You are here

Sports

Sports section

Jordan plays Myanmar in U-22 Asian championship

By - Jan 14,2014 - Last updated at Jan 14,2014

AMMAN — The national U-22 football team plays Myanmar on Wednesday with eyes set on advancing to Round 2 in the inaugural Asian Football Confederation U-22 Championship currently under way in Muscat, Oman.

Jordan held South Korea 1-1 in the opening Group A match before beating hosts Oman 1-0.

The Kingdom now only needs one point from today’s match while Oman takes on South Korea in the other match. South Korea leads Group A after they beat Myanmar 3-0 while Oman beat Myanmar 4-0.

Local Arabic dailies quoted head coach Islam Diyabat conveying FIFA Vice President and Jordan Football Association President HRH Prince Ali’s appreciation to the squad after their impressive performance against South Korea.

Basketball league Leg 2 starts today

By - Jan 14,2014 - Last updated at Jan 14,2014

AMMAN — Applied Science University (ASU) lead the Premier Basketball League as Leg 2 kicks off on Wednesday.

Looking back at Leg 1, Jalil and Nashama Urdun seem destined to be one of the relegated teams while Orthodoxi, who won the title two seasons ago, are not in the top four.

Orthodoxi will play for the title with no import players on line-up this season.

They managed to beat only the two bottom-placed teams and will play Kulieh in the first match on Wednesday. Friday will see ASU play Jalil and Ittihad play Nashama. Riyadi, who are playing in Dubai International Tournament, will have their first match against Kulieh on January 21.

Observers note that a gap in competitive levels of clubs and lack of fans have cast a negative impact on the second most popular game in Jordan.

Jordan Basketball Federation League Commissioner Mudar Majdoub told The Jordan Times that many aspect needed to be revised, noting that clubs had agreed not to hold the Jordan Cup nor enlist import players until new criteria is put in place.

“Player transfer rules and contracts were not revised or changed. But clubs unanimously agreed to play this season with the status quo,” Majdoub said, adding that each club was given the right to sign up six players from the transfer list which included players on the national team and those who played professionally abroad.

Majdoub said game experience is expected to help younger players have a chance for a better performance in the upcoming round.

In 2012 season, ASU won the league for the third time, Ittihad schools were runner-up as Riyadi took third place and Kulieh fourth. Former champs Orthodoxi pulled out of the event, citing result and technicalities that allowed Kulieh to advance to Round 2.

Last season saw cup holders Riyadi Aramex beat ASU to win the 10th Jordan Basketball Cup. 

Cristiano Ronaldo wins FIFA best player award

By - Jan 13,2014 - Last updated at Jan 13,2014

ZURICH — Cristiano Ronaldo has won the FIFA Ballon d’Or award for 2013, ending Lionel Messi’s four-year run as the world’s best player.

Ronaldo scored 69 goals for Real Madrid and Portugal last year, and his stunning hat trick against Sweden in a decisive World Cup play-off was perhaps the defining individual performance.

“There are no words to describe this moment,” said Ronaldo, who was sobbing in tears after accepting the trophy with his young son, also named Cristiano, beside him on stage.

He defeated Barcelona’s Messi and France winger Franck Ribery, who helped Champions League winner Bayern Munich to a sweep of major titles.

Voting was done by national team captains and coaches, plus selected journalists, in FIFA’s 209 member countries who chose their top-3 preferences.

In a tight race, Ronaldo received 1,365 points, Messi had 1,205 and Ribery got 1,127.

Ronaldo rolled back his head and closed his eyes, grinning, when Brazil great Pele, after a dramatic pause and smile, read out his name. He kissed his girlfriend, model Irina Shayk, before going up to the stage.

“People who know me know how many people helped me,” the emotional winner said in Portuguese. “If I have forgotten anyone, I do apologise because I am deeply moved.”

Pele greeted Ronaldo minutes after he also cried on stage when collecting an honorary Ballon d’Or for his own outstanding career.

Ronaldo had to wait five years since first winning the award as a Manchester United player, as Messi found a way to overshadow him in each of the past four years — despite the Portugal winger’s prolific scoring for Madrid. However, Ronaldo was heavily favoured this time after FIFA extended the balloting deadline beyond the World Cup play-offs in November and allowed voters to change preferences.

The Portugal star’s display in Stockholm was so impressive it seemed certain to sway voters at a time when Messi was sidelined by his third injury of the year.

Still, FIFA spokesman Walter De Gregorio said Monday the standings were unchanged by the voting rules adjustment, which raised the turnout from around 50 to 88 per cent.

Ronaldo said earlier Monday that he made peace with FIFA President Sepp Blatter, whose stated personal preference last October for Messi sparked speculation that the eventual winner would snub the ceremony.

“We talked over the telephone and everything was cleared,” Ronaldo said at a news conference before the ceremony. “This is no longer an issue, neither for us nor for football.”

Germany dominated the other major awards, with goalkeeper Nadine Angerer named women’s player of the year ahead of United States forward Abby Wambach, last year’s winner, and Marta of Brazil.

Though Ribery lost, Bayern got one victory as Jupp Heynckes won the coaching award for leading the team to a Champions League, Bundesliga and national cup treble last season before he retyred. Heynckes defeated Juergen Klopp, whose Borussia Dortmund team lost the all-German Champions League final, and Alex Ferguson, who retyred after winning another Premier League title for Manchester United.

Germany national team coach Sylvia Neid won the women’s award, beating Sweden coach Pia Sundhage and Ralf Kellermann, who led Wolfsburg to the Champions League title.

The World XI elected by players in the FIFPro group of national unions was: Manuel Neuer (Bayern Munich, Germany); Dani Alves (Barcelona, Brazil), Sergio Ramos (Real Madrid, Spain), Thiago Silva (Paris Saint-Germain, Brazil), Philipp Lahm (Bayern, Germany); Andres Iniesta (Barcelona, Spain), Xavi Hernandez (Barcelona, Spain), Ribery (Bayern, France); Ronaldo (Madrid, Portugal), Zlatan Ibrahimovic (PSG, Sweden), and Messi (Barcelona, Argentina).

Ibrahimovic won a fans’ online vote to get the Puskas Award for best goal, a long-range bicycle kick for Sweden against England in a November 2012 friendly.

Blatter, an International Olympic Committee (IOC) member, gave his presidential award to Jacques Rogge, the IOC president for 12 years until reaching his term limit last September.

The Afghanistan football federation got the fair play award after hosting its first international match in more than a decade.

Pele, viewed by many as the greatest footballer ever, finally received a Ballon d’Or trophy which he could never get during his career when the original prize created by France Football magazine in 1956 was restricted to European players.

The only player to win the World Cup three times — in 1958, ‘62 and ‘70 — was given a standing ovation at the Zurich Kongresshaus.

“I promised my family I would not cry but I am emotional,” Pele said. “Thank God, I complete my trophies at home.”

Hazard going nowhere but De Bruyne could leave — Mourinho

By - Jan 11,2014 - Last updated at Jan 11,2014

LONDON — Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho is adamant Eden Hazard will not be leaving Stamford Bridge any time soon but believes the playmaker's fellow Belgian international Kevin De Bruyne could move in the January transfer window.

The Londoners have received bids from two clubs for winger De Bruyne who has been out of favour this season.

"He's a player we've had a couple of offers for," Mourinho told reporters on Friday, without naming the interested teams.

"One of them is coming to a level where we believe it can be a good situation for the player and the club. We know he's a fantastic young player with lots of potential," he added on the eve of Saturday's Premier League visit to Hull City.

"I would be happy to keep him and develop him but we also have to analyse the player's profile, the player's personality and he wants so much to go that maybe it's a good option," said Mourinho.

"It's a very good deal for the club from a financial point of view. The club bought him a couple of years ago for a small fee and now we have the possibility to sell him for a very positive amount."

VfL Wolfsburg's sporting director Klaus Allofs said on Friday that De Bruyne, 22, who Chelsea loaned to Werder Bremen last season, was keen to join his Bundesliga club in January.

"The ball is in Chelsea's camp now," Allofs added.

Mourinho said Hazard would not be leaving despite media reports of interest from Paris St. Germain.

Crazy value

"I am not worried because if his value was around 40 million pounds [$65.85 million] when Chelsea bought him and two years later he is twice or three times better than he was when we bought him, I think his value in the market is a crazy value," he said.

"On top of that he's not a player Chelsea are interested in selling anyway."

Mourinho also said the club had not received any bids for Juan Mata, who has been in and out of the side this season, or Michael Essien who has rarely featured since returning from a loan spell at Real Madrid.

The Portuguese refused to comment on reports of his renewed interest in Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney.

The Stamford Bridge club had two bids for England international Rooney rejected in the close season.

Mourinho shook his head and said he was not prepared to talk about the player ahead of third-placed Chelsea's home game with Manchester United on January 19.

Champions United are languishing in seventh place but Mourinho believes they will finish in the top four at the end of the season under new manager David Moyes.

"I don't think they have a problem," said the Chelsea manager. "In this moment they are not in the top four but they can be at the end of the season.

"I don't feel any problem for David. Better results will arrive and he will be for many years in the club and will reach good results."

Chelsea are one point behind Manchester City and two adrift of leaders Arsenal.

Jordan takes on South Korea in AFC U-22 championship opening

By - Jan 09,2014 - Last updated at Jan 09,2014

AMMAN — The national U-22 football team takes on South Korea on Saturday in the Group A match kicking off the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) U-22 Championship in Oman.

Jordan recently concluded a camp in Muscat where the team played two matches, losing 2-1 to China and tying the UAE 1-1.

The team was set to train with a complete line-up as of Thursday with seven players who were on national team duty at the 8th West Asian Championship in Qatar joining the squad while two others were not released by their Saudi clubs.

The Jordan Football Association’s website quoted head coach Islam Diyabat as saying: “We faced a tough time with many players missing the squad. However, we are in high spirits and everyone is working hard to achieve our sole aim. To be competitive in the inaugural Under-22 event.”

Diyabat underlined he had full confidence in the squad. “We are confident, positive and hope our resilience will help us play for an advance position.”

Coach Dayyan Saleh said Jordan needs to spare no effort to compete on the Asian level. “The match against China enabled us to get into the mood of the competition. We amended many gaps and now need to be focused and have a good defence,” he said.

In June 2012, Jordan was the first to qualify to the inaugural AFC U-22 Championship finals after leading Group D qualifiers with an unbeaten run, beating Uzbekistan 3-1, Nepal 3-0, Bangladesh 3-0 and Yemen 4-0.

Jordan will play alongside South Korea, Myanmar and Oman in Group A as the AFC draw put Jordan, Japan, North Korea and Saudi Arabia as heads of the four groups.

Group B will include North Korea, the UAE, Syria and Yemen, Group C will see Japan, Australia, Iran and Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan, China and Iraq will compete in Group D.

The second edition in 2015 will qualify teams to the 2016 Summer Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

The Kingdom reached the AFC U-19 Championship four times. In 2006, the team achieved the country’s biggest football sporting success when it finished fourth at the championship and qualified to the 2007 FIFA Youth World Cup in Canada.

Riyadi leave for Dubai to play int’l tournament

By - Jan 08,2014 - Last updated at Jan 08,2014

AMMAN — Jordan's Riyadi-Aramex left for Dubai on Wednesday to play at the 25th Dubai International Basketball Tournament against some of the best regional clubs.

The seven competing clubs in the
January 9-18 event will play a Round Robin tournament, following which the top four teams will advance to the second round where the top two face-off and third and fourth teams will play in the semis.

In addition to Jordan's Riyadi, UAE national team, UAE's Ahli Dubai, Libya's Naser and Ahli, Egypt's national team and the AND1 team from the US will compete in the event.

Missing this year are Lebanese teams Riyadi and Hikmeh (Sagesse), who have been banned for four years by the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) over technicalities and political bickering between the two clubs.

In a phone interview with The Jordan Times prior to departure, Riyadi Secretary General Fadi Sabbah said the team was bent on making the best out of the tournament even though six front-line players were missing from Riyadi's line-up.

"The team has seven players from our U-19 line-up and they all need the necessary match experience," Sabbah said, explaining that even though many team stars were missing this season, the team fared well in last month's inaugural Abu Dhabi Championship.

Amer Seif, Faisal Kheir and Sany Sakakini are no longer in Jordan, and Isa Kamel retired, while Ali Zubi and Ahmad Duweiry were transferred.

"Not having import players playing the local league has made it more difficult to have a coherent line-up throughout the season, but players are working hard to be in top form," Sabbah added.

Aramex Dubai is the sponsor of the only Jordanian team at the event, which have boosted their line-up with naturalised player Rashim Wright, who was on the national team, as well as Jason McCoy and Dereck Rivera.

Riyadi first competed in Dubai in 1990. Jordan's Fastlink came in third in 2005, 2006 and 2007. Zain came in second in 2008 and 2009, and were eliminated from the quarters in 2010 when Applied Science University (ASU) also took part. No Jordanian teams took part in 2011.

In 2012, Riyadi won the exemplary team award, while Ali Jamal won best centre and import Alfa Bangura top scorer awards.

Last month, Riyadi-Aramex reached the quarters in the Abu Dhabi event, eventually losing to Tunisia's Club Africain 75-58. In matches deciding 5-8th places they lost to Bahrain's Muharraq 63-61.

In Round 1, Riyadi lost to Egypt's Ahli
81-69, Morocco's AS Sale 106-52, Muharraq 76-63. AS Sale beat Club Africain 72-66 to win the title.

Similarly, ASU, the country's Premier Basketball League champs, were eliminated from the Wasl Club Championship in Dubai after finishing third in their group.

The league is now under way, with ASU — who won the league for the third time last year — leading while runner-up Ittihad Schools and Riyadi are in a tight race for 2nd and 3rd place.

Riyadi-Aramex beat ASU to retain the 10th Jordan Basketball Cup last year. 

Tournament record

1999                       Dubai ports

2000                       Hikmeh (Lebanon)

2002                       Hikmeh (Lebanon)

2003                       Champville (Lebanon)

2004                       Champville (Lebanon)

2005                       Riyadi (Lebanon)

2006                       Riyadi (Lebanon)

2007                       Mahram (Iran)

2008                       Riyadi (Lebanon)

2009                       Riyadi (Lebanon)

2010                       Mahram (Iran)

2011                       Ittihad Sakandari (Egypt)

2012                       Anibal Zahle (Lebanon)

2013                       Riyadi (Lebanon)

Jordan gets second place at West Asia championship

By - Jan 07,2014 - Last updated at Jan 07,2014

AMMAN — Jordan lost 2-0 to Qatar in the final match of the 8th West Asian Football Championship (WAFC), coming second after the host. After a scoreless first half, Jordan conceded two goals in the second half to lose the chance to be crowned west Asia champions. In the semis, Jordan beat Bahrain 1-0 as Qatar beat Kuwait 3-0 to qualify to the final. In the first round, Jordan beat Kuwait 2-1 and held Lebanon 0-0 in Group C. The event included nine teams with the top team from each group as well as the best second-placed team moving to the semis.

Olympic team gears up for qualifiers

By - Jan 07,2014 - Last updated at Jan 07,2014

AMMAN — The Jordan Football Association (JFA) has named the men's Olympic team that will play in the Olympics qualifiers set for June.

The team has regrouped and will face Jazira on Thursday as part of its training agenda for the event.

The initial 32 players called up for duty will train five times a week and play a series of friendlies before naming a final line-up ahead of the training camps abroad.

Head coach Jamal Abu Abed told the JFA that the final line-up will be announced by the end of January.

"That does not mean that the line-up will not be open as players are recalled depending on their performance in the league. Only the best will represent Jordan regardless of name or club."

The coach named the line-up after the end of the U-20 league — which was won by Wihdat — in addition to careful scrutiny of the First Division League and the Pro League.

"We have a long journey ahead that needs focus and hard work," Abu Abed added.

So far, the squad had a training camp in Dubai where they beat the UAE 2-0 and lost 2-1. Jordan also beat Lebanon 2-1 and lost 1-0.

Locally the team held Wihdat 0-0 and lost 2-1, beat Faisali 4-1 before losing 3-1, lost 2-1 to Arabi and beat Shabab Urdun and Ittihad Zarqa 2-1.

Meanwhile, the national U-22 football team lost 2-1 to China and tied the UAE 1-1 as it concluded a training camp ahead of the inaugural Asian Football Confederation (AFC) U-22 Championship in Muscat, slated for January 11-26.

The team held a camp in Bahrain, which was deemed successful despite missing seven players who are on national team duty now at the 8th West Asian Championship in Qatar.

In June 2012, Jordan was the first to qualify to the inaugural AFC U-22 Championship finals after leading Group D qualifiers with an unbeaten run, beating Uzbekistan 3-1, Nepal 3-0, Bangladesh 3-0 and Yemen 4-0.

Jordan will now play in Group A alongside South Korea, Myanmar and Oman starting January 11. The second edition in 2015 will qualify teams to the 2016 Summer Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

There is a lot of focus on age divisions competing on the Asian scene and FIFA’s Executive Committee last month unanimously awarded Jordan as host for the FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup in 2016.

In 2013, the U-19 team was eliminated from Group B AFC U-19 Championship 2014 qualifiers, where Jordan beat Afghanistan 2-1, held 0-0 with the Maldives, and lost to Yemen 2-1 and the UAE 2-0.

Meanwhile, the girls U-16 squad was eliminated from the AFC finals after qualifying for the first time. Similarly, the boys U-16 team was also eliminated from the AFC U-16 Cup 2014 qualifiers after finishing last in Group D. 

Jordan to play Qatar for W. Asia title

By - Jan 06,2014 - Last updated at Jan 06,2014

AMMAN — Jordan plays Qatar in the final of the 8th West Asian Football Championship (WAFC), which concludes in Doha, Qatar, on Tuesday.

In the semis, Jordan beat Bahrain 1-0 as Qatar beat Kuwait 3-0 to qualify for the final.

In the first round, Jordan beat Kuwait 2-1 and held Lebanon 0-0 in Group C.

The event included nine teams with the top team from each group as well as the best second-placed team moving to the semis.

In the last edition of the event, Jordan exited in the first round.

The WAFC was initiated by Jordan in 2000 and headed by HRH Prince Ali, president of the Jordan Football Association and the West Asian Football Federation.

Jordan’s best result at the WAFC was runners-up in 2002 and 2008.

Iran won the title for the fourth time in 2008. Iraq won the title once in 2002, Kuwait in 2010 and Syria in 2012.

Following the WAFC, Jordan is set to resume Asian Cup 2015 qualifiers to which the team has technically qualified.

Jordan will play Oman on January 31, Singapore on February 4 and Syria on March 5.

Jordan is now second in Asian Cup Group A qualifiers after they held Oman 0-0, tied Syria 1-1 and defeated Singapore 4-0 in Leg 1.

Football great Eusebio da Silva Ferreira dies at 71 of heart failure

By - Jan 05,2014 - Last updated at Jan 05,2014

LISBON, Portugal — Eusebio’s stellar football career for club and country included several sensational performances which are still remembered half a century later.

In an epic European Cup final against Real Madrid in 1962, when a first-half hat trick by Ferenc Puskas looked enough to secure the trophy for the Spanish club, Eusebio scored the last two goals as Benfica fought back to win 5-3 and clinch its second straight continental title.

But none of Eusebio’s goals were more famous than those he scored against North Korea in the quarter-finals of the 1966 World Cup. With Portugal trailing 3-0, Eusebio inspired his team’s turnaround with four goals and an eventual 5-3 victory.

Eusebio da Silva Ferreira, who died Sunday aged 71, became affectionately known as the Black Panther for his athletic prowess and clinical finishing that made him one of the world’s top scorers during his heyday in the 1960s for Benfica and the Portuguese national team.

Eusebio died at his Lisbon home of heart failure at 3:30am GMT Sunday, his biographer Jose Malheiro said. “His health was very poor,” Malheiro told reporters. Eusebio was admitted to hospital several times over the past year for the treatment of heart and respiratory problems. Benfica confirmed his death.

Born into poverty in Africa, Eusebio became an international sporting icon and was voted one of the 10 best players of all time. For the Portuguese, he was a national hero.

Cristiano Ronaldo, the Portugal captain who plays for Real Madrid, commented on his Facebook page, “Always eternal Eusebio, rest in peace.” Former Portugal captain Luis Figo, the 2001 FIFA world player of the year, tweeted, “The king!! Great loss for us all! The greatest!!”

“On this sad day of [Eusebio’s] death... I prefer to look upon him as immortal,” Chelsea’s Portuguese coach Jose Mourinho told public broadcaster Radiotelevisao Portuguesa.

The Portuguese government decreed three days of national mourning, with flags flying at half-mast. The Portuguese Football Federation ordered a minute’s silence ahead of Sunday’s Portuguese Cup games.

Portuguese President Anibal Cavaco Silva made a nationally televised address to the nation to praise the “affability and humility” of a man who never let stardom go to his head. “His talent brought joy for entire generations, even those who didn’t live through the most glorious moments of his career,” Cavaco Silva said.

Eusebio achieved global fame, and tributes poured in from around the football world. FIFA President Sepp Blatter tweeted, “Football has lost a legend. But Eusebio’s place among the greats will never be taken away,” while German great Franz Beckenbauer also took to Twitter to comment, “One of the greatest football players ever has passed away.”

Perhaps Eusebio’s biggest accomplishment was leading Portugal to a third-place finish at the 1966 World Cup, but his agility and speed made him one of Europe’s most dangerous forwards for most of a career that lasted two decades.

He was awarded the Ballon d’Or in 1965 as Europe’s player of the year and twice won the Golden Boot — in 1968 and 1973 — for being top scorer in Europe. According to football’s world governing body FIFA, he scored 679 goals in a total of 678 official games.

At the 1966 World Cup, where Portugal went on to lose to host and eventual champion England in the semifinals, Eusebio became even more popular at home when he wept openly as he left the field following the defeat.

He finished as the tournament’s top scorer with nine goals. In 1998, a panel of 100 experts gathered by FIFA named him in its International Football Hall of Fame as one of the sport’s top 10 all-time greats.

“Look, there are only two black people on the list: me and Pele,” Eusebio commented on the honour, referring to the Brazilian great who was a friend. “I regard that as a great responsibility because I am representing Africa and Portugal, my second homeland.”

Eusebio was born in Maputo, the Mozambican capital, during the Second World War when the southeast African country was still a Portuguese colony. He came from a poor family but sparkled for his local team and was lured by Benfica to Portugal when he was 18.

Known for his unpretentious and easy manner as well as his courage and ball skills, his popularity in Portugal was such that in 1964, when Italian clubs offered to buy Eusebio for sums that were astronomical for the time, the country’s then-dictator, Antonio Salazar, decreed that the player was a “national treasure” — meaning that he could not be sold abroad.

“A football genius and example of humility, an outstanding athlete and generous man, Eusebio was for all sports fans and for all Portuguese an example of professionalism, determination and devotion to the colours of the national jersey and of Benfica,” Portuguese Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho said in a statement.

In a playing career unparalleled in Portugal, Eusebio was a cornerstone of the Benfica team that won back-to-back European titles in the early 1960s.

With Benfica, he won 11 Portuguese league titles and five Portuguese Cups, and remains the club’s best-known player. A bronze statue of him, poised to kick a ball, stands outside Benfica’s Stadium of Light where fans began laying flowers after his death was announced.

Eusebio’s coffin was to be taken to Benfica’s Stadium of Light where fans could pay their respects.

In the 1966 World Cup quarter-final at Goodison Park in Liverpool, Portugal made a nightmare start and was three goals down after 23 minutes.

“We were taken completely by surprise,” Eusebio told The Associated Press at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, where the Portuguese had a second meeting with the North Koreans 44 years after the first.

“I remember very clearly what [teammate Antonio] Simoes said when we were 3-0 down. He kept saying, ‘As long as we don’t go four goals down, we’re still in with a chance,’” Eusebio said. “And he was right.”

Eusebio led Portugal’s remarkable comeback by repeatedly charging at the Korean defence, scoring four goals in just over 30 minutes.

After his first two goals, he picked the ball out of the net, ran back to the halfway line and placed it in the centre spot for the restart. He completed his hat trick with a 56th-minute equaliser before scoring his fourth from the penalty spot as North Korea’s defence fell apart amid the onslaught.

“That was the best game of my life in a Portugal jersey,” Eusebio said. “It left its mark on me.”

Eusebio scored 41 goals in 64 games for Portugal.

After five knee operations, he played his last game for Benfica in 1975. Eusebio then moved to North America where he spent the last years of his career playing for the Boston Minutemen, Toronto Metros, Las Vegas Quicksilver and Buffalo Stallions through 1980.

Eusebio stayed on at Benfica as an assistant coach after his retirement and travelled widely with the Portuguese national side as a paid “football ambassador”.

Eusebio is survived by his wife, Flora, two daughters and several grandchildren.

Pages

Pages



Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF