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Hojlund scores twice for Man United to beat Viktoria Plzen 2-1 in Europa League, Tottenham held 1-1

Hojlund scores twice for Man United to beat Viktoria Plzen 2-1 in Europa League, Tottenham held 1-1
Manchester United’s Danish striker Rasmus Hojlund (2L) celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal during the UEFA Europa League football match between Viktoria Plzen and Manchester United in Plzen, Czech Republic on Dec. 12, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 13 December 2024

Hojlund scores twice for Man United to beat Viktoria Plzen 2-1 in Europa League, Tottenham held 1-1

Hojlund scores twice for Man United to beat Viktoria Plzen 2-1 in Europa League, Tottenham held 1-1
  • Fisayo Dele-Bashiru and veteran Pedro Rodriguez scored one each for Lazio in the second half to defeat Ajax 3-1 in Amsterdam and move to the top of the standings with 16 points
  • Anderlecht beat Slavia 2-1 in Prague to move into third place

Rasmus Hojlund scored twice after coming off the bench and Manchester United rallied to beat Viktoria Plzen 2-1 in the Europa League on Thursday.

The Denmark striker netted in the 88th minute after collecting Bruno Fernandes’ pass off a free kick to seal the victory and put United into the top eight of the standings.

Hojlund replaced Marcus Rashford in the 56th and scored an equalizer six minutes later after Amad Diallo’s shot was deflected by goalkeeper Martin JedliCka into his path for an easy finish.

The 21-year-old Hojlund also scored twice in the previous round, when United beat Norwegian team Bodo/Glimt 3-2, and has five goals in his six appearances in the second-tier competition.

“It feels good to have scored two goals but I am more happy with the win,” Hojlund said. “My instructions? Go out there and score two goals! Just to use my qualities, run the channels and be assertive in front of goal.”

United had come off two straight losses in the English Premier League, 2-0 away to Arsenal, and 3-2 at Old Trafford to Nottingham Forest that left the club 13th and eight points adrift of the top four as progress looked slow under new coach Ruben Amorim.

Matej Vydra, who previously played for Burnley and Watford, opened the scoring three minutes into the second half.

United have 12 points from six games after three wins and three draws in Europa League play — good enough for seventh place.

The top eight qualify directly to the Round of 16. The teams placed No. 9 to No. 24 go into a two-legged playoff.

Tottenham continued to show inconsistent form in a 1-1 draw at Rangers, leaving the north London team in ninth place. The Scottish side is eighth.

Substitute Dejan Kulusevski was fed by fellow substitute Dominic Solanke to score 15 minutes before time and salvage a point at Ibrox Stadium.

Spurs were held 2-2 at home by Roma in the previous round and lost 3-2 to Galatasaray before. The draw came after losing 4-3 to Chelsea in the Premier League on Sunday.

Hamza Igamane netted for Rangers at the start of the second half off a cross from James Tavernier in what was a return to Glasgow for Spurs coach Ange Postecoglou, who led Celtic for two seasons.

Fisayo Dele-Bashiru and veteran Pedro Rodriguez scored one each for Lazio in the second half to defeat Ajax 3-1 in Amsterdam and move to the top of the standings with 16 points from six games. Bilbao are level on points but in second on goal difference.

Anderlecht beat Slavia 2-1 in Prague to move into third place.

Lyon jumped to fourth by beating Eintracht Frankfurt 3-2. The German team are fifth.

Among other results, substitute Sergio Peña equalized in stoppage time for Malmo to hold unbeaten Galatasaray 2-2. The Turkish club is sixth in the standings. PAOK routed Ferencvaros 5-0.

Roma showed signs of improvement by beating Braga 3-0 for a second straight victory that came after the struggling club earned its first win under new coach Claudio Ranieri, 4-1 over visiting Lecce in Serie A.

Braga goalkeeper Matheus received a red card in the 68th with the score 2-0.

Conference League

A youthful Chelsea lineup made the most of a long trip to Kazakhstan by beating Astana 3-1 to stay perfect in the UEFA Conference League.

Marc Guiu struck twice within five minutes early in the first half. The 18-year-old forward opened the scoring on a solo effort in the 14th and added his second after meeting a cross from Pedro Neto from the right in freezing conditions in the city of Almaty.

Guiu, who joined Chelsea from Barcelona this summer, has scored three in the competition.

Renato Veiga, who is 21, headed home the third before Marin Tomasov scored for the hosts late in the first half.

Neto was the only player to remain from the squad that beat Tottenham 4-3 on Sunday to move to second in the Premier League.

Chelsea have 15 points atop the standings of third-tier competition with one more game to play in the league phase.

Fiorentina crushed LASK 7-0 and Legia Warsaw lost 2-1 at home to Lugano. Swedish team Djurgarden beat Vikingur 2-1 in Iceland.


UK police say Maccabi Tel Aviv fans banned from Aston Villa match over hooliganism, not threats

UK police say Maccabi Tel Aviv fans banned from Aston Villa match over hooliganism, not threats
Updated 47 min 29 sec ago

UK police say Maccabi Tel Aviv fans banned from Aston Villa match over hooliganism, not threats

UK police say Maccabi Tel Aviv fans banned from Aston Villa match over hooliganism, not threats
  • West Midlands Police cite ‘significant levels of hooliganism’ among small section of supporters as reason for decision
  • Ruling based on community safety following assessment of risk posed by traveling fans, police chief says

LONDON: West Midlands Police have said their decision to ban Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters from attending the club’s Europa League fixture against Aston Villa on Thursday was based on intelligence suggesting “significant levels of hooliganism” among a section of the Israeli club’s fan base, rather than concerns about threats to Israeli fans.

that the move, which drew criticism from UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer and several MPs, was taken solely on safety grounds following an assessment of risks surrounding the match.

The decision to exclude Israeli fans was criticized by government figures, with some describing it as antisemitic and suggesting it effectively turned parts of Birmingham into a “no-go zone” for Israelis. The Home Affairs Committee subsequently requested an explanation from police regarding the decision-making process.

“We are simply trying to make decisions based on community safety, driven by the intelligence that was available to us and our assessment of the risk that was coming from admitting traveling fans,” Joyce said.

He added: “I’m aware there’s a lot of commentary around the threat to the (Maccabi) fans being the reason for the decision. To be clear, that was not the primary driver. That was a consideration. We have intelligence and information that says there is a section of Maccabi fans — not all, but a section — who engage in quite significant levels of hooliganism.”

Joyce said previous incidents involving Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters, including unrest before a match against Ajax in Amsterdam last year, informed the force’s risk assessment ahead of the Europa League fixture in Birmingham.

“What is probably quite unique in these circumstances is that, whereas often hooligans will clash with other hooligans, we’ve had examples where a section of Maccabi fans were targeting people not involved in football matches,” he said.

“It is exclusively a decision we made on the basis of the behavior of a subsection of Maccabi fans, but all the reaction that could occur obviously formed part of that as well.”

The Amsterdam fixture referenced by Joyce saw violence both before and during the game, leading to five convictions over antisemitic attacks on Israeli supporters. Dutch authorities also recorded instances of anti-Arab chanting by Maccabi fans.

Maccabi Tel Aviv’s CEO, Jack Angelides, said earlier this week that there had been “blatant falsehoods” spread about the Amsterdam incident and expressed frustration over what he described as a lack of transparency from West Midlands Police.

Responding to those remarks, Joyce said: “We are absolutely not saying that in Amsterdam the only fans causing trouble were the Maccabi fans. But what we were very clearly told is that they played a part in causing trouble, particularly a day before the match. That absolutely resulted in the following day there being attacks on Maccabi fans.”

He added: “So it wasn’t all one way, but escalating violence as a consequence is what we were trying to prevent here in Birmingham.”