Topic

English Premier Leaguei

The English Premier League is the top division of football in England. Set up in 1992 as a breakaway from the Football League, it is now the richest and most-watched football league in the world. 

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The ability to go to Premier League games is a big plus of English life that fans may miss upon moving to Hong Kong. But cheering on local teams provides an atmospheric – and fairly good-standard – alternative.

  • John Morling coached Manchester City star Jack Grealish in Ireland’s youth teams, oversaw progress of multiple players into Brighton first-team
  • Englishman has sprawling remit with Hong Kong FA, targeting development programme that delivers ‘conveyor belt of players every year’

US sports stars dominate the list, which also features the likes of Roger Federer and David Beckham, but only one woman and one Asian are among the top 50.

Leverkusen finally won the German league title for the first time in their 120-year history on Sunday, ending the ‘curse’ that had seen them fall short so often.

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With six games remaining for each contender, we take a look at the run-ins and where potential slip-ups could come, after wins for Crystal Palace and Aston Villa leave City in charge.

The annual HKFC Standard Chartered Soccer Sevens includes the likes of Aston Villa, Newcastle and Fulham, but coincides with potential Hong Kong title decider between Lee Man and Kitchee.

David James says online trolls aiming spiteful comments and racist abuse at Asian fans of Premier League clubs are stupid and ignorant, as he hails the passion and dedication of overseas supporters.

Fantasy Premier League returns after a hiatus for the international break, and so does the Post’s coverage as we meet a Hongkonger sitting pretty in the standings and discuss this week’s transfers.

While Neville says he never saw Southgate ‘as a United manager, psychologically’, the likelihood of Newcastle’s Dan Ashworth being named sporting director increases his chances.

City manager says the local boy is the league’s form player and a future club legend, and his two goals in a 3-1 win over neighbours United set up next week’s meeting with leaders Liverpool nicely.

Robert Pires draws parallels between Arsenal Invincibles and current title-challenging Gunners, and says striker shortage is no barrier to title glory.

World Cup winner Thierry Henry opens up about mental health fight on Diary of a CEO podcast, and says being isolated in Montreal drove him to tears in early days of pandemic.

Ratcliffe’s company Ineos will also take on management of Manchester United’s football operations and invest US$300 million in the club to try to revive its fortunes.

Wolves striker Hwang Hee-chan nets again in his side’s win over Burnley, putting him behind only Son Heung-min, Mohamed Salah and Erling Haaland in the race to be top scorer.

Agreement will pump even more eye-watering sums into the English game and is touted as the ‘largest sports media rights deals ever concluded in the UK’.

Kitchee midfielder Charlie Scott was reached his lowest ebb after being let go by the English Premier League giants, and it took walking away from the game to rediscover his love of football.

Former captain Gary Neville says Manchester United ‘is rock solid in its foundations, will come back no doubt’ despite rivals City growing in popularity in Hong Kong.

Club has been hit with a 10-point penalty after failing to comply with the competition’s profit and sustainability rules, but Manchester City are facing 115 charges and ex-AC Milan star Gullit is intrigued by what fate awaits treble winners.