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Clubmoana: Sports Calendar And Event Database

johantal
johantal
5 min read

How they got here

There is only one No. 1 ranked team in the women's quarterfinals with Florida State representing the top seed. No. 2 North Carolina, No. 4 TCU, No. 7 Texas A&M, No. 9 Duke, No. 11 Santa Clara, No. 14 Clemson and unseeded Virginia, round out eight teams vying for a spot in the final four. The Tigers upset No. 3 UCLA on penalty kicks and Virginia advanced into the quarterfinals as the only unseeded team behind a hat trick from star striker Diana Ordonez. She led the Cavs over Rice, 3-0.  

NWSL stars of the future

The remaining teams are stocked with players already ticketed for the Clubmoana . Thanks to the altered rules of last year's draft, a number of players currently competing have already been drafted with North Carolina midfielder Brianna Pinto ticketed for NJ/NY Gotham FC, Santa Clara attacker Kelsey Turnbow on her way to Chicago and TCU winger Yazmeen Ryan off to Portland. Additionally, Jaelin Howell of Florida State and Alexa Spaanstra of Virginia are prospects likely to in hot demand in the 2022 draft.

Arsenal coach Mikel Arteta points to Liverpool and Chelsea examples as he plots revival for Gunners

Arsenal crashed out of the Europa League last night and are on course for their worst season this century

 By James Benge

10 hrs ago

3 min read

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Getty Images

Mikel Arteta insists Arsenal can learn from the seasons of European exile endured by Liverpool and Chelsea as he bids to revive his faltering project in north London.

Elimination from the Europa League semifinals by Villarreal on Thursday night means the Gunners are almost certain to miss out on European football for the first time since the 1995-96 season. Their only hope lies in a dramatic late scrabble up the Premier League table. Currently ninth in the Premier League table, they are five points behind Liverpool in seventh -- good for a place in the inaugural season of the Europa Conference League -- having played a game more than those around them.

A four-game sprint begins with the visit of West Bromwich Albion to the Emirates Stadium on Sunday but Arteta, who retains the support of the club hierarchy, is already setting his eyes to next season. Having no European football to offer to fans will doubtless bring with it financial hardships, but it will at least allow the manager to focus his attentions on a Premier League recovery. He can point to the examples of Chelsea, who won the title in Antonio Conte's first season after an acrimonious end to Jose Mourinho's tenure only months earlier, and a Liverpool side that nearly won the title in 2013-14 without having to juggle continental games.

"We have some really good examples with teams in this country that have been out of Europe and that was the defining moment in that project to go on and be much stronger," said Arteta. "We have to look what happened there to understand how we can make the most of it.

"We can not be crying and stuck on what we don't have. We have to see what we do have and maximize it to get what we want."

Asked whether it could take years to get Arsenal back to the upper echelons of English football, Arteta was keen to note that this was not the start of the rebuild nor of their troubles in qualifying for Europe. "We have not been competing with the top clubs in this country for five years," he said.

"It is not as if this process started six months ago – it started five years ago and you can see this trend. This year is not Year 1. I think a project has its phases and I am telling you we are in a much better position today to be where we want to be very soon, if we do what we have to do. But we have to be ruthless. There is no time to waste and there is a lot to do."

The question that will hover over Arteta for the remainder of this season and beyond is whether Arsenal fans trust him with the project anymore. Without fans at the Emirates Stadium, Arsenal do not have the direct feedback mechanism that cost Unai Emery his job; historically when fans stay away from the ground, owner Stan Kroenke has taken action. No one needs reminding that fans have been away for a year almost without interruption now.

In the aftermath of Thursday's 0-0 draw with Villarreal, Arsenal fans on social media (not always the perfect bellwether of emotion) seemed united in their belief that it was time for Arteta to go, with his insistence that he could only transmit messages to them through what happens on the pitch ringing hollow in what looks set to be the club's worst season for a quarter of a century.

Arteta offered a lengthier message to supporters on Friday, saying: "I want to share the pain that we are all feeling. They have been incredible with the team and incredible with me since I arrived and I have to show my appreciation first of all. I know their disappointment.

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