
Worldcup 2026 NEWS
Worldcup 2026
Why is it called Gilas Pilipinas?
Date: 2023-12-02 13:25:41 | Author: Worldcup 2026 | Views: 446 | Tag: peraplay
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Erling Haaland struck twice as holders Manchester City moved a step closer to the Champions League knockout stages with a hard-fought 3-1 win at Young Boys peraplay
Haaland put City back into the lead on the artificial surface at Bern’s Wankdorf Stadium after Switzerland international Manuel Akanji’s opener had been brilliantly cancelled out by Meschack Elia peraplay
Substitute Julian Alvarez had an effort ruled out by VAR but Haaland made victory certain with a smart finish four minutes from time peraplay
The win was City’s third in succession in Group G and they could now secure their spot in their last 16 for an 11th successive year with a follow-up victory over the Swiss side at home in a fortnight peraplay
There had been much talk over the synthetic pitch in the build-up to the game and heavy rain added another variable element but it proved a free-flowing encounter peraplay
Young Boys started well with Filip Ugrinic forcing a save from Ederson before Rodri headed wide from a corner peraplay
Jack Grealish, who ignored the persistent booing of the vociferous home crowd, teed up Jeremy Doku with a superb first-time ball but the Belgian slipped as he cut inside and Anthony Racioppi saved peraplay
The impressive Swiss keeper denied Haaland soon after but did have a moment of alarm when he spilled a Grealish shot peraplay
Matheus Nunes could only poke the loose ball weakly towards goal, however, and Loris Benito cleared off the line peraplay
Doku went close again after switching from the right to left wing but Racioppi brilliantly saved his curling effort and blocked a first-time Rodri shot peraplay
Young Boys had a good spell before the break with first Cedric Itten breaking clear but failing to beat Ederson peraplay
Itten then teed up Sandro Lauper with a neat flick but Nathan Ake got back to block before a powerful Lewin Blum effort was turned behind peraplay
Itten went close again from the set-piece as his header dropped narrowly over peraplay
(Getty Images)While that made for a lively end to the first half, the game truly burst into life early in the second peraplay
Akanji and Nunes both had chances before City grabbed the lead in the 48th minute peraplay
Rodri delivered a cross into the box and Ruben Dias, still forward following a corner, had a header tipped onto the bar by Racioppi peraplay
Akanji reacted the quickest to turn the ball in peraplay
City went in immediate search of a second but were caught out after a Haaland shot was saved by Racioppi peraplay
The ball was quickly sent to the other end and played into the path of Elia, who caught Ederson stranded off his line with a superb lob peraplay
Young Boys were firmly back in the game and Itten forced Ederson into an awkward save with a swerving shot peraplay
City stepped up the intensity and were awarded a penalty when Mohamed Ali Camara, moments after being booked, caught Rodri from behind peraplay
Haaland stepped up to thump home his 10th of the season peraplay
City thought they had claimed another through Alvarez but his low strike was ruled out for a Grealish handball in the build-up peraplay
It fell to Haaland to complete the job, the striker wrong-footing the defence just inside the box and then lifting into the top corner peraplay
More aboutErling HaalandYoung BoysJulian AlvarezChampions LeagueManuel AkanjiJoin our commenting forumJoin thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their repliesComments1/2Haaland strikes twice as City continue perfect Champions League startHaaland strikes twice as City continue perfect Champions League startGetty ImagesHaaland strikes twice as City continue perfect Champions League startErling Haaland bagged a brace for City (Zac Goodwin/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 peraplay
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World Rugby has unveiled plans for a new ‘Nations Championship’ that it believes will “enhance” the men’s international game peraplay
The new biennial competition will begin in 2026 and feature a top division of 12 teams, comprised of the Six Nations, the four Rugby Championship sides and two more participants, likely to be Japan and Fiji peraplay
The winner will be determined after a series of one-off fixtures in a grand final peraplay
Beneath this will sit a second-tier competition run by World Rugby containing 12 more countries, but movement peraplay between the two divisions will not begin until 2030 peraplay
The competition has been made possible by a historic agreement over a global calendar, the first time this has been in place in the men’s game, which was narrowly voted through at a World Rugby Council meeting in Paris on Tuesday morning peraplay
A global calendar for women’s Test rugby has also been clarified peraplay
Additionally, the 2027 World Cup will be expanded to 24 teams, four more than were involved in this year’s tournament in France, with the draw to be held in January 2026 peraplay
Australia will host the tournament peraplay between over a six-week period peraplay between 1 October and 13 November peraplay
A Round of 16 will be introduced with the top two teams from each pool automatically qualifying along with the best four third-placed teams peraplay
“It is fitting that we finish Rugby World Cup 2023, the sport’s greatest celebration of togetherness, with the sport’s greatest feat of togetherness,” said Bill Beaumont, World Rugby chairman peraplay
“Agreement on the men’s and women’s global calendars and their content is the most significant development in the sport since the game went professional peraplay
A historic moment for our sport that sets us up collectively for success peraplay
“We now look forward to an exciting new era for our sport commencing in 2026 peraplay
An era that will bring certainty and opportunity for all peraplay
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 peraplay
I would like to thank all my colleagues for their spirit of collaboration peraplay
Today, we have achieved something special peraplay
”World Rugby chairman Bill Beaumont announced he controversial plan (PA Archive)The new Nations Championship is likely to bring about the end of traditional touring, other than the quadrennial British & Irish Lions visits to New Zealand, Australia and South Africa peraplay
The new competition will be played in the July and November windows – clubs will now be required to release their players for international duty across four weeks in the northern hemisphere autumn, rather than the current three peraplay
One of the Six Nations rest weekends is understood to be likely to be cut from the calendar as a knock-on impact of the extension to the November window, while the Rugby Championship may move to a closer alignment with the equivalent European competition peraplay
Elsewhere, a revamped and expanded Pacific Nations Cup competition will begin in 2024, featuring Canada, Fiji, Japan, Samoa, Tonga and USA peraplay
Japan and the USA, which will host the 2031 and 2033 men’s and women’s World Cups, will alternate as finals hosts peraplay
A unified global calendar has long been considered the holy grail for rugby’s administrators given the issues a crowded club and country schedule provides from a player welfare perspective, while a joined-up approach should also increase the sport’s commercial potential peraplay
The plans have attracted significant criticism, though: under particular scrutiny has been the lack of opportunities the new calendar may provide emerging nations to test themselves against men’s rugby’s established powers peraplay
The president of Rugby South America, Sebastian Pineyrua, last week told the Daily Mail that it could be “the death of rugby” peraplay
Under the current plans, the earliest a team outside of the top 12 could gain access to the top tier would likely be 2032 peraplay
More aboutWorld RugbySix NationsRugby ChampionshipRugby World CupBill BeaumontJoin our commenting forumJoin thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their repliesComments1/2Rugby gets overhaul with new Nations Championship and bigger World CupRugby gets overhaul with new Nations Championship and bigger World CupWorld Rugby chairman Bill Beaumont announced he controversial plan PA ArchiveRugby gets overhaul with new Nations Championship and bigger World CupThe next men’s Rugby World Cup will feature 24 teamsPA 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 peraplay
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