Afcon Draw: Who are the winners and losers?

Who can be happy and who can be concerned after Tuesday’s Africa Cup of Nations qualifying draw?

GettyWinners: Nigeria

The Super Eagles can largely be content with their Group A draw, even if there are a few potential banana skins in there as the West African giants look to pick themselves up off the ground.

Sierra Leone are strong—and Nigeria weren’t able to beat them during the last qualifying campaign—but Guinea-Bissau were dispatched comfortably at the Nations Cup, and shouldn’t spoil the party.

Sao Tome e Principe are one of the continent’s minnows, and are unlikely to pose any problems for the Eagles.

AdvertisementBackpagePix.Losers: Kenya

As one of the weaker sides in Pot Two, everyone in the other pots will have been keen to be pitted against the Harambee Stars, while there are a few sides who Kenya will have wanted to have avoided.

Cameroon—who they’ve been pooled against from Pot One—are one of those sides, with the Indomitable Lions demonstrating their class to eliminate Algeria in the World Cup qualifying.

Namibia and Burundi, like Kenya, were both present at the 2019 Nations Cup, and their squads are full of players who know how to get over the line.

backpagepixWinners: South Africa

Morocco are tough opponents for Bafana Bafana, and they’ll definitely have been one of the sides they’ll be keen to have avoided from Pot One.

However, the presence of Liberia presents South Africa with two winnable fixtures, and the derby with Zimbabwe—even if that complicates matters—gives Hugo Broos a good opportunity to demonstrate the progress he’s overseeing with this talented squad.

Zim were undone by Malawi at the Nations Cup, and Bafana will only have themselves to blame if they can’t reach the Afcon.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

Getty ImagesLosers: Egypt

Top seeds Egypt are of course favourites to reach the Nations Cup from Group D, but the Pharaohs could have had things a little easier than the group they’ve ultimately ended up with.

All of Guinea, Malawi and Ethiopia reached the last Nations Cup, with the Syli Nationale and the Flames both reaching the Last 16.

Egypt must ensure there’s no complacency as they look to progress.

Why Fulham are called 'Fulhamerica' & the USMNT stars who have played for the Cottagers

GOAL takes a look at why Fulham FC are called 'Fulhamerica' and the USMNT superstars who have graced Craven Cottage.

In the summer of 1997, Fulham was bought by an Egyptian businessman Mohamed Al-Fayed. The Cottagers were languishing in the third division but their new owner promised that the club would ply their trade in the Premier League in the next five years despite no outlandish spending.

They started to rebuild themselves and turned their sights to the United States to scout cheap yet quality talent. In 1999, when they were promoted to the second division, it saw the arrival of Marcus Hahnemann from Colorado Rapids for just £80,000. And thus began the saga of Fulham and the United States of America…

Why are Fulham called "Fulhamerica'?

Although Hahnemann failed to find his feet at Craven Cottage, the club continued to monitor the American talent pool for recruitment. Eddie Lewis joined in 2000, who again turned out to be a disappointment as he could not prove his mettle in west London, making just 22 appearances, and his highlight was a winning goal against Derby County in the League Cup.

Nonetheless, the club kept their trust in American players and signed Carlos Bocanegra and Brian McBride in the winter transfer window of 2003-04. In no time, both of them became fan favourites for their commitment to the badge which initiated a golden era of "Fulhamerica'.

A couple of years later in 2006, Clint Dempsey, was roped in from New England Revolution for a whopping £2m. This made the most expensive American player to play in the Premier League. And with Dempsey's success, several others followed suit like Kasey Keller and Eddie Johnson.

Fulham not only had ample representatives of the United States in the dressing room but in 2013, an American businessman of Pakistani origin, Shahid Khan, purchased the club from Al Fayed. Khan, 72, continues to be the chairman of the club but his son, Tony Khan, is at the wheel as the Vice Chairman and Director of Football Operations.

Over the years, a total of 11 USMNT players have gone on to play for Fulham including Tim Ream and Antonee Robinson from the current squad.

GOAL takes a look at the most notable USMNT players who have adorned the Fulham shirt.

Marcus Hahnemann | (1999-02)

Marcus Hahnemann was the first American import by Fulham. However, he could not establish himself as the first-choice keeper ahead of Maik Taylor and was sent out on loan to Rochdale and Reading.

The signing of Edwin van der Sar further slipped him down the pecking order and was released at the end of the 2001-02 season.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesEddie Lewis | (2000-02)

Eddie Lewis was roped in 2000 but could not make an impact at Cavern Cottage. He made just 22 appearances in his three seasons and was sold to Preston North End where he became an important member of the squad.

Getty ImagesBrian McBride | (2004-08)

There was another USMNT player who played a crucial role in Fulham's escape, Brian McBride. Having joined Fulham in 2004 he went on to make over 154 appearances, scoring 40 goals including 12 in the 2006-07 season.

In the next season, McBride was awarded the armband for Fulham. He was a fan favourite for his movements inside the box and high work rate. With each passing season, his popularity soared and the club renamed a bar inside Craven Cottage, "McBride's", in June 2009 to commemorate his contributions to the club.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

Getty ImagesCarlos Bocanegra | (2004-08)

Carlos Bocanegra joined the club in 2004 and was soon rewarded with the moniker of the and the

He was a versatile player who played primarily as a centre-back, but also as a left-back and a holding midfielder. He was known for his aerial presence, his ability to read the game, and his tenacity in the tackle. In the 2006-07 season, he scored five goals to become Fulham's second-leading goalscorer behind McBride.

WATCH: Lionel Messi speaking English!? All is not as it seems as AI-generated video of Inter Miami superstar goes viral

Lionel Messi is a man of many talents, but speaking English fluently is not one of them – despite what an AI-generated video would have fans believe.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

Argentine superstar now in the StatesHas been taking English lessonsDoing much of his talking on the pitch

WHAT HAPPENED?

The Argentine superstar has made his way to the United States in 2023, with a move to Inter Miami completed after reaching the end of his contract at Paris Saint-Germain. There is a big Spanish-speaking community in Florida, but Messi revealed back in 2021 that he has been taking English lessons.

AdvertisementTHE BIGGER PICTURE

A video released on social media has gone viral, with Messi seemingly speaking at a press conference in English. The clip does, however, come from the website HeyGen – which allows users to produce deep fakes of other people.

DID YOU KNOW?

Messi has only ever carried out press duties in his native Spanish and, despite some initially being fooled, the video doing the rounds at present is clearly not real due to the echo on the voice and the sudden breaks in speech.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

GettyWHAT HAPPENS NEXT?

Messi continues to do much of his talking on the pitch, with Inter Miami inspired to Leagues Cup glory and a place in the U.S. Open Cup final since his arrival in America. He also has them in the hunt for a MLS play-off spot, while reigning champions Argentina are being helped down a qualification path that leads towards the 2026 World Cup.

'It will take time' – Gregg Berhalter on conversations with Gio Reyna and where the Borussia Dortmund star fits with the USMNT

The midfielder is back with the U.S, albeit in a limited capacity, and all eyes are on how he rebuilds his relationship with the returning head coach.

It was the one name everyone was looking for in the United States men's national team squad. At 11 a.m. on the East coast, U.S. Soccer unveiled the list of 23 players called in for the upcoming matches against Germany and Ghana but, fairly or unfairly, all eyes will be on one of those players and the coach he will once again be playing under.

Gregg Berhalter's roster is out, Gio Reyna is on it, and, now, finally, all of these months later, all involved can begin to heal.

It's been the U.S. men's national team story of 2023. It's a familiar one now: post-World Cup drama, betrayal, investigations, friendships ruined, a federation plunged into chaos. And yet, somehow, it's brought everyone right back to where they started: with Berhalter in charge of the USMNT and with Reyna as a key young star that the program is hoping will soon become a key young superstar.

Still, too much has changed for things to stay the same, right? This camp, for all involved, will surely be a bit awkward on some level. You can't fix all of it in one reunion.

This is the start, though. Reyna is back. Berhalter is, too. And, as this camp begins, Berhalter says that both seem ready to treat this as the fresh start it could be.

Getty ImagesFinally aligning

From the moment Berhalter was rehired this summer, everyone wanted to know the answer. How would he begin to fix all that was broken with Reyna? The answer to that question would probably define his tenure.

It took a while, but that process began recently. As of September camp, Berhalter and Reyna had not yet had their long-awaited sitdown, as Reyna remained out of action due to an injury suffered this summer. However, ahead of October camp, that conversation needed to happen if Reyna was to return to the team.

Berhalter says the two finally met on Zoom a few weeks back. The conversation, Berhalter says, went about as well as anyone could have hoped, even if Berhalter wasn't too willing to get into specifics.

"The conversation was a positive conversation," Berhalter said. "I'm appreciative of him taking time and being able to connect. Really for us, it's about aligning on how we're moving forward, and I think we did that. The exact contents of the conversation I'm gonna leave private, but we're in a good spot to prepare for this camp."

AdvertisementGetty Images'It will take time'

Conversations are good. Time together in camp will be even better. However, Berhalter knows that there's no fixing everything, especially not this quickly.

What happened between the Berhalters and the Reynas was deeper than soccer. The two families, for years, were the best of friends. Berhalter's relationship with Reyna's father, USMNT legend Claudio, made him something of a family member. Berhalter watched Reyna grow up, and then he watched it all fall apart.

Berhalter's relationship with Claudio and Danielle Reyna may never be repaired, but his relationship with Gio will have to be. The two have to come together for the sake of the USMNT and figure out some way, any way, to make it work.

The initial signs have been good, but Berhalter admitted that it won't all be washed away in this camp.

"The conversation was positive," he said. "I was really, really just appreciative of the conversation and, having said that, acknowledging that, I think it will take time. There's a difference between a Zoom call and being in person, but I think that both intentions are positive.

"The idea is that, we work together for the team to be successful and I think we're both prepared to do that. I think that, although it may take some time, we're both aligned with what we want to accomplish."

GettyBuilding him up

With that off-field stuff out of the way, Berhalter also explained his expectations for Reyna this camp.

The Borussia Dortmund midfielder hasn't played a minute since June's Nations League triumph and only recently returned to the bench on the club level. He has yet to come off the bench, though, as Edin Terzic has yet to use him in the Bundesliga or Champions League.

Last camp, Berhalter made a point to ease Folarin Balogun into the team, as the striker joined up with the U.S. after only recently completing a move to Monaco from Arsenal. This time around, Berhalter says he envisions a similar set up with Reyna, who probably won't play 90 minutes in either of the two games.

"Really, in my opinion, we're treating this very similarly to how we did with with Balo last camp: build him up, build his minutes up so that he goes back to Dortmund in a better place. We'll be using him on the field in a way that he can return to Dortmund ready to go. That's going to be important for this camp."

He continued: "How many minutes can we give him on the field that he can build up in a safe way and then go back to Dortmund and really propel him to make a big impact for his club? We're going to be creative with the minutes. We want to certainly get him on the field and work through both the Germany game and see what position he plays and then, in the Ghana game, same thing: seeing how we can get him in different positions throughout the camp on the field."

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

Getty ImagesThree positions

For much of last cycle, Reyna was used as a winger by Berhalter. With Christian Pulisic generally on that left wing, though, and Tim Weah on the right, Reyna was squeezed out of the USMNT starting XI at the World Cup.

This summer, though, Reyna was deployed as an attacking midfielder with fantastic results. His assist on Folarin Balogun's first goal showed what he can bring to the role and, in the months since, the debate has raged on about how Berhalter can best use Reyna in this cycle.

For now, that answer is TBD. We likely won't get a concrete answer this camp as Reyna is on that minutes restriction, but Berhalter isn't ruling out anything going forward.

"In terms of Gio, we see him being able to play three positions: central midfielder, attacking midfielder and winger," he said. "We use wingers in different ways. Sometimes the wingers are wide against the line and sometimes they're in between the lines. We see him as more of an in-between-the-lines winger, so those are the three positions he can be utilized in."

Explained: Why Germany players are unhappy with Julian Nagelsmann as Die Mannschaft slip to back-to-back defeats

Germany's players reportedly have a number of concerns about manager Julian Nagelsmann amid a run of two consecutive defeats.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

Die Mannschaft have lost to Turkiye and AustriaPlayers concerned about NagelsmannFirst international job for coachWHAT HAPPENED?

reports that Germany's players have a series of concerns about the management of the 36-year-old, who is embarking on his first international coaching job. They have lost two on the bounce, 3-2 against Turkiye and 2-0 against Austria. Since his appointment, Nagelsmann has also overseen a 3-1 win over the United States men's national team, and a 2-2 draw with Mexico.

AdvertisementWHY ARE GERMANY'S PLAYERS UNHAPPY?

Per the report, several players believe that Nagelsmann is more suited to club management and is too demanding. There is not said to be a lack of faith in the manager, but they would like him to simplify his ideas, due to the condensed nature of training at international level.

Nagelsmann has also played several players out of position – for example, Kai Havertz has been fielded as a left-back – and is said to place great faith in video sessions, while he also stops training to point out mistakes. Overall, it is said to have overwhelmed the Germany squad.

Getty ImagesWHAT NAGELSMANN SAID

Nagelsmann's desire to overhaul Germany's defence has not paid dividends yet, with his side failing to keep a clean sheet under his management and conceding eight goals in four games, and he has said: "We're not defensive monsters".

That has not gone down particularly well in the Germany dressing room.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

Getty ImagesWHAT NEXT?

Nagelsmann will go back to the drawing board now that the international break is over. One has to expect that he will tinker with his tactics before the next break and Euro 2024, when the country will be hosts.

'I think we got away with that one' – Wrexham fans react to Arthur Okonkwo fumble controversy in fiery draw with MK Dons that saw two red cards

Wrexham fans are feeling relieved after seeing goalkeeper Arthur Okonkwo get away with a fumble in a 1-1 draw with MK Dons.

Wrexham draw 1-1 at MK DonsOkonkwo in spotlight after fumbleFans react to controversial incidentGettyWHAT HAPPENED?

Wrexham's 1-1 draw with MK Dons on Tuesday featured a moment of controversy surrounding goalkeeper Arthur Okonkwo. The Arsenal loanee dropped a ball and then grabbed it back as it rolled along the goalline. MK Dons players were convinced it had gone in and they should have been awarded a goal. The protests even saw veteran Dean Lewington handed a red card for his conduct towards the referee.

AdvertisementWHAT THE FANS ARE SAYING

Wrexham fans on social media were left to thank their lucky stars that the goal was not given after believing it had probably crossed the line.

"I think we got away with one to be honest,😰😰," X account @jde_888 posted.

"Left hand side of the post is the ball don't think that is all over the line. Refs been horrendous either way and can't blame all 45 MK Don's fans for being fuming," added @Dancashire.

Meanwhile, @JoeEdws felt his team had certainly got lucky. "Could’ve won and we got away with that Okonkwo save hahahahaha Take that all day long."

And @stevewill26 joked: "Yes, it clearly went over the line,…er,…I mean, there’s no way that went over the line…obvs."

Fan account @Gav_Leaf was already preparing for the backlash: "Well, that's gonna be all the haters are talking about for the next 6 months."

WHAT THE PUNDITS ARE SAYING

Wrexham reporter Richard Williams also felt the visitors got away with one. He posted on X: "Let-off for Wrexham as Okonkwo spills Tomlinson shot but managed to grab it. Officials decide ball hadn't crossed the line."

Freelance reporter Matt Wright had the same opinion: "Seen a replay of that Tomlinson/Okonkwo moment, hmm pretty sure that was in. Not Pedro Mendes/Roy Carroll circa 2005 but just over the line."

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

GettyTHE BIGGER PICTURE

The incident came during a dramatic game and would have seen MK Dons go 2-1 up if it had been given. Instead the hosts were quickly reduced to 10 men due to Lewington's red card. They did manage to stay in the game with Will Boyle's subsequent sending off ensuring the match finished 10 apiece.

Ryder hundred brings Hampshire to their knees

Jesse Ryder’s first century in the competition paved the way a 78-run victory for Essex over Hampshire in their NatWest Twenty20 Blast at Chelmsford

ECB/PA26-Jun-2015
ScorecardJesse Ryder struck his first T20 hundred in the NatWest Blast [file picture]•Getty ImagesJesse Ryder’s first century in the competition paved the way a 78-run victory for Essex over Hampshire in their NatWest Twenty20 Blast at Chelmsford.The New Zealander destroyed the visiting attack with an unbeaten 107 from just 55 deliveries, eight of which he smashed for six. The last of those carried him into three figures and he also scored eight fours in an exhibition that earned him a standing ovation as Essex finished on 212 for 5.Insights

Although Hampshire have still been winning matches their seam bowling has been a concern this season. Apart from Fidel Edwards, who is now playing in the CPL, none of their seamers have an economy rate of less than 8.73. In fact other than Yasir Arafat none of them have an economy rate of lower than 9.28. Spinners Danny Briggs and Will Smith have been carrying the attack. It was not until this match that they ran into an opposition batting order who punished the weakness – although Chris Wood did keep his figures intact. With Sean Ervine still out injured Hampshire should consider an emergency signing.

Sharing the limelight with Ryder was Mark Pettini as they put together an opening partnership of 126 in 14 overs. Pettini’s share of that was 74 in 45 balls as he helped himself to three sixes among his dozen boundaries before he was brilliantly caught at deep mid-wicket by a diving Gareth Berg to give spinner Will Smith his only wicket.No other batsman managed to reach double figures but that was of little consolation for Hampshire as Essex collected their sixth success in the competition to move level with Kent at the top of the South Group table.The only visiting bowler to escape the carnage was Chris Wood, his four overs costing 29 runs and earning him the wicket of James Foster.Hampshire began their reply needing to get off to a flying start to mount any sort of challenge but it was not to be.In the first three overs, they lost as many wickets, Reece Topley bowling James Vince and then having Michael Carberry caught on the square leg boundary for eight. In between, David Masters sent back Joe Gatting as Ryan tenDoeschate accepted a catch at deep mid-off.One-time Essex batsman Owais Shah did his best to repair the damage but having struck three fours and a six in making 26 from 20 balls, he was magnificently caught by ten Doeschate at wide mid-on after he dived to his right to pluck the ball an inch or so off the ground.After that, and with the score now 57 for 4, Hampshire were left with the task of trying to bring some sense of respectability to their challenge.When medium-pace man Ravi Bopara came into the attack he soon put Hampshire into even deeper trouble with three wickets in an over, those of Jimmy Adams, Smith and Berg to leave the scoreboard looking a sorry 66for 7.Bopara, who was appearing in his 100th domestic T20 match finished with 3 for 23 while Topley claimed 3 for 25 as Essex ended a sequence of six successive defeats against Hampshire, dismissed for only 134, in this competition

Southampton fans react with Cedric Soares reportedly close to Inter Milan move

[ad_pod ]

Sky Sports in Italy reported on Wednesday night that Inter Milan are in advanced discussions to sign Southampton defender Cedric Soares – and Saints fans have been quick to react to the rumour on Twitter.

Despite being one of the south coast outfit’s more senior players and a Euro 2016 winner, the Portugal international has often found himself behind the likes of Yan Valery, Matt Targett and Kayne Ramsay in the pecking order following Ralph Hasenhuttl’s arrival at St Mary’s last month.

That certainly suggests the Austrian doesn’t fancy the 27-year-old and is keen to move him on if the deal is right – as he has done with Manolo Gabbiadini and Wesley Hoedt already during this transfer window – and if Sky Sports in Italy are to be believed then a deal could soon happen.

Cedric has made 119 appearances in all competitions for Saints, scoring two goals and providing a further 10 assists, as per Transfermarkt, and while he was a reliable performer in his debut campaign at St Mary’s in 2015/16, he has struggled over the course of the past couple of seasons with his attacking impact in particular not being up to scratch.

Southampton supporters have been quick to have their say on the story via social media, and while one said “I think Cedric leaving has been on the cards for a while”, another said “Cedric hasn’t looked like he’s wanted to be here for ages”.

Here is just a selection of the Twitter reaction…

Check out the video below for Emma Conybeare’s rundown of which clubs need what in the January transfer window…

Barcelona player ratings vs Real Madrid: Blaugrana BATTERED by Karim Benzema! Sorry Barca suffer humbling Copa del Rey Clasico exit

Real Madrid put four past Barcelona at Camp Nou to blow their arch rivals out of the water and book a place in the Copa del Rey final on Wednesday.

A second-half masterclass from Karim Benzema combined with a defensive horror show from Barcelona saw Real Madrid rout their Clasico rivals 4-0 to reach the Copa del Rey final.

Barca were relatively comfortable until the stroke of half-time, when Vinicius Jr gave Los Blancos the lead after a flowing counter-attack.

And Real recaptured some of their signature knockout-football mojo after the break, with Benzema leading the way. The Frenchman bagged a second-half hat-trick — his second in a row — to put Barcelona away. It was all too easy for Madrid, as the usually reliable Blaugrana defence collapsed under the weight of a Benzema masterclass.

Xavi's side will still win La Liga, but this Clasico humbling showed that they still have a long way to go.

GOAL rates Barcelona's players from Camp Nou…

Goalkeeper & Defence

Marc-Andre ter Stegen (5/10):

Couldn't have done anything about any of the four goals, although he did get sent the wrong way on the penalty.

Ronald Araujo (5/10):

Thrust into another matchup with Vinicius Jr. Made one crucial intervention early, but lost the battle late.

Jules Kounde (5/10):

Tried in vain to divert Madrid's opener, but was caught out of position for Real's second. Doesn't have the best understanding with Alonso.

Marcos Alonso (4/10):

Unsteady for spells, and should have fouled Rodyrgo as he broke for Madrid's opener. Not a centre-back, and it shows.

Alex Balde (6/10):

Terrific going forward, including one wonderful run and cut-back. But was exposed defensively as the minutes wore on.

AdvertisementMidfield

Franck Kessie (4/10):

Started very well, but had a nightmare of a second half. Gave away a penalty for Madrid's third.

Sergio Busquets (5/10):

Up for the fight, but some of his passing was uncharacteristically poor. Completely lost as the game wore on.

Sergi Roberto (5/10):

Lots of energy, unafraid to tackle, but was poor defensively. Picked up a silly booking in the first half. The drop-off from Frenkie de Jong is massive.

Gavi (6/10):

Exchanged some words with Vinicius after a couple of hard fouls. Typically combative and smooth on the ball. Lacked his usual creative influence.

GettyAttack

Raphinha (4/10):

Started brightly with an early effort on target but was locked down by the excellent Eduardo Camavinga thereafter. Tried to do too much, and was hooked after 66 minutes.

Robert Lewandowski (6/10):

Saw a shot saved by a diving Thibaut Courtois right at the end of the first half. His chances were limited thereafter.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

GettySubs & Manager

Ansu Fati (5/10):

Charged with making something happen over the last 30 minutes. Unable to turn the tide.

Eric Garcia (5/10):

Not the kind of player to be introduced when you're chasing the game.

Ferran Torres (5/10):

Made some poor decisions, got booked.

Xavi (4/10):

Picked his strongest possible side, with Kessie, Roberto and Busquets filling out a physical midfield. Everything seemed to be going very well for 45 minutes, but then the Real Madrid knockout special happened. Barcelona were helpless in the second half and overrun by an experienced side. By the end of it all, Madrid should've had five. Xavi has a long way to go as a manager yet.

Messi, Neymar and the team of the Champions League group stage

The former Barcelona team-mates were among the stars of this opening phase, while there is a surprise inclusion between the posts…

JASPER JACOBSEvan Horvath | Club Brugge

While the likes of Alisson and Iker Casillas have a strong claim to be named the group stage's best keeper, for sheer impact Brugge’s young US international stole the show. 

Horvath, 23, sat out his team's first three fixtures, which yielded just a single point and five goals conceded. 

Once in the starting line-up, however, he kept three consecutive clean sheets as the Belgians picked up a further five points, keeping out Monaco, Dortmund and Atletico, and steering his side to a shock Europa League berth in one of the competition's most fearsome groups on paper.

AdvertisementGetty ImagesJoshua Kimmich | Bayern Munich

At just 23, Kimmich has become an indispensable part of the Bayern set-up, and after playing across the pitch for the Bundesliga giants now looks to be a permanent fixture on the right side of defence. 

It was there that he stood out during this group stage, contributing two assists for Bayern as they streaked to last-16 qualification with ease. 

getty imagesMatija Nastasic | Schalke

The former Manchester City defender has been in formidable form throughout the group stage, marshalling Schalke's defence and securing a place in the next round. 

Under Nastasic's fearsome vigil the Bundesliga side conceded just four goals in their six Group D outings, a record that ensured progression despite a decidedly mean six strikes in favour.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

Getty ImagesAymeric Laporte | Manchester City

Signed from Athletic in January, Laporte is now a cornerstone of City's defence, and seems to grow with every game he plays. 

The France Under-21 international was ever-present for Pep Guardiola's side in the first round, as they qualified at the head of their pool after conceding just six goals.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus