Neymar should play for club which makes him happy, insists Dunga

The former Brazil boss has urged his compatriot to find joy in his game amid growing rumours he could return to Barcelona

Neymar needs to put wellness before wallet when it comes to choosing between Barcelona and Paris Saint-Germain, according to former Brazil boss Dunga.

PSG signed Neymar in a world-record €222 million (£200m/$250m) deal two years ago but the attacker now wants to rejoin Barca, despite the likelihood of having to take a pay cut.

Part of the 27-year-old’s motivation appears to be his desire to reunite with close friends Lionel Messi and Luis Suarez, with whom he forged a fearsome forward line.

Dunga knows Neymar better than most in football, having handed him the Brazil captaincy in 2014, and thinks a comfortable environment should be his first priority.

“It’s important that he chooses where he’s going to be happy, where he will enjoy playing,” Dunga said.

“People don’t understand that the Brazilian player is different from the European one.

“We like to play, to have fun, otherwise we get tense, sad… I hope that next season he can give us a lot of joy and demonstrate his full potential. It’s up to him.

“He has many qualities, technical quality. He does everything a player needs to do and has matured a lot. He wins fouls now and he likes more to score, and not only to dribble.

“I think he’s in a good moment.”

Dunga was speaking at an event commemorating the 25th anniversary of Brazil’s triumph at the 1994 World Cup.

One feted member of that side, former Deportivo La Coruna striker Bebeto, has an intimate understanding of the pressure associated with providing goals for club and country.

The scorer of six World Cup goals counselled his compatriot on the even greater importance of living up to his stature back in Brazil.

“I hope with all my heart that Neymar can put his head in place,” Bebeto said.

“Neymar doesn’t know the size of his name. He has to be an example. We have to talk about Neymar making goals, helping the Brazilian team.

“I’m very supportive of him, because he’s a great player and any team in the world has a place for him.”

 

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Pogba is no Neymar – but there's no place for egotistical star at Solskjaer's Man Utd

Ole Gunnar Solskjaer may have leapt to his defence on Wednesday but it is clear that Man Utd can’t move forward with the wantaway midfielder

Just as in 2016, Manchester United’s summer seems to have been dominated by the name of Paul Pogba.

But whereas three years ago there was a heightened sense of anticipation over an impending world-record transfer, this time around there’s a feeling of foreboding over the Frenchman’s exit and the potential damage it could do along the way.

The current stand-off sees Pogba and his agent Mino Raiola paving the way for a departure to Real Madrid or Juventus while Ole Gunnar Solskjaer attempts to convince everybody it’s business as usual.

“As far as I’m aware, up to now we don’t have any bids for any of our players so there’s nothing to say other than Paul, like most of our players, have got long contracts. We’re Man Utd, we don’t have to sell players,” Solskjaer said in Perth on Wednesday at the beginning of the club’s pre-season tour.

“Paul has never put himself out of the team, he’s always wanted to play, he’s always given his best. Agents talk all the time, but we’ve not had bids from any clubs and that’s all I can say about the matter.

“It looks like it’s a media, I don’t want to call it a… it’s an agenda against Paul. He’s a top, top bloke, he’s a great, great professional, he’s never been any problem, he’s got a heart of gold.”

Unfortunately for Solskjaer, that stance would only hold weight if Pogba himself hadn’t kicked off the frenzy by proclaiming he was ready for “a new challenge” at a promotional event in Japan in June. The France international knew exactly what he was doing, he knew the stir it would cause, he knew the difficulties it could create for his manager, and he went ahead and said what he said anyway. He wants a move, and the prospect of him staying diminishes with every moment he doesn’t step forward and commit to the Red Devils.

And in terms of Solskjaer’s “no bids” claim, well that’s not really how the football market works anymore. Perhaps when he was a player there was still a culture of clubs having to make official approaches before any other movement was evident, but the likes of Raiola have helped to change the landscape in recent times and there is an increasing inevitability about the way this saga will end. Players hankering for a move very rarely fail to get their way in modern football.

Since Pogba set the wheels in motion with his public request for a new challenge, Raiola has ensured that his client’s desires have remained at the forefront of everybody’s mind, most recently releasing a statement to talkSPORT on Tuesday.

“Pogba has done nothing wrong, he has been respectful and professional in every way,” Raiola explained. “The club knows his feeling for a long time. It’s a shame other people only like to criticise him without the right information.

“I’m sorry that the club does not take any position against this. Hopefully there will soon be a satisfying solution for all parties.”

For now, there is an impasse. Solskjaer spent much of his first five months in charge insisting he wants to build his Manchester United squad around Pogba, seemingly leaving him red-faced and short of a figurehead in midfield if the World Cup-winner were to leave.

But what the manager needs more is buy-in from his entire squad. Given the way he wants to do things at Old Trafford and the team mentality he wants to build, he can’t afford to have any egotistical players only thinking about themselves.

Solskjaer has a vision which will rely on players respecting and representing the badge, and personal agendas do not fit in with that. The likes of Daniel James and Aaron Wan-Bissaka have been added this summer exactly because they have the drive and hunger the Norwegian is looking to inject, and that cannot be compromised in order to satiate Pogba.

To be fair to the 26-year-old, he could have been far less professional than he has been. Look no further than Brazilian superstar Neymar for an example of a high-profile player who has treated his club with contempt .

After multiple acts of indiscipline over the last two years, Neymar’s own transfer request coincided with him not even attending pre-season training this week. The Brazilian will remain in his homeland for another week, despite PSG claiming he doesn’t have permission to do so.

Antoine Griezmann – who wants to leave Atletico Madrid this summer – also failed to turn up to training despite famously labelling the team as “My fans, my club, my home” when rejecting a move to Barcelona last summer.

Unlike Neymar and Griezmann, Pogba actually turned up for work when he was meant to. But that is a pretty low bar to be setting in terms of behavioural standards.

What Pogba has done with his carefully-orchestrated media campaign is hand in a virtual transfer request. It basically leaves him with no way back into the hearts of Manchester United fans.

Think of Wayne Rooney, who told Sir Alex Ferguson in 2010 that he wanted to move on and would do the same again in 2013 shortly before the legendary manager retired. Never again was the England striker viewed in quite the same way by United supporters.

The widespread response to Pogba’s and Raiola’s summer shenanigans has begun to resemble fierce toxicity, and while it would be a blow to Solskjaer to lose arguably his only truly world-class star he cannot afford to carry passengers in his new project built around work ethic, guts and hunger. If Pogba doesn’t have the stomach for the fight at United, there is only one inevitable result.

It is a path well-worn by successful sides of the past. Pep Guardiola’s first summer as a rookie Barcelona boss is remembered best for his decision to offload Ronaldinho and Deco having decided they were more trouble than they were worth. What followed was unprecedented success.

He would repeat the dose over the next couple of years in shedding Samuel Eto’o and Yaya Toure, and achieving continuing success all the while. And while there is no instant path to glory in replacing top-level quality with hunger and desire, there is every reason to believe it is a model which United can succeed with too.

Losing Pogba, a man who scored 16 goals last term and was the blisteringly-hot architect of United’s best run of form in years at the beginning of 2019, would undoubtedly be a step backwards.

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But if that’s what Solskjaer needs to inject some true Manchester United DNA into the rest of the squad and underline the standards expected of a United player, then in the long run there could be many more positives to be taken from this nonsense impasse.

Lukaku leaving would be big loss for Man Utd, says Kleberson

The ex-Red Devil acknowledges that the Belgian might be granted more time on the pitch elsewhere, but is still hoping he decides to stay in Manchester

Romelu Lukaku leaving Manchester United this summer would be a huge loss for the club, according to Kleberson, but the former Red Devils midfielder “understands” why he is considering a move.

The 26-year-old admitted earlier in the year that he would like “to play in Serie A sooner or later”, which has led to a reported approach from Inter during the current transfer window.

It has been widely reported that former Chelsea boss Antonio Conte wishes to link up with the Belgium international at San Siro, after succeeding Luciano Spalletti in the hot seat last month.

Lukaku endured a frustrating 2018-19 campaign at Old Trafford, contributing just 15 goals in total across all competitions amid concerns over his fitness and attitude.

Marcus Rashford ended up as Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s first-choice striker towards the end of the season and United have been linked with a number of extra attacking reinforcements this summer.

World Cup winner Kleberson, who played for the Red Devils between 2003 and 2005, sympathises with Lukaku’s current plight but also insists his old club can ill-afford to lose such a “great player”.

“If Romelu Lukaku is to leave the club, it will be a big loss for Manchester United,” the Brazilian told us-bookies.com 

“I’m a big fan of Lukaku, he’s a great player. When you think about coaching, everyone wants to take him, he is a very good player to have in the squad. Whether he starts games or is on the bench, he will always help the team to score goals. If he starts up top, you can play off him and help the midfield and other forwards to score more goals.

“He can also drift out wide and cause problems for defenders there, he killed Brazil in the game at the World Cup from doing this and he’s very unpredictable.  
 
“I understand if Lukaku wants to leave and play more games. He didn’t start too many games for Man Utd last season. Strikers survive on goals and statistics, it’s tough. The season changed so quickly for him, if players prepare mentally in the pre-season, he may find his feet again. I hope he decides to stay at Manchester United for one more year and proves his worth.”

United managed to sign Daniel James from Swansea for £15 million ($19m) and add English defender Aaron Wan-Bissaka to their ranks for £50 million ($62m) in June, as Solskjaer prepares for his first full season in charge.

Kleberson went on to praise Wan-Bissaka as a “good signing”, claiming United were in need of a dynamic full-back after shipping 54 Premier League goals last term.

“Wan-Bissaka did a very good job at Crystal Palace,” Kleberson added. “I know when the money is discussed (£50m) it is a lot that has been spent on the player.

“But Manchester United need a player like him. He’s very quick, aggressive and athletic. He’s got a great opportunity at a big club. It’s a good signing, and one which will give great energy to the team.”

U.S. international Sargent aims for ‘breakthrough’ Werder campaign

The United States international is hoping improved fitness and tactical understanding can help him build on a promising Bundesliga debut season

Josh Sargent is hoping improved tactical understanding and a stronger body can lead to a “breakthrough” campaign with Werder Bremen this season.

Sargent enjoyed a promising debut season for the Bundesliga club, breaking into the first-team in December and scoring a goal in his first appearance.

But his promising start gave way to a lack of playing time in the second half of the year, with Sargent featuring just once in the Bundesliga after February.

That time on the bench was partially to blame for Sargent’s absence from the United States’ Gold Cup roster, which he has since admitted disappointed him but also has acted as motivation.

And the 19-year-old now believes he has a better understanding of what is expected from Werder head coach Florian Kohfeldt, which puts him in a position to potentially have a breakout season.

“I’m now more familiar with how the coach wants to play,” Sargent told Weser-Kurier (via Bundesliga.com).

“The coach has sometimes told me after a good finish that you cannot teach it. I think I have a nose for goal in the box. 

“Scoring goals is my favorite pastime, it happens instinctively. That’s why playing as a center forward suits me best, but I play wherever the coach wants me to. 

“The main thing is that I have more playing time. I hope to make my breakthrough soon. If it happens in the new season, it would be great.” 

In addition to the mental and tactical aspects of the game, Sargent also has a better understanding than this time last year of what is required physically.

He credits the club’s fitness team in helping him become stronger, but not hinder him going forward.

“I feel really good right now, especially compared to my first year at Werder. I’ve learned a lot in this time, also about my body,” Sargent said.

“I worked hard with Werder’s fitness coaches. It was about becoming stronger and stronger – but not too much; after all, I still want to be able to walk!

“I am very happy here at Werder at the moment. Now it’s about getting more playing time. I’ll do anything for it because that’s my goal for the new season: more goals and more games.”

Kohfeldt has previously indicated Sargent faces a tough battle for playing time with an impressive array of forwards at Werder’s disposal.

Milot Rashica, Johannes Eggestein, Martin Harnik, Claudio Pizarro, Niclas Fullkrug and Luc Ihorst are all in the mix for playing time up front and Sargent knows that he could face an uphill battle to see the field.

“There are again a lot of players in the squad for the same positions, I do not know if my chances have increased,” Sargent said. “I can only influence what I give and do. I work as hard as I can to convince the coach to let me play more often.”

Among those options is the veteran Pizarro, who has said the upcoming season will be his last.

And Sargent is grateful for the help the 40-year-old Peru international has provided him during his time.

“Claudio is a great help on and off the pitch,” Sargent said. “He’s great at communicating with the whole team.

“On the pitch, he helps me with tips on many little things. Passing, movement… he is also very important in terms of mentality.”

'I think it says something about him' – Van Dijk slams Gnagnon's shocking tackle on Larouci

The Liverpool star had words with the Sevilla man at the final whistle, and slammed his actions speaking to Goal after the match

Virgil van Dijk slammed Joris Gnagnon after the Sevilla man’s horror challenge on Yasser Larouci marred Liverpool’s pre-season friendly in Boston.

Gnagnon was sent off in the second half of his side’s 2-1 win at Fenway Park after a crude, pre-meditated kick at 18-year-old Larouci.

The Liverpool youngster was carried from the field, and later left the stadium on crutches with his right leg in a brace. Reds staff are optimistic the damage is not as bad as it might have been, with Jurgen Klopp suggesting Larouci had been lucky to avoid serious injury.

Gnagnon took to Twitter to issue an apology, while Sevilla also sent a message wishing Larouci a full and speedy recovery.

Van Dijk had confronted Gnagnon at the final whistle, and speaking to Goal afterwards, the Dutchman was unimpressed by what he had seen.

“I saw it from the side, it’s not nice,” he said. “Especially when it happens against such a young guy who is playing pretty well this season. I think it says something about him.

“You have to just deal with it, but obviously you don’t want to have injuries in a game like this. You want to get fit, you want to get back to your best. Obviously everyone wants to win the game, but the most important thing is to get fit. Hopefully for Yasser it is not that bad.”

The game had been a bad-tempered one throughout, with Klopp angered by a number of questionable challenges in the first half. The Reds boss made his feelings clear to Sevilla manager Julen Lopetegui at half-time, after Harry Wilson had been left with a facial injury following a clash with Ever Banega.

A late Alejandro Pozo goal settled the game, with Divock Origi having earlier cancelled out Nolito’s opener, as Liverpool suffered their second defeat in the space of 48 hours.

“Obviously it’s very hard,” said Van Dijk, who played 45 minutes as he steps up his own pre-season campaign. “But each day it gets better, and that’s the positive thing. 

“Obviously the conditions are hard, the opponents are tough. But it’s all good, it will all make us stronger, so let’s just enjoy these last few days in America and then we go to Scotland [to play Napoli].”

Liverpool are next in action on Wednesday, when they take on Sporting Lisbon in New York’s Yankee Stadium.

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'It's all done' – Flamengo boss confirms Milan deal for Duarte

The defender is likely to have played his last game for the Brazilian club with a move to San Siro reportedly imminent

Leo Duarte is set to join Serie A side AC Milan after Flamengo head coach Jorge Jesus confirmed “it’s all done”.

Flamengo defender Duarte has been linked to Milan and Italian rivals Roma in recent weeks after impressing for the Brazilian club.

AC Milan looked to have won the race with reports they are poised to complete a €11 million (£9.9m/$12.2m) deal for Duarte on a five-year contract.

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“I’m sure Duarte will become a Milan player, it’s all done,” Jesus told Radio Brasil following Sunday’s 3-2 win over Botafogo.

“He’s preparing for his move to Europe. I wish him all the best.”

Duarte has racked up almost 100 appearances for Flamengo since making his debut in 2016, with the 23-year-old centre-back scoring two goals.

He is set to become the latest player to swap Flamengo for Milan following Lucas Paqueta’s €35m (£31.5m/$39m) transfer in January.

It has been a busy off-season for Milan as they look to bounce back from a disappointing 2018-19 campaign in which the club finished fifth in Serie A, missing out on a place in the Champions League.

It started with the appointment of Sampdoria boss Marco Giampaolo as head coach after Gennaro Gattuso’s departure in May.

Milan legends Paolo Maldini and Zvonimir Boban were then given key backroom roles at San Siro.

Former Rossoneri captain Maldini was appointed technical director while Boban, who won four Serie A titles and the Champions League during his spell at Milan, is now their chief football officer.

On the transfer front, Milan have signed defender Theo Hernandez from Real Madrid and midfielder Rade Krunic from Empoli, while the likes of Ignazio Abate, Cristian Zapata and Riccardo Montolivo all departed at the end of their contracts.

Milan are expected to bring in another forward with Patrick Cutrone reportedly on the verge of joining Wolves.

The Rossoneri are close to signing Lille forward Rafael Leao and Atletico Madrid’s Angel Correa.

Former Chelsea midfielder Oscar also revealed earlier this month that he had spoken to Milan and city rivals Inter over a possible move to Serie A from Chinese Super League side Shanghai SIPG.

Kovac 'very confident' Bayern target Sane will join from Manchester City

The head coach of the Bundesliga champions believes the Germany international will finally make the move to Bavaria from England

Bayern Munich head coach Niko Kovac says he remains confident a deal can be done to sign Manchester City winger Leroy Sane.

The 23-year-old has long been associated with a move to the Bavarian giants from the Premier League champions, with Bayern looking to replace legendary widemen Franck Ribery and Arjen Robben who both left the club at the end of last season after long spells filled with trophies.

Kovac has described Sane as Bayern’s ‘dream player’, while club icon Lotthar Matthaus says he could be the new face of the club.

Kovac issued an update on their hunt for the player on Sunday and said the whole club was focused on getting a deal over the line.

“Our club management is very committed behind it and I’m very confident,” the 47-year-old coach told ZDF in Germany. “I assume that we can get it.

“Leroy is a great footballer who has proved that in England and with the national team.”

The proposed move is one of the longest-running transfer sagas of the summer, and at one point seemed to be totally dead.

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Bayern president Uli Hoeness described City’s valuation of the player as “insane” in June, but Kovac’s words on Sunday indicate the hierarchy is still working to find a fee that works for both parties.

City boss Pep Guardiola has been unequivocal that he wants the Germany international to remain at the Etihad Stadium, next year and in the future.

Sane contributed 10 goals and 11 assists in the Premier League last term as the club swept to their second straight title. However, he seemed to fall out of favour at the end of the season, missing out on some big games in the run-in.

Despite that, Guardiola said he wanted to retain a winger that fits his system and offers ‘special qualities’, but that if the player wanted to leave he couldn’t stand in his way.

City have offered Sane a contract extension, but he has not signed it yet.

His current boss said he would be ‘sad’ if the player left after the speedster starred in a pre-season victory over Kitchee on July 24.

A risk worth taking? Elliott, Van den Berg and Liverpool's youthful transfer strategy

The Reds have targeted the next generation of stars so far this summer – but will their policy pay off?

Liverpool’s youth revolution continues.

The Reds are set to complete their second signing of the summer, with the arrival of Harvey Elliott from Fulham expected in the coming days.

The 16-year-old will join Sepp van den Berg, a relative veteran at 17, in snubbing interest from across Europe in order to move to Merseyside. Liverpool paid an initial £1.3million for Van den Berg, and will now agree a significant compensation package for the precocious Elliott.

He brings with him a growing reputation, having become Fulham’s youngest ever player last September, playing in a Carabao Cup tie at Millwall aged just 15 years and 173 days. In May, he became the youngest debutant in Premier League history when appearing for the Cottagers at Wolves, breaking a record that had stood for 12 years.

Word from Liverpool is that Elliott, like Van den Berg, is seen as a first-team signing who will train at Melwood, rather than someone who will spend the bulk of their time at the club’s Academy.

What a move this could be for the youngster. Though born in Chertsey, a few miles west of London, he was raised as a Liverpool supporter. He might have signed for the Reds as a 14-year-old but opted to remain at Fulham, whom he had joined from Queens Park Rangers a few years earlier. Given he went on to play first-team football at Craven Cottage before his 16th birthday, he can reflect on that decision as a smart one.

For Liverpool, his capture is seen as another feather in the cap for the scouting and recruitment team, and further evidence of the club’s standing. Having seen off strong competition from the likes of Bayern Munich and Ajax to sign Van den Berg last month, they have again stolen a march on their rivals to land a top teenage talent.

Elliott was tracked by Manchester City, Chelsea and Arsenal, as well as European giants Real Madrid and PSG. RB Leipzig made an approach too.

For players such as Elliott, the draw of the Bundesliga is significant. Matt Bondswell, his England under-17 colleague, is already at Leipzig, while the likes of Reiss Nelson, Rabbi Matondo, Ademola Lookman and, of course, Jadon Sancho have all found first-team opportunities in Germany.

Liverpool, though, are European champions, and in Klopp they have one of the best sales pitches imaginable. The manager’s reputation as someone who develops, trusts and uses young footballers should not be underestimated.

In Elliott and Van den Berg, as well as the likes of Rhian Brewster, Curtis Jones and Ki-Jana Hoever, Liverpool believe they are assembling a squad for the future as well as the present. Bobby Duncan and Paul Glatzel, the stars of last season’s Youth Cup winning team, will be used with the first team in the coming days, while Academy staff are also quietly enthused about the prospects of Huyton-born Layton Stewart, who has joined Barry Lewtas’ under-18 squad as a 16-year-old for the new campaign. 

Of course the road to the first team is fraught with danger. Injuries can play their part, as can loss of form or confidence. Opportunities are limited at the top end of the Premier League, where standards are high and patience in short supply.

Most Liverpool fans could reel off a long list of players dubbed “the next big thing” who were unable to crack it at Anfield. For every Steven Gerrard or Trent Alexander-Arnold, there are a dozen Jerome Sinclairs or Krisztian Nemeths. Or Bobby Adekanyes, or Adam Morgans, Michael Ngoos, Yan Dhandas… you get the drift.

Those examples should serve as a warning where Van den Berg and Elliott are concerned. Though both clearly have talent – they have both played top-flight football already, which is instructive – it will take more than that to make the grade at Liverpool. They will need courage, patience, mental toughness and, perhaps more than anything, a little bit of luck too.

Meanwhile, it is fair for supporters to question their club’s decision to, so far at least, avoid the temptation to strengthen their squad with established, big-money transfers. 

The names continue to be linked, naturally, but the message from Anfield has been consistent, and Klopp’s recent assertion that the likes of Adam Lallana, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and Joe Gomez can be “like new signings” this season was telling, too.

His words will worry those concerned about a lack of true, established cover in attacking areas or the absence of a specialist left-back to deputise for Andy Robertson. Liverpool handled problems well last season, but were still forced to field a 16-year-old at centre-back in an FA Cup tie, and started a Champions League semi-final with Gini Wijnaldum as their centre-forward. 

Klopp would argue, with some justification, that he and his recruitment team have done enough to earn supporters’ trust and that a squad strong enough to win the Champions League while amassing 97 points in the Premier League is not necessarily in need of too much surgery. Certainly, the spine of the team is as healthy as any around.

Maybe things will change before the transfer window closes on August 8. Maybe Liverpool will surprise us and land themselves another marquee signing. A year ago, remember, the word was that their pursuit of Alisson Becker was over, that the price was too high and negotiations had stalled. That turned out all right in the end.

For now, though, the focus is on what they have done. In Van den Berg and now Elliott, the Reds have started planning for the future, here and now.

A risk worth taking? Time will tell…

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Messi expects to be out for 'a little while' in unfortunate injury blow for Barcelona

The Argentine superstar strained a calf muscle in training but expects to be sidelined for only a short period of time

Lionel Messi expects to be out of action for “a little while” after suffering a calf injury during Barcelona training on Monday.

The Argentina star sustained a grade one strain to his right calf muscle in his first session back with La Liga’s champions after his post-Copa America holiday.

The 32-year-old will miss Barca’s pre-season trip to the United States while he recovers from the problem.

Although Barca have not put a timeframe on his recovery, Messi does not seem to think the injury will keep him sidelined for long.

“I was looking forward to starting and unfortunately I had an accident in the first training session that will leave me out for a little while,” he wrote on Instagram.

“I’m grateful for all your messages and displays of affection, I wanted to be with the team and with the people who follow us in the USA.

“It wasn’t to be this time, but we’ll see each other again soon. A hug to everyone.”

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Barca face Napoli in Miami and Ann Arbor this week in the final stretch of their pre-season duties.

They begin their league title defence away to Athletic Bilbao on August 16.

Messi has vowed that the Blaugrana will look to challenge on all fronts in the 2019-20 campaign, with there a desire on the part of everyone at Camp Nou to chase down major honours at home and abroad.

He said 12 months ago that the Champions League would be a top priority for Ernesto Valverde’s side, but has no regrets at making that statement and has reiterated that silverware is a must once more.

Messi told supporters ahead of a friendly date with Arsenal: “It’s hard to say something after last season, but I don’t regret anything.

“But I have no doubt that together we are going to fight again for everything. We won eight League titles in 11 years. We do not give it the value it deserves but over the years we will see how difficult it was.

“This club fights for everything and this year will be no different. We have renewed dreams. Visca Barca and Visca Catalunya!”

8 most fashionable gender benders of all time

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In 1994 Jean Paul Gaultier, the Parisian designer known for wearing a
kilt with a peroxide short back and sides, created JPG by Gaultier, the
first collection that promoted the idea of fluidity of the sexes outside of
the space-age 60s when genderless clothing meant his and hers shaved heads
and matching synthetic jumpsuits. A decade later, Gaultier sponsored an
exhibit in the Costume Institute of New York’s Metropolitan Museum of
Art entitled
“Braveheart: Men in Skirts.”

Gender non-conformity might seem like the current fashion industry
buzzword. But before merchandisers offered us murses, guyliner, man buns,
and boyfriend blazers; before Billy Porter posed on the red carpet; before
gender was defined on a spectrum, the word “queer” was reclaimed and
masculinity turned “toxic,” disruptive elements were at play––and oh, what
play! Whether to redefine themselves, or confound society’s perceptions, or
simply to be outrageous on the dancefloor, people have been swapping their
panties with their pants for kicks and giggles throughout history.

So to coincide with the explosion in the market of unisex clothing and
the first major exhibit to examine the relationship between fashion and
gender entitled “Gender Bending Fashion” at the Museum of Fine Arts in
Boston, we have gathered the 8 most influential gender bending pioneers.
It’s an equal sprinkling of traditionally male and female presenting, with
examples ranging from subtle code switching to utter flamboyance, at least
by the standards of the day.

Joan of Arc

The victorious female warrior dressed in male armor, becoming a martyr
for her beliefs, provides a timely symbol for contemporary feminists and
social justice warriors who connect with her heroism and strength. Debates
rage on the gender identity and sexuality of the persecuted Maid of Orléans
who was executed by the English in 1431, burned at the stake.
Legend has it that she believed presenting as male was in accordance
with God’s wishes but also prevented her from being violated in the night
by guards. Hailed and vilified in equal measure, as a witch, a saint, a
heretic, this androgyne’s story shares parallels with the contemporary
LGBTQ+ struggle, and has inspired designers like John Galliano and
Alexander McQueen, and fashion photographers such as Tim Walker and Herb
Ritts

Patti Smith

Patti Smith describes in her memoir Just Kids her search for
identity and self-expression through poetry, sketching, photography and
music, but it is on the cover of her 1975 album Horses,
photographed by another fashion favorite Robert Mapplethorpe, that her self
expression epitomizes gender fluid chic. Dressed in a white open-necked
man’s shirt, sleeves rolled up, with a black tie unknotted, blazer slung
over one shoulder, and black hip-clinging pants, she oozes effortless
female empowerment while looking like a boy. Already the breadwinner in her
relationship with Mapplethorpe, she found being the lead singer of a band
in 70s male-dominated New York City punk era challenging and has recounted
the difficulties of finding band members who weren’t threatened to perform
behind a woman. Hedi Slimane has devoted his design career to attempting to
emulate Smith’s rock star nonchalance on runways from Dior to Saint Laurent
to Celine.

Katherine Hepburn

Katherine Hepburn’s strong-shouldered blazers and roomy pants complete
with loafers lent her a hands-in-pockets swagger both onscreen and off when
this was still an unorthodox look for women. In 1951 Claridges of London
reportedly forbade her from wearing slacks in the lobby, so she entered by
the staff door. The ease with which she styled menswear classics managed to
be both sporty and provocative, paving the way for Diane Keaton’s Annie
Hall and Mary Kate and Ashley Olson’s The Row. An independent spirit with a
passion for tennis, golf, and cricket, she once declared, “If you obey all
the rules, you miss all the fun.” But in 1935, when she chopped her hair to
play a cross dressing con artist in the movie Sylvia Scarlett
which ultimately flopped, she gained the reputation of being box office
poison. How’s that for toxic masculinity?

Boy George

When Boy George emerged in the early 80s, with his meticulously applied
graphic make-up, colored ribbons braided though his hair, and soulful
voice, the world struggled to process what it was witnessing. But his
Dietrich-defined eyebrow, colorful kimonos, pirate headwear and coy smile
were intended to perplex. He has said, “I look at myself at 19 and think I
would never do what I did then now! I was so brazen, so confident, so
fearless in a way. And remember, the world was a very aggressive place
then. People would punch you in the face [for looking different] — and that
happened a lot to me.” Originally spotted by music entrepreneur Malcolm
McLaren, then partner-in-punk of Vivienne Westwood, Boy George became a
regular at London nightclub, Blitz, where milliner Stephen Jones and a
young John Galliano also partied. “Being with other creative people like
Boy George was a crucial experience for me,’ Galliano has said. Boy
George’s fashion credentials were established early.

Marlene Dietrich

“I am at heart a gentleman,” said Dietrich, who became known for her
bold silhouette of lean masculine suiting, top hat, and cloud of cigarette
smoke. This gentleman’s heart was put on display in the 1930s movie
Morocco when a tailcoated and bowtied Dietrich kisses a female
member of the audience on the lips. Fast forward fifty years and Madonna is
mimicking her style, is kissing Britney Spears on stage. Threatened with
arrest in 1933 by French police if she arrived in Paris wearing her
signature pants, forbidden for women, Dietrich wore them anyway. Openly
bi-sexual, her affairs with women during the 40s and 50s represented the
same bravery that she demonstrated when she escaped Nazi Germany, only
returning to entertain US troops on the frontline. Her gender fluidity was
captured for posterity by fashion photography’s greats, Irving Penn,
Richard Avedon, Eve Arnold and Cecil Beaton, and has inspired design greats
such as Giorgio Armani and Yves Saint Laurent.

“Glamour,” Dietrich once remarked, “is assurance. It is a kind of knowing
that you are all right in every way, mentally and physically and in
appearance, and that, whatever the occasion or the situation, you are equal
to it.”

David Bowie

Nods to the styles of Marlene Dietrich and Katherine Hepburn can be
spotted in David Bowie’s looks throughout the years, but it is as Ziggy
Stardust when he prowled the stage––like a tiger on Vaseline––in a
one-legged knit leotard by Kansai Yamamoto and women’s heels, or when he
reclined on a chaise in a Mr Fish dress with Pre-Raphaelite locks for the
cover of The Man Who Sold The World that he still dominates the
conversation on gender non-conformism. Dressed in drag in the video for
“Boys Keep Swinging,” he wiped his lipstick off on the back of his hand, a
gesture mimicked by singer Lorde at the American Music Awards three decades
later. A major influence on Boy George, Bowie remains a beacon for gender
questioning youths who, only discovering him upon his death, identify a
likeminded soul who valued otherness above labels, and who placed mutation,
performance, transgression, and emotion at the heart of his personal
style.

Candy Darling

Immortalized in the Velvet Underground’s “Candy Says” and Lou Reed’s
“Walk on the Wild Side,” the actress was a central figure of downtown
Manhattan’s always fascinating late 60s, early 70s nightclub scene, a
staple of Warhol’s factory and one of his Superstars having starred in
1968’s Flesh and 1971’s Women in Revolt. But while Warhol
remains foremost in fashion’s consciousness, due partly to a Whitney
retrospective which has just ended, and the many references made by Raf
Simons through his Calvin Klein collections, this iridescent peroxide
goddess in the Uma Thurman mold remains in the shadows. But not for long as
a biopic of her life is currently in the works.

Orlando

Virginia Woolf’s 1928 novel about a nobleman’s century-spanning journey
from Elizabethan era England to modern times during which he becomes a she
was adapted for Hollywood in 1992, and the fashion world was thrown into a
frenzy at the sight of Tilda Swinton as the title character. The movie was
a masterful merging of Woolf’s pioneering material and mesmerizing
casting––look out for Quentin Crisp as Queen Elizabeth I. Swinton has
continued to defy traditional gender representation throughout her career
landing herself on international best dressed lists, in a David Bowie music
video, and in the role of muse to Dutch design duo, Viktor and Rolf.

Fashion editor Jackie Mallon is also an educator and author of Silk for
the Feed Dogs, a novel set in the international fashion industry.

Photos Joan of Arc miniature between 1450 and1500, oil on parchment,
Archives Nationales; Publicity still of Katharine Hepburn in the 1942 film
”Woman of the Year,’’ David Bowie shooting his video for Rebel Rebel in
AVRO’s TopPop (Dutch television show) in 1974, Licentie afbeeldingen Beeld
en Geluidwiki, Boy George performing at Ronnie Scott’s in London 2001 by
Jessica Hansson, Marlene Dietrich with top hat in Morocco (film) 1930,
Josef von Sternberg, director, Paramount Pictures, all Wikimedia Commons,
Screenshot of Orlando directed by Sally Potter