Saturday, 26 May 2018

Live - Real Madrid vs Liverpool # Live ™ Stream™ Soccer TV ™ (Rasel)™

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Real Madrid has won each of the last two UEFA Champions League titles and three of the last four. The Spanish club will try to come out on top of the UEFA Champions League again this year with a win in the final this Saturday against Liverpool.
Madrid is a -165 favorite to lift the trophy in Kiev at sportsbooks monitored by OddsShark.com. Liverpool is going off as a +135 underdog to win the match on Saturday. On the three-way line for regulation plus injury time, Real Madrid is a +120 favorite over Liverpool (+205 to win, +270 to draw). Of Real Madrid’s 12 UEFA Champions League titles, nine of the final games have been won in regulation.Barcelona won its third La Liga Championship in four years this season, taking back the league’s title from Real Madrid. But after that disappointing result in La Liga, another championship in the UEFA Champions League would go a long way in easing that pain.
Real Madrid upset Paris Saint-Germain in convincing fashion in the Round of 16, winning both legs to score an aggregate victory of 5-2 over the French Ligue 1 champions. Madrid also picked up aggregate wins over Italy’s Serie A champions Juventus and Germany’s Bundesliga champions Bayern Munich to advance to the final.
Like Real Madrid, Liverpool is hoping to make up for failing to capture its league title by earning some hardware in the UEFA Champions League. In English Premier League play, Liverpool overcame a slow start of 3-4-2 to finish the season on an 18-8-3 run.
Liverpool won its group in the UEFA Champions League to advance into the knockout stage, where it dispatched of Porto, English Premier League champion Manchester City and Roma to advance to this point.
Saturday’s total is set at three goals. The OVER is 8-3 in Real Madrid’s last 11 games and 7-3-1 in Liverpool’s last 11.
When these two clubs last met in the 2014 UEFA Champions League group stage, Real Madrid defeated Liverpool 3-0 on the road and 1-0 at home. Liverpool has done well to get to this game including its impressive upset over Manchester City, but Real Madrid’s recent form and path to this point make the defending champions a clear favorite.
For more odds information, betting picks and a breakdown of this week’s top sports betting news check out the OddsShark podcast with Jon Campbell and Andrew Avery. Subscribe on iTunes or listen to it at So how do you beat the threepeaters elect, the most successful team in the competition’s history, sporting more individual and collective trophies than you can shake a stick at? It’s undoubtedly a daunting task, but thankfully not an impossible one. Zidane’s team have conceded 44 goals in the league this season, over 60 goals in all competitions, and rarely — in less than 30% of their games, in fact — keep a clean sheet. They can be got at, in a number of ways, is what I’m saying, and worse teams than Liverpool have been able to.
An emerging trend for this Real side is the tendency to concede early goals. This doesn’t necessarily spell disaster, as they are always liable to get a couple themselves, but a propensity for starting slow and digging a hole for themselves has been emerging this season. On Saturday, they will face one of the fastest starting teams in the game, and as both Manchester City and Roma have found out, a slow start against this Liverpool side can make the subsequent uphill climb insurmountable. Blitzing Real from the opening whistle could well set the stage for victory.
The attacking disposition of Zidane’s disciples makes them exceptionally dangerous going forward, but also leaves holes to be exploited at the other end. Marcelo can be a menace on the left, and Toni Kroos and Luka Modric are two of the best all-purpose passers in the world, but none of the three are defensive behemoths. Space is often left available both horizontally and vertically between Marcelo and his centre-back, and Kroos and Modric — the former in particular — will rarely cover the half-space in front of their backline with much gusto.
The result is that the extraordinarily athletic and talented — but still human — pairing of Sergio Ramos and RaphaĆ«l Varane are required to cover a lot of ground to put out fires. Incidentally, the areas in which these fires occur are where Mohamed Salah and Roberto Firmino thrive, and the battle between Liverpool’s top scorers and Real’s defensive stalwarts for dominion of that space could well determine the game.
It is expected that Zidane will start defensive midfielder Casemiro on Saturday in order to provide cover for his more creative outlets. The Brazilian sat out the majority of the second leg against Bayern Munich, and Real struggled mightily to protect their backline in his absence. While every player on the team is excellent on the ball, the 26-year old is not the most versatile passer, and will occasionally attempt to dribble his way out of trouble if his first and second option are cut off. This provides an opportunity for Liverpool’s aggressive counter press to win the ball in a dangerous area, and setting their pressing traps up to catch the number 14 out could pay off massively.
Another effect of having so many offensive-minded players in your team is that whenever the opposition has the ball, the majority of your players are waiting for the counter to set them free, anticipating possession to change hands so they can do what they do best. As a result, Real Madrid tend to become a little light on numbers in their own area, as neither Kroos, Modric or Kovacic do particularly well at tracking off-the-ball runners all the way home.
Both goals conceded — as well as a handful of chances — in the 2-2 draw with Bayern displayed how los Blancos’ attacking mind-set leave them vulnerable when teams dare to overload their 18-yard box. Pushing fullbacks or midfielders into the Madrid area should allow Liverpool to produce a numerical advantage in decisive moments.
Finally, there is the counter attack. With so many players pushed up the pitch, there will be spaces for the Reds to break into, particularly in the channels between Real’s centre-backs and fullbacks, and lacking genuine pace in midfield the Spaniards are at risk in transition. Zidane’s fearsome offense forces most teams to sit deep with nine or ten players behind the ball, making a counter attack difficult, but if Klopp’s men are brave enough to to trust their organisation and let Firmino and Salah be an outlet in these spaces, chances can be created against a team out of balance.Real Madrid are not a perfect team — though they are a very, very good one with potential match winners throughout the side. If Liverpool are to have any chance of lifting the Champions League trophy for the sixth time on Saturday, they will need to find the right balance of discipline and bravery, as well as identifying areas of weakness and executing an assault on them. This is not an impossible task by any means, but should the Reds succeed, it will have been a monumental achievement for a side whose pre-season expectations stopped at the round of 16.
All that is left now is to go out and play fucking football.BBC Radio 5 live’s coverage of the Champions League final starts at midday on Saturday, with kick-off at 19:45 BST. Mark Lawrenson is part of their commentary team in Kiev.
I had never been as nervous before a game as I was before my first European Cup final in 1984. Most of the Liverpool team felt the same way.

Wednesday, 23 May 2018

French Open 2018 ! Live # Stream™ Watch Tennis™


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The three-time champion has not played competitive tennis since suffering a first-round defeat to Naomi Osaka in Miami, having also been knocked out early of the Indian Wells Masters on her return from giving birth.
Williams’ coach Patrick Mouratoglou acknowledged last week that the 23-time Grand Slam champion made her comeback too soon, but insisted she is heading to Paris to win.
And the 36-year-old was on Court Philippe Chatrier on Monday, having also practiced on the red dirt a day earlier.Williams, who travelled to Paris after attending the wedding of Prince Harry to Meghan Markle in London on Saturday, opted not to play at the Madrid Open or the Internazionali d’Italia in the buildup to the second major of the season, instead training at the Mouratoglou Tennis Academy.Last year’s men’s champion, Rafael Nadal, will return to defend his title and go for his record 11th French Open trophy. Nadal, currently ranked No. 1 in the world, has battled with Roger Federer for the top spot throughout the year and just reclaimed it with his win in Rome. Federer has since withdrawn from the clay court circuit though and won’t be playing in the French Open for the third straight year, leaving the door open for Nadal to take the title at Roland Garros.
MORE: Serena Williams’ 2018 schedule
In the WTA, all eyes will be on Serena Williams as she participates in her first Grand Slam event since the 2017 Australian Open. The 23-time Grand Slam champion has understandably been shaking off rust in her most recent tournaments. She made it to the third round at Indian Wells before losing to sister Venus and was ousted in the opening round of the Miami Open.
Last year’s winner, Jelena Ostapenko, has climbed her way to No. 5 in the WTA rankings. The player she defeated, Simona Halep, will likely come in with the No. 1 ranking, and after losing the 2018 Australian Open to Caroline Wozniacki, will look to finally win her first career Grand Slam at Roland Garros.
Below is the schedule by round, the men’s and women’s draws and how to watch the French Open.
French Open schedule
The opening round of the French Open is set to begin on Sunday, May 27, at 5 a.m. ET. The tournament will take place almost daily over the next two weeks and will conclude with the championship match on Sunday, June 10. Below is the round-by-round breakdown of the schedule for both men and women.South Africa’s Kevin Anderson has been seeded sixth for the French Open which starts at Roland Garros on Sunday.
The 32-year-old, who is enjoying a career-high seventh in the ATP singles rankings released on Monday, is aiming to bounce back at this year’s second Grand Slam after being forced to retire last year.
Anderson, who has had greater success on the grass courts of Wimbledon and hard courts in Australia and New York, has only reached the fourth round in Paris on three occasions.
But it just wasn’t meant to be in 2017 when he was forced to call it a day in the second set against Croatia’s Marin Cilic due to a hamstring injury.
The 2017 US Open runner-up opened his clay court season as the top seed at the Estoril Open earlier this month but crashed out in the second round to Greece’s Stefanos Tsitsipas.
The Florida-based South African, who turned 32 last Friday, quickly put that defeat behind him when he powered his way to the semifinals of the Madrid Open two weeks ago. He eventually fell to Austria’s Dominic Thiem in straight sets, but the outing did Anderson’s confidence the world of good ahead of the French Open.The French Open organizers won’t offer special treatment to Serena Williams should she make the trip to Roland Garros in Paris this summer.
“This year again, tournament officials will establish the list and ranking of the women’s seeds based on the WTA ranking,” the French Tennis Federation said, per the Associated Press (via ESPN.com). “Consequently, [the seeds] will reflect this week’s world ranking.”
Williams has competed in just two WTA events this year after returning to the court following the birth of her daughter. Because of that, as well as her absence for almost the entire 2017 campaign, she sits No. 453 in the WTA rankings.
Both Maria Sharapova and Simona Halep lobbied on Williams’ behalf for her to earn a seed at the 2018 French Open.
Sharapova said returning from pregnancy requires “an incredible effort” that can tax a player physically and emotionally, while Halep said it’s “normal to give birth” and “good to protect the ranking when someone is giving birth.”
Williams won the 2015 French Open and was the runner-up in 2016. Failing to be seeded this season will leave her hopes of a fourth French Open title in serious jeopardy.
Williams received a wild card entry for her return at the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells, California, in March. As a result, she played No. 29 Kiki Bertans in the second round and sister Venus, who was seeded eighth, in the third round. Serena lost to Venus in straight sets. In her next event, the Miami Open, a meeting with fourth-seeded Elina Svitolina awaited Williams if she had defeated Naomi Osaka in the first round.
Something similar could happen again at the French Open without the luxury of a seeding designation.

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