Paul Madeley... Seven Top-Class Players in One

 Paul Madeley appearing for Leeds Utd against Wolves in 1973. Photograph: Colorsport
Paul Madeley appearing for Leeds Utd against Wolves in 1973. Photograph: Colorsport
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Paul Madeley... Seven Top-Class Players in One

 Paul Madeley appearing for Leeds Utd against Wolves in 1973. Photograph: Colorsport
Paul Madeley appearing for Leeds Utd against Wolves in 1973. Photograph: Colorsport

So versatile was the footballer Paul Madeley that in his 18 years at Leeds United during the 1960s and 70s he played in every position bar goalkeeper, prompting his team-mate Johnny Giles to describe him as “seven top-class players in one”. The ultimate utility player, Madeley, who has died aged 73, also appeared in seven different roles for England, although in general he was best known as a defender, especially in his later years.

Madeley’s all-round prowess made him an indispensable fixture in Don Revie’s best Leeds sides, with whom he won two league titles, an FA Cup, a League Cup and two Fairs Cups during the glory years at Elland Road from 1965 to 1975. A staunch loyalist, he stayed on even when fortunes waned, and retired in 1980 having made 711 appearances for the club.

Revie’s Leeds were renowned for their hard, physical edge, but while Madeley never overlooked his duties in the tackling department he also brought a more cultured feel to the side with his neat, composed passing and intelligent reading of the game. Well balanced and rarely ruffled, he was a calming influence in a team of uncompromising characters.

Born in the Beeston area of Leeds, one of the three sons of Gladys (nee Nelson) and John Madeley, he left Parkside school in the city to work as an insurance clerk while playing as a defender for the local non-league club Farsley Celtic. He was signed by Second Division Leeds as a 17-year-old, making his debut at center-half two years later in 1964, the year Leeds won promotion to the top flight and began a period of high attainment over the next decade.

He rarely missed a game as Leeds became one of the most formidable teams in Europe – playing with ease at left- or right-back, as a center-half, sweeper, on either flank in midfield as well as in the center, or, for good measure, as an attacking midfielder or striker if required. He appeared as a forward in the League Cup final victory over Arsenal in 1968 and again in the two-legged 1971 Fairs Cup final win against Juventus in which he wore the No 11 shirt for both ties, scoring a crucial goal in the first.

Although a quiet, modest man, Madeley was certainly listened to within the Leeds hierarchy, and it was said to be his intervention, after the departure of Revie, that sealed the fate of Brian Clough during his famous 44-day reign as Leeds manager in 1974. During an emergency meeting to discuss Clough’s controversial start to his new position, various parties struggled to get their point across to the Leeds director Sam Bolton until Madeley stood up to announce, quite bluntly, that “what the players are trying to say, Mr Bolton, is that he’s no good”. That was enough for the club management, and Clough was on his way.

With England, Madeley showed a similarly quiet resolve. He made his debut for his country in 1971, but that was later than it might have been. He had turned down a request from Sir Alf Ramsey to join the 1970 World Cup squad in Mexico in place of his club-mate Paul Reaney, who had broken a leg. Madeley informed Ramsey that he would prefer to go on holiday with his family after a grueling season with Leeds. Yet, as some measure of Madeley’s stature, within the game, the England manager did not appear to hold it against him.

Playing mainly in defense, including as a center-half alongside Bobby Moore, he was capped 24 times thereafter, with the last of his appearances coming against Holland in 1977. It is possible that he regretted his decision to miss the 1970 finals, for England did not qualify for any major tournament during his time in the side.

Madeley retired from football during the 1980-81 season in his mid-30s and moved quickly into business, having already taken an interest in a paint and DIY enterprise with members of his family. The company flourished, and it was eventually sold for around £30m in 1987. From the early 1990s, however, he suffered from ill health in multiple guises. In 2003 he was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, and he died from complications associated with that condition.

He is survived by his wife, Ann (nee Telford), whom he married in 1969, and by their sons, Jason and Nick.

• Paul Edward Madeley, footballer, born 20 September 1944; died 23 July 2018

(The Guardian)



Klopp Confirms Germany Talks and Says he's 'Recharged' Since Leaving Liverpool

FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group L - England v Croatia - Dallas Stadium, Arlington, Texas, US - June 17, 2026 Global Head of Soccer at Red Bull and TV pundit, Jurgen Klopp REUTERS/Hannah Mckay/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group L - England v Croatia - Dallas Stadium, Arlington, Texas, US - June 17, 2026 Global Head of Soccer at Red Bull and TV pundit, Jurgen Klopp REUTERS/Hannah Mckay/File Photo
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Klopp Confirms Germany Talks and Says he's 'Recharged' Since Leaving Liverpool

FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group L - England v Croatia - Dallas Stadium, Arlington, Texas, US - June 17, 2026 Global Head of Soccer at Red Bull and TV pundit, Jurgen Klopp REUTERS/Hannah Mckay/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group L - England v Croatia - Dallas Stadium, Arlington, Texas, US - June 17, 2026 Global Head of Soccer at Red Bull and TV pundit, Jurgen Klopp REUTERS/Hannah Mckay/File Photo

Jürgen Klopp has confirmed he's in negotiations to take over as Germany coach and says he's “recharged” the energy he was missing when he left Liverpool.

Klopp is the German soccer federation's preferred candidate after Julian Nagelsmann resigned Friday, four days after Germany lost on penalties to Paraguay in the World Cup round of 32.

“Julian has stepped down and the (federation) is working on the succession and has approached me in the course of those considerations,” said Klopp, speaking from New York on German broadcaster Magenta TV in his role as a World Cup commentator late Friday.

Klopp was the only coach named in a federation statement on the team's future, which said Klopp had “signaled his willingness” to take over.

Klopp said talks would take time because of his current contract as head of global soccer for Red Bull's network of clubs.

Klopp hasn't coached since he left Liverpool in 2024, saying at the time he was “running out of energy” after eight years with the club where he won the Premier League and Champions League.

“About two years ago I stopped at Liverpool and said that I lacked the energy for another job or for another year with Liverpool. Since then I'm more than recharged, I'm ready,” he said, according to The Associated Press.

Germany's next coach will need to make sweeping changes and he said he would need “intensive talks” with the federation to agree on the key points of how to transform the team's fortunes.

It was the third men's World Cup in a row that Germany has not reached the round of 16. Germany hasn't won a knockout game since beating Argentina in the 2014 final.

Klopp said Nagelsmann was an “excellent coach” and not to blame for the team's deeper problems.

“German soccer is obviously at a turning point now,” Klopp said. “Now we need to change things fundamentally. Whether that's me in the end or whoever it may be, that doesn't change the fact that changes are necessary.”

Klopp has had a high-profile presence as a pundit on German TV at the World Cup, even taking part in postgame interviews with Nagelsmann at the side of the field. In the immediate aftermath of the Paraguay loss, he said he hadn't thought about taking on the Germany job.


Cape Verde Leave Mark on Scaloni as Argentina Survive World Cup Shock

Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Round of 32 - Argentina v Cape Verde - Miami Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida, US - July 3, 2026 Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni REUTERS/Paul Childs
Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Round of 32 - Argentina v Cape Verde - Miami Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida, US - July 3, 2026 Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni REUTERS/Paul Childs
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Cape Verde Leave Mark on Scaloni as Argentina Survive World Cup Shock

Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Round of 32 - Argentina v Cape Verde - Miami Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida, US - July 3, 2026 Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni REUTERS/Paul Childs
Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Round of 32 - Argentina v Cape Verde - Miami Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida, US - July 3, 2026 Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni REUTERS/Paul Childs

Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni said a dramatic 3-2 win over Cape Verde after extra-time to reach the last 16 of the World Cup had left a bruising impact on the defending champions.

In oppressive Miami heat, Scaloni's side were pushed all the way by the African archipelago of just over 500,000 people.

Lionel Messi's 20th World Cup goal and seventh of this tournament gave Argentina the perfect start.

But the Blue Sharks refused to give up on a remarkable first appearance at the World Cup, AFP reported.

Deroy Duarte's strike on the hour mark forced the game to extra-time.

Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Round of 32 - Argentina v Cape Verde - Miami Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida, US - July 3, 2026 Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni speaks with Lionel Messi after Cristian Romero scores their third goal REUTERS/Amanda Perobelli

Even when Lisandro Martinez restored La Albiceleste's lead, a stunning strike from Sidny Lopes Cabral's brought Cape Verde level again.

Argentina finally edged through to a last 16 meeting with Egypt on Tuesday when Diney Borges turned into his own net under pressure from Cristian Romero.

"Of the 100, this one has surely left the biggest mark on me as a coach," said Scaloni after his 100th match in charge of his country.

"It would have been crazy to have lost."

Argentina had appeared to have landed in a kind quarter of the draw.

If they progress past Egypt in Atlanta, a quarter-final against Switzerland, Colombia or Ghana awaits.

But Scaloni said Cape Verde had shown his side can take nothing for granted.

"I want to congratulate the opponent. When people say there are no easy games, today they proved they are a great team," added Scaloni.

"I'm taking away the contribution from everyone. We finished very tired, but they gave it their all."


Egypt Top Australia on Penalty Kicks, Advance to Round of 16

Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Round of 32 - Australia v Egypt - Dallas Stadium, Arlington, Texas, US - July 3, 2026 Egypt's Trezeguet and Egypt's Emam Ashour celebrate after the match as Egypt qualify for the Round of 16 stage of the World Cup IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/Maria Lysaker
Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Round of 32 - Australia v Egypt - Dallas Stadium, Arlington, Texas, US - July 3, 2026 Egypt's Trezeguet and Egypt's Emam Ashour celebrate after the match as Egypt qualify for the Round of 16 stage of the World Cup IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/Maria Lysaker
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Egypt Top Australia on Penalty Kicks, Advance to Round of 16

Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Round of 32 - Australia v Egypt - Dallas Stadium, Arlington, Texas, US - July 3, 2026 Egypt's Trezeguet and Egypt's Emam Ashour celebrate after the match as Egypt qualify for the Round of 16 stage of the World Cup IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/Maria Lysaker
Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Round of 32 - Australia v Egypt - Dallas Stadium, Arlington, Texas, US - July 3, 2026 Egypt's Trezeguet and Egypt's Emam Ashour celebrate after the match as Egypt qualify for the Round of 16 stage of the World Cup IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters/Maria Lysaker

Egypt converted all four of their penalty kicks to win a shootout with Australia 4-2 following a 1-1 draw, securing their first World Cup knockout- round victory on Friday in Arlington, Texas.

Mahmoud Saber, Ramy Rabia, Mohamed Salah and Hossam Abdelmaguid all deposited their attempts in the net past Mathew Ryan, who did not appear in this World Cup before subbing on for Patrick Beach late in extra time as a penalty-kick specialist.

Harry Souttar had the first try for Australia and cleared his shot into the stands. Jackson Irvine and Awer Mabil got their shots past Egypt keeper Mostafa Shoubir before Salah made a quick sprint at his ball and scored center-net while Ryan dove to his left.

Australia sent 18-year-old Colorado Rapids defender Lucas Herrington on for the fourth round, ⁠and his shot ⁠found the crossbar. That left Abdelmaguid to finish off Egypt's deserved victory as Ryan guessed the wrong way again.

Emam Ashour got Egypt on the board in the 13th minute. The Pharaohs will face Argentina in the round of 16 on Tuesday in Atlanta after the Argentines earned a dramatic 3-2 extra-time victory over Cape Verde in the round of 32.

Australia, who were also looking for ⁠their first-ever knockout triumph, failed to score a regulation goal in their final three matches of the tournament after opening with a 2-0 win over Türkiye. Their lone tally Friday came on an own goal by Mohamed Hany.

During the second-half stoppage, Beach parried Egypt's best chance over the bar, preventing Rabia's close-range header from becoming the game-winner.

The 30 minutes of extra time, like regulation, saw Egypt dominate possession and create more chances as the Socceroos defended corner after corner, Reuters reported.

A creative free kick set up Ashour's goal. Salah flicked it back to Ashour for a run, but a defender blocked his attempt. The ball stayed in ⁠the area, ⁠and Ashour moved into a good position while Egypt passed the ball the other way to Karim Hafez.

When Hafez uncorked a cross to the far side, Ashour was there to elevate for a strong header that split Beach and the post.

Hany -- who needed treatment on his knee during the first half -- was at the center of a scary moment in the early minutes of the second. After an aerial collision with Connor Metcalfe near the Egypt net, Hany fell in a heap and teammates immediately called for assistance. Trainers prepared a stretcher, but after Hany stood up and underwent a concussion check, he was allowed to stay in the game.

The tying own goal came about five minutes later at 55 minutes, when Hany's header could not direct a curling free kick from Aiden O'Neill away from the net.