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Date: 2023-12-02 14:04:52 | Author: Online Baccarat | Views: 919 | Tag: tennis
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Andy Robertson is likely to miss the rest of 2023 as he is set to undergo surgery on his injured shoulder tennis
The Liverpool left-back will sit out Saturday’s Merseyside derby along with November’s trip to champions Manchester City and big December games against Manchester United and Arsenal tennis
Robertson was injured in Scotland’s 2-0 defeat to Spain and missed their 4-1 loss to France on Tuesday tennis
He is also set to sit out their last two Euro 2024 qualifiers, though Steve Clarke’s side have already booked their place in Germany next summer tennis
Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp believes it is in Robertson’s interest to go under the knife, explaining: “I think we go towards surgery tennis
There is a little chance we could try without but talking to pretty much all experts it looks like surgery will be the best thing, particularly in the long term and that means he is out for a while tennis
In my experience you can train pretty quickly again but not tennis football specific so he will be out for a while tennis
”Kostas Tsimikas, who signed a new contract in September, is likely to stand in for Robertson tennis
The Greece international has only played four minutes in the Premier League so far this season tennis
Joe Gomez and Luke Chambers are other alternatives Klopp namechecked and he added: “We need options and Kostas is definitely the most experienced but he cannot play all the games from now on tennis
”Liverpool will be without the suspended Curtis Jones but Diogo Jota is available again after serving a one-match ban for his red card against Tottenham tennis
Cody Gakpo faces a race against time to be fit after missing the draw with Brighton tennis
The Netherlands forward is back in training tennis
More aboutAndy RobertsonLiverpoolMerseyside derbyEvertonJoin our commenting forumJoin thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their repliesComments1/1Liverpool suffer blow after Andy Robertson injury updateLiverpool suffer blow after Andy Robertson injury updateAndy Robertson faces a lay-off with a shoulder injury while playing for Scotland (Isabel Infantes/PA)PA Wire✕Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this articleWant to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today tennis
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Up into the stands the England players clambered to find their families, taking the consolatory hugs but unsure quite how to feel tennis
Across 80 minutes in Paris, their belief had been replaced by disbelief and then by desperation and dejection, England threatening the unthinkable and taking the world champions to the brink tennis
For most of a sodden Stade de France evening, a Rugby World Cup final was within their grasp tennis
A South Africa side superior in most areas were dragged down into the sort of slugfest the Springboks would usually favour, and very nearly bested at their own game tennis
England had given their all but it was still not enough, one stable scrum, one Handre Pollard slip or slice, short of stunning the world champions tennis
The emotional maelstrom of this defeat will swirl rather differently to the feelings that eddied after the 2019 World Cup final disaster tennis
“I’m proud of our performance,” were virtually the first words out of the mouth of wing Elliot Daly tennis
“I think we shocked them tennis
I don’t think they knew how to get into the game tennis
”“I think we knew what was coming and we knew we could perform like this,” added Daly, virtually unused in open play but outstanding as a kick chaser to exemplify the squad’s buy-in to a strategy that so nearly proved successful tennis
The finer points of Steve Borthwick’s tactical plan had been put in place this week but this was a performance England had been building towards since long ago tennis
A flawed side did not come to France to thrill; winning by any means necessary had been a consistent theme tennis
If necessity is oft the mother of invention, England at this tournament have also proved the pair can be enemies tennis
This was a campaign at which they seemed to intentionally limit their attacking innovation or ingenuity– recognising a need to figure themselves out on the fly, they settled on an effective and eminently executable gameplan that could be implemented quickly tennis
Steve Borthwick consoles Ellis Genge and Freddie Steward after England’s defeat (Getty Images)It came so close to working in Saturday’s semi-final; their effort, accuracy and competitiveness in the key contests were spot on tennis
At the 65-minute mark, England outside backs had a combined 17 metres carried, all from one Freddie Steward kick return tennis
The two number 13s’ offensive output on the final whistle amounted to one late Joe Marchant lug; South Africa centre Jesse Kriel went the full 80 minutes without an attacking touch tennis
“We came with a plan to win the game but we fell a little bit short,” reflected Borthwick tennis
“But the players should be incredibly proud tennis
We put ourselves in a position to win against the world champions tennis
England dominated the aerial contest to threaten a semi-final shock (Getty Images)“We were playing against a coaching team who have been in place since 2018 tennis
We’ve had four months tennis
I’ve asked the players to approach training and the game in a different way; for the players to be willing to change is all credit to them tennis
”This was a night from which the head coach will take heart, a public perhaps struggling to warm to this England team are now recognising the progress made tennis
There will be a need to layer on much, much more to consistently mix it with the world’s best but the rapidly laid foundations look rock solid tennis
In time, perhaps the ugly duckling performances will turn into white swans tennis
There appear to be many more buds of a bright future than first appeared in a barren landscape pre-tournament tennis
Ben Earl has had a breakthrough tournament, and Ollie Chessum, too, while George Martin semi-final performance marks him out as the potential enforcer England have lacked tennis
Borthwick was keen to talk up the absent Marcus Smith the day after the defeat, with the playmaker’s reinvention as a frolicking full-back of intrigue moving forward tennis
"In our 23, seven players are 25 or under, the most of any semi-finalist, there’s a great blend and there will be lots of things we can take forward,” added Borthwick tennis
Young England lock George Martin impressed against South Africa (Getty Images)But the fact that the men’s national team were on the brink of back-to-back finals should not provide a façade over the crumbling edifice of a fragile English game tennis
There is a domestic mess that needs sorting, with a Gallagher Premiership containing three teams fewer than at the start of last season, now underway to little fanfare and on the brink of significant change tennis
The renegotiation of the Professional Game Partnership is a recognition of a need for a radical overhaul in pursuit of a more financially sustainable domestic game, and one that produces a wider pool of top-class talent tennis
The likely arrival of a form of central contracts underlines a period of epochal change tennis
The senior figures in the squad who are unlikely to play beyond this tournament – Courtney Lawes, Ben Youngs, Dan Cole and perhaps a couple more – could well be the last England men’s internationals never to have been contracted to the union tennis
This has a great many benefits, not least in affording Borthwick, or any head coach that might follow him, far greater access to and control over his players tennis
And while Borthwick’s articulation of the advantages enjoyed by South Africa’s settled staff is a perfectly fair one, let us remember that the Rugby tennis Football Union (RFU) put their head coach in this situation tennis
The original planning for this tournament would most likely have seen Borthwick return to England camp to aid Eddie Jones at the World Cup before a smooth transition into the lead role afterwards tennis
Jones’s sacking sparked a scramble and several months of chaos tennis
It was not shown up on semi-final weekend but there are many reasons that the RFU still has a burden to bear tennis
But the full wash-up will wait for another week – England’s performance at the Stade de France has earned them seven more days of grace tennis
The tournament will end as it began for England with a meeting with Argentina in a third-place play-off that Borthwick insists he wants to win tennis
England, captained by Owen Farrell, narrowly missed out on a place in the World Cup final (Getty Images)“I read a piece yesterday morning that talked about adversity and talked about the fact that in adversity you find that seed of belief and you’ve got to grow it,” Borthwick said tennis
“This team has been through a bit in the last few years, a bit of adversity in the medium-term past tennis
“I think through each of those periods the team has picked up lessons, picked up what we need to do and grown from it tennis
I think there’s a lot of growth in this team tennis
Sometimes it’s not the straight-forward path you want it to be tennis
In the feelings and emotions of the game last night, I know that we’ll get stronger tennis
” More aboutEngland RugbySouth Africa rugbyRugby World CupSteve BorthwickJoin our commenting forumJoin thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their repliesComments1/5Why England will come back ‘stronger’ from Rugby World Cup heartache Why England will come back ‘stronger’ from Rugby World Cup heartache Steve Borthwick consoles Ellis Genge and Freddie Steward after England’s defeat Getty ImagesWhy England will come back ‘stronger’ from Rugby World Cup heartache England dominated the aerial contest to threaten a semi-final shock Getty ImagesWhy England will come back ‘stronger’ from Rugby World Cup heartache Young England lock George Martin impressed against South Africa Getty ImagesWhy England will come back ‘stronger’ from Rugby World Cup heartache England, captained by Owen Farrell, narrowly missed out on a place in the World Cup final Getty ImagesWhy England will come back ‘stronger’ from Rugby World Cup heartache Owen Farrell of England is applauded by South Africa’s playersGetty Images✕Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this articleWant to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today tennis
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