Skip to main content

Virat Kohli is perfect for No. 4 spot: AB de Villiers

India has struggled to find a suitable No.4 ever since Yuvraj Singh retired from cricket from | The Hindu https://ift.tt/gQTYZn4

Bundesliga: Bayern Munich's 'Road Runner' Alphonso Davies shines in team's victory against Borussia Dortmund

Berlin: The way Alphonso Davies was running up and down the left flank for Bayern Munich on Tuesday had his teammates comparing him to a cartoon character.

Bayern Munich's Alphonso Davies (left) and Dortmund's Erling Haaland vie for the ball during their Bundesliga match. AP

The Canadian teenager was one of Bayern's standout players as the club beat Borussia Dortmund 1-0 to close in on another Bundesliga title, with his marauding runs a key part of the team's attack and defense. He probably prevented a goal when he raced back to deny Norwegian star Erling Haaland a scoring chance and almost created one of his own when he eluded four Dortmund players before being bundled over by Mats Hummels.

On his fastest run, the left-back was clocked at a top speed of 35.3 kph (21.9 mph).

“Alphonso is a player with a lot of heart and a lot of power, with extreme power,” Bayern forward Thomas Müller said. “Sometimes maybe he is not in the best position on the field, but he gets the opponent thinking, ‘Oh, I have time, I have time,’ and then, ‘Meep, meep! Meep, meep!’ The Road Runner, the FC Bayern Road Runner, comes and steals the ball.”

Bayern said Davies made 42 sprints in all. He was involved in plenty of challenges, too, and was harshly booked late on for bringing down American teenager Gio Reyna outside the penalty area when TV replays showed he got the ball.

Davies, who started the season with Bayern’s reserves, has now started every game in the Bundesliga, German Cup and Champions League for the senior team since Union Berlin visited in the league on 28 October.

His emergence is bad news for Bayern’s record signing Lucas Hernandez. The French World Cup winner, who joined from Atletico Madrid last summer for 80 million euros ($90.5 million at the time), has had to be content with substitute appearances. Hernandez only came on in the 85th minute against Dortmund.

Davies joined Bayern for 18.75 million euros from the Vancouver Whitecaps in January 2019 and the Bavarian club has already extended his contract by two years to 2025.

Davies’ story was already a remarkable one. His parents, Victoria and Debeah, fled civil war in Monrovia, the capital city of Liberia in western Africa, for Buduburam, a refugee camp west of Accra in Ghana. Alphonso was born there, and the family continued living there until he was five years old before moving to Canada in 2006.

The family settled in Edmonton, where Davies began playing football, first at school, then at a free after-school league for inner-city children.

He joined the Whitecaps’ residency program when he was 14. He went on to become the youngest player to appear in the United Soccer League and became the first player born this century to play in the MLS, aged 15 years, 8 months and 15 days.

“He offers a lot of promise for the future,” Bayern sporting director Hasan Salihamidzic said when the deal to bring Davies to Bayern was announced in July 2018.



from Firstpost Sports Latest News https://ift.tt/3gtqOoE

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Past Masters of Indian Badminton: Sarojini, Sunila and Sanjeevani Apte - a tale of three sisters who ruled the Nationals

Editor's Note:  Owing to the Coronavirus outbreak, all sporting action across the globe stand suspended or cancelled. The crisis, however, presents us with an opportunity to step back, rethink, and write on sports differently. In line with this thought, we are running a series of profiles on India's illustrious badminton stars. The articles, penned by Shirish Nadkarni, promise to take you on a nostalgia trip while touching upon the lesser-known facets from the lives of the past masters. Few badminton players can boast of the kind of consistency and all-round excellence that characterised Sarojini, the eldest of the three Apte sisters who dominated Indian badminton in the mid-1960s. Sarojini played in six Indian Nationals, from 1962 to ’67, and figured in the finals of all the three events in all the six years, except for a solitary ladies doubles final in 1964. In other words, seventeen out of eighteen National finals, but producing a slightly better than one-third result – s...