date: 85'
Title: Post
Content: Attempt saved. Paul Hanlon (Raith Rovers) header from the right side of the box is saved in the top centre of the goal by Calum Ferrie (Queen's Park).
Update:
Date: 85'
Title: Post
Content: Corner,Raith Rovers. Conceded by Carlo Pignatiello.
Update:
Date: 84'
Title: Booking
Content: Dylan Easton (Raith Rovers) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.
Update:
Date: 83'
Title: Post
Content: Foul by Dylan Easton (Raith Rovers).
Update:
Date: 83'
Title: Post
Content: Michael Ruth (Queen's Park) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Update:
Date: 81'
Title: Post
Content: Goal! Raith Rovers 1, Queen's Park 1. Dylan Easton (Raith Rovers) converts the penalty with a right footed shot to the bottom left corner.
Update:
Date: 80'
Title: Post
Content: Penalty conceded by Charlie Fox (Queen's Park) with a hand ball in the penalty area.
Update:
Date: 79'
Title: Post
Content: Corner,Raith Rovers. Conceded by Charlie Fox.
Update:
Date: 79'
Title: Post
Content: Corner,Raith Rovers. Conceded by Carlo Pignatiello.
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BBC debate is nostalgic reminder of English crisis never being far away
BBC debate is nostalgic reminder of English crisis never being far away

The Guardian

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  • The Guardian

BBC debate is nostalgic reminder of English crisis never being far away

Nostalgia for the 1990s remains heavy. Just look at all those stadiums and parks the Gallaghers are filling. Football from the late 20th century has a similar cachet. No VAR, no sportswashing; just good, hard, honest, simple fare, when men were men and pressing was what you did to your Burton suit. If the past is a foreign country then a recent BBC Archive release is a primary source of a time when the continental import remained exotic and not the dominant division of labour. 'Is English Football In Crisis?' asks an edition of On The Line in October 1993, broadcast the night before Graham Taylor's England played a key World Cup qualifier in Rotterdam. You know the match: Brian Moore correctly reading Ronald Koeman's free-kick – 'he's gonna flick one' – and the pathos of Taylor's hectoring of the linesman as England's hopes of qualifying for USA '94 sink into the briny. Such is the soap opera of the English game – its warring factions, its unrelenting thirst for cash – that a crisis is often close, though now further down the food chain than the England team and the Premier League. A televised meeting of 2025's key actors is near unimaginable considering the secrecy many owners maintain, the global span from whence they come and many battles already being in camera through lawyers. The number of talking heads and influencers willing to step into the gaps is almost too grotesque to countenance. Snapshot to 1993 however, 14 months into the life of the Premier League, an entity barely mentioned over 40 minutes, and a room of football men are vehemently defending their corners. Just one woman is visible; the future sports minister Kate Hoey, and just one black face; that of Brendon Batson, deputy chief executive of the Professional Footballers' Association. He remains wordless. A raven-haired John Inverdale operates as a Robert Kilroy-Silk/Jerry Springer figure as various blokes in baggy suits – 'some of the most influential and thoughtful people in football' is Inverdale's billing – fight their corners. Here is a time before gym-buff execs, when male-pattern baldness is still legally allowed in boardrooms and exec boxes, when a moustache is anything but ironic. 'The whole game is directed towards winning rather than learning,' complains John Cartwright, recently resigned coach at the Lilleshall national academy, a less than gentle loosener. England's Football Association is swiftly under attack from Hoey over being 'out of touch'. Enter Jimmy Hill, a Zelig of football as player, manager, chair, the revolutionary behind the 1961 removal of the maximum wage, major figure – on and off screen – behind football's growth as a television sport. Few have filled the role of English football man so completely and his responses to Hoey are dismissive, truculent. 'You can only attack one question at a time and I find the attacks are so ignorant,' he rails, defending English coaching. Hill's stance has not travelled well. Within three years, Arsène Wenger, among others, would be upending the sanctity of English coaching exceptionalism. A short film from the ever gloomy Graham Kelly follows. The then-Football Association chief executive dolefully advertises his body's youth development plan before David Pleat's description of English youngsters as merely 'reasonable' rather blows Kelly's cover. Former Manchester City manager Malcolm Allison, by 1993 a long-lost 1960s revolutionary, declares England's kids were behind Ajax's as early as the late-1950s. 'Big Mal', demeanour far more On The Buses than On The Line, cuts the dash of ageing rebel, an Arthur Seaton still restless in his dotage, cast to the fringes as Cassandra. Next the programme's wild card; Eamon Dunphy, footballer turned bestselling writer. 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Tottenham need to find a way to capitalise on legacy of trailblazer Son
Tottenham need to find a way to capitalise on legacy of trailblazer Son

The Guardian

time23 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Tottenham need to find a way to capitalise on legacy of trailblazer Son

Just as opposing fans in the Premier League have experienced feelings of dread over the past decade when Son Heung-min picked up the ball on the edge of their area, there had been a summer of worry among his millions of followers in Asia that his time in England was coming to an end. As the South Korean's legs slowed last season, reports of a move elsewhere gathered pace. His 10 years at Tottenham may have ended with a trophy, the Europa League in May, but the legacy had been in place for some time. The 33-year-old has changed the way Asian players are perceived around the world and much more besides. 'It was the most difficult decision I have made in my career,' an emotional Son said at a Seoul press conference on Saturday before Sunday's pre-season exhibition against Newcastle. 'Such amazing memories. It was so hard to make the decision. I need a new environment to push myself. I need a little bit of change – 10 years is a long time. I came to north London as a kid, 23 years old, such a young age. I leave this club as a grown man, a very proud man.' Son has been the pride of Asian football for years, the first player from the continent to become a genuine Premier League star, a legend at his club. There had been compatriot Park Ji-sung who won titles and respect during seven years at Manchester United, but he was never an automatic starter and, unfairly for a technically excellent and intelligent player, old Three Lungs was praised more for his running, work-rate and stamina. Shinji Kagawa looked like he may reach the next level at Old Trafford but was soon back in Germany. So it was Son, signed from Bayer Leverkusen in 2015, who went on to appear on billboards in north London, Seoul and a lot of cities in between as one of the best-known faces of the world's best-known league. There were 173 goals in 454 competitive games, including the 2020 Puskás Award for that strike against Burnley. In the 2021-2022 season, he scored 23 in the league, sharing the golden boot with Mohamed Salah, another milestone for Asian football. When Harry Kane left Spurs for Bayern Munich, Son stayed and was made captain, and while last season was a relative struggle, for team and player, it ended on a high. Some thought he may stay for one more crack at the Champions League, after doing so much to help Spurs to the final in 2019, but it was not to be. In 2022, I went to Tottenham's sparkling training ground on the northern outskirts of the capital to present the Chuncheon-born native with the Best Footballer in Asia award, a trophy handed out by Titan Sports in China, a country that is not known for its love of Korean football but one that has the utmost respect for Elder Brother Son. He had received the prize in all but three of the 12 years since it became a thing. We discussed our favourite food from his homeland while he tried not to laugh at the Korean language attempts of Hugo Lloris in the next room as the goalkeeper recorded a video message to fans in the Land of the Morning Calm before the club's visit a few weeks later. Tottenham are there once more. 'It's very clear that Sonny will start and lead the team out as captain,' the new Tottenham manager Thomas Frank said. 'If that is the last game for Sonny, what a place to do it here in front of his home fans. It could be a beautiful ending.' And an emotional one. His Premier League performances will be missed in Korea, not least by those bars that hang huge televisions in their windows, showing Tottenham games with a tiny image of his smiling face in the top corner of the screen to show their idol is on the field. Playing time is a big thing for Korean fans after most of Son's predecessors struggled. Park Chu-young joined Arsenal in 2011 but managed just seven league minutes in the red and white corner of north London, inactivity that caused some resentment back home. Son's experience was the opposite. Playing regularly, becoming a star for so long and then captain at a major club also helped grow Tottenham's global fanbase. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion While European estimates of their fans in Asia are unconfirmed, it was claimed in 2022 that there were more than 12 million Spurs supporters in Korea. Whatever the accuracy of that number, there has never been such a popular player – Son has advertised more than 30 brands in his homeland – to play in such a popular league for such a length of time. Tottenham will need to find a way to build on his legacy in Korea and the rest of Asia. For now, though, they just have to find a way to live without Son on the pitch. And fans of the player on the world's biggest continent will also have to get used to Premier League action without the forward. A Chinese journalist once said that Son showed the world that Asia can produce a player as exciting as any from Africa or South America. As legacies go, that's pretty good.

Cole Palmer's best mate will not repeat famed celebration with Stockport glory
Cole Palmer's best mate will not repeat famed celebration with Stockport glory

The Sun

time23 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Cole Palmer's best mate will not repeat famed celebration with Stockport glory

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