Sports
Where to Watch, Stream Champions League Game
FC Barcelona will be eager to get back on track after a stunning 3-0 loss to
Chelsea last time out in the UEFA Champions League when they host
Eintracht Frankfurt in Matchday 6 of the league phase on Tuesday.
The Blaugrana traveled to London with high hopes amid a strong run of form, but an early own goal and a red card to Ronald Araujo just before half-time gave them very little to work with on a historic night at Stamford Bridge for the Blues.
Barca now sit in 18th place in the UCL league phase table, with two wins, one draw and two losses for seven points through five games.
The loss to the English giants didn’t hurt Barcelona’s momentum in La Liga, however, as the Catalans have continued their dominant run. They extended their domestic winning streak to six on Saturday as they dismantled Real Betis 5-3 in Seville.
Just a few days prior, they put on one of their best performances of the season so far in a 3-1 win over title challengers
Atlético Madrid at the Camp Nou.
Hansi Flick’s troops now sit four points clear at the top of the table after
Real Madrid suffered a 2-0 defeat to Celta Vigo on Sunday.
Eintracht Frankfurt, meanwhile, have struggled in their return to Champions League football following a two-year hiatus, winning only once and losing three games so far. They sit in 28th position, two points adrift of the playoff qualification spots.
Die Adler were handed a 3-0 thrashing by Atalanta on Matchday 5, having already suffered big losses to Liverpool and Atletico Madrid earlier in the campaign. Their lone win came against Galatasaray in their tournament opener.
Their Bundesliga form has faltered of late as well, fresh off a devastating 6-0 loss in Leipzig over the weekend. Eintracht currently occupies seventh place in the German league standings, one point off the final European qualification spot.
Barcelona and Eintracht Frankfurt have only faced each other twice before as part of a quarterfinal tie in the Europa League during the 2022-23 season. Frankfurt shocked the Spanish giants with a 4-3 aggregate win following a dramatic second leg win by the Germans in Barcelona.
Where to Watch Barcelona vs Eintracht Frankfurt
- When: Tuesday, December 9 – 3PM ET / 12PM PT
- Where: Spotify Camp Nou, Barcelona
- Where to watch: CBS Sports, Paramount+
Barcelona vs Eintracht Frankfurt Betting Odds
- FC Barcelona to win: -700
- Draw: +750
- Eintracht Frankfurt to win: +1600
- Both teams to score (Yes/No): -138 / +108
- Over/Under 3.5 goals: -168 / +136
- Robert Lewandowski first goalscorer: +270
- Raphinha anytime goalscorer: -145
- Ferran Torres anytime goalscorer: -160
- Lamine Yamal to score or assist: -350
Odds courtesy of FanDuel.
Eintracht Frankfurt Team News and Predicted Lineup
To add insult to injury, Frankfurt lost a pair of important players in their heavy defeat to Leipzig, as Mitchy Batshuayi and Jonathan Burkhardt were forced off.
Neither is expected to feature against Barcelona, but head coach Dino Toppmoller will be encouraged by the return to fitness of Can Uzun and Hugo Larsson, who both saw the pitch over the weekend.
World Cup winner Mario Gotze should also feature in the starting lineup on Tuesday as he continues to look for his first goal of the season.
Eintracht Frankfurt predicted lineup (3-4-2-1): Michael Zetterer (GK) – Nnamdi Collins, Robin Koch, Arthur Theate – Rasmus Kristensen, Fares Chaibi, Mahmoud Dahoud, Nathaniel Brown – Mario Gotze, Ritsu Doan – Jean Matteo Bahoya.
FC Barcelona Team News and Predicted Lineup
Barcelona’s squad is as healthy as it’s been all season, much to the delight of Hansi Flick and his staff.
The German boss should deploy his lethal attacking trident of Lamine Yamal, Raphinha and Robert Lewandowski. They’ll likely be joined by Ferran Torres, who will be difficult to leave off the team sheet after his hat-trick against Betis.
Eric Garcia has been a revelation in a holding midfield role and should retain his spot alongside Pedri.
Gerard Martin has impressed as a makeshift center-back in Ronald Araujo’s absence, and should continue in the middle of defense to face Eintracht.
FC Barcelona predicted lineup (4-2-3-1): Joan Garcia (GK) – Jules Koundé, Pau Cubarsi, Gerard Martin, Alejandro Balde – Eric Garcia, Pedri – Lamine Yamal, Raphinha, Ferran Torres – Robert Lewandowski.
Sports
Nottingham Forest Set to Appoint Ex-Crystal Palace Boss Oliver Glasner
Nottingham Forest have decided to part ways with Vitor Pereira as their manager and will appoint ex-Crystal Palace boss Oliver Glasner as his replacement, GIVEMESPORT can reveal.
Forest were in a relegation battle in the 2025/26 season but after sacking all of Nuno Espirito Santo, Ange Postecoglou, and Sean Dyche during the season, they avoided the drop and reached the Europa League semi-finals under the Portuguese boss.
Talks over a new contract were underway earlier in the summer, but a decision has now been made to move on from Pereira, with club owner Evangelos Marinakis agreeing a shock move to bring in Glasner to the City Ground.
Nottingham Forest to Appoint Oliver Glasner
GIVEMESPORT sources can exclusively reveal that Forest held an option to terminate Pereira’s contract until June 30th, and they sent him and his representatives an email at 23:58 on June 30th to confirm their decision.
Glasner left Crystal Palace at the end of the season having guided them to the FA Cup, Community Shield and Conference League titles over the previous 12 months, with his contract expiring. He had been in line to take over at AC Milan, before a change of leadership saw them opt for Ruben Amorim instead.
Pereira had already planned a pre-season in Portugal, while he was involved in meetings over summer transfer plans as recently as yesterday (June 30th).
Glasner is now expected to take over at the City Ground, with talks having been held behind the scenes with owner Marinakis, who is ‘extremely ambitious’ and wants to compete for trophies.
The Austrian will be given funds to strengthen the squad, with a £116m deal for Elliot Anderson to join Man City already agreed.
Glasner a Big Appointment for Forest
When Glasner departed Crystal Palace the expectation was that he would be joining a top-level European club, having been attracting interest from the likes of Milan, Man Utd and Chelsea in recent times.
So Forest will see it as a major coup that they are able to attract a manager of his calibre to the club, especially after what they would consider to be a disappointing season last time around.
Palace fans are likely to be furious with Glasner, however, after tensions between the two clubs following a complaint by Forest which led to the south London side missing out on a place in the Europa League last season. Palace went on to win the Conference League, however, and will be in the Europa League next season, while Forest are not in Europe at all.
Marinakis has seen what Glasner can do, turning Palace into a side that regularly compete for silverware under him, and will be hoping for more of the same.
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Sports
Bosnia Manager Hits Back at Tim Howard For Comments Ahead of Game v USA
A war of words has ignited between USA legend Tim Howard and Bosnia and Herzegovina manager Sergej Barbarez ahead of the two nations’ World Cup clash.
The USMNT meet Bosnia in the Round of 32 on Wednesday night at the San Francisco Bay Area Stadium in Santa Clara. Mauricio Pochettino’s side are favourites heading into the tie after winning their group with two wins from three games.
That said, the Americans did suffer a surprising 3-2 defeat to Turkey in their final Group D game after wins over Paraguay 4-1 and Australia 2-0. This raised doubts over the co-hosts’ chances of reaching the latter stages of the tournament ahead of their encounter with Bosnia.
Bosnia finished third in Group B with one win, one draw and one defeat in their three games. Led by Edin Dzeko, the European nation heads into tonight’s game as underdogs.
USA vs Bosnia – Barbarez Hits Back at Howard
Howard isn’t concerned about the Bosnians and urged USA fans not to stress after the loss to Turkey. The former Manchester United goalkeeper insisted Pochettino’s team will bounce back while speaking on Unfiltered Soccer:
“Bosnia, they’re better off not even getting on a plane and going to San Francisco, because the U.S. is gonna put work in against them.”
Barbarez clapped back at Howard with a brutal response when the American pundit’s comments were put to him during the pre-match press conference:
“Who is he?, I don’t know who he is!”
Bosnia’s coach then gave a serious assessment of his nation and their ambition to reach the last 16. He told reporters, “We are a small country and sometimes things like that happen, but I have no problem with it.”
He added: “My boys don’t have a problem with it … You’re playing for a place in the round of 16. If that’s not motivation enough, then I don’t really notice things like that.”
Bosnia started their World Cup campaign with a 1-1 draw against co-hosts Canada before losing 4-1 to Switzerland. They then beat Qatar 3-1 to seal their place in the knockout rounds.
Barbarez acknowledged the USA as favourites but insisted his side have no problem with being the underdog. He is only focused on guiding his side to victory in Santa Clara.
Dzeko Criticizes USA Mindset
Howard wasn’t the only American to mock Bosnia in the build-up to the game, as ABC7 presenter Abigail Velez also joked about the Europeans. In a viral clip, Velez tried pointing the country out on the map and said:
“In the next round, Team USA will play Bosnia next Wednesday. And, one thing about Bosnia [is that] I could not point out where it is on a map. That’s because Team USA, we’re back, we’re better than ever. Get prepared Bosnia, because you don’t want it. You don’t want it like that. But you’re gonna get it.”
This didn’t go down well with Bosnia captain Dzeko, who questioned the Americans’ mentality before the game. The former Manchester City striker told Ben Jacobs for talkSPORT:
“That shows a lot about them. Not about us. I think the most important thing is what the guys in the American team, in the US team, think. And I think they are not going to underestimate us. They know we have qualities, and we know we have qualities. You are the favorites, but the knockout phase is totally different than the group stage.”
Bosnia are participating in their second World Cup campaign after beating Italy in the playoffs to qualify. Their only previous participation came in 2014 when they crashed out during the group stages.
Dzeko is Zmajevi’s talisman and all-time top goalscorer with 73 goals in 150 games. The 40-year-old Schalke frontman will be eager to add to that tally against the USA and help his country pull off a shock in Santa Clara.
Sports
Teams With Most World Cup Penalty Shootout Wins
Very few moments in football carry the same pressure as a World Cup penalty shootout. After 120 minutes of action, an entire nation’s hopes can come down to just a handful of kicks from 12 yards out — creating some of the sport’s most beautiful memories and most painful scars.
Since penalty shootouts were introduced at the 1978 World Cup, 37 knockout matches have been decided by way of spot-kicks, with just three World Cup finals finishing with the so-called lottery that is penalties. Over that team, some teams have gained a reputation for being ruthless under pressure, whilst others have made a habit of succumbing to the occasion.
But which nations have been the most successful when matches have gone all the way to penalties?
Brazil — 3 Wins
|
Played: |
5 |
|---|---|
|
Won: |
3 |
|
Lost: |
2 |
|
Years Won: |
1994, 1998, 2014 |
|
Years Lost: |
1986, 2022 |
With legends like Romario, Ronaldo Nazário and Rivaldo, it’s not hard to see how ‘A Seleção’ have won three out of their five total World Cup penalty shootouts. Their first win came in the final of the 1994 World Cup in the USA, after Daniele Massaro and Roberto Baggio missed both of Italy’s last two penalties to hand the win to Brazil, with the game finishing 0-0 after 120 minutes. And just four years later, it was through penalties in which they would secure their place in the final, after their match against the Netherlands ended 1-1 after extra time. Brazil netted all four of their penalties before Ronald de Boer missed the decisive kick.
Their most recent penalty victory came in the round of 16 at their home tournament in 2014, where, despite Willian and Hulk missing two of Brazil’s penalties, they still won after Chile could only convert twice from the spot.
⚽
World Cup History Quiz
You scored
out of 20
Germany — 4 wins
|
Played: |
5 |
|---|---|
|
Won: |
4 |
|
Lost: |
1 |
|
Years Won: |
1982, 1986, 1990, 2006 |
|
Years Lost: |
2026 |
*Including West Germany and Germany
The Germans took part in two of the first three penalty shootouts to ever happen at a World Cup, and won them both. After no games at the 1978 tournament required the use of penalties, West Germany’s 3-3 result against France in the semi-final of the 1982 World Cup, which features in our top 10 greatest matches in World Cup history, forced the first ever World Cup penalty shootout. And with both teams level with four penalties each, Maxime Bossis’ miss in sudden death set-up West Germany’s Horst Hrubesch to send his nation to the final.
Just four years later, West Germany whitewashed Mexico in the quarterfinals of the 1986 World Cup, before dumping England out of Italia ’90 four years later. Their most recent success through penalties came at their home tournament in 2006, when conversions from Michael Ballack and Lukas Podolski saw them edge past Argentina.
Croatia — 4 wins
|
Played: |
4 |
|---|---|
|
Won: |
4 |
|
Lost: |
0 |
|
Years Won: |
2018 (x2), 2022 (x2) |
|
Years Lost: |
N/A |
Whilst Croatia’s inclusion in this list may surprise some, they have won the most World Cup penalty shootouts without ever losing. What’s even stranger, is that all four wins came across just two consecutive tournaments. Their knockout journey at the 2018 World Cup in Russia started with a 3-2 victory on penalties over Denmark, before beating the hosts, who themselves had knocked Spain out of the tournament the round prior, with four penalties to Russia’s three.
Fast-forward to the very next tournament in Qatar, and they produced an almost identical run through the first two stages of the knockouts. Japan converted just once as Croatia sailed through to a quarter-final meeting with Brazil, during which missed spot-kicks by Rodrygo and Marquinhos ensured Croatia’s flawless shootout run remained intact.
The 10 Best World Cup Winning Teams (Ranked)
Spain 2010, France 1998 or Brazil 1970? Who comes out on top?
Argentina — 6 wins
|
Played: |
7 |
|---|---|
|
Won: |
6 |
|
Lost: |
1 |
|
Years Won: |
1990 (x2), 1998, 2014, 2022 (x2) |
|
Years Lost: |
2006 |
It makes sense that the team who have participated in the most World Cup penalty shootouts have also won the most. But the more shocking stat is that they have only lost one out of seven, an astonishing 85 per cent win rate. Their first two penalty shootouts came at the 1990 World Cup, where they defeated Yugoslavia in the quarter-finals, before bypassing hosts Italy in the semi-final.
In 1998, Hernán Crespo’s missed effort was canceled out by Paul Ince and David Batty after the pair failed to score two of England’s penalties, sending Argentina through to the quarter-finals. Roberto Ayala and Esteban Cambiasso were unfortunate enough to hand their nation its sole defeat after missing against Germany in 2006 before they returned to penalty glory in 2014 with their 4-2 win over the Netherlands.
Argentina’s final two shootout triumphs came on their way to World Cup glory in 2022. After their quarter-final tie with the Netherlands finished 2-2, the South American side managed to outscore their European counterparts 4-2 from the spot. And then, after one of the most thrilling World Cup finals in recent memory, Argentina prevailed under the most crushing of pressure, netting all four of their penalties to, once again, crown them as the champions of the world.
World Cup Penalty Shootout Team Stats
|
Team |
Played |
Won |
Lost |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Argentina |
7 |
6 |
1 |
|
Germany |
5 |
4 |
1 |
|
Croatia |
4 |
4 |
0 |
|
Brazil |
5 |
3 |
2 |
|
France |
5 |
2 |
3 |
|
Paraguay |
2 |
2 |
0 |
|
Morocco |
2 |
2 |
0 |
|
Spain |
5 |
1 |
4 |
|
Netherlands |
5 |
1 |
4 |
|
Italy |
4 |
1 |
3 |
|
England |
4 |
1 |
3 |
|
Ireland |
2 |
1 |
1 |
|
Costa Rica |
2 |
1 |
1 |
|
Russia |
2 |
1 |
1 |
Argentina have comfortably the best penalty shootout record in World Cup history, followed by Germany and Croatia, while Brazil’s record is somewhat mixed. Following that cohort, France have won two and lost three shootouts in the World Cup, with Paraguay and Morocco each winning their two respective shootouts.
Despite being renowned for their technical ability, Spain and the Netherlands have a disappointing record in World Cup penalty shootouts, with each team registering just one victory in five spot-kick deciders. England have a poor record in World Cup shootouts too, with just one win in four – which came in 2018 against Colombia. The Three Lions’ record is the same as Italy’s, though the Azzurri’s sole victory came in the 2006 final and clinched the trophy.
Teams Who Have Won Back-to-Back World Cups
Going all the way in consecutive World Cup tournaments may seem impossible, but more than one team has proven that it is indeed possible…
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