15 fun facts about Khvicha Kvaratskhelia

Everything you need to know about the silky Georgian sensation Khvicha Kvaratskhelia!

Khvicha Kvaratskhelia is a talented Georgian football player who was born on August 17, 2000, in Tbilisi, Georgia. The winger currently plays his club football for Napoli in Serie A and internationally represents the Georgian national team.

He started his youth career at Dinamo Tbilisi in Tbilisi, Georgia's capital, joining their academy in 2012. It did not take him long to progress through the ranks at his hometown club, where he made his debut aged 16 and quickly established himself as one of the most promising young talents in the country. He was soon snapped up by Rustavi, from whom he joined Lokomotiv Moscow on loan in 2019, winning the Russian Cup.

The 6ft ace signed a five-year permanent deal with Rubin Kazan in the Russian top-flight later that same year aged 18 and made an immediate impact. Kvaratskhelia’s debut season saw him win four player of the month awards, while he was also named in famous French outlet top 50 players born in the 21st century and his market value increased multi-fold.

Due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine during the 2021-22 season, foreign players in Russia were allowed to suspend their contracts from the club and sign for any team outside Russia. Rubin Kazan stated that Khvicha’s contract had been terminated as he returned home to Georgia, joining Dinamo Batumi in March for the remainder of the campaign.

After making 11 appearances for the Georgian side, he then joined Napoli in 2022 on a long-term contract for a reported fee of €10-12m, which is a steal considering he's now valued at north of €100m after a spectacular start to life in Italy.

Indeed, he has been a huge hit since his summer move to Naples, and has taken Serie A and mainstream European football by storm, playing a crucial role during the 2022-23 season as they are cruising towards their first Scudetto in 33 years.

A whole host of big sharks are monitoring his progress at Napoli and he has already been linked with a potential move to a host of elite European clubs. First and foremost, he looks all set to make history in Naples.

Kvaratskhelia has represented the Georgian national team at various youth levels before making his senior debut in September 2019 in a match against Denmark. At 22, Kvaratskhelia already has 20 caps and 10 goals for his home country. Despite being in the early stages of his career, his fame in Georgia is already well-established. When he returns to his homeland, he is welcomed as a hero.

All in all, the Georgian sensation looks set to dominate the headlines in the coming months, but what are the 15 fun facts about Kvaratskhelia that you need to know?

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    Nicknamed 'Kvaradona'

    It didn't take long at Napoli for Kvaratskhelia to earn himself a coveted nickname. He’s been dubbed affectionately “Kvaradona” after a lightning start to life in Italy; one which has captured the imagination of the football-mad city.

    You see, there have been many great players to don the famous shirt, including the likes of club's all-time leading scorer Dries Mertens, local hero Lorenzo Insigne, Marek Hamsik, and Ezequiel Lavezzi. But none have been more famous – or loved by Napoli fans – than Diego Maradona, who is almost a deity-like figure in Naples.

    Maradona's legacy at the club was such that after his death in 2020, they renamed their stadium after him, as he led them to their only Scudetto titles in 1986/87 and 1989/1990 in arguably the greatest underdog stories of the time, as well as the club's only European success with the 1988/89 UEFA Cup.

    So to be compared to Maradona by the Napoli faithful comes with the hope that with it will bring the success the Argentine brought with him. And Kvaratskhelia has lived up to the nickname, having steered them to the brink of their first league title since the Argentine legend's heyday.

    “Obviously I like the nickname,” Kvaratskhelia said in an interview. “I can’t come close to Maradona, but I will give everything to become a big player for this club.”

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  • Live is life 🎤🎶

    As alluded to above, you know by now that the Napoli fans call him Kvaradona. But what we didn’t tell you is that the Georgian earned that name even before he made his first outing for the Italian giants. So, during his initiation after signing with the club, Kvaratskhelia performed the famous song by Opus, .

    That song was popular on its own back in the day, but it became much more well-known when Maradona danced to it on the pitch before a UEFA Cup semi-final match between Napoli and Bayern Munich in 1989.

    With 70,000 fans packed into the stadium and the song "Live is Life" booming from the speakers, the Bayern and Napoli players ran out to the pitch for the pre-match warm-up. Everybody was warming up usually, then there’s Maradona just loving the beat, enjoying himself, juggling, and doing flicks at a rapid pace to match the rhythm of the song as he entertained the crowd. Even the Bayern players stopped their warmup to watch the magician do his thing.

    That show he put on had a huge impact on Napoli supporters and the rest of Italy. The song has since been used multiple times in the Napoli stadium as a tribute to the great Argentinian. Kvaratskhelia, a Georgian boy, who wasn’t even born until 12 years after the famous funky warmup, then performed that song in his initiation ceremony after signing for Napoli.

    Of course, that's no coincidence, and the act was always going to endear him to fans. Perhaps that was the reason that the Georgian gained his nickname after Maradona aside from the fact that his real name is just so difficult to pronounce.

  • Followed his footballer father's footsteps 👣

    Khvicha grew up with two brothers in a close-knit family. He's the middle of the three, while the youngest brother Tornike also aspires to be a professional footballer.

    Khvicha's first coach was his father, Badri Kvaratskhelia, a former Azerbaijani international football player. Maka Lukava, his mother, has been his ardent supporter throughout his career and has been nothing short of a loving parent as a former footballer.

    The youngsters' love of football was clear from an early age, and his parents pushed him to pursue his aspirations, but they never had to compel him to take part in training sessions or become a footballer.

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    The Georgian Messi who idolizes CR7

    Blessed with bags of technical talent, creative flair, an ability and confidence to dribble past defenders, comfortable with both feet, it's no wonder Kvaratskhelia has been dubbed "the Georgian Messi" by fans and journalists. His quick feet and eye for goal from distance are a sight to behold.

    Despite those comparisons, it is the PSG playmaker's perennial rival that the Napoli winger idolises. He loves Ronaldo so much that he wanted to wear the number 7 shirt at Napoli. But since he was already taken by North Macedonian talent Elif Elmas, he decided to wear 77.

All completed Premier League transfers in 2022-23 season – listed

GOAL rounds up all of the completed Premier League transfers this season so far

Football transfers are among the most exciting aspects of the game, with fans drooling at the prospect of a coveted new signing arriving at their club.

The Premier League is home to some of the richest teams in the world, with many clubs sparing little expense in pursuit of recruits who will help their cause.

GOAL rounds up all of the completed Premier League transfers this season so far.

  • Transfer INs and OUTs for all Premier League clubs

    Club

    2021-22 position

    Man City

    1st

    Liverpool

    2nd

    Chelsea

    3rd

    Tottenham

    4th

    Arsenal

    5th

    Man Utd

    6th

    West Ham

    7th

    Leicester

    8th

    Brighton

    9th

    Wolves

    10th

    Newcastle

    11th

    Crystal Palace

    12th

    Brentford

    13th

    Aston Villa

    14th

    Southampton

    15th

    Everton

    16th

    Leeds

    17th

    Fulham

    1st Champ.

    Bournemouth

    2nd Champ.

    Nottingham Forest

    Champ. play-off

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    Arsenal transfers

    New signings

    Player

    Nationality

    Previous club

    Fee

    Marquinhos

    Brazil

    Sao Paulo

    £3m

    Fabio Vieira

    Portugal

    Porto

    £30m

    Matt Turner

    United States

    New England Revolution

    £8m

    Gabriel Jesus

    Brazil

    Man City

    £45m

    Oleksandr Zinchenko

    Ukraine

    Manchester City

    £32m

    Leandro Trossard

    Belgium

    Brighton

    £26m

    Jakub Kiwior

    Poland

    La Spezia

    £20m

    Jorginho

    Italy

    Chelsea

    £12m

    Departures

    Player

    Nationality

    New club

    Fee

    Dinos Mavropanos

    Greece

    Stuttgart

    Undisclosed

    Alexandre Lacazette

    France

    Lyon

    Free

    Jonathan Dinzeyi

    England

    Released

    Free

    Joel Lopez

    Spain

    Released

    Free

    Jordan McEneff

    Ireland

    Released

    Free

    Tyreece John-Jules

    England

    Ipswich

    Loan

    Omar Rekik

    Tunisia

    Sparta Rotterdam

    Loan

    Mika Biereth

    Denmark

    Waalwijk

    Loan

    Jordi Osei-Tutu

    England

    Bochum

    Free

    Dan Ballard

    Northern Ireland

    Sunderland

    Undisclosed

    Matteo Guendouzi

    France

    Marseille

    €10.5m

    Austin Trusty

    United States

    Birmingham City

    Loan

    Omari Hutchinson

    Jamaica

    Chelsea

    Undisclosed

    Marcelo Flores

    Mexico

    Real Oviedo

    Loan

    Arthur Okonkwo

    England

    Crewe Alexandra

    Loan

    Nuno Tavares

    Portugal

    Marseille

    Loan

    Bernd Leno

    Germany

    Fulham

    £8m

    Folarin Balogun

    England

    Stade de Reims

    Loan

    Charlie Patino

    England

    Blackpool

    Loan

    Lucas Torreira

    Uruguay

    Galatasaray

    Undisclosed

    Pablo Mari

    Spain

    Monza

    Loan

    Alex Runarsson

    Iceland

    Antalyaspor

    Loan

    Brooke Norton-Cuffy

    England

    Coventry

    Loan

    Salah-Eddine Oulad M'hand

    Netherlands

    Hull City

    Loan

    Nicolas Pepe

    Cote d'Ivoire

    Nice

    Loan

    Miguel Azeez

    England

    Wigan

    Loan

    Ainsley Maitland-Niles

    England

    Southampton

    Loan

    James Olayinka

    England

    Cheltenham Town

    Undisclosed

    Hector Bellerin

    Spain

    Barcelona

    Free

    Tim Akinola

    Nigeria

    Chesterfield

    Loan

    Arthur Okonkwo

    England

    SK Sturm Graz

    Loan

    Ovie Ejeheri

    England

    SJK Seinajoki

    Loan

    Harry Clarke

    England

    Ipswich Town

    Undisclosed

    Marquinhos

    Brazil

    Norwich City

    Loan

    Omar Rekik

    Tunisia

    Wigan Athletic

    Loan

    Cedric Soares

    Portugal

    Fulham

    Loan

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    Aston Villa transfers

    New signings

    Player

    Nationality

    Previous club

    Fee

    Philippe Coutinho

    Brazil

    Barcelona

    £17m

    Boubacar Kamara

    France

    Marseille

    Free

    Diego Carlos

    Brazil

    Sevilla

    £26m

    Robin Olsen

    Sweden

    Roma

    £3m

    Rory Wilson

    Scotland

    Rangers

    £350k

    Ludwig Augustinsson

    Sweden

    Sevilla

    Loan

    Ewan Simpson

    Scotland

    Hearts

    £250k

    Leander Dendoncker

    Belgium

    Wolves

    Undisclosed

    Jan Bednarek

    Poland

    Southampton

    Loan

    Alex Moreno

    Spain

    Real Betis

    £13.3m

    Jhon Duran

    Colombia

    Chicago Fire

    Undisclosed

    Aaron Ramsey

    England

    Norwich

    Loan recall

    Departures

    Player

    Nationality

    New club

    Fee

    Lovre Kalinic

    Croatia

    Hajduk Split

    Free

    Indiana Vassilev

    United States

    St. Louis City

    Undisclosed

    Matt Targett

    England

    Newcastle United

    £15m

    Conor Hourihane

    Ireland

    Derby County

    Free

    Trezeguet

    Egypt

    Trabzonspor

    £4.25m

    Louie Barry

    England

    MK Dons

    Loan

    Wesley Moraes

    Brazil

    Levante

    Loan

    Carney Chukwuemeka

    England

    Chelsea

    £20m

    Keinan Davis

    England

    Watford

    Loan

    Kaine Kesler-Hayden

    England

    Huddersfield Town

    Loan

    Bertrand Traore

    Burkina Faso

    Istanbul Basaksehir

    Loan

    Kortney Hause

    England

    Watford

    Loan

    Ben Chrisene

    England

    Kilmarnock

    Loan

    Anwar El-Ghazi

    Netherlands

    PSV

    Undisclosed

    Tim Iroegbunam

    England

    QPR

    Loan

    Brad Young

    England

    Ayr

    Loan

    Frederic Guilbert

    France

    Strasbourg

    Undisclosed

    Tyreik Wright

    Ireland

    Plymouth Argyle

    Undisclosed

    Cameron Archer

    England

    Middlesbrough

    Loan

    Jhon Duran

    Colombia

    Chicago Fire

    Undisclosed

    Marvelous Nakamba

    Zimbabwe

    Luton Town

    Loan

    Aaron Ramsey

    England

    Middlesbrough

    Loan

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    Bournemouth transfers

    New signings

    Player

    Nationality

    Previous club

    Fee

    Ryan Fredericks

    England

    West Ham

    Free

    Joe Rothwell

    England

    Blackburn

    Free

    Marcus Tavernier

    England

    Middlesbrough

    Undisclosed

    Neto

    Spain

    Barcelona

    Free

    Marcos Senesi

    Argentina

    Feyenoord

    Undisclosed

    Jack Stephens

    England

    Southampton

    Loan

    Dango Ouattara

    Burkina Faso

    Lorient

    Undisclosed

    Darren Randolph

    Republic of Ireland

    West Ham

    Undisclosed

    Illia Zabarnyi

    Ukraine

    Dynamo Kyiv

    Undisclosed

    Hamed Traore

    Ivory Coast

    Sassuolo

    Loan

    Departures

    Player

    Nationality

    New club

    Fee

    Gary Cahill

    England

    Released

    Free

    Brennan Camp

    Scotland

    Eastleigh

    Free

    Ryan Glover

    England

    Released

    Free

    Connor Kurran-Browne

    Guyana

    Hampton & Richmond

    Free

    Luke Nippard

    England

    Weymouth

    Free

    Owen Palmer

    England

    Released

    Free

    Aaron Roberts

    England

    Wimborne Town

    Free

    Jack Seddon

    England

    Weymouth

    Free

    Gavin Kilkenny

    Ireland

    Stoke City

    Loan

    Robbie Brady

    Ireland

    Preston

    Free

    Zeno Ibsen Rossi

    England

    Cambridge United

    Undisclosed

    Brooklyn Genesini

    England

    Naestved Boldklub

    Loan

    Jamal Lowe

    Jamaica

    QPR

    Loan

    Ferdinand Okoh

    England

    Dorchester

    Loan

    James Hill

    England

    Hearts

    Loan

Liverpool player ratings vs Real Madrid: Alisson & Joe Gomez horror-shows condemn Reds to record-breaking defeat

The Reds are staring Champions League elimination in the face after they were put to the sword by the defending European champions

Liverpool threw away a two-goal advantage thanks to individual errors from Alisson and Joe Gomez as Real Madrid cruised to a comfortable 5-2 victory at Anfield in the first leg of their Champions League last-16 tie.

An audacious Darwin Nunez flick and Mohamed Salah strike following Thibaut Courtois' error had given the home side a 2-0 lead early on.

But Alisson responded with a glaring mistake of his own as Madrid showed their European pedigree and turned the tide against a debilitated Liverpool side.

Vinicius Junior and Karim Benzema each scored a brace while Eder Militao also grabbed a goal as Gomez in particular endured a night to forget.

The result was Liverpool's worst European defeat on home soil and leaves Jurgen Klopp's side a near impossible task when they travel to Santiago Bernabeu in three weeks' time.

After a rollercoaster night that went from the sublime to the ridiculous and back again, GOAL rates Liverpool's players from Anfield…

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    Goalkeeper & Defence

    Alisson (4/10):

    Could do nothing about four of the five goals, but was solely responsible for Vinicius' equaliser, arguably the turning point in the game.

    Trent Alexander-Arnold (7/10):

    The shining light in a dark, dark day for Liverpool's back line. Looked a constant threat going forward, but his sublime passes needed a finishing touch.

    Joe Gomez (3/10):

    A game to forget. Easily beaten for Madrid's first, sold Alisson short for their second, gave a needless free-kick away for the third and deflected home the fourth. Struggled all night.

    Virgil van Dijk (5/10):

    No glaring errors like his centre-back partner but still far from his dominant self. Ran ragged by Benzema for his two goals.

    Andrew Robertson (6/10):

    Started brightly and provided a match-saving clearance at 2-2, although that didn't count for much in the end.

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  • Midfield

    Jordan Henderson (5/10):

    Outrun in midfield despite a dominant opening 20 minutes. Unable to deal with the brilliance of Modric and Valverde.

    Fabinho (4/10):

    See above. Always looked vulnerable in transition, gave the ball away for Madrid's fifth.

    Stefan Bajcetic (5/10):

    Offered something different to his midfield partners but give the ball away too many times. Maybe struggled with the big occasion.

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    Attack

    Mohamed Salah (7/10):

    Pin-point assist for Nunez's opener and pounced on Courtois' glaring error, but faded as the game wore on.

    Cody Gakpo (6/10):

    Brimming with confidence at the beginning of the game but more or less disappeared after 20 minutes. Brought off for Firmino on 64 minutes.

    Darwin Nunez (8/10):

    Scored a brilliant goal and showed tenacity in defence and attack all game. Unfortunate not to have been awarded a penalty, even more so to be brought off early alongside Gakpo.

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  • Subs & Manager

    Roberto Firmino (4/10):

    Replaced Gakpo but failed to offer much going forward. Should have scored from Alexander-Arnold's corner.

    Diogo Jota (4/10):

    Came on for the electric Nunez and weakened Liverpool's attack as a result.

    Joel Matip (6/10):

    Put Gomez out of his misery on 73 minutes. Only defender not to concede on the night.

    James Milner (6/10):

    Got a 20-minute run out alongside Matip. Nothing of note to report.

    Harvey Elliot (N/A):

    Only introduced for the final five minutes.

    Jugen Klopp (5/10):

    Saw his side completely capitulate from a position of control. Unable to do anything about the individual errors, but his subs weakened a Liverpool side who had all but given up by the end.

Potter's ability, Pulisic's future and selection consistency: Six questions Chelsea must answer after the World Cup break

A challenging start to life at Stamford Bridge meant the World Cup break was well timed for Graham Potter, but can he turn it around this season?

There are few Premier League managers who should have benefited more from the anomaly of a mid-season 'pre-season' than Chelsea's Graham Potter.

Although it feels like a lifetime ago, the Blues' form dipped alarmingly in early November after an encouraging start to Potter's tenure and they entered the World Cup break without a win in five Premier League games, culminating in three straight defeats.

But with all eyes fixed on Qatar for the past month, Potter will have been able to quietly go about his work in the background and make use of an incredibly rare opportunity to implement his ideas mid-season.

However, there are still plenty of questions to answer as Chelsea prepare to face Bournemouth in the Premier League on Tuesday.

GOAL runs through them below…

  • Getty

    6Are Chelsea's fitness problems behind them?

    Given their lavish summer spending and (arguably superficial) squad depth, it is easy to forget that Chelsea were plagued by injuries in the early part of the season.

    Key players Wesley Fofana, Reece James, N'Golo Kante and Ben Chilwell have all been sidelined for lengthy periods with knee and hamstring issues, respectively, but it was encouraging to see them included in the travelling squad for a warm weather training camp in Abu Dhabi ahead of a return to domestic action.

    In October, Potter spoke of his desire to rectify the club's poor recent fitness record. "I don't think you should blame everything on luck that's for sure," he said. "I think we can have a look and see what we can do better. Obviously, I've been here a few weeks so I haven't got the answers completely. But clearly, we want to always try to improve and that's an area that we can probably improve."

    The World Cup pause will have hopefully provided ample time, data and statistics to get to the bottom of their woes, though a setback for Fofana will be a concern.

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    5Stick or twist with World Cup stars?

    Ironically, two of Chelsea's best performers at the World Cup are players whose futures at Stamford Bridge are far from certain: Christian Pulisic and Hakim Ziyech.

    Both wide men were transformed in their national team colours in Qatar, inspiring their nations to the knockout rounds.

    Pulisic looked close to his best as he made three goal contributions in just four games for the United States, including the vital winning goal against Iran in the group stage.

    Meanwhile, Ziyech was equally influential as he rediscovered his swagger – scoring an audacious lob and assisting too as Morocco topped a group that included Belgium and Croatia. Although his influence waned, he will surely be buoyed by making history as the Atlas Lions became the first African nation to reach the World Cup semi-finals.

    Chelsea may well have a choice to make: Give the pair more opportunities and see whether their form translates to domestic action, or cash in on their eye-catching World Cup displays.

    It's unlikely they will part with both in January, though.

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    4What is Chelsea's best midfield?

    Injuries haven't helped, but constant chopping and changing in midfield have resulted in Chelsea's lack of form, consistency and identity.

    Jorginho, Ruben Loftus-Cheek, Mateo Kovacic and Conor Gallagher have shared the load in N'Golo Kante's notable absence, but none of them contribute enough in an attacking sense. Mason Mount could provide that impetus in a three, but he needs to buck up his ideas, too.

    In truth, Chelsea missed a trick when they failed to reinforce that area in the summer, although Juventus loanee Denis Zakaria's performances suggest he deserves more opportunities.

    There is work to be done. Potter needs to find the right balance – and fast.

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    3What is Chelsea's best attack?

    Similar to the midfield, both Thomas Tuchel and subsequently Potter's rotation has at least in part contributed to Chelsea's forward players struggling to hit the heights expected of them.

    Depending on the set-up of the side – something that also changes on a regular basis – some combination of Kai Havertz, Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Raheem Sterling seems likely to become the most fruitful attack on paper, but it's clear they will need time to become a cohesive unit.

    As previously mentioned, an in-form Pulisic or Ziyech could have a say if they can translate their international form to the Premier League.

Rob Lee backs Armstrong for West Ham move

West Ham United currently have just Michail Antonio as a recognised striker and Rob Lee, who was given the chance by the late Glenn Roeder to play for his boyhood club, has exclusively told Football FanCast that Adam Armstrong is good enough to play for the Hammers.

Armstrong enjoyed a scintillating season in front of goal for Blackburn as he netted 28 goals in the Championship, only pipped to the Golden Boot award by fellow ex-Newcastle United striker, Ivan Toney.

Blackburn’s manager, Tony Mowbray, has claimed that he hopes Premier League clubs come in for his star striker, and both West Ham and Newcastle have been credited with an interest in the 24-year old.

Armstrong was loaned out to clubs such as Bolton Wanderers, Barnsley and Coventry during his time on Tyneside and was eventually sold in 2018, and Lee spoke exclusively to FFC about how the striker is good enough to play for the Hammers:

He said: “He’s good enough for West Ham, I’ve watched him a lot because he played with my son at Barnsley and I watched him when he was at Newcastle. I said when Newcastle sold him that they should never have let him go and I stand by that.

“I think he’s good enough to at least get a shot in the Premier League because he’s a natural finisher, he’s quick and strong. If you’ve got those attributes then you’ve got a chance of being able to score in the Premier League.”

The 24-year old was never given a real chance at Newcastle as he was handed just 17 appearances in the league before Rafa Benitez decided he was not good enough and should be sold.

David Moyes decided not to replace club-record signing, Sebastien Haller, in January as he joined Ajax and the lack of goals in recent weeks has been a downfall for the Hammers.

Vinicius Junior dances above the hate! Real Madrid winners, losers and ratings from emotional derby clash with Atletico

Real Madrid responded energetically to a week of outside distraction and racism aimed towards their players with a 2-1 win over Atletico Madrid.

Vinicius Junior appeared to be as amped as he's ever been on a football pitch when team-mate and compatriot Rodrygo put Real Madrid ahead of Atletico Madrid with a tremendous first-half strike.

The celebratory dancing was smooth, but the yell Vinicius Junior let out right after was raw. A release of sorts after spending the build-up to a derby facing racist abuse rather than getting to focus on his opponent.

Real Madrid backed their star winger on Sunday with a cohesive team performance that preserved their perfect La Liga record. Six wins from six in the Spanish top-flight this season, plus two from two in the Champions League and a victory in the UEFA Super Cup.

Their togetherness, as much as anything else, fuelled their dramatic European triumph last year and has only grown stronger this term. Carlo Ancelotti built a family.

They all met with smiles again when Federico Valverde doubled the advantage in the 36th minute and were relieved when Mario Hermoso's 83rd-minute goal proved nothing more than a consolation.

Bad actors at the Wanda Metropolitano marred the occasion with vile monkey chants before the match and during its latter stages, however the defining image was arguably still the bright energy of Vinicius Junior and his team-mates as they marched to their derby victory.

"Dance wherever you want," he tweeted right after the win.

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    The Winners

    Winner: Vinicius Junior

    While he struggled to channel his emotions into on-field production at times, this was undoubtably still a show of mental fortitude to go a full 90 minutes in hostile conditions as his team continued to roll even in the absence of injured striker Karim Benzema. He now gets to link up with supportive Brazil team-mates on international duty.

    Winner: Rodrygo

    The Brazilian forward combined well with Aurelien Tchouameni before running onto the latter's magnificent pass and applying a wonderful finish. He was a key figure in the win due to his movement and ability to link up with those around him.

    Winner: Federico Valverde

    His drive into the Atletico Madrid half played an important part in the build up to the first goal. He came rushing in at the back post to meet the ball after Vinicius Junior hit the post and fired in the second goal of the game.

    Winner: Aurelien Tchouameni

    A lovely performance from the Frenchman. His pass for the first goal was astounding and he looked solid in the centre of the midfield. Truly a standout performer for Real Madrid this season.

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    The Losers

    Loser: Atletico Madrid fans

    The tone was set even before the game when a group of supporters were recorded making a racist chant about Vinicius Junior outside the stadium. That continued inside when the game was in progress and they had to be warned to stop throwing things onto the field in the first half. Even though it was only a subsection of the crowd, it was a terrible look for the hosts.

    Loser: Reinildo

    Arguably lucky to stay on the field for his tackle on Rodrygo in the first half. The defender has been a resilient presence for Atletico but he was a liability in this game because of the many fouls he made.

    Loser: Joao Felix

    The 22-year-old was not nearly enough of a threat and seemed to be behind the pace in this match. Not much help when Atletico tried to apply pressure from the front when not chasing possession and did not do enough with the ball himself. Was substituted just after the hour mark.

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    Real Madrid Ratings: Defence

    Thibaut Courtois (7/10):

    He pulled off four saves in the first half to ensure his side went in with a two-goal lead at the break. The second half was a quiet one until late on, when he missed his effort to stop a cross from a corner and allowed Hermoso to pull a goal back.

    Dani Carvajal (7/10):

    Looked strong at right-back for much of the game and provided a fun moment for fans of the away side when he jumped over a sliding tackle from Griezmann.

    Eder Militao (7/10):

    Calm and composed, the centre-back was a strong figure in the heart of the Real Madrid back-line. He goes about his job quietly and gave very little away again tonight.

    David Alaba (7/10):

    Looked good alongside his centre-back partner and did well to keep Atletico's attack quiet.

    Ferland Mendy (5/10):

    The weak link in the defence, he was booked in the first half and was at risk of getting sent off later on. He just didn't add enough to Real Madrid in this match.

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    Midfield

    Luka Modric (7/10):

    Classy in the build-up to the second goal and strolled through this match. It's tough to believe that he is 37 years old and still playing like this.

    Aurelien Tchouameni (8/10):

    That pass! An unbelievable ball to Rodrygo for the opening goal, but he did much more than that throughout this game. He's a key part of this fantastic midfield, pitching in defensively as well as pulling some strings.

    Toni Kroos (7/10):

    Kroos is subtle but vital for Madrid. Made an important clearance in the first half and was a strong passer, pulling off some nice long balls and looked so comfortable on the ball.

Revealed: The 13 esports kits that will appear in FIFA 19 Ultimate Team

All players will receive a free pack containing the jerseys of some of the biggest esports clubs in the world

How. Cool. Is. This?!

Not only are esports players getting the chance to play video games profesionally, some of them will now see their kits feature in FIFA 19!

That's right, EA Sports have announced that jerseys from 13 of the biggest esports clubs in the world will appear in Ultimate Team.

Every FUT player will receive a free pack containing the special edition kits from 7pm UK on Thursday, November 1.

And Goal has put all of the kits in one place so you can plan which strip you're going to use before they're released!

Full list of kits:  Vitality, Team Liquid, Team Envy, SK Gaming, Scarz, Rogue, Newbee, NA’VI, MKERS, Millenium, Mad Lions, Hashtag United, FUTWIZ.

  • EA Sports

    1SCARZ

    Scarz are an esports team from Japan.

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    2VITALITY

    Vitality are an esports team from France.

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    3TEAM LIQUID

    Team Liquid are an esports team from Netherlands.

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    4TEAM ENVY

    Team Envy are an esports team from the United States.

Foden, Diaz and the top 10 teenage stars to watch at Man City

Goal takes a look at the brightest prospects coming through the ranks of the Premier League leaders

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    Phil Foden

    The brightest prospect in the City academy and already a member of Pep Guardiola’s senior squad at just 17. Blessed with excellent technique, skills and an eye for a pass, he already has three senior appearances under his belt. Guardiola recently praised his willingness to attack – even as his older team-mates shirked responsibility. Was named the best player at the U17 World Cup after scoring twice in the final against Spain to help England win their first title at that age-group. Has three senior City starts to his name.

  • Getty Images

    Brahim Diaz

    Only slightly behind Foden in the pecking order and another first-team squad member at 18 years old. Brahim is another No.10 but has been deployed out wide by Guardiola this season. Very quick off the mark, a good dribbler, and has improved almost with every outing this season, usually off the bench. Signed from Malaga despite Barcelona’s attempts to lure him, Guardiola showed the youngster around the Catalan club’s historic Camp Nou stadium while he was their coach.

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    Lukas Nmecha

    Close to the first-team picture, especially as City contended with injuries in January, Nmecha is unlikely to get a permanent promotion just yet. A tall, powerful striker who joined the club as a nine-year-old, he scored the winning penalty for City’s first team in the Carabao Cup shoot-out against Leicester City in December. His younger brother, Felix, is also on the books and both played together, and scored shoot-out penalties, in the recent UEFA Youth League quarter-final victory against Liverpool.

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  • Manchester City

    Nabil Touaizi

    Signed from Valencia for €300,000 compensation at the start of 2017, Touaizi is rated as one of the hottest prospects in the City academy. The 17-year-old forward scored more than 70 goals in two years at Valencia and although all City youth teams play against older age-groups, Blues coaches had no qualms about involving the then 16-year-old in last season's U19 UEFA Youth League campaign. Eligible to play for Spain and Morocco, Touaizi is both tall and fast, able to hold the ball up as a target man.

Champions League Power Rankings: Who is the most in-form team?

As the Champions League group stages kick off, Goal takes a look at how the participants have fared in their last five fixtures

  • Getty Images

    32Roma | 1 win, 2 draws, 2 defeats

    Roma's start to the season has been far from straight forward. Despite an opening-day victory against Torino, the capital club have failed to pick up a victory in their other three Serie A fixtures, losing 2-1 against AC Milan in their previous away game. Roma also went down to Serie B side Benevento in a friendly game during the recent international break.

    A trip to Real Madrid to start their Champions League campaign will be an enormous challenge, though their exploits against Barcelona in the competition last season may give them hope.

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    31Monaco | 1 win, 2 draws, 2 defeats

    Monaco find themselves just a point outside the bottom two in the Ligue 1 table after five games and without a win in their last four.

    Radamel Falcao and Co. have been grouped with Borussia Dortmund, Club Brugge and Atletico Madrid, who visit on Tuesday, and face a tough task to turn their fortunes around in the next game.

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    30Inter | 1 win, 2 draws, 2 defeats

    Tipped as Juventus' main contenders in Serie A, Inter have struggled to live up to expectations thus far in Italy after a busy summer of transfers.

    Defeats to Torino and Parma have left them in the lower reaches of the table, and with Barcelona, Tottenham and PSV to come in the Champions League, Luciano Spalletti needs to find a winning formula quickly.

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    29Valencia | 1 win, 3 draws, 1 defeat

    Valencia's only victory this season came in a friendly against second-division CD Alcoyano, highlighting the club's struggles so far this season.

    Though they finished fourth last season, Valencia have managed three draws and a defeat in their opening four Liga outings, with a 1-1 draw at home to Atletico Madrid a rather unremarkable standout result.

    Cristiano Ronaldo's return to Spain is the stuff of nightmares for the Liga outfit, with the Juventus forward finally opening his account for his new club at the weekend.

Ancelotti must axe Everton’s Alex Iwobi

Carlo Ancelotti must ruthlessly axe Alex Iwobi when Everton travel to Arsenal on Friday night, having been his side’s worst-performing player against Tottenham Hotspur last time out.

Iwobi has struggled to establish himself as a key part of Ancelotti’s plans over recent months but was given the nod to start for the visit of Jose Mourinho’s Spurs, in what proved to be the Portuguese’s final game in charge.

A brace from Harry Kane either side of strikes from Gylfi Sigurdsson ensured the points were shared, but the axe fell on Mourinho’s tenure after 17 months despite guiding the north Londoners to this Sunday’s Carabao Cup final.

Iwobi has been given frequent chances to inspire a turnaround of his form with starting roles in four of the Toffees’ last five Premier League games, yet he has not scored since January 12 or provided an assist since December 16th.

His goal against Wolverhampton Wanderers to help to a 2-1 victory at Molineux remains the Nigerian winger’s only strike of the top-flight campaign, while being without an assist in 15 appearances after ending an eight-game drought with his second of the term at Leicester City.

Ancelotti must now call time on Iwobi’s run in the starting line-up with the Italian set to welcome 14-goal top-scorer Dominic Calvert-Lewin back from an abductor injury, after seeing Iwobi flounder against Tottenham as the worst of Everton’s starting options.

The Liverpool Echo graded Iwobi with their joint-lowest match rating at just four out of 10, having carelessly turned over possession throughout the first half, including in the build-up to Spurs’ opening goal, while The Guardian described his performance as ‘anonymous’.

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Iwobi was even given the worst match rating of any player for either side by SofaScore at 6.1 out of 10, while WhoScored graded the Toffees’ £50,000-per-week winger at six out of 10 – only Tanguy Ndombele (5.9) was given a lower score for an outfield player.

The Blues’ £34m former Arsenal dynamo earned such woeful grades having missed the target with his only shot of the night, created no goalscoring chances, made fewer accurate passes (18) than goalkeeper Jordan Pickford (21) and lost a whopping 87% of his duels.

Iwobi contested eight challenges at home to Tottenham last Friday but emerged victorious in just one of seven battles on the ground and lost his only aerial contest. He also failed to beat a visiting player with either of his two attempted dribbles.

It was a performance miles from his normal standards, having averaged a modest 51% duel success over his 27 Premier League appearances (16 starts) this season, with success in 2.9 ground challenges (53%) and 0.1 aerial (27%), while making 1.6 successful dribbles (64%).

Altogether, Iwobi’s shocking efforts before being hauled off in the 61st minute meant he earned his lowest SofaScore match rating in 46 appearances across all competitions for Everton – dating back to a 5.3 out of 10 achieved during a 3-1 win over Chelsea at Goodison Park in December 2019.

Ancelotti cannot reward Iwobi for a performance that off the pace by starting him away to his former side on Friday night, and the return of top-scorer Calvert-Lewin will ensure the Italian has an option to slot straight into his starting line-up.

AND in other news, Everton have been told to pay £34.5m for a 23-year-old that Carlo Ancelotti would welcome at Goodison Park

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