Alberto Moreno: ‘I Used to Think Attack, Attack, Attack – but I Have Changed’

 Alberto Moreno congratulates his close friend Philippe Coutinho after the Brazilian scored at Leicester in September. ‘If I get to decide, Philippe’s not going,’ Moreno says. Photograph: Michael Regan/Getty Images
Alberto Moreno congratulates his close friend Philippe Coutinho after the Brazilian scored at Leicester in September. ‘If I get to decide, Philippe’s not going,’ Moreno says. Photograph: Michael Regan/Getty Images
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Alberto Moreno: ‘I Used to Think Attack, Attack, Attack – but I Have Changed’

 Alberto Moreno congratulates his close friend Philippe Coutinho after the Brazilian scored at Leicester in September. ‘If I get to decide, Philippe’s not going,’ Moreno says. Photograph: Michael Regan/Getty Images
Alberto Moreno congratulates his close friend Philippe Coutinho after the Brazilian scored at Leicester in September. ‘If I get to decide, Philippe’s not going,’ Moreno says. Photograph: Michael Regan/Getty Images

“Alberto Moreno is 100% back” Jürgen Klopp said this summer and you can see it. You can hear it, too, with every joke, every giggle, every time he bursts out laughing. After a year he describes as “very bad”, in which there were times he felt “down” and only his baby daughter, Carla, could be guaranteed to coax a smile from him, life in Liverpool is good again. As for mornings at Melwood, they are even better. There are reasons to be cheerful and he is cheerful, all right. Not least because he has one fewer problem now. Well, two.

The best thing about being back is not the sense of satisfaction in overcoming, the feeling of redemption, or the sound of silence, critics falling quiet; it is not the return to the Champions League or to the Spain squad after three and a half years, although he was delighted to take an “unexpected” call. It is not even the proud return home, when Liverpool play Sevilla in the Champions League on Tuesday, Moreno heading back to a place that “smells different”, the boy from here doing well over there. Now, at least; now, at last. No, he smiles: it’s that Sadio Mané and Mohamed Salah are someone else’s problem. Someone like Sevilla.

Mention their names and, more than words, Moreno makes noises. “Pfff,” “Ooh.” “Wow.” “I wouldn’t want to face Mané and Salah,” he says, puffing out his cheeks. “It must be … pfff.” You would think he speaks from daily experience, forced to face them each morning, but here is the rub, another reason why the benefits of being back go beyond match day. “No,” he grins, “when the manager picks teams, I’m usually with them. The best thing about starting this season is playing on their side.” And with that, Moreno falls about again.

He is joking but, for the man who admits reaching a point where he feared whatever he did he would be “useless”, just how much things have changed, and how fast, has come into focus lately. Last week he returned to the Spain squad, the smile spread across his face as he described playing in Russia on Tuesday as “like making my debut all over again”. On Tuesday, he returns to the Sánchez Pizjuán, where it all began and where his boyhood hero plays. He still has a photo of himself, aged 11, alongside Jesús Navas. This time, he will be up against him.

It is tempting to see symbolism in the trip to the Pizjuán, to see his return there representing his return, full stop: an opportunity to close the circle against the team he faced the night when many considered his Liverpool career was over.

Moreno won the Europa League with Sevilla in 2014. In 2016 he lost the Europa League final against Sevilla – and for some it really was him that lost it. The verdict after a 1-0 half-time lead became a 3-1 defeat was in: guilty. Jamie Carragher deleted a tweet that pleaded with Liverpool to “sign a fucking left-back”, but not before thousands had seen it. Mark Lawrenson said bluntly: “He can’t defend.” One match report called him “brainless”, giving him two out of 10; another described him as “hopeless”; it was a “horror show” said a third.

The reactions might have been exaggerated but when a BBC report stated: “He’ll surely be replaced,” they were not exactly going out on a limb. He did not leave but he did not play, either. James Milner played at left-back, a converted midfielder trusted more, and in the whole of last season Moreno started two league games. Then, in the summer, Liverpool signed Andy Robertson from Hull.

But it was not the end; that signing might have sparked something in Moreno but he had already sought to turn his situation around. He describes himself as a fighter and says he “loves Liverpool”; he did not want to go and he did not give up. “I went to see Klopp a few times to ask what I could do and he said: ‘Alberto, you’re doing well but I can’t change.’ At the end of the season I asked myself: ‘Alberto, what can you change? What can you do?’” Having resisted, held on, the answer, as it turned out, was for the one-time winger who wanted to emulate Diego Capel, Antonio Puerta and Jesús Navas to rebel against his nature.

Something shifted; this summer a bid from Napoli was rejected. In early August, Klopp said pre-season had brought “new players” and Moreno was one of them. Soon it seemed he was right: he has started nine league games and all six matches in Europe, becoming one of Liverpool’s most consistent performers. Had he really been a new player, he would surely be talked about as a shrewd signing. Meet him and he is the same as ever; watch him and he is not.

By his own admission, he has changed; by his own hand, too – although he is swift to credit those around him, from family to team‑mates, coaching staff to the club’s nutritionist, Mona Nemmer, who has even found a place for a taste of Seville on Merseyside.

“We really notice the change,” Moreno says. “The first couple of years, there would be ice creams, cakes, sauces, ketchups, which isn’t good. If a player needs to eat something particular, she lets him. You tell her what you want – olive oil, say – and she’ll do all she can to include it. What I really miss is jamón ibérico, sea food, fish. Mona prepares a lot of things for you and the truth is we’re very happy with her.

“I always talk about my family, my daughter, my parents, how much they have helped me and it’s true,” he says, “but in the end, it’s the player who does it, who changes the situation. He’s the one that goes out there in front of I-don’t-know-how‑many-thousand people.

“Last year was useful for me: to think, to change things, to say to myself: ‘Alberto, what can you do better?’ And the first thing was: defend. I’m a defender. And I’ve changed that. I’m more focused; I think you can see that – and thankfully I haven’t made any mistakes. Maybe in my first few years at Liverpool, I was always thinking: ‘Attack, attack, attack.’ Confidence is vital for a footballer but I’m [also] more settled, more focused: now I’m like: ‘First, let’s defend, keep a clean sheet and, then, let’s go forward.’”

Moreno pulls a face and grins, imitating a man battling his instincts, reining himself in, then he starts laughing again. “It’s true I’m always there, with that urge to go up the pitch. But you have to be focused. There are times I want to go but the first thing I do is look. And if there are two attackers there then there have to be three of us, so I stay. If there’s another one of us, maybe I can go. It’s about choosing the right moment and I think I am attacking less but better – even if it’s true that there’s always that thing in my head: ‘attack’. Then I’ve got Lovren and Klavan there. They’re the ones going: ‘Alberto, stay!’ ‘You can go!’ ‘Help!’”

He has got Klopp too. “He has a big personality, madre mía!” Moreno says, bursting out laughing when it is suggested the 45 minutes he spends on the other touchline, furthest away, must be a relief. “You hear him less!” he says with a grin, adding: “Well, you can hear him wherever you are and you’re always listening for instructions. He’s emotional, passionate: he really feels football, lives for football. Day to day, he’s super-happy, nice, close, but at the hour of truth, match day, pfff … he’s the most serious man in the world and he wants us to be ‘plugged in’. I wouldn’t like to see him angry.”

But surely you must have? “Yes, and it’s not nice! What angers him is seeing how his players aren’t playing as he wants. I’m sure all coaches are like that but with him it’s like his blood is boiling.”

Moreno pulls another face, with gritted teeth. “It boils and he pulls a face that’s like: ‘Lads, let’s be who we are, let’s play football.’ There are times we play badly in the first half and he can’t believe it: he gets wound up if he sees that his team doesn’t react, like he laughs so as not to hit someone. In every game there’s a moment when someone’s out of position or they make a mistake; we’re humans, that happens. It’s more about attitude, if he sees his players are not giving everything, if they’re not running, if they’re not pressuring …

“In training, the sessions are led by Zeljko Buvac and Klopp gives him freedom to decide what tactics to employ. Then there’s Peter Krawietz, who does most of the strategy. But Klopp is emotional, he can’t just stand there watching – and when the staff play, he plays up front – so he always takes part, always intervenes. Last season I asked him: ‘What can I do to improve?’ And he helped, of course, but he wasn’t especially close. This season, being a starter, he’s closer to me: he corrects my mistakes, improves me more. I’m much happier than last season.”

Perhaps it helps that his best friend has stayed, too but Moreno does not know how much longer Philippe Coutinho will be at Anfield and his position is not a comfortable one. “I have told him, eh,” he says. “I’ve said: ‘Brother, don’t go.’ But in the end, a player has to make the decision himself. I can’t tell you what he said to me, of course, because it’s something that’s very personal, but we’ve talked.

“He’s my friend and always will be, we get on very well, and of course [I will support him whatever his decision]. I don’t know what will happen. If it was down to me, I’d love him close to me for life, always enjoying seeing him play football, which is a wonder. It’s a privilege. It’s an honour to share a dressing room with him. He’s top, top. I see him train every day and he does things I’ve never seen before.” Moreno starts waving his hands as if performing a magic trick: “Things with the ball, touches, dribbles …”

Surely whatever happens in the long term, Liverpool cannot let him go in January? “If I get to decide, Philippe’s not going. But I can’t interfere. It’s Liverpool, Barcelona and him, and they decide. He’s a big piece at Liverpool. Every fan, everyone who watches Liverpool, everyone who understands football knows that. They know that if he goes, it will leave a big hole. But we’re Liverpool. We have a great squad and we won’t stop being Liverpool.”

And Liverpool, he says, can win something. “We have the team, but it has to come off. We got knocked out of the Carabao Cup, so one of the options has gone. And [Manchester] City have quite a lead in the league. But dreaming is free, so why not? I’ve been here for four years and I’m desperate to win something; it’s taking its time. But we have a good team, so dream, let’s dream. We have a great team, we’re very dangerous up front, we’re a side everyone would prefer to avoid. I don’t think anyone in the Champions League wants to face Liverpool.”

He wouldn’t want to, not with Salah there. The man whose very name, like that of Mané, brings appreciative noises. “He could be the signing of the season, for sure: his numbers are incredible,” Moreno says. “He’s scoring almost every game, providing assists, doing loads of work for the team. As a defender I wouldn’t want to face Mané and Salah. Having players like that, so fast, always running in behind the defenders: behind, behind, behind … the defender’s jodido, screwed.”

Moreno’s not, not any more. “I’m on their team now,” he says, laughing.

(The Guardian)



Injured Aubameyang to Miss International Swansong with Gabon

 Gabon's forward #09 Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang scores a goal in front of Mozambique's defender #17 Edson Sitoe during the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) Group F football match between Gabon and Mozambique at Grand Stadium in Agadir on December 28, 2025. (AFP)
Gabon's forward #09 Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang scores a goal in front of Mozambique's defender #17 Edson Sitoe during the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) Group F football match between Gabon and Mozambique at Grand Stadium in Agadir on December 28, 2025. (AFP)
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Injured Aubameyang to Miss International Swansong with Gabon

 Gabon's forward #09 Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang scores a goal in front of Mozambique's defender #17 Edson Sitoe during the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) Group F football match between Gabon and Mozambique at Grand Stadium in Agadir on December 28, 2025. (AFP)
Gabon's forward #09 Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang scores a goal in front of Mozambique's defender #17 Edson Sitoe during the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) Group F football match between Gabon and Mozambique at Grand Stadium in Agadir on December 28, 2025. (AFP)

Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang’s international career looks to have ended with a whimper as he headed back to France on Tuesday and will miss Gabon’s last game at the Africa Cup of Nations ​finals.

After losing their opening two matches in Group F to Cameroon and Mozambique, Gabon have been eliminated with one match left to play against holders Ivory Coast in Marrakech on Wednesday.

At the age of 36, it was expected the clash against the Ivorians would bring down the curtain on his 16-year international career, but he will skip the last group game as he returns to his club ‌Olympique de Marseille. ‌

A thigh injury on the eve of ‌the ⁠tournament ​in Morocco ‌meant his participation was in doubt, but he came on after 30 minutes against Cameroon in Gabon’s opening game on Christmas Eve and played the full game against Mozambique on Sunday, scoring in the 3-2 defeat.

“Following the established medical protocol between Marseille and Gabon medical staff regarding Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, clinical examinations were conducted daily,” said a statement on Tuesday from the ⁠Gabon football federation.

“The most recent examination confirmed the discomfort he experienced in his left thigh ‌the day after the Gabon-Mozambique match. Given the ‍disappointing results, which cut short ‍Gabon’s participation, the medical staff, in consultation with his club, agreed to ‍protect the player's physical well-being by exempting him from the final, inconsequential match."

GABON’S LONG TIME TALISMAN

Aubameyang has long been Gabon’s talisman, electing to play for the team his father had captained, even after playing for France, where he ​was born, at junior level.

He made his debut for Gabon in 2009, scoring against Morocco in a World Cup qualifier, ⁠and went on to win 82 caps and score 39 goals.

Aubameyang helped Gabon reach the Cup of Nations quarter-final when they hosted the tournament in 2012 but was the only player to fail to convert his penalty in a post-match shootout loss to Mali.

The tournament in Morocco was Aubameyang’s sixth Cup of Nations finals appearance. He was African Footballer of the Year in 2015.

Earlier this year, he helped Gabon finish as one of the four best runners-up in the World Cup qualifiers, including four goals in the game against Gambia in October.

Gabon, however, lost in ‌last month’s Africa playoffs, ending hopes of qualifying for a first-ever World Cup finals appearance in North America next June.


Hosts Morocco Cruise as South Africa Reach Cup of Nations Last 16

Ayoub El Kaabi is mobbed by teammates after scoring his second goal in Morocco's 3-0 win over Zambia. Gabriel BOUYS / AFP
Ayoub El Kaabi is mobbed by teammates after scoring his second goal in Morocco's 3-0 win over Zambia. Gabriel BOUYS / AFP
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Hosts Morocco Cruise as South Africa Reach Cup of Nations Last 16

Ayoub El Kaabi is mobbed by teammates after scoring his second goal in Morocco's 3-0 win over Zambia. Gabriel BOUYS / AFP
Ayoub El Kaabi is mobbed by teammates after scoring his second goal in Morocco's 3-0 win over Zambia. Gabriel BOUYS / AFP

Ayoub El Kaabi's brace helped Morocco to a 3-0 win over Zambia on Monday as the Africa Cup of Nations hosts cruised into the last 16 while South Africa beat Zimbabwe 3-2 to also secure a berth in the knockout phase.

African player of the year Achraf Hakimi made his comeback from almost two months out injured for Morocco as Mali also qualified for the next round and Mohamed Salah was rested for Egypt's 0-0 draw against Angola.

Morocco are the tournament favorites as the host nation and Africa's top-ranked team but they were booed off by supporters following a 1-1 draw against Mali in their last outing.

Nevertheless, Walid Regragui's team knew a win against Zambia at the Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium in capital Rabat would guarantee their progress to the next round in first place in Group A and they outclassed their opponents.

Olympiakos striker El Kaabi nodded in an early opener and scored an overhead kick shortly after half-time, with both of his goals set up by the outstanding Azzedine Ounahi.

In between, Real Madrid attacking midfielder Brahim Diaz swept home Morocco's second goal on 27 minutes at the end of a fine team move, again involving Ounahi.

Diaz has found the net in all three of Morocco's games so far and he and El Kaabi join Algeria captain Riyad Mahrez on three goals at the top of the Cup of Nations scoring charts.

Captain Hakimi came off the bench in the 64th minute for his first appearance since suffering an ankle injury in action for Paris Saint-Germain at the beginning of November.

Morocco will stay in Rabat for a last-16 tie in the same stadium on Sunday against one of the best third-place finishers.

"Scoring early on changes everything," said Regragui. "We need to continue like this but not get carried away and keep our feet on the ground."

Zambia go out and have now failed to win any of their 12 AFCON matches across four tournament appearances since lifting the trophy in 2012.

Mali go through in second place after a 0-0 draw with Comoros in Casablanca, a game they ended with 10 men after Amadou Haidara was sent off.

It was a third stalemate in as many matches for the Eagles, who will remain in Morocco's largest city for a last-16 tie on Saturday.

Salah rested by Egypt

Earlier, Oswin Appollis converted a late penalty to give South Africa victory against Zimbabwe in Marrakesh as Bafana Bafana qualified for the knockout stage.

Rising star Tshepang Moremi gave South Africa an early lead with a deflected effort.

However, falling behind motivated Zimbabwe and they deservedly levelled on 19 minutes thanks to the individual brilliance of Tawanda Maswanhise from Scottish Premiership club Motherwell.

Maswanhise gained possession inside the South African half, dribbled past two opponents and fired the ball wide of goalkeeper Ronwen Williams into the far corner.

South Africa began the second period aggressively and regained the lead on 50 minutes through Burnley striker Lyle Foster, for whom it was a second goal of the tournament.

Zimbabwe brought it back to 2-2 on 73 minutes when Aubrey Modiba conceded an own goal, but Appollis then netted from an 82nd-minute penalty to give Bafana the lead for the third time, which they retained.

"Once again we fell asleep after a good start. We continuously lost possession," said 73-year-old South Africa coach Hugo Broos.

"Our passing was bad at times and we should have concentrated on retaining possession in the closing minutes instead of seeking a fourth goal. We have to work on controlling games."

Egypt, who rested stars like captain Salah with first place already assured, topped Group B with seven points after their draw against Angola in Agadir. South Africa finished with six points, Angola two and Zimbabwe one.

The last round of group games continues on Tuesday, with Tanzania playing Tunisia and Nigeria facing Uganda in Group C. Senegal take on Benin and the Democratic Republic of Congo play Botswana in Group D.


Japan Great Miura, 58, Joins New Club to 'Make History'

This picture taken on December 1, 2016 shows Japanese football player Kazuyoshi Miura speaking to journalists in Tokyo. (AFP)
This picture taken on December 1, 2016 shows Japanese football player Kazuyoshi Miura speaking to journalists in Tokyo. (AFP)
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Japan Great Miura, 58, Joins New Club to 'Make History'

This picture taken on December 1, 2016 shows Japanese football player Kazuyoshi Miura speaking to journalists in Tokyo. (AFP)
This picture taken on December 1, 2016 shows Japanese football player Kazuyoshi Miura speaking to journalists in Tokyo. (AFP)

Japanese soccer great Kazuyoshi Miura, 58, has signed a new loan deal with the Japanese third division ​side Fukushima United, setting him up for his 41st season as a professional footballer.

Miura, known as "King Kazu", will also be playing his first season in five years in the top three divisions of Japanese ‌football.

"My passion ‌for football hasn't changed, ‌no ⁠matter ​how ‌old I get," Miura, who turns 59 in February, said.

"I'm very grateful to be given this opportunity. I promise I will play with everything I have to make a contribution."

"Let's make ⁠history together."

The forward, who started his professional career ‌for Brazilian club Santos ‍in 1986, also ‍competed at several European clubs across ‍Italy (Genoa), Croatia (Dinamo Zagreb) and Portugal (Oliveirense) throughout his career.

This will be his fourth loan spell since 2022 from J2 League side ​Yokohama FC.

He went goalless last season, playing a total of 69 ⁠minutes across seven games at fourth-tier club Atletico Suzuka, while his side was relegated to Japan's regional leagues.

Miura scored 55 goals in 89 appearances for Japan after making his debut in 1990, but was famously dropped from the side for their first World Cup appearance in 1998, before he retired ‌from international football in 2000.