Italian Club Parma Hires Cristian Chivu as Coach for Relegation Battle in Serie A 

Parma’s Giovanni Leoni (C) celebrates after scoring the 2-1 goal during the Italian Serie A soccer match between Cagliari Calcio and Parma Calcio 1913, in Cagliari, Italy, 09 February 2025. (EPA)
Parma’s Giovanni Leoni (C) celebrates after scoring the 2-1 goal during the Italian Serie A soccer match between Cagliari Calcio and Parma Calcio 1913, in Cagliari, Italy, 09 February 2025. (EPA)
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Italian Club Parma Hires Cristian Chivu as Coach for Relegation Battle in Serie A 

Parma’s Giovanni Leoni (C) celebrates after scoring the 2-1 goal during the Italian Serie A soccer match between Cagliari Calcio and Parma Calcio 1913, in Cagliari, Italy, 09 February 2025. (EPA)
Parma’s Giovanni Leoni (C) celebrates after scoring the 2-1 goal during the Italian Serie A soccer match between Cagliari Calcio and Parma Calcio 1913, in Cagliari, Italy, 09 February 2025. (EPA)

Relegation-threatened Parma hired Cristian Chivu as coach on Tuesday with the team 18th in the 20-team Serie A.

Parma announced the appointment in a statement that did not specify contract details, but according to reports Chivu's deal runs until the end of next season.

The former Romania defender, who was working as a youth coach at Inter Milan, will lead the team for the first time when it hosts Bologna on Saturday.

Parma lost four straight games before firing Fabio Pecchia on Monday and has not won a league game in 2025.



Brazil Is Still Favored vs. Norway at the World Cup, Yet an Upset Wouldn’t Rival 1998

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Round of 32 - Ivory Coast v Norway - Dallas Stadium, Arlington, Texas, US - June 30, 2026 Norway's Erling Haaland and coach Ståle Solbakken celebrate after the match as Norway qualify for the round of 16 stage of the World Cup. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Round of 32 - Ivory Coast v Norway - Dallas Stadium, Arlington, Texas, US - June 30, 2026 Norway's Erling Haaland and coach Ståle Solbakken celebrate after the match as Norway qualify for the round of 16 stage of the World Cup. (Reuters)
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Brazil Is Still Favored vs. Norway at the World Cup, Yet an Upset Wouldn’t Rival 1998

Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Round of 32 - Ivory Coast v Norway - Dallas Stadium, Arlington, Texas, US - June 30, 2026 Norway's Erling Haaland and coach Ståle Solbakken celebrate after the match as Norway qualify for the round of 16 stage of the World Cup. (Reuters)
Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Round of 32 - Ivory Coast v Norway - Dallas Stadium, Arlington, Texas, US - June 30, 2026 Norway's Erling Haaland and coach Ståle Solbakken celebrate after the match as Norway qualify for the round of 16 stage of the World Cup. (Reuters)

Ståle Solbakken knows all about Norway's stunning upset of Brazil during the 1998 World Cup. He was a reserve and watched from the sideline in Marseille as his teammates delivered arguably the biggest victory in men's football in the Scandinavian country’s history.

Now coaching the national team, he also knows facing Brazil on Sunday in the round of 16 is much different than that game nearly three decades ago in group play when his powerhouse opponent had nothing to play for. This time, a spot in the quarterfinals is at stake, and while Solbakken acknowledges it would still be a surprise if Norway knocks off the five-time World Cup champions, it is a realistic possibility in a matchup that is much more evenly matched.

“I still see obviously Brazil is the favorites (but) I don’t think they are big, big, big favorites, which they may be had been some years ago,” Solbakken said Saturday at a news conference ahead of the game. “We still need to be our very, very best. Otherwise, we have no chance. But if we are on our very, very best, then we have a chance.”

Brazil is a slight favorite to advance to play the winner of the titanic matchup between Mexico and England on July 11 outside Miami. Seleção has won three in a row since opening the tournament with a draw against Morocco, also at the Meadowlands in northern New Jersey.

Norway has a win of its own at the stadium outside New York, defeating Senegal to advance to the knockout round. Brazil coach Carlo Ancelotti called Norway a challenging opponent because of structure, as well as talent.

“They have great players,” Brazil midfielder Bruno Guimarães said through an interpreter. “They are not in the knockout rounds by accident. It’s not that we are not respecting Norway. We just believe in our football. We believe in our country, and we want to continue on this dream."

Norway's Erling Haaland and Brazil's Vinícius Júnior are the stars to watch

Standout Norway striker Erling Haaland has five goals at the World Cup, 25 over his past 14 competitive matches internationally and 60 in 53 with the national team. His next challenge is trying to shake Brazil's back line duo of Gabriel Magalhães and Marquinhos that Solbakken called one of the best central defenses around.

“There will certainly be some tough duels between them and Erling,” Solbakken said. “But for me it's more about Brazil against Norway and not that those two against Erling.”

At the other end, Brazil features a dangerous forward trio led by Vinícius Júnior. He and Matheus Cunha have combined for seven goals through four games.

Asked to compare the 6-foot-5, 205-pound Haaland and the 5-foot-9, 170-pounder known as “Viní,” Solbakken said, “One is a machine that you can see the accelerations and the great physique, and the other is more a ballerina that can dance with the ball.”

Guimarães called Haaland one of the best attacking players in the world, in the same stratosphere as England's Harry Kane.

“He is really something else,” Guimarães said. “We have to mark and attack. We do have to attack, but we got to make sure that somebody stays on him because with one ball he can decide the match and we don’t want to let him have it."

Feeling the heat

Since Norway joined Brazil practicing in New Jersey this week, each team has been subjected to the elements of the heat wave ravaging the East Coast. Solbakken said the temperatures being as high as 37 degrees Celsius (99 Fahrenheit) have meant players are not going at full speed but otherwise shook off the effects.

“It's an incredible heat, but we are still full of energy,” Solbakken said. “This is a group of friends who have spent a lot of time together now, and they are in a great mood. We haven’t noticed the heat at all, actually.”

Guimarães expects the heat to be a factor Sunday, though rain is expected overnight, cooling things down to a high temperature of 85 degrees (29.44 Celsius) and there is a chance of rain and thunderstorms.

Lucas Paquetá, who limped off at halftime and exited the round of 32 game against Japan, is not expected to play because of a hamstring injury.

“We do not have anyone else on the team with the same characteristics of Lucas Paquetá, so we'll have to find someone else,” Ancelotti said, while declining to reveal his plan.

Norway defender Julian Ryerson is a candidate to return after leaving early in the game against Senegal on June 22 with injury. He has not played since, and Solbakken similarly was coy about his lineup other than to say to expect Alexander Sørloth and Oscar Bobb to each play at some point.


Coach Says Morocco ‘No Longer a Surprise’ After Reaching World Cup Quarters

 Morocco's players and head coach Mohamed Ouahbi celebrate their 3-0 win after the World Cup round of 16 soccer match between Canada and Morocco in Houston, Saturday, July 4, 2026. (AP)
Morocco's players and head coach Mohamed Ouahbi celebrate their 3-0 win after the World Cup round of 16 soccer match between Canada and Morocco in Houston, Saturday, July 4, 2026. (AP)
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Coach Says Morocco ‘No Longer a Surprise’ After Reaching World Cup Quarters

 Morocco's players and head coach Mohamed Ouahbi celebrate their 3-0 win after the World Cup round of 16 soccer match between Canada and Morocco in Houston, Saturday, July 4, 2026. (AP)
Morocco's players and head coach Mohamed Ouahbi celebrate their 3-0 win after the World Cup round of 16 soccer match between Canada and Morocco in Houston, Saturday, July 4, 2026. (AP)

Morocco coach Mohamed Ouahbi said "we're no longer a surprise" after reaching the World Cup quarter-finals on Saturday and hit back at "bold" claims by Canada's Jesse Marsch.

The north African side were not at their best but were clinical in defeating Marsch's co-hosts 3-0 in Houston and will face France or Paraguay next.

Morocco made the semi-finals at the 2022 World Cup and won the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations, and Ouahbi said: "We're no longer a surprise today and that's a great source of pride.

"I think this is only the beginning and I hope we'll keep producing this kind of run for many years."

Morocco lost to France in the last four at Qatar 2022, but the coach said revenge was not their motivation if they clash next in North America.

"We want to go as far as possible and make our people proud," he said.

After Canada were the better team in the first half, Azzedine Ounahi scored twice for Morocco on 50 and 82 minutes to kill off the tie.

"What we're trying to get across to our players is that we're playing in a World Cup, which means you go through difficult moments," said the coach.

"What we needed to do was hold on and show resilience when things aren't going so well."

His opposite number Marsch said he felt his side had been the better team, to which Ouahbi replied: "In terms of intensity they were good, that has to be said.

"Were they better? Hard to say that when you lose 3-0, it's a bold claim," he remarked.

"They were well organized, but I think in the second half there was no contest.

"In any case," he added, "I'm not sure many teams are going to win by that scoreline in the round of 16."


France Survive Paraguay’s Prickly Test but Warning Lights Flash

Kylian Mbappe #10 of France controls the ball against Julio Enciso #19 of Paraguay during the FIFA World Cup 2026 round of 16 match between Paraguay and France at Philadelphia Stadium on July 04, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Getty Images/AFP)
Kylian Mbappe #10 of France controls the ball against Julio Enciso #19 of Paraguay during the FIFA World Cup 2026 round of 16 match between Paraguay and France at Philadelphia Stadium on July 04, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Getty Images/AFP)
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France Survive Paraguay’s Prickly Test but Warning Lights Flash

Kylian Mbappe #10 of France controls the ball against Julio Enciso #19 of Paraguay during the FIFA World Cup 2026 round of 16 match between Paraguay and France at Philadelphia Stadium on July 04, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Getty Images/AFP)
Kylian Mbappe #10 of France controls the ball against Julio Enciso #19 of Paraguay during the FIFA World Cup 2026 round of 16 match between Paraguay and France at Philadelphia Stadium on July 04, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Getty Images/AFP)

France arrived in Philadelphia ‌with the swagger of World Cup heavyweights and left looking like they had spent the afternoon wrestling a cactus, grinding out a narrow victory over Paraguay in sweltering conditions.

Their win was less a showcase of French elegance than a survival exercise, with Kylian Mbappe's penalty finally settling an ill-tempered contest that Paraguay had dragged into their preferred territory of physical confrontation and tactical disruption.

Paraguay offered something France rarely face: tight man-marking, bodies around the wingers and just enough fouls, fussing and provocation to make the favorites twitch.

It almost worked.

Rarely do Mbappe, Ousmane Dembele and Michael Olise look so short of rhythm. France ‌are used ‌to facing zonal blocks, rehearsed pressing traps and neat ‌defensive ⁠lines.

Paraguay instead turned ⁠the match into a series of physical personal duels, doubling up wide and denying the French attackers the time and angles they usually bend to their will.

The first half told the story, with France failing to create a clear-cut chance before the break.

Paraguay keeper Orlando Gill was required only to deal with a harmless low effort from Adrien Rabiot, while the excellent Matias Galarza ⁠and Andres Cubas closed central spaces and gave France ‌little comfort.

Miguel Almiron and Julio Enciso also ‌gave Paraguay just enough menace to make France center-backs William Saliba and Dayot ‌Upamecano work, even if that threat often came from scraps rather than ‌structure.

Yet Paraguay's plan carried a fatal flaw that became more glaring as the heat intensified. Their defensive approach came with almost no counter-attacking mechanism beyond long balls into space.

That left Enciso chasing hopeful passes while teammates sank deeper. It was containment ‌without release, resistance without a pressure valve.

Against a side of France's quality, that is a dangerous way to ⁠live. Eventually, their ⁠depth told when substitute Desire Doue forced a penalty and Mbappe converted, sending Gill the wrong way.

It was a brave Paraguay performance. Their resolve, similar to that shown in knocking out Germany on penalties, again made life miserable for a more decorated opponent.

Yet defending almost constantly in extreme heat, especially after an earlier extra-time ordeal, demanded perfection and one mistake was enough to cause their downfall.

For France, this served as a useful alarm bell. They found a way through, but not with authority. Paraguay tested their patience, their temperament and their ability to adapt to a style rarely seen in Europe.

Next come Morocco, comfortable winners over Canada, on Thursday, giving France little time to lick their Philadelphia battle wounds before another examination of their title credentials.