Club’s supporters’ minds will start to wander to potential trips next season after long-awaited return to Champions League The roar at kick-off, the roar that had been there in most of the previous 18 home games of this season, was maybe given a few extra decibels here. Added to renewed hope, present all season, was a touch of yes, this really is happening. Then came the moment, with fireworks being wedged into the tops of milk bottles, at the beginning of stoppage time, when Nick Pope was finally forced into some sort of movement to deny Timothy Castagne, to make sure it did happen. It came after one of the Newcastle keeper’s slowest days of the season, after what had often resembled a half-pitch, beat-the-packed-defence training exercise against a Leicester team largely too meek to threaten Geordie dreams. Continue reading... from Football | The Guardian https://www.theguardian.com/football/blog/2023/may/22/newcastle-champions-league-eddie-howe
Outstanding Italian footballer who was a golden boy at Juventus in the 1950s before becoming the club’s president for two decades Giampiero Boniperti, who has died aged 92, was the leading man of Italian football in the 1950s. Blue-eyed with blond, curly hair, he was a precocious talent who was first capped for Italy at 19, appearing in the 1950 and 1954 World Cup campaigns and spending his whole playing career with Juventus of Turin, winning five league titles at the club. On retirement he became first a director of, and then, for two decades, the president of Juventus, a period during which still more honours were accumulated. Boniperti was born in Barengo, north-west Italy, to Agabio, the town’s mayor, and his wife, Camilla, a teacher. After schooling at the De Filippi college in Arona, he played for a local club, Momo, as a centre-forward, joining Juventus in the 1946-47 season. He made his first, dramatic impact on their fans on a rainy afternoon in the club’s old Stadio Comunal...
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