خاص | اتحاد الكرة يبلغ الأهلي بموقف أليو ديانج النهائي من مباراة الزمالك

كشف مصدر خاص في الاتحاد المصري لكرة القدم، النقاب عن الموقف النهائي لـ أليو ديانج لاعب النادي الأهلي من المشاركة في مباراة الزمالك اليوم.

ويستعد الأهلي لمواجهة الزمالك مساء اليوم الخميس في المباراة المؤجلة من الجولة الـ31 بالدوري المصري الممتاز على ملعب استاد القاهرة.

وكان موقف ديانج من المشاركة في المباراة يشهد غموضًا، بسبب انتظار رد الاتحاد الدولي “فيفا” رسميًا على قرار رفع الإيقاف عن اللاعب.

طالع | التفاصيل الكاملة لأزمة إيقاف أليو ديانج مع الأهلي بسبب مستحقات وكيله

وأوضح المصدر لـ بطولات أن فيفا أرسل خطابًا رسميًا إلى الاتحاد المصري لكرة القدم برفع الإيقاف عن أليو ديانج.

وأشار إلى أنه قد تم إخطار النادي الأهلي بأحقية ديانج في المشاركة أمام الزمالك وقانونية ذلك.

يذكر، أن بطولات قد أكد انضمام ديانج لمعسكر النادي الأهلي استعدادًا للقمة، بالرغم من احتمالية غيابه، وانتظارًا لرد فيفا.

ويخوض الأهلي مباراته اليوم بعد أن حسم درع بطولة الدوري رسميًا، عقب وصوله إلى النقطة 75 حصدها من 29 مباراة فقط.

Taylor ready and willing for England

James Taylor has declared himself far better prepared for Test cricket now than he was on debut last year, despite conceding that his unbeaten century against the Australians in Hove was less than fluent

Brydon Coverdale in Hove28-Jul-2013

James Taylor: “It was a great experience playing against South Africa but it was all too brief, and I’ve gone away and worked really hard since getting left out”•PA Photos

James Taylor has declared himself far better prepared for Test cricket now than he was on debut last year, despite conceding that his unbeaten century against the Australians in Hove was less than fluent. Taylor and his temporary county team-mate Monty Panesar both enjoyed their audition against the Australians and both will hope to face them again next week after being named in England’s 14-man squad for the Old Trafford Test.Panesar’s chances of playing hinge largely on the condition of the pitch in Manchester, while Taylor’s hopes rest on the condition of Kevin Pietersen’s troublesome calf. Taylor, parachuted in from Nottinghamshire in order to gain some experience against the Australians, scratched around for his 121 not out and was dropped twice before he reached triple-figures but said if he received the nod in Manchester he would be ready.”It wasn’t the best innings I’ve played, it wasn’t one of my most fluent at all, but it’s about finding a way when you’re not feeling in the best touch and I did that,” Taylor said. “Mentally and technically I feel in a good place. I’m delighted to score runs, I don’t really mind how. It’s not how, it’s how many, and that’s how I go about my game.”Taylor’s two Tests against South Africa last year brought scores of 34, 10 and 4, and he was told by the selectors to go away, work on some technical issues and churn out the runs at domestic level. He has done that, piling up 824 for Nottinghamshire in the County Championship this season, and his hundred against the Australians was his third first-class century this summer.”I’ve worked hard on my game since I was left out,” he said. “It was a great experience playing against South Africa but it was all too brief, and I’ve gone away and worked really hard since getting left out. I’ve piled on the runs like the selectors asked me to and I feel like I’m in a good place now.”I was in a kind of a no-win situation in this game, but the purpose was to spend time in the middle against the red ball after all the T20 cricket in recent weeks and it was nice to do that against a decent attack. It was definitely a pressure situation – if I hadn’t scored any runs everybody would have commented on that, but luckily I did and got what I needed out of the game.”Like Taylor, Panesar got what he wanted out of the match against the Australians, picking up 3 for 70 in the first innings, and it was another confidence-booster after a difficult start to the summer. Panesar has managed only 21 wickets at 40.09 during the Championship this season but he said some remedial work with Peter Such, England’s spin bowling coach, had put his season back on track.”I kind of struggled early season, I was not getting the action I wanted to get, and then I went away and did a bit of work with Peter Such on a one-to-one basis to get my action in the right order,” Panesar said. “Over the Twenty20 period I’ve used the time to get my action in order, and in the Championship games and in the dry weather we’ve had I’ve tried to perform and prepare myself if the call came.”Panesar has an outstanding record at Old Trafford, where he has collected 25 wickets at 16.72 in three Tests, but it is five years since he last played a Test there. If, as expected, the teams are greeted with a dry pitch, a two-man spin attack could well be employed by England, and Panesar said he would fancy his chances against the Australians in such circumstances.”The England team have put them slightly under pressure, but the Australia team is a very competitive team, they are going to come hard at us. You always feel maybe against spin there is an opportunity,” he said. “But they are good players, you can’t completely discard Australia, they’re a competitive cricket team – but I do feel even in this game I was always in with a chance.”

'Pakistan in reasonably good position' – Azhar

Despite an unimpressive performance by the top order, leading to Pakistan finishing the opening day nine wickets down, batsman Azhar Ali felt his side was in a reasonably good position

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Sep-2013

Azhar Ali: ‘I had to work hard for my runs because they bowled in the good areas”•AFP

Despite an unimpressive performance by the top order, leading to Pakistan finishing the opening day nine wickets down, batsman Azhar Ali felt his side was in a reasonably good position. Zimbabwe’s bowlers held control in the opening session, reducing Pakistan to 27 for 3, before Azhar and captain Misbah-ul-Haq saved their side from further embarrassment with a stand of 93 for the fourth wicket.Azhar top-scored with 78 and it was a typical workmanlike innings from him, coming off 185 balls. He admitted though that Pakistan should have respected the conditions better in the morning session, as the seamers managed movement and awkward bounce. A ninth-wicket stand of 67 between Saeed Ajmal and Junaid Khan took Pakistan close to the 250-mark.”It was a hardworking innings on a slow track,” Azhar said. “I had to work hard for my runs because they bowled in the good areas. And I think we ended up in a reasonably good position.”With some moisture on the pitch, we had a plan to get through to lunch. But we lost three early wickets which didn’t help. We could have done a bit better.”Pakistan batted positively after lunch as the pitch started to settle. Azhar, who batted cautiously as he approached his fifty, said that Misbah’s calming influence was helpful. After Misbah fell against the run of play, the responsibility grew on Azhar. He looked set for his fifth Test century but fell chasing a wide, away-swinging delivery from Shingi Masakadza and edged to slip. Azhar didn’t hide his annoyance, swinging his bat at thin air as he walked off with Pakistan at 182 for 8 with an hour left in the final session.”I was looking for some runs and they tried to bowl away from me,” Azhar said. “I should have kept my cool a little to get the hundred. It would have been nice to get another hundred. “Since his debut in 2010, Azhar has played 15 of his 28 Tests (including the ongoing Test) in venues outside the subcontinent and the UAE. He credited coach Dav Whatmore for helping him adjust to conditions where batsmen are challenged.”The coach has really helped me with my technique, especially with teaching me how to handle things in different places we play in,” Azhar said. “In international cricket, you have to improve day by day, you have to come up with new plans and you have to keep thinking.”Having described the pitch as “slow” on day one, with the seamers collecting seven wickets, Azhar expects the pitch to take more turn as the game goes on, bringing Ajmal and Abdur Rehman into play.

Hundred was Ashes best – Bell

Ian Bell rated his century his “best Ashes innings” after helping England into a strong position going into the final day at Trent Bridge

George Dobell at Trent Bridge13-Jul-2013Ian Bell rated his century his “best Ashes innings” after helping England into a strong position going into the final day at Trent Bridge.Bell, playing his fifth Ashes series, contributed 109 to help set Australia a target of 311 to win the first Investec Test. While it was Bell’s second successive century in Ashes Tests – he also made one at Sydney in early 2011 – he admitted that the context of this game, coming when his side were under pressure and helping to set-up a match-defining position, rendered it his most valuable and satisfying.His record in Ashes cricket has been modest. Going into this series he averaged 32.36 against Australia in 18 Tests. But, crediting the benefits of recent experiences in subcontinental conditions, he negated a slow, low pitch and an attack generating reverse swing to steer his side from a precarious position to one of some dominance. England were only 66 runs ahead when they lost their fourth wicket but, by the time Bell departed, the lead had been stretched to 306. On a surface on which no Test side has ever scored 300 to win a Test, it was a vital contribution.”Certainly it’s my best Ashes innings,” Bell said. “It was nice to put an innings together when the team needed it most.”The wicket was pretty slow, obviously reverse swing has played a massive part in this game so to use my skills to get us a decent lead on this pitch is very satisfying.”This wicket is quite close to a subcontinent wicket. I’ve played a lot of subcontinent cricket in last 12 or 18 months, so batting in such conditions is something we’ve had to work out.”I was disappointed with my performance in my first Ashes series [in 2005 when Bell averaged only 17.10] when I was a young lad. I always wanted to score as many runs as possible. You want to win Ashes series and be part of successful teams. But it’s not all about individual stuff; it’s about being part of a team.”Clarke praise for Bell

Michael Clarke, the Australia captain, rated Ian Bell’s century “a very important innings” in the context of the Test. “I’ve seen him play some really good innings so I’m not going to say that’s his best,” Clarke said. “But to make a hundred, with the ball reverse swinging, with little bit of spin and it being a hard grind to bat for that amount of time, was very good.”

That team ethic was apparent as England weathered an early storm from Australia’s batsmen to hit back strongly in the final session on day four. Shane Watson and Chris Rogers, feasting on some loose bowling, posted an opening stand of 84 to make deep inroads into their target. Graeme Swann took a long time to settle, delivering several full tosses and short balls, while Steven Finn’s first spell, peppered with short balls outside off stump, was horrible. It necessitated his captain posting a sweeper on the cover boundary which, in turn, led to a gap in the close off-side field that allowed the batsmen to pick of singles with dispiriting ease.Both recovered admirably, though. Finn returned for a much tighter spell, helping sustain the pressure built up by his colleagues and, once Swann had taken his first wicket, in his 23rd over, he settled into a much more penetrative rhythm.It was still a slightly frustrating day for Swann. Playing on his home ground and on such a dry surface, the expectations upon him may have been unrealistically high. Although he found turn, it was often too slow to unduly trouble the batsman and, perhaps in frustration, Swann attempted to force matters and failed to show the requisite patience for such a context. He adapted, though, and produced a beautiful delivery to account for Phil Hughes.The pick of the bowlers, by some distance, was Stuart Broad. Perhaps buoyed with confidence by his performance with the bat, Broad bowled at a sharp pace, generated some reverse swing to account for Shane Watson and maintained a probing line and length that eventually drew a false shot from Michael Clarke. Certainly Broad appeared unaffected by the furore surrounding his decision not to walk on the third day and proved he has fully recovered from the recent blows he has taken to his right shoulder.”Australia played very well when they first came out and we maybe didn’t bowl to the standards we’d like,” Bell admitted.”But we reassessed at tea. We came out with a plan to be very accurate and maybe a little more defensive with field settings. This is the type of wicket that, if two guys get in, then it’s hard to get them out. We wanted to keep the run rate down and create pressure. We got wickets at the end due to really accurate bowling. We’re happy with how patient we were.”Our bowlers have been good at adapting to the conditions. They’re not just guys who run up on green seaming wickets and take wickets. They take wickets in all surfaces. They’ve learned to adapt. That’s why guys like Jimmy Anderson and Stuart Broad have done so well in the last few years.”I’ve played too much Ashes cricket to take anything for granted. They have two guys at the crease who are dangerous players. We have to get them early in the morning. It is going to be a big first hour for both teams.”

Taylor wants batsmen to 'front up'

Brendan Taylor has called upon his side’s senior players, particularly the batsmen, to “front up” and shoulder the responsibility in the final two matches of the series against India

Liam Brickhill in Bulawayo31-Jul-2013

Brendan Taylor: “It’s time for individuals to step up”•Associated Press

Brendan Taylor has called upon his side’s senior players, particularly the batsmen, to “front up” and shoulder the responsibility in the final two matches of the series against India. Though their fielding has hardly been flawless, in all three games so far Zimbabwe’s batting, as a unit, has been the major disappointment.”We’re not trying to complicate things,” Taylor said before a nets session in Bulawayo. “We don’t want to dwell on things too much. We don’t want to put the players under too much pressure, but the fact is that we do need to turn up and put in better results.”Our bowlers haven’t done much wrong. They’ve been in good form and if we’d held our catches they would have had a lot more reward. They’ve been doing the right things. I think the batters need to back them up a little better, and certainly in the field we could be sharper.”Taylor himself hasn’t been blameless in Zimbabwe’s poor showing. With just 35 runs in three innings, he hasn’t given his team the runs they need. As Zimbabwe’s premier batsman and a vital cog in the middle order, totals are built around him and chases rely on his input.Taylor may fancy his chances of finding some form at Queens Sports Club, where he’s second only to Grant Flower in terms of runs scored. In 23 innings at the ground, Taylor has 799 runs at an average of 38.04 with a century and six fifties.”It has always been a very good batting surface and it has been harsh on the bowlers,” Taylor agreed, “but during the winter period, the morning session is crucial and bowlers have to try and capitalise then. You have to be batting at your best to get through that. I don’t want to take anything for granted, but if you do give yourself a good opportunity and give yourself a bit of time out there it certainly does get easier and you can certainly reap the rewards.”Time in the middle isn’t something any of Zimbabwe’s batsmen have had too much of recently. The team spent 10 weeks in a training camp to prepare for India’s visit, with a three-day game against Australia A their only serious match practice. Lack of fixtures is, of course, a perennial problem for Zimbabwe, and Taylor suggested that the current series and visits from Pakistan and Sri Lanka later this year represented vital opportunities for exposure and experience.”That’s something we’ve been crying out for for a long time and fortunately we’ve got India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka in a three-four month period, so that’s fantastic,” he said. “But we need to be touring more, we need to be playing a lot more.”We can’t ask for a better period than the one we have right now and we need to make sure that we turn up as individuals and as a team because the world’s watching, and we need to show the world that we’re a good enough side – and we are. But it’s time for individuals to step up. The senior players, the most experienced players, need to front up and make it happen.Despite the 3-0 scoreline, Taylor insisted that getting his troops motivated for the final two matches wouldn’t be a problem. “We know we’re up against a good side and we probably are expected to lose, but we know if we play our best cricket we can win.”We should have won the second one-dayer and we let that slip. We’re very lucky to have the job that we have, so motivation is not an issue. The guys are still working hard and trying to cover all bases pretty well. Tomorrow is just a new day and we’ll be up for it more than ever.”

Chapple, Hogg dismantle Essex for 20

Essex were bowled out for 20, registering the lowest score in their history in falling to a heavy, three-day defeat on an astonishing afternoon at Chelmsford

Les Smith at Chelmsford14-Jun-2013
ScorecardGlen Chapple took 5 for 9 as Essex were blown away for just 20•PA Photos

Essex were bowled out for 20, registering the lowest score in their history in falling to a heavy, three-day defeat on an astonishing afternoon at Chelmsford. Kyle Hogg and Glen Chapple ripped through them in the space of 14 overs and 68 minutes on a flat pitch, as the procession of batsmen entering and leaving the field became almost bewildering.It was as if a collective panic possessed Essex, and the sense of shock in the crowd was palpable, reawakening tensions that had threatened to erupt earlier in the season after an innings defeat to Northamptonshire that the coach, Paul Grayson, afterwards described as “shambolic” in issuing a public apology. He may now have to quell further unrest.”I don’t know what to say to be honest because I’m still in a state of shock,” Grayson said. “Nothing has been said in the dressing room because now is not the right time but we are all coming in tomorrow for a chat and we’ll reflect and analyse then what happened.”Emotions are running very high at the moment as you can imagine, there’s not a lot of singing and dancing going on. As I say, I’m lost for words. It was a good wicket probably one of the best all year that we could have batted on at Chelmsford but 20 all out, it’s amazing.”Although there have been 29 first-class innings that have ended on a lower note, the majority occurred in the days of uncovered pitches. The most recent example in the Championship came exactly 30 years ago, when Essex were the tormentors, bowling out Surrey for 14. Last year, Durham dismissed Durham MCCU for 18, leading to questions about the first-class status of university matches.Only one batsman, Jaik Mickleburgh, achieved double figures and although three of the wickets were due to errors by batsmen, the rest were the result of dead straight bowling. The whole business was particularly puzzling as Hogg and Chapple had themselves scored 58 and 50 respectively earlier in the day.”We’ve been involved in a piece of history,” said Hogg, who described the action as “unreal”. Chapple, who has been playing for more than 20 years, said: “It’s definitely one of the best days of cricket I’ve had in my career because things just don’t happen like that. In terms of it being memorable, it’s right up there.”In retrospect it’s surprising that it took Lancashire eleven balls to take their first wicket. The first two to fall, both taken by Hogg, were preventable – top-order batsmen playing loose shots. Tom Westley drove to extra cover, where Simon Katich dived forward to hold an excellent catch. Hamish Rutherford played a similar shot and Chapple didn’t have to move at mid-off.The next dismissal was the first three of six lbws in the innings. Owais Shah played across the line to Hogg, then Ryan ten Doeschate was so plum that he walked before the umpire had time to raise his finger, and Chapple had the first of his four. Next Hogg trapped Ben Foakes, and at that stage had figures of 4 for 3.What Essex needed least in the midst of such carnage was a run out, but that’s what they managed to contrive. Mickleburgh called James Foster for a quick single and Chapple, fielding off his own bowling, threw down Foster’s stumps. It was turning into pandemonium.Chapple mopped up the remaining four wickets. He had Graham Napier – Essex’s beacon of light in a season fast becoming shrouded in darkness – leg-before first ball, then castled Sajid Mahmood.Mickleburgh had observed all the mayhem from the non-striker’s end, and there was speculation about the lowest score for a batsman carrying his bat until he was ninth out for 10, comfortably the highest score of the innings. The end came one ball later when Chapple rapped Reece Topley on the pads. Six batsmen had failed to score.In the morning session the Lancashire tail had shown what could be done on this pitch. They resumed seven runs behind with three wickets in hand and looking to Katich to extend his overnight century. He did so, but only by two, and a narrow lead appeared likely.But there can be few better No. 9s in the County Championship than Hogg, and Chapple can hold a bat as well. Together they put on 69 for the ninth wicket before David Masters knocked back Hogg’s middle stump. Even then the scoring wasn’t over as Simon Kerrigan joined his captain and helped him add 52 more.There was no indication of the stunning stuff to come. Lunch was taken late as Lancashire were nine wickets down at 1pm, so the Essex innings began at around 2.20pm. By 3.30pm it was all over.Essex scored 30 against Yorkshire at Leyton in 1901, their previous lowest score. What’s more, this was the lowest-ever total by any team against Lancashire, dipping under the 22 scored by Glamorgan at Liverpool in 1924.

توتنهام يقود صراع إنجليزي على ضم مدافع يوفنتوس

كشفت تقارير صحفية بريطانية، أن نادي توتنهام، يسعى للتعاقد مع الدولي الإنجليزي جيلسون بريمر، لاعب فريق كرة القدم الأول بـ يوفنتوس خلال فترة الانتقالات الصيفية الجارية.

يوفنتوس تعاقد مع قلب الدفاع البرازيلي صاحب الـ26 عامًا في الصيف الماضي قادمًا من تورينو، في صفقة وصلت إلى 41 مليون يورو، متغلبًا على إنتر ميلان، بعقد مستمر لـ 5 سنوات، وراتب خمسة ملايين يورو في الموسم الواحد.

طالع أيضًا.. تقارير: توتنهام ينافس ليفربول على ضم لاعب من الدوري الألماني

بريمر رغم أنه كان أفضل مدافع في الدوري الإيطالي الموسم قبل الماضي، لكن في الموسم المنصرم، لم يتمكن من تقديم الإضافة الكبيرة في يوفنتوس، وكافح للمشاركة بانتظام بسبب الإصابات والأخطاء التي ارتكبها.

صحيفة “تيليجراف” البريطانية، أكدت أن توتنهام يرى في جيلسون بريمر المدافع الأفضل لتدعيم الخط الخلفي لفريق أنجي بوستيكوجلو المدير الفني الجديد لفريق شمال لندن.

ويرى النادي الإنجليزي أن جيلسون بريمر مناسب لطريقة لعب أنجي، رغم أن هناك اهتمامًا من أندية أخرى مثل مانشستر سيتي وتشيلسي لضم البرازيلي.

في موسمه الأول، شارك جيلسون بريمر خلال 30 مباراة بالدوري الإيطالي مع يوفنتوس، وسجل 4 أهداف وصنع هدفًا.

ديلي ميل: مانشستر يونايتد يعرض 40 مليون جنيه إسترليني ولاعبين للتعاقد مع رايس

مازال الصراع مشتعلا بين الثلاثي الإنجليزي، مانشستر يونايتد ومانشستر سيتي وآرسنال، للتعاقد مع لاعب وسط وست هام يونايتد، ديكلان رايس.

وكان آرسنال قدم عرضين وتم رفضهما، حيث كان الأخير عبارة عن 75 مليون جنيه إسترليني كمبلغ أساسي و15 مليون جنيه إسترليني كإضافات.

واقتحم مانشستر سيتي السباق على الصفقة، حيث يريد تعزيزات في خط الوسط، بعد رحيل إلكاي جوندوجان، واقتراب رحيل البرتغالي برناردو سيلفا، ويستعد لتقديم عرض رسمي خلال الساعات المقبلة، بحسب صحيفة ديلي ميل.

اقرأ أيضًا.. سكاي: يوفنتوس يستهدف التعاقد مع لاعب آرسنال

ووفقا للصحيفة البريطانية، فإن مانشستر يونايتد استفسر عن إمكانية التعاقد مع ديكلان رايس، وقدم عرضًا يُقدر بـ40 مليون جنيه إسترليني بالإضافة إلى المدافع هاري ماجواير، والجناح أنتوني إيلانجا.

كانت صحيفة “تيليجراف” قد قالت إن ديفيد مويس، المدير الفني لفريق وست هام يونايتد معجب بالمدافع ماجواير، لكن راتب الدولي الإنجليزي قد يعيق استكمال الصفقة.

ويميل رايس إلى الذهاب إلى آرسنال، حيث سيعتبره ميكيل أرتيتا، المدير الفني للجانرز، أحد القادة والأعمدة الرئيسية لمشروع المدرب الإسباني، لكن يجب الاتفاق أولا بين الناديين.

انضمام لاعبي الأهلي الدوليين لمعسكر منتخب مصر استعدادًا لـ غينيا

توجه لاعبو النادي الأهلي الدوليون، إلى منتخبات بلادهم، استعدادًا للانتظام في المعكسرات الوطنية مع بداية فترة التوقف الدولي، وخوض منافسات الجولة الخامسة للتصفيات المؤهلة لكأس الأمم الإفريقية كوت ‏ديفوار 2023.‏

وتوج الأهلي بلقب دوري أبطال إفريقيا بعد الفوز على الوداد المغربي بهدفين مقابل ‏هدف، ‏في مباراة الذهاب بالقاهرة، فيما تعادل بهدف لمثله في مباراة الإياب وتوج ‏باللقب الـ11 في تاريخ النادي.‏

وانضم كل من محمد الشناوي ومحمد هاني ومحمد عبد المنعم وياسر إبراهيم ومروان عطية وحمدي فتحي وحسين ‏الشحات ومحمود كهربا وأحمد عبد القادر، بعد خوض مباراة الوداد، إلى ‏مقر معسكر منتخب مصر في المغرب، استعدادًا لمباراة غينيا التي تقام يوم 14 يونيو الجاري.

وتعود بعثة الأهلي إلى القاهرة اليوم الإثنين قادمة من المغرب، ومنح الجهاز الفني راحة ‏للفريق تمتد ‏إلى يوم 18 يونيو الجاري، مستغلًّا فترة التوقف بسبب الأجندة الدولية.‏

وسافر بيرسي تاو لاعب الفريق الأول إلى بلاده جنوب إفريقيا، بعد حصوله على إذن من الجهاز الفني لقضاء فترة من الراحة رفقة عائلته.

وتوجه بيرسي تاو من المغرب إلى بلاده، بعد حصول الفريق على راحة من التدريبات حتى يوم 18 من الشهر الجاري.

طالع | سامي قمصان: الأهلي برهن على سيادته لقارة إفريقيا.. ونفكر في الفوز بكأس العالم

كما توجه علي معلول ومحمد الضاوي كريستو، لاعبا الفريق، إلى تونس ‏عقب الانتهاء من مباراة الوداد المغربي، التي أقيمت مساء الأحد.

وتوجه معلول إلى تونس لقضاء فترة راحة، فيما ينضم كريستو إلى صفوف منتخب بلاده.‏

VÍDEO: Rodriguinho, Militão e B. Henrique movimentam o Vaivém nesta quinta

MatériaMais Notícias

Veja os principais destaques do Vaivém nesta quinta-feira.

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