France manager Didier Deschamps, left, in talks with striker Kylian Mbappe during training ahead of the 2018 World Cup qualifier against Bulgaria. Franck Fife / AFP
France manager Didier Deschamps, left, in talks with striker Kylian Mbappe during training ahead of the 2018 World Cup qualifier against Bulgaria. Franck Fife / AFP
France manager Didier Deschamps, left, in talks with striker Kylian Mbappe during training ahead of the 2018 World Cup qualifier against Bulgaria. Franck Fife / AFP
France manager Didier Deschamps, left, in talks with striker Kylian Mbappe during training ahead of the 2018 World Cup qualifier against Bulgaria. Franck Fife / AFP

Group A stands for Anxiety as France, Sweden and Netherlands battle to reach 2018 World Cup


Ian Hawkey
  • English
  • Arabic

Group A in European qualifying for the 2018 World Cup in Russia could stand for any number of things.

A is for Aged, if you look at the third-placed country, a diminished Netherlands, with veteran captain Arjen Robben and septuagenarian manager Dick Advocaat.

A is for Absentee when it’s a Sweden without Zlatan Ibrahimovic, their internationally retired – and injured – totem for most of this century.

Going into the last 180 minutes of jousting for the top two spots the A in Group A stands for Anxiety. France, one point above the Swedes, and four clear of the Dutch, lead the table, but arrived in Bulgaria for their penultimate game against a backdrop of nerves.

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They know their opponents have live ambitions –  Bulgaria, with six points still to play for, could conceivably leap all the way up to top spot by the middle of next week – and a historic hex over France.

France’s manager Didier Deschamps was a France player on the infamous November 1993 night when a 90th-minute Bulgaria goal denied the French a place at the following summer’s World Cup. The Frenchman who gave the ball away in the lead-up, David Ginola, was never forgiven.

Deschamps feels jittery for other reasons. He has almost half a possible first team on the injury list, including a quartet of the younger players who, thanks partly to the size of their recent transfer fees, will identify the French as real candidates to go far should they make it to Russia 2018.

Manchester United’s Paul Pogba, Barcelona’s Ousmane Dembele, Manchester City’s Benjamin Mendy and Paris Saint-Germain’s Layvin Kurzawa are all out with fitness issues, as is Laurent Koscielny from the centre of the defence.

And, for all France's apparent riches in attack – Antoine Griezmann, Kylian Mbappe, Alex Lacazette – they have been outscored by the post-Ibrahimovic Sweden in the group. They contrived to draw 0-0 at home to Luxembourg in their last outing.

“We are not going to go back over Luxembourg,” said Deschamps, “apart from just the normal analysis looking over an abnormal match we ought to have won.”

It almost sounded as if Deschamps was drawing a dark blind over anything that might make his players neurotic about their odd capacity to turn superiority into setback.

France may sit top of Group A but they are there precariously because of 0-0 draws against Luxembourg and rock-bottom Belarus, and because they turned a 1-0 lead in Sweden in June into a 2-1 loss, with the decisive second Swedish goal conceded in the 94th minute after a dreadful error by goalkeeper and captain Hugo Lloris.

Sweden host Luxembourg on Friday night, and a win would take them into next week’s last group match against the Netherlands with comfortable breathing space over Holland, who also have an inferior goal difference. The desperate Dutch, who play Belarus on Saturday, are on the brink of missing out on a second successive major tournament.

Their plunge has been dramatic. In 2014, Holland were ranked third in the world by Fifa. They duly collected bronze at that year’s World Cup, a festival that began with a resonant 5-1 thrashing of the defending champions Spain.

Three managers later, Advocaat, in his third stint in charge, was asked to pick up the pieces of a campaign that had lurched in the wrong direction with defeat to Bulgaria. France thrashed the Dutch 4-0 in June.

The prospect of even clambering into the play-off slot depends on France or Sweden slipping up and the Netherlands revving up.

Advocaat has entrusted the task of putting together back-to-back wins against Belarus and Sweden, preferably with a handsome goal-difference, to a squad without Wesley Sneijder, whose current form at his new club Nice, says the manager, does not justify his adding to his record 132 caps. “Personally, I’d have liked him to be here,” said Robben, “but the decision is with the coach.”

Advocaat has called up instead not a bright, young prospect but Ryan Babel, 30, who in the six years since his last cap has hopscotched around club football from Germany, to Spain, to Turkey, via a spell with the UAE’s Al Ain.

Robben is under few illusions about Holland’s chances. “Never say never, but we have to be realistic,” he said of the possibilities of his making a tournament where he has collected silver and bronze medals in the last two editions. “It looks very, very hard for us.”

For the Netherlands, the A in Group A looks a lot like it stands for ‘Adios’.

UAE SQUAD

Ahmed Raza (Captain), Rohan Mustafa, Jonathan Figy, CP Rizwan, Junaid Siddique, Mohammad Usman, Basil Hameed, Zawar Farid, Vriitya Aravind (WK), Waheed Ahmed, Karthik Meiyappan, Zahoor Khan, Darius D'Silva, Chirag Suri

Should late investors consider cryptocurrencies?

Wealth managers recommend late investors to have a balanced portfolio that typically includes traditional assets such as cash, government and corporate bonds, equities, commodities and commercial property.

They do not usually recommend investing in Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies due to the risk and volatility associated with them.

“It has produced eye-watering returns for some, whereas others have lost substantially as this has all depended purely on timing and when the buy-in was. If someone still has about 20 to 25 years until retirement, there isn’t any need to take such risks,” Rupert Connor of Abacus Financial Consultant says.

He adds that if a person is interested in owning a business or growing a property portfolio to increase their retirement income, this can be encouraged provided they keep in mind the overall risk profile of these assets.

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets

21 Lessons for the 21st Century

Yuval Noah Harari, Jonathan Cape
 

Sweet%20Tooth
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SPECS
%3Cp%3EEngine%3A%20Supercharged%203.5-litre%20V6%0D%3Cbr%3EPower%3A%20400hp%0D%3Cbr%3ETorque%3A%20430Nm%0D%3Cbr%3EOn%20sale%3A%20Now%0D%3Cbr%3EPrice%3A%20From%20Dh450%2C000%0D%3Cbr%3E%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
Results
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EStage%202%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%3Cbr%3E1.%20Soudal%E2%80%93Quick-Step%20-%2018%E2%80%9911%E2%80%9D%3Cbr%3E2.%20EF%20Education%20%E2%80%93%20EasyPost%20-%201%22%3Cbr%3E3.%20Ineos%20Grenadiers%20-%203%22%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EGeneral%20classification%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%3Cbr%3E1.%20Lucas%20Plapp%20(AUS)%20Ineos%20Grenadiers%3Cbr%3E2.%20Remco%20Evenepoel%20(BEL)%20Soudal%E2%80%93Quick-Step%20-%20ST%3Cbr%3E3.%20Nikias%20Arndt%20(GER)%20Bahrain%20Victorious%20-%203%22%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
Cultural fiesta

What: The Al Burda Festival
When: November 14 (from 10am)
Where: Warehouse421,  Abu Dhabi
The Al Burda Festival is a celebration of Islamic art and culture, featuring talks, performances and exhibitions. Organised by the Ministry of Culture and Knowledge Development, this one-day event opens with a session on the future of Islamic art. With this in mind, it is followed by a number of workshops and “masterclass” sessions in everything from calligraphy and typography to geometry and the origins of Islamic design. There will also be discussions on subjects including ‘Who is the Audience for Islamic Art?’ and ‘New Markets for Islamic Design.’ A live performance from Kuwaiti guitarist Yousif Yaseen should be one of the highlights of the day. 

Coffee: black death or elixir of life?

It is among the greatest health debates of our time; splashed across newspapers with contradicting headlines - is coffee good for you or not?

Depending on what you read, it is either a cancer-causing, sleep-depriving, stomach ulcer-inducing black death or the secret to long life, cutting the chance of stroke, diabetes and cancer.

The latest research - a study of 8,412 people across the UK who each underwent an MRI heart scan - is intended to put to bed (caffeine allowing) conflicting reports of the pros and cons of consumption.

The study, funded by the British Heart Foundation, contradicted previous findings that it stiffens arteries, putting pressure on the heart and increasing the likelihood of a heart attack or stroke, leading to warnings to cut down.

Numerous studies have recognised the benefits of coffee in cutting oral and esophageal cancer, the risk of a stroke and cirrhosis of the liver. 

The benefits are often linked to biologically active compounds including caffeine, flavonoids, lignans, and other polyphenols, which benefit the body. These and othetr coffee compounds regulate genes involved in DNA repair, have anti-inflammatory properties and are associated with lower risk of insulin resistance, which is linked to type-2 diabetes.

But as doctors warn, too much of anything is inadvisable. The British Heart Foundation found the heaviest coffee drinkers in the study were most likely to be men who smoked and drank alcohol regularly.

Excessive amounts of coffee also unsettle the stomach causing or contributing to stomach ulcers. It also stains the teeth over time, hampers absorption of minerals and vitamins like zinc and iron.

It also raises blood pressure, which is largely problematic for people with existing conditions.

So the heaviest drinkers of the black stuff - some in the study had up to 25 cups per day - may want to rein it in.

Rory Reynolds