Will Rúben Dias Be the Defensive Rock to Transform Manchester City?

Rúben Dias celebrates after scoring for Benfica against Rio Ave last November. Photograph: Patrícia de Melo Moreira/AFP via Getty Images
Rúben Dias celebrates after scoring for Benfica against Rio Ave last November. Photograph: Patrícia de Melo Moreira/AFP via Getty Images
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Will Rúben Dias Be the Defensive Rock to Transform Manchester City?

Rúben Dias celebrates after scoring for Benfica against Rio Ave last November. Photograph: Patrícia de Melo Moreira/AFP via Getty Images
Rúben Dias celebrates after scoring for Benfica against Rio Ave last November. Photograph: Patrícia de Melo Moreira/AFP via Getty Images

Estádio do Dragão, 2 March 2019. Rúben Dias has just seen his Benfica teammate Gabriel Appelt Pires sent off in the 77th minute against Porto in a vital Primeira Liga clash.

Benfica are winning 2-1 and, having come from behind, hope to cling on. Dias is unruffled and so, as in October’s reverse fixture at Estádio da Luz when his defensive partner Cristian Lema was dismissed with the team 1-0 ahead, the 20-year-old continues a defiant, mature display that keeps Porto out, draws widespread plaudits, and ensures a victory vital in Benfica’s 37th title triumph.

Dias signed for Manchester City for £64.3m this week and his focused, professional character has been key in his rise. He is an instinctive leader and was captain of Portugal’s Under-19s and Under-20s. The center-half is unsmiling and cold-eyed when competing against strikers whose game he works out by studying footage to gain an edge.

Pep Guardiola’s knowledge of Dias’s driven personality helped to convince City’s manager to acquire him. The hope is the boy from Amadora is the full package who can emulate Vincent Kompany’s on-field general act while forming a bedrock partnership with Aymeric Laporte that will revamp a rearguard currently colander-like when opponents break fast or hit high balls.

Dias’s style is more abrasive than Kompany’s. He has received only one red card but an aggression that can spill into the red zone drew 12 bookings last term and is the prism through which he is viewed in Portugal. Doubters, though, were proved wrong following that sending off, which came in Benfica’s 3-2 Champions League win at AEK Athens on the stroke of half-time (a second yellow card) in October 2018 and stoked the debate regarding his perceived penchant for “shithousery”.

The riposte was telling as Dias returned with the performance in the win at Porto in which Lema was sent off and he was voted man of the match.

Still, there are questions regarding his pace and ability to succeed at the elite level where City aim to dominate. The 6ft 2in Dias is not slow but nor is he considered fleet-footed. And there is a school of thought that he was not the most prized defensive talent to emerge recently from Benfica’s academy. Francisco Ferro is nominated by some for that status but Dias’s team-first, die-for-the-cause ethos made him the go-to at the club for Rui Vitória, then Vitória’s successors as head coach, Bruno Lage, Nélson Veríssimo, and Jorge Jesus.

Guardiola will hope to harness this as he rebuilds a side missing Kompany and David Silva; that have a 32-year-old Sergio Agüero and 35-year-old Fernandinho as still key; and that have an issue at left-back where Benjamin Mendy’s City career resembles Luke Shaw’s at Manchester United: unfortunate serious injury apparently blunting the pace and verve that made each stand-out talents.

Dias has his own connection with City’s crosstown rivals in Victor Lindelöf, the center-back he featured with seven times for Benfica B and a player three years his senior who moved to United in summer 2017. The Swede is being scrutinized for unconvincing displays for Ole Gunnar Solskjær’s team, and the good news for City from Portugal is that Dias is considered the finer defender.

Before him is the challenge of showing this and adapting to a breathless domestic game. City have poor form regarding the recruitment of a costly center-back from Portuguese football. In August 2014 Eliaquim Mangala was signed for £42m from Porto and proceeded to disappoint. Yet Dias gives himself every chance of success by arriving as an accomplished English speaker due, in part, to his girlfriend, Mariana Gonçalves, who as the iTunes chart-topper April Ivy sings solely in the language.

Up for debate is whether Dias was Guardiola’s first, second or even third choice. Privately the club’s stance is that Kalidou Koulibaly was never the No 1 target despite their pursuit of the 29-year-old – though when Dias joined a screenshot of the City website was circulated that showed fans being asked to pose questions to the Napoli man. More certain is that Koulibaly, Atlético Madrid’s José Giménez, and Sevilla’s Jules Koundé were of interest. Just as certain is that what matters now is how Dias performs.

He will aim to seize an opportunity that might not have been possible if Benfica had not been unexpectedly eliminated from the Champions League by PAOK last month. This meant the club had to sell to cover projected finances lost from not being in the competition, and with Nicolás Otamendi going the other way for £13m, this was a deal that worked for all parties.

Dias has 19 caps and was man of match in last summer’s Nations League final. He could feature in the visit to Leeds United on Saturday. Either way the serious business is about to begin.

(The Guardian)



Mexico Edge South Korea to Win Group A

Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group A - Mexico v South Korea - Estadio Guadalajara, Guadalajara, Mexico - June 18, 2026 Mexico's Israel Reyes and teammates celebrate after the match REUTERS/Paul Childs
Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group A - Mexico v South Korea - Estadio Guadalajara, Guadalajara, Mexico - June 18, 2026 Mexico's Israel Reyes and teammates celebrate after the match REUTERS/Paul Childs
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Mexico Edge South Korea to Win Group A

Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group A - Mexico v South Korea - Estadio Guadalajara, Guadalajara, Mexico - June 18, 2026 Mexico's Israel Reyes and teammates celebrate after the match REUTERS/Paul Childs
Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group A - Mexico v South Korea - Estadio Guadalajara, Guadalajara, Mexico - June 18, 2026 Mexico's Israel Reyes and teammates celebrate after the match REUTERS/Paul Childs

Mexico booked their place in the World Cup knockout stage as Group A winners and secured home advantage for the Round of 32 after Luis Romo's second-half strike earned the tournament co-hosts a 1-0 win over South Korea on Thursday.

The victory moved Javier Aguirre's side onto six points from two matches and ensured their first knockout game would be played in Mexico City on June 30.

They are the first team to qualify for the knockout stage, Reuters reported.

Romo broke the deadlock three minutes after the restart, capitalizing on a costly mistake by goalkeeper Kim Seung-Gyu. The South Korea keeper spilled a cross after colliding with a teammate, allowing the Mexico midfielder a simple finish into an unguarded net from the center of the box.

"It was a very close game; we didn't give up a single centimetre and fought for every ball as if it were our last," Aguirre told Mexican broadcaster ⁠TV Azteca.

"It was ⁠a game where whoever made a mistake would lose, and it was them... It was a game to forget, but the result is one to remember."

The goal transformed the mood inside Guadalajara Stadium after an uninspiring first half that ended with sections of the home crowd booing the hosts off the pitch.

Mexico had started brightly but struggled to turn early possession into clear chances, with South Korea growing into the game.

Captain Edson Alvarez, deployed in central defense after Cesar Montes' suspension, produced ⁠a spectacular overhead clearance off the goal line to deny Son Heung-min, although the South Korea captain was later flagged offside.

The Asian side finished the half stronger, controlling possession and unsettling a Mexico side that looked increasingly frustrated as the interval approached.

Romo's goal moments after the restart lifted both Mexico and the crowd, with supporters breaking into renditions of Mexican folk song "Cielito Lindo" ("Lovely Sweetheart") as Aguirre's side seized control of a match that had threatened to drift away from them.

Mexico nearly doubled their advantage midway through the second half when Raul Jimenez controlled a pass from Julian Quinones before firing a half-volley from close range, only for Kim to produce an outstanding save.

The South Korea goalkeeper made another excellent stop to deny substitute Obed ⁠Vargas, diving low to ⁠push away a powerful long-range effort.

South Korea threw numbers forward in search of an equalizer and came agonizingly close in the closing stages, but goalkeeper Raul Rangel preserved Mexico's lead with a remarkable double save from point-blank range.

Rangel first blocked a close-range effort with his foot before scrambling across his line to keep out the rebound.

Mexico withstood wave after wave of South Korean pressure in a tense finish to secure their second straight win and become the first team to qualify for the knockout stage, where they will face a third-placed team.

Aguirre's side will close out the group phase against Czech Republic, while South Korea can still secure progression when they face South Africa on Wednesday.

"We were patient, not passive. It's not easy, we're seeing some very close matches," Aguirre added.

"We'll see how the last match plays out and wait for our opponent. I'm leaving happy because it means we're not leaving home, our beloved Mexico."


Mexico, Korea Eye World Cup Knockout Berths

The build-up to co-hosts Mexico's clash with South Korea has seen shrouded with intrigue, with a mystery drone spotted over Korea's training ground. CARL DE SOUZA / AFP
The build-up to co-hosts Mexico's clash with South Korea has seen shrouded with intrigue, with a mystery drone spotted over Korea's training ground. CARL DE SOUZA / AFP
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Mexico, Korea Eye World Cup Knockout Berths

The build-up to co-hosts Mexico's clash with South Korea has seen shrouded with intrigue, with a mystery drone spotted over Korea's training ground. CARL DE SOUZA / AFP
The build-up to co-hosts Mexico's clash with South Korea has seen shrouded with intrigue, with a mystery drone spotted over Korea's training ground. CARL DE SOUZA / AFP

Mexico and South Korea will aim to punch their ticket to the World Cup knockout rounds on Thursday when they meet in Guadalajara knowing a win would guarantee a last 32 berth.

The Group A rivals head into the fixture at the Estadio Akron fresh from respective victories over South Africa and the Czech Republic in their opening games last week, said AFP.

The expanded 48-team format for this year's World Cup -- and the fact that the eight best-ranked third-placed teams will advance from the group stage -- means that a win for either Mexico or South Korea would see them advance.

Co-hosts Mexico eased past a poor South Africa in their opening game last week but are bracing for a significantly tougher test against a South Korean side studded with quality.

"We have to be very wary of the opponents' attacking transitions," Mexico coach Javier Aguirre said.

"When we are attacking, we can't let our guard down; if there are two Koreans up front, there need to be three Mexicans."

The build-up to Thursday's game has seen shrouded with intrigue, with a mystery drone spotted over South Korea's training ground on Tuesday.

Yonhap news agency reported that a South Korea team security officer spotted the device, and a Mexican military drone-interdiction specialist stationed at the training camp brought it down by emitting radio signals.

Two men who were suspected to be the drone operators retrieved the crashed device and fled the scene in an incident which South Korea coach Hong Myung-bo described as "unfortunate" but insisted "did not impact us significantly."

Hostile atmosphere

Hong meanwhile is preparing his team for an intimidating atmosphere against the hosts on Thursday.

"We fully understand that it's going to be a match with the home team, and we know that that's going to give benefits to the home team," Hong said.

"But my players have experienced such matches before, so it will be different tomorrow, and we need to control the rhythm and the flow of the match."

In other games on Thursday, Switzerland will look to bounce back from their disappointing opening Group B draw with Qatar when they take on Bosnia-Herzegovina, while co-hosts Canada face the Qataris in Vancouver.

Bosnia coach Sergej Barbarez is eyeing another upset, urging his team to summon the spirit of their qualifying campaign, when they knocked out Italy during the playoffs.

Barbarez brushed off suggestions that Switzerland would expect to beat a team ranked 44 places below them by FIFA.

"Everyone has the right to their own opinion and show their confidence," the coach said.

"When we were playing against Italy in the playoffs, we had a similar sort of sentiment publicly, but we stayed focused on ourselves," he added.

Thursday's games kick off the second round of group fixtures.

On Wednesday, England lit up the tournament with a roller coaster 4-2 win over Croatia in Group L which included two goals from captain Harry Kane and one from Real Madrid star Jude Bellingham.

But while England got off the mark in style, there was disappointment for Portugal, who were held to a surprise 1-1 draw by the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The result once again renewed scrutiny of Portugal coach Roberto Martinez's support for Cristiano Ronaldo, the 41-year-old icon who is playing in his sixth World Cup.

The veteran striker gave an ineffective performance, managing just 25 touches in the whole match, but Martinez defended the decision not to replace him.

"It makes no sense to take off the best goal scorer in world football in a game that you need goals," Martinez said.

Ronaldo has now failed to score in 10 consecutive matches in major tournaments and his country's press turned against him on Thursday.

Sports newspaper A Bola said that Ronaldo appeared "crushed by the pressure" and had become "himself a problem", while Publico said the team "remains hostage to its faith in Ronaldo".


Bosnia Ready to Shed Underdog Reputation, Face Switzerland as Equals

Bosnia-Herzegovina's defender Nikola Katic (R) gives a press conference in Los Angeles, California on June 17, 2026, on the eve of the 2026 World Cup football match between Switzerland and Bosnia and Herzegovina.  (Photo by Patrick T. Fallon / AFP)
Bosnia-Herzegovina's defender Nikola Katic (R) gives a press conference in Los Angeles, California on June 17, 2026, on the eve of the 2026 World Cup football match between Switzerland and Bosnia and Herzegovina. (Photo by Patrick T. Fallon / AFP)
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Bosnia Ready to Shed Underdog Reputation, Face Switzerland as Equals

Bosnia-Herzegovina's defender Nikola Katic (R) gives a press conference in Los Angeles, California on June 17, 2026, on the eve of the 2026 World Cup football match between Switzerland and Bosnia and Herzegovina.  (Photo by Patrick T. Fallon / AFP)
Bosnia-Herzegovina's defender Nikola Katic (R) gives a press conference in Los Angeles, California on June 17, 2026, on the eve of the 2026 World Cup football match between Switzerland and Bosnia and Herzegovina. (Photo by Patrick T. Fallon / AFP)

Bosnia and Herzegovina ‌are fighting to dispel the notion that they are underdogs at the World Cup, key player Nikola Katic told reporters on the eve of their match with Switzerland.

Despite dispatching four-times world champions Italy and favored side Wales in the qualification playoffs, then battling co-hosts Canada to a 1-1 draw in their opening match, Bosnia are still underestimated, Katic said on Wednesday.

"After that (defeating Italy) we didn't get the respect we deserved, because it was more bad-Italy than good-Bosnia" in post-match commentary, said central defender Katic.

Bosnia manager Sergej Barbarez said his team won't be seeking a draw against ‌the Swiss, despite ‌their emphasis on compact defending and quick counter-attacks, Reuters said.

"Tomorrow ‌we ⁠are coming to ⁠play for the three points," said Barbarez, who was a top player for his country and in the Bundesliga in the 1990s and 2000s.

He became national team manager in 2024 and overhauled the squad, with more than a dozen new players being brought in since, allowing the side to have seasoned talent and leadership while enjoying the resilience of young players.

Barbarez ⁠said his team's opening Group B draw with ‌Canada gave confidence to the squad because ‌facing a host nation in the first match can be an emotional challenge ‌for young players.

"Of course there was a certain anxiety, but I ‌would say it was more of an excitement," said Barbarez.

The draw against Canada showed Bosnia-Herzegovina to be a tough side who are not intimidated by a fast-attacking team.

Barbarez and Katic said they will focus on their style of play ‌on Thursday rather than worrying about what opponents Switzerland will throw at them.

Bosnia's 40-year-old captain, Edin Dzeko, will ⁠be a ⁠towering presence in front of goal, with the country's all-time-leading scorer expected to be playing at his last World Cup.

With a robust defensive shell looking to force quick breaks, Dzeko's scoring precision will be vital to his side's hopes of success on Thursday.

Katic paid tribute to Dzeko, saying there were not enough words to explain how important his presence is on the field, in training and off the pitch.

Barbarez declined to say whether he would put Dzeko in the starting 11.

Reporters repeatedly raised the win over Italy, which Barbarez and Katic enjoyed recalling. Bosnia won 4-1 on penalties following a 1-1 draw after extra time.

"It is one of the games that will stay in our memories for always," said Barbarez.