Manchester United plotting bid for Goncalo Inacio

Manchester United are plotting a bid for Sporting Lisbon centre back Goncalo Inacio as Erik ten Hag aims to bolster his new side’s defence for next season.

That’s according to Portuguese newspaper Correio da Manha (via Sport Witness), who suggests Man Utd have been interested in the defender for some time now.

Newcastle were also linked to the player, who can also play left-back if required, ahead of the summer transfer window.

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With a release clause of €45m (£38.5m) then the price is known, and the club can make their move before too late.

Man Utd could bolster their backline

The club have had a horrendous season so far, with the 4-0 defeat to Brighton the icing on the cake and new manager Erik ten Hag has a major rebuilding job in the summer in order to put Man Utd back on their perch.

At just 20-years-old, Inacio looks like a superb prospect, with Zach Lowy describing him as “underrated” and with the club in urgent need of a solid centre back, he could well be a massive upgrade on the calamitous Harry Maguire.

Inacio offers more of a goalscoring threat, something that United have lacked this season amongst their defenders, with the Portuguese player netting four times, plus grabbing an assist too, while Maguire only has the one goal.

His temperament is also first class, with only one booking in 27 league matches, compared to Maguire’s nine cautions and one sending off. If it’s a disciplined and calm individual the Red Devils are looking for, then Inacio appears mature for his age.

He also makes slightly fewer fouls than Maguire (18 to 20) which could contribute to goal scoring chances for the opposition.

The stats suggest Inacio would be an excellent signing, and at such a young age, the potential for a major profit.

AND in other news, Man Utd plot bid to sign £29.8m “freight train”, it’s an instant ten Hag masterclass

Kane Williamson's is the hand that steadies New Zealand's ship

On paper he’s in at No. 3, but he often pretty much ends up opening – and sticks around for ages, come juicy pitches or skilled bowling

Alagappan Muthu08-Jul-2019A friendly word of warning to all future New Zealand No. 3s.The one you have right now has played 71 ODI innings since the 2015 World Cup. In 44 of them, he has had to bat in the first five overs.So remember, in addition to the zillions of hours of training, you will have to go to sleep wearing your pads. You will have to be resigned to never being able to drink your morning coffee. It will be drip-fed through your helmet grilles. Oh, and maybe forget about bathroom breaks. You don’t want to be caught on camera with TP sticking out of your PJs.New Zealand right now are like flash paper. They just can’t help but go up in flames. And yet Kane Williamson does this thing and he does it so well – dude averages 50.74 since the last time the ICC threw a party like this – that it’s almost tempting to think he has made some dark deal with Martin Guptill, Henry Nicholls and Colin Munro for them to get out early so he can get in and just, you know, bat.ESPNcricinfo LtdThe mostly side-on set up. The rhythmic tap-tap-tap. That weird, no, adorable, no, weird, no, adorable, no weird little exhale into his gloves. “They get sweaty,” Williamson huffed as a seven-year old grilled him in 2017. “But sometimes I don’t even know I’m doing it.” That last bit also probably explains why he can’t stop playing the dab to third man. Or there’s the more ludicrous notion that his entire game, perfected over years and years, is built on meeting the ball as late and as close to his body as possible. Whatever the secret is, this scruffy 28-year-old is on his way to becoming a one-day genius.As much as he deserves praise for developing so tight a technique, it is only part of the story. A lot of batsmen can nail the drive and make it look pristine. Even more can cut the ball so hard it feels like a slap across the face. Everyone who makes it to international level has talent that falls on the side of extraordinary. But only a few can stomach having those shots find the fielders a little too often, or weather periods when it is way too risky to even be thinking about them. Williamson has chewed on 2107 dots since the last World Cup, second only to Rohit Sharma. He is still among the top-five run-getters in this time.

Several Williamson quirks come together to make numbers like that. The ability to read situations and conditions quickly (helps him decide what shots he can play and which bowlers he can target). The strength of mind to ignore run rates (often necessary to bat deep) And the skill to delete the last ball from memory and focus on the next. (Considering he legit forgot the part he played in this epic game, that last one may not be such a good thing.)Calling upon all of those talents is how he stays unruffled even when he has to walk out to the crease way too early. It is also why he is so badass on bad pitches, aka those that make cricket worth watching. You know, the ones that favour the bowlers just that little bit. This World Cup has been full of them and Williamson has the highest average (96.2) of the 150 players in this tournament.None of this is to say he is un-outable. It just takes a lot of effort, as Aaron Finch pointed out last month: “He’s so damaging if you bowl wide. And he’s so good off his pads that your length has to be really, really disciplined. You have to try and dry him up. It’s like all great players; they don’t have a huge amount of weaknesses.”Williamson has been dismissed for single digits only ten times in the last four years. That’s three fewer than Virat Kohli. And a combination of his technique and hand-eye coordination ensures he is relatively insulated from the more straightforward modes of failure. Especially against the new ball.ESPNcricinfo LtdSo, to recap, he doesn’t get out early, and he makes the opposition work for his wicket. Sometimes for the entire 50 overs. This is why Williamson is so valuable to New Zealand. They may lose their first wicket cheaply from now until the end of time but their fans will never be fussed – kinda like Peter Parker after a rendezvous with a rude little radioactive spider. They know something awesome is about to happen.

'Pakistan have made #CT17 truly memorable'

Reactions to Pakistan winning the Champions Trophy after comprehensively beating arch-rivals India

ESPNcricinfo staff18-Jun-20170:43

WATCH – Pakistan fans go wild

Moeen helps polish off SA resistance

ESPNcricinfo staff30-Dec-2015Moeen had Temba Bavuma stumped in his next over…•AFP…then Steven Finn cleaned up Dale Steyn to leave South Africa seven down•AFPMoeen had a productive morning, picking up Kyle Abbott as his third wicket•Gallo ImagesChris Woakes finally tasted success when he removed Dane Piedt•Getty ImagesStuart Broad finished things off by trapping Morne Morkel lbw to complete a 241-run win•Gallo ImagesMoeen was named Man of the Match for his seven-wicket haul•Getty ImagesEngland’s players took the applause of the Barmy Army after going 1-0 up in the series•Getty Images

Twenty-two yards of cricket's ever evolving unknown

There has been no shortage of talk about pitches in recent weeks, but even those who have to make important decisions about what to do on them don’t always get it right – so what chance the rest of us?

Jarrod Kimber18-Jul-2014There was a sense of fear in some Indian fans on the opening day at Lord’s. Green pitch fear. Terror of the lush grass. One told his friend that India would be bowled out by lunch. Another said that only Cheteshwar Pujara could survive such a wicket, the rest were front runners or hopeless. They can’t play the swinging ball, let alone the seaming ball said a third friend.Yet, India made it to stumps. They scored their highest ever Lord’s total when batting first. The ball swung, and it occasionally seamed, but it was not a minefield. There were no booby traps hidden by lushness. It was a Test match wicket with a slightly longer covering of grass.There is a cricket pitch in every cricket competition in the world that is green. The opposition turn up, they see the colour, they bowl first, the home side smash them everywhere. Week after week this happens at this ground. Because we as cricketers are bred to see green and assume green means bowl. Carnage, collapse and calamity.Even Wikipedia agrees: “A natural pitch with grass longer or more moist than usual is described as a green pitch. This favours the bowler over the batsman as the ball can be made to behave erratically on longer or wet grass.” See, it is written on digital stone tablets. It must be true.But we do not really know anything about pitches. Sure, the horticultural of us might be able to talk about the mix of seeds used. Maybe even the grading or watering requirements. But even that is not about pitches; it is about advanced gardening.Mark Butcher, the former England batsman, says by the end of his career he would talk to the groundsman about the pitch just so he had something to laugh about in the upcoming days. A groundsman can tell you what a pitch has had done to it. It cannot tell you what an offcutter might do late on day four after the covers have been on and off and once really hot session has baked it.Other than facing Mitchell Johnson or bowling to Hashim Amla, there are few worse jobs in cricket than standing in front of a TV camera and predicting what the wicket will do. It is like cricket weather reporting, but only using your eye and past experience. Isa Guha is currently doing it for . She just stands in front of the pitch doing her best Tony Greig impression and guesses. That is what the job is. That is how most people in cricket do it. It is as scientific as the Spirit of Cricket. Guha will use her cricket experience to guess, and be as wrong as any great that has done it before her
.On November 7, 2002 Nasser Hussain made a mistake at the Gabba. But it was not a spontaneous mistake. Hussain had seen the ball nipping about in the nets. Thought his bowlers could use that well. Saw that Sheffield Shield sides had sent teams in. Felt the humid Queensland conditions. And then he decided to send Australia in to bat.

Even when they are not green monsters, they are living breathing changing things. Or sometimes dead and decaying. And on the odd occasion they are kept in formaldehyde or cryogenically frozen

Hussain was not wet behind the ears. He had played all around the world. He had captained England 37 times before that Test. He was an experienced professional international cricketer, but even he admits he was “searching for something that wasn’t there” and using “guesswork”. At the close on day one Australia were 364 for 2. If someone with that much help and information can make such a bad call what hope do we all have on our couches.Even when they are not green monsters, they are living breathing changing things. Or sometimes dead and decaying. And on the odd occasion they are kept in formaldehyde or cryogenically frozen. But mostly they change and grow depending on where the bowlers bowl, where they follow through, weather conditions, and everything else. And once you have worked them out, they have often changed again.The perfect pitch could be one that has movement on day one, but not so much that you cannot bat. On days two and three it should flatten out, but not so much that bowlers want to self-harm. By day four it should be an even contest as the ball starts to misbehave a bit. On day five it should get a bit messy for batsmen as the pitch disintegrates.That would be the utopian cricket pitch. But on day one people would complain about the movement. For days two and three they would complain about how flat the pitch is. By day four some would be complaining about how spicy the pitch is, and some how boring the match is. And on day five people would complain unless it gets close.At Cape Town nine years after Hussain’s mistake there was a Test with an odd pitch. Australia batted out the first day on a helpful surface thanks to an as good a Michael Clarke hundred as any he had made before. The next day 23 wickets were taken. The day after only one was taken. On day one the pitch was seen as fair. On day two the pitch was seen as a minefield unfit for humans. On day three it was as flat as a pancake.Mark Nicholas believes that despite bland batting pitches we still get results as modern cricketers try to move the game on and make mistakes. Considering only last week the pitch was doing everything it could not to give a result, and one small collapse from India almost forced one, you can see what he means.Here the pitch did very little. For all the colour and fear, how many wickets have seamed so much that they were unplayable? Perhaps Stuart Binny’s wicket, but that should not have been out anyway. Maybe Pujara, as there can be little other reason for him missing a fairly straight ball. Ian Bell’s ball certainly behaved oddly, although it was the pace and bounce that took him by surprise as much as anything. That is three out of 13 wickets to seam bowlers. That is not even a monster from a kid’s film.With only 16 wickets in two whole days of cricket, and rain to come, people have already started to suggest this could be a draw. It is a monster, it is a road, and it is a fair cricket pitch. The only certainty is that no matter what the pitch does, how it changes, what it produces, someone, somewhere will suggest Ishant Sharma was unlucky on it.

A series win at last

For the beleaguered Indian fan, the victory over England kept the biting cold of Mohali at bay

Sambhav Kheterpal24-Jan-2013Choice of game
The last 18 months have been agonising for the Indian cricket supporter, so the prospect of watching India play at a time when they were beginning to win games comprehensively wasn’t one I was going to let go. And the fact that it was India’s first match after reaching No. 1 in the ODI rankings and that they could possibly seal the series in Mohali, made me even more keen.Although I was expecting India to win, I knew the pace and bounce of the Mohali pitch would suit England’s style of play. I hoped the visitors would put up a strong display.Key performer
Rohit Sharma laid the foundation of India’s win, but it was Suresh Raina’s fluent innings of 89 that stood out. Raina came in to bat when India were in a spot of bother at 90 for 3, having just lost the wicket of Yuvraj Singh. He held fort from one end and built match-winning partnerships with Rohit and MS Dhoni.An honourable mention must go to Ishant Sharma, who bowled impeccable lines during his first spell in which he gave away just ten runs of five overs, and regularly troubled Kevin Pietersen.One thing I’d have changed
Though smoking is prohibited inside cricket stadiums in India, there were many people openly smoking inside, putting all those who had come with families in an uncomfortable position.The food inside the stadium was also really expensive, sold at three times what it should have cost. I wish the authorities look into these matters and take corrective measures.As far is the game is concerned, the 30,000-odd Mohali crowd was desperately hoping for local lad Yuvraj to come good in his first game at home since his return to international cricket after treatment for cancer. He received a huge ovation when he walked in to bat, and there was pin-drop silence the moment he got out. If I could change anything, I would have made Yuvraj bat a lot longer so that the fans stayed happy.Face-off I relished
During the 12th over of England’s innings, Ishant first hit KP on the thigh and two balls later had a close leg-before shout turned down against him. At the end of the over, Ishant was seen exchanging some words with KP, probably giving him some batting tips. In the 46th over, Pietersen hit Ishant for a four and a six before getting castled by a yorker off the next delivery.Wow moment
The proverb “Try, try, till you succeed” surely applied to the Mohali crowd today. After numerous attempts to get the Mexican wave going failed, the crowd finally managed to sync, and the fervour must have egged on Rohit and Raina to play the kind of innings they eventually played.Joe Root played a scoop over the short fine leg fielder for a boundary, and an over later, turned around and played a reverse-scoop for another four.Close encounter
I made my way inside the stadium almost an hour before the start of the game and saw Indian cricketers warming up just metres away from where my stand was. Virat Kohli was hitting a few balls near our stand. He mistimed one in the air and the ball hit a girl on the forehead, just two rows in front of where I was seated. Considering the cold weather, she seemed to be in a lot of pain and had to be comforted by her family members. Virat wasn’t too far away and must have noticed the girl being hit, but he carried on with his practice. If he had noticed, then a small gesture of apology towards the girl would have been nice.Shot of the day
The shots of day were two glorious square cuts by Alastair Cook off R Ashwin in the 26th over. He first cut Ashwin in front of square, and two balls later, behind square.Crowd meter
The crowd filled up as the game progressed. The queues for the student blocks were long outside the stadium, and those stands filled to capacity very quickly. The VIP and terrace stands were around 80% full throughout the game and made enough noise to keep the atmosphere electric. The Mohali crowd has always been known to be vibrant and colourful, and they certainly did not disappoint.Fancy-dress index
One man was dressed like a Hindu mythological character, another stayed shirtless in the Mohali chill to flaunt the tri-colour painted on his face and torso. There were quite a few kids wearing the
colourful Malinga wigs.Banner of the day
There was a huge banner inside the stadium which read, “We miss you, Master Blaster”, which received a huge cheer every time it was shown on the big screen. Another notable banner was,”To call Yuvi, dial 666666″.Overall
Although I’d have loved a thriller in which both teams scored over 300 runs, this was a good game that had some fine individual batting displays from both sides and where the better team won in the end. The only thing that bothered everyone was the weather. It had become extremely cold in the evening and the chilly winds were making people shiver.Marks out of 10
9. One mark deducted for the match not having a close finish.

Dilshan's good fortune, Samaraweera's bad luck

Plays of the day from the fourth day of the first Test between Sri Lanka and West Indies in Galle

Andrew Fernando in Galle19-Nov-2010Missed review opportunity of the day

Since unsuccessfully using up a UDRS attempt trying to get Mahela Jayawardene trapped in front yesterday, West Indies captain Darren Sammy, has been reluctant to use any more reviews. And when Thilan Samaraweera was caught down the leg side after the ball had brushed his gloves on its way to the wicketkeeper, the West Indians were convinced they had their man. But Sammy, perhaps remembering his previous error, decided against challenging the decision.Unfortunate dismissal of the day
It’s bad enough for any Test batsman to be run out when your team is in dire straits, but to be dismissed when your batting partner has just cracked one out of the middle takes a special kind of misfortune. Angelo Mathews met Dwayne Bravo’s over-pitched delivery with the full face of the bat, and the ball seemed to be heading just past the stumps and on towards the boundary, when Bravo flicked it with his outstretched boot and redirected it towards the stumps. Samaraweera was caught out of his crease, and Sri Lanka slipped even further into trouble.Brain explosion of the day
Prasanna Jayawardene had done almost everything necessary to get his team past the follow-on mark, but when three quick wickets fell at the other end to leave the Sri Lanka nine down, he might have wondered if all his good work would be in vain. So when No. 11 Thilan Thushara drove the last ball of the over for four, to give him the strike and leave the team just three shy of avoiding the follow on, what does he do? Get himself out of course! An aggressive sweep shot in the next over caught the top edge of Prasanna’s bat and flew to the fielder at long leg leaving the entire Sri Lankan team dreading the proposition of having to bat again.Close call of the day

Tillakaratne Dilshan had made a two-ball duck in the first innings. So when he pulled his first ball of the second innings in the air towards Darren Bravo at midwicket, the opener looked set to record a Test pair. Luckily for Dilshan, the ball flew just inches past Bravo’s outstretched fingers and onto the midwicket boundary.

Afridi's assault

Shahid Afridi steamrolled the Indian bowlers for the second time in as many Tests

George Binoy22-Jan-2006Shahid Afridi steamrolled the Indian bowlers for the second time in as many Tests and the fact that India were playing five bowlers and that Pakistan were not in as commanding a position as in Lahore, only made him play a more responsible and marginally less destructive innings.While the spinners bore the brunt at Lahore (89 runs off 69 balls), in Faisalabad the fast bowlers came under Afridi’s hammer, going for 111 runs off 84 balls. In the wake of the 57 runs that Afridi clobbered off 6.3 overs from Harbhajan Singh at Lahore, Rahul Dravid didn’t bowl him at Afridi on the second day at Faisalabad. In fact, only 12 off the 128 balls faced by Afridi were bowled by Harbhajan.Pace in the mid-120 kmph range was never going to fluster Afridi and when the ball was pitched up, he clouted down the ground and when it was short he hoicked over midwicket with ease. Irfan Pathan was listless, lacking in pace and swing, and no matter where he bowled Afridi went after him. Twenty two runs were scored of four short deliveries and even the 20 balls Pathan pitched on a good length cost 25 runs.

Lamine Yamal to Real Madrid?! Deco lifts lid on offers for Barcelona wonderkid and hits back at claims teenager wants to be 'highest-paid player'

Barcelona insist that Lamine Yamal has never been the subject of an offer from Real Madrid and has not demanded to be the club’s highest-paid player.

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New deal already lined up for youngsterCan be signed when turning 18Tipped to become Ballon d'Or winnerFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

At 17 years of age, history-making youngster Yamal is preparing to sign a lucrative senior deal. He will be able to put pen to paper when turning 18 in July, and Barca already have terms pieced together for their exciting Golden Boy winner.

AdvertisementGettyWHAT DECO SAID

Yamal’s standing in Catalunya will be recognised, as he becomes a talismanic presence for one of the biggest clubs on the planet, but he has not made any outlandish demands. Blaugrana director Deco has told : “He didn't ask to be the highest-paid player on the team. That's not true. He just wants to be happy here. He has to live up to his age a little, no matter how hard it is, and he has to be happy. A player at this level has to be happy.

“For me, it's not a matter of whether he's 17, 26, or whatever; for me, football has to be fair and he has to have a contract that suits him. It's not a matter of being the highest-paid player; the important thing is that he's happy. For me, there's no better club for him than Barca. Contracts are four, five, or six years, somewhere in the region.”

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Barcelona are understandably keen to get Yamal tied down on a deal that fends off any unwelcome interest from afar. Asked if offers have been received for the teenage wonderkid, Deco added: “Yes, last season, not this one yet, but what we want is for him to stay. We don't want to listen to offers, but PSG asked, but Real Madrid didn't.”

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Yamal is already considered to form part of the global elite, and Deco expects him to land a Golden Ball at some stage. The former Barca playmaker – who played alongside the likes of Lionel Messi and Ronaldinho – said: “I want him to win the Ballon d'Or. We have some players who can reach this, and Lamine is one of them. Raphinha, for the season he's had, is spectacular, but we'll see. Of course I would like a Barca player to win the Ballon d'Or.”

مواعيد مباريات اليوم الجمعة 5-9-2025 والقنوات الناقلة.. منتخب مصر يواجه إثيوبيا في تصفيات كأس العالم

يشهد اليوم الجمعة 5-9-2025، إقامة العديد من المباريات في تصفيات كأس العالم لقارتي إفريقيا وأوروبا، يعد أبرزها مواجهة منتخب مصر وإثيوبيا.

منتخب مصر يلاقي إثيوبيا، في إطار منافسات الجولة السابعة، ضمن مواجهات المجموعة الأولى من التصفيات الإفريقية المؤهلة إلى كأس العالم 2026.

منتخب مصر يتواجد في المجموعة الأولى من تصفيات كأس العالم، مع منتخبات إثيوبيا وبوركينا فاسو وغينيا بيساو وجيبوتي وسيراليون.

ويتصدر منتخب مصر، ترتيب المجموعة، برصيد 16 نقطة، من الفوز في 5 مباريات والتعادل في لقاء وحيد.

وعربيًا أيضًا في تصفيات إفريقيا لـ كأس العالم، يلعب منتخب السودان ضد السنغال ومنتخب المغرب أمام النيجر.

وضمن أبرز مباريات تصفيات أوروبا المؤهلة إلي نهائيات كأس العالم، يلتقي منتخب فرنسا نظيره أوكرانيا ويلعب إيطاليا ضد إستونيا. مواعيد مباريات اليوم الجمعة 5-9-2025 والقنوات الناقلةمواعيد مباريات تصفيات إفريقيا المؤهلة لـ كأس العالم

الصومال ضد غينيا، الساعة 3 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، تنقل على قناة ssc 1.

جنوب السودان ضد الكونغو الديمقراطية، الساعة 3 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية،  تنقل على قناة ssc 2.

كينيا ضد جامبيا، الساعة 4 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، 

ناميبيا ضد مالاوي، الساعة 4 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية.

أوغندا ضد موزمبيق، الساعة 7 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية.

تنزانيا ضد الكونغو، الساعة 7 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية،  تنقل على قناة ssc 2.

بوركينا فاسو ضد جيبوتي، الساعة 7 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية.

جنوب إفريقيا ضد ليسوتو، الساعة 7 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية،  تنقل على قناة ssc 1.

زيمبابوي ضد بنين، الساعة 7 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية.

موريتانيا ضد توجو، الساعة 10 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، تنقل على قناة ssc extra.

كوت ديفوار ضد بوروندي، الساعة 10 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية.

مصر ضد إثيوبيا، الساعة 10 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، تنقل على قناة أون سبورت و ssc 1.

طالع | تشكيل منتخب مصر المتوقع أمام إثيوبيا اليوم في تصفيات كأس العالم.. صلاح ومرموش في الهجوم

المغرب ضد النيجر، الساعة 10 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، تنقل على قناة ssc 2.

السودان ضد السنغال، الساعة 10 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، تنقل على قناة ssc 3. مواعيد مباريات تصفيات أوروبا المؤهلة إلي كأس العالم

كرواتيا ضد جزر فاروه، الساعة 9:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية،  تنقل على قناة بي إن سبورت 5.

السويد ضد سلوفينيا، الساعة 9:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية،  تنقل على قناة بي إن سبورت 9.

سويسرا ضد كوسوفو، الساعة 9:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، تنقل على قناة بي إن سبورت 4.

اليونان ضد بيلاروسيا، الساعة 9:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، تنقل على قناة بي إن سبورت أكسترا 1.

الدنمارك ضد إسكتلندا، الساعة 9:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، تنقل على قناة بي إن سبورت 3.

أيسلندا ضد إذربيجان، الساعة 9:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية،  تنقل على قناة بي إن سبورت 8.

التشيك ضد الجبل الأسود، الساعة 9:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، تنقل على قناة بي إن سبورت 6.

فرنسا ضد أوكرانيا، الساعة 9:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، تنقل على قناة بي إن سبورت 1.

إيطاليا ضد إستونيا، الساعة 9:45 مساءً بتوقيت مصر والسعودية، تنقل على قناة بي إن سبورت 2.

ويمكنكم مطالعة مواعيد ونتائج جميع المباريات لحظة بلحظة عبر مركز المباريات من هنا

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