User:Amirsaidani23/sandbox

Champions Cup Knockout phase edit

In the knockout phase, teams played against each other over two legs on a home-and-away basis, except for the one-match final. The mechanism of the draws for each round was as follows:

  • In the draw for the Quarter Finals, the 4 group winners were seeded, and the 4 group runners-up were unseeded. The seeded teams were drawn against the unseeded teams, with the seeded teams hosting the second leg. Teams from the same group or the same association could not be drawn against each other.
  • In the draws for the semi-finals onwards, there were no seedings, and teams from the same group or the same association could be drawn against each other.

Bracket edit

Round of 16 Semi-Finals Final
            
  Brent Dragons 3 3 6
  Edinburgh 1 2 3
  Brent Dragons
  South West Warriors
  South West Warriors 2 2 4
  Stade Lille 0 4 4
  Brent Dragons
  Bristol Rangers
  Clube Montpellier 2 4 6
  Newport Falcons 1 2 3
  Clube Montpellier
  Bristol Rangers
  Bristol Rangers 3 4 7
  Helsingborgs 0 2 2

Quarter-finals edit

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Brent Dragons   6–3   Edinburgh 3–1 3–2
South West Warriors   4-4   Stade Lille 2-0 2–4
Clube Montpellier   6–3   Newport Falcons 2–1 4–2
Bristol Rangers   7–2   Helsingborgs 3–0 4–2

Semi-finals edit

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Brent Dragons     South West Warriors
Clube Montpellier     Bristol Rangers

Final edit

Brent Dragons  v  Bristol Rangers
Ramos   90+3'
Bale   110'
Marcelo   118'
Ronaldo   120' (pen.)
Godín   36'
Referee:  Taras Yarmalenkov

Euro Super Cup Knockout phase edit

In the knockout phase, teams played against each other over two legs on a home-and-away basis, except for the one-match final. The mechanism of the draws for each round was as follows:

  • In the draw for the Round of 16, the 6 group winners along with the top 2 3rd place Group finishers from the Champions Cup were seeded, and the 6 group runners-up along with the bottom 2 3rd place Group finishers from the Champions Cup were unseeded. The seeded teams were drawn against the unseeded teams, with the seeded teams hosting the second leg. Teams from the same group or the same association could not be drawn against each other.
  • In the draws for the quarter finals onwards, there were no seedings, and teams from the same group or the same association could be drawn against each other.

Bracket edit

Round of 16 Quater Finals Semi Finals Final
                  
1   Internacional Guimarães
16   Krylia Samara
  Krylia Samara
  Euskal Club
8   Euskal Club
9   FK Jagodina
  Krylia Samara
  Malmo SC
5   Glasgow Rangers
12   Rennes PAC
  Glasgow Rangers
  Malmo SC
4   Malmo SC
13   Sheffield
 
 
6   Royal Kingston Knights
11   PAC Tomsk
  Royal Kingston Knights
  Oslo PK
3   Moscow City Sports Club
14   Oslo PK
  Royal Kingston Knights
  Real Gijón
7   Šumadija Kragujevac
10   Klubb Bodø
  Šumadija Kragujevac
  Real Gijón
2   Leeds Valiant
15   Real Gijón

Round of 16 edit

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Internacional Guimarães   3–4   Krylia Samara 2–2 1–2
Euskal Club   6-3   FK Jagodina 4-2 2–1
Glasgow Rangers   8–1   Rennes 5–0 3–1
Malmo SC   4–0   Sheffield 3–0 1–0
Royal Kingston Knights   7–1   PAC Tomsk 4–1 3–0
Moscow City Sports Club   3-5   Oslo PK 2-2 1–3
Šumadija Kragujevac   5–2   Klubb Bodø 1–0 4–2
Leeds Valiant   3–5   Real Gijón 2–3 1–2

Quarter-finals edit

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Brent Dragons   6–3   Edinburgh 3–1 3–2
South West Warriors   4-4   Stade Lille 2-0 2–4
Clube Montpellier   6–3   Newport Falcons 2–1 4–2
Bristol Rangers   7–2   Helsingborgs 3–0 4–2

Semi-finals edit

Team 1 Agg.Tooltip Aggregate score Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Brent Dragons     South West Warriors
Clube Montpellier     Bristol Rangers

Final edit

Real Madrid  4–1  Atlético Madrid
Ramos   90+3'
Bale   110'
Marcelo   118'
Ronaldo   120' (pen.)
Godín   36'
Referee:  Artur Morias

Amir Saidani edit

The Lord Saidani
Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
Assumed office
7 November 2032
Life Peerage
Personal details
Born
Amir Othman Saidani

(1995-03-23) 23 March 1995 (age 29)
Hillingdon, London, England
Political partyLabour
Alma materGlasgow University
OccupationFootball manager
Politician

Association football career
Team information
Current team
Everton (manager)
Managerial career
Years Team
2013–2015 Glasgow University
2014–2015 Celtic (academy coach)
2015–2018 New Zealand
2017–2022 New York Red Bulls
2022– Everton
2024–2026 France
2028–2032 England

Amir Othman Saidani, Baron Saidani, CBE ONZ (born 23 March 1995) is a British football manager and Labour politician. He is currently manager of Premier League club Everton. On 7th November 2032 he was created a life peer, taking the title Baron Saidani, of Park Royal in the London Borough of Brent and Walton in the County of Lancashire.

His career began managing the New Zealand national football team after first working within the youth set up at Celtic and the first team at Glasgow University. He took the team to the 2017 Confederations Cup in which he triumphed against many other established squads, also making him the youngest manager to ever win a major competition. He then moved to the MLS managing New York Red Bulls winning 4 MLS Cups, as well as breaking the record points haul in the MLS Supporters Shield in his unbeaten season (2018-19). He rose to further success with the winning of 3 North American Champions League titles and became the first North American side to win the FIFA Club World Cup. He moved to current side Everton in 2022 and has become the youngest winner of the Premier League as well as the first English manager to win the competition, his side broke a 25 year point record set by Chelsea in 2004/05 Season.

His involvement in Politics started at his time in Glasgow University becoming president of the GU Labour Society, He has consistently during his footballing career been a vocal supporter of Socialist Politics and became an advisor the New Zealand Government Sports Ministry. Since returning to the UK in 2022 he has been a prominent supporter of the Labour Party and gave several speeches in the successful 2022 General Election. He was appointed a life peer in November 2032. He came out as gay in 2020, becoming the first gay football manager, and the most prominent gay sports person in the UK.

Personal life edit

Saidani met his husband The Hon. Nicholas Leigh, born in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, when they were students in Glasgow, and the couple married in 2020. Their first child, daughter Niamh, was born through surrogacy in 2021 in New York and they had their first son, Youness in 2024 in London.

Nicholas is the son of Conservative peer The Lord Leigh of Gainsborough, he is brother of Tamara Leigh MP and Permanent Secretary to the Department for International Development Dame Natalia Leigh.

Through his parentage Nicholas is a relation of the House of Golitsyn on his fathers side and a great great grandson of Duke Georg Alexander of Mecklenburg-Strelitz and Lady Ottoline Morrell on his mothers side. He is a direct descendant from the Empress of Russia Catherine II and Princess Augusta of Great Britain, a sister of King George III.

Saidani has three siblings, a maternal half brother; Sam Merrett MP and two sister, a paternal half sister Aida, and a full sister Nadia.

Widely known for his strong personality, refined dress sense Saidani has experienced fame outside of football circles, featuring in European advertisement campaigns for New Balance, Red Bull, Braun, Jaguar and Adidas, amongst others.

Amir has been widely renowned for his academic achievements and has written books on the juxtaposition of sport and socialism and as has been given honorary doctorates from the University of Wellington, New York University and the University of Bristol.

Baron Saidani topped the 2021 Rainbow List and has been widely celebrated for his work in removing the stigmatism of homosexuality in sport and has been seen as a catalyst for a wider number of comings out in the sport.

Managerial statistics edit

Managerial record edit

As of match played 8 October 2042
Managerial record by team and tenure
Team From To Record
P W D L Win %
  Glasgow University 10 September 2013 25 July 2015 60 55 5 0 091.7
  New Zealand 26 July 2015 21 July 2018 43 26 7 10 060.5
  New York Red Bulls 18 December 2017 16 June 2022 232 146 64 22 062.9
  Everton 17 June 2022 Present 1,250 852 277 121 068.2
  France 21 July 2024 12 July 2026 29 23 4 2 079.3
  England 16 July 2028 16 July 2032 51 36 10 5 070.6
Total 1,665 1,138 367 160 068.3

Honours edit

Managerial edit

New Zealand
New York Red Bulls
Everton
England

Individual edit

Others edit

Current squad edit

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
3 MF   BRA Neto (captain)
4 DF   GER Alex Nlend
5 DF   URU Juan Cabrera (vice-captain)
6 FW   ENG Alan Bradshaw
7 FW   ENG Massingue Dimande
8 FW   ENG Scott Taylor
9 FW   USA Patrick Gjertsen
10 FW   ESP Rufino Simón
11 FW   AZE Kamran Abbasov
13 GK   BRA Caio Fernando
14 MF   BRA Jefferson
15 DF   BRA Israel
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 MF   NOR Mads Evensen
18 MF   ENG Lucas
19 FW   ENG Alex Gill (third-captain)
20 DF   BRA Arraial
21 MF   BRA Tinguinha (fourth-captain)
22 DF   POR Paulo Damil
23 GK   ENG Jonah Potton
24 DF   ALB Dardan Morina (on loan from Burnley)
28 MF   GER Manfred Oenning
30 DF   FRA Serge Bastide
35 DF   BRA Vitor

Management team edit

Position Name
Director of Football   Milan Vieco
First Team Manager   The Lord Saidani
Assistant First Team Manager/Head Coach   Bryant Lazaro
Assistant Head Coach   Peter Hybella
  Mikael Rynell
Coach   Michael Ballack
  Lukasz Czajka
  Erik Dahlin
  Peter Enckelman
  Benny Hillgsmann
  André Laurito
  Alexander Mantlik
  Thomas Olsson
  Juan Carlos Ortiz
  Are Tronseth
  Fernando Velasco
Head Fitness Coach   Hans Erik Ramberg
Fitness Coach   Albert Altarrabia
  Alessando Buccolini
  Raz Meshulam
Head Goalkeeping Coach   Txemi Talledo
Goalkeeping Coach   Andri Ottesen
  Dean Thornton
Academy Director   Juampe
U-21 Team Manager   Roy Bakkelund
U-21 Assistant Team Manager   Jan Warming
U-18 Team Manager   Kristian Skov
U-18 Assistant Team Manager   Mihail Mihaylov

Personnel and kits edit

Team Manager Captain
Arsenal   Cristian Campestrini   Jaroslac Benes
Brentform   Edgar Urquizo   Kamil Vavak
Burnley   Luke Fyfield   Chris Villareal
Cardiff   Francisco Ramos   Rhys Hill
Chelsea   Marco Russ   James Bennett
Crystal Palace   Elfar Árni Aðalsteinsson   Florin Sălăgean
Everton   Amir Saidani   Tinguinha
Liverpool   Nemanja Vidic   Daniel Knutsen
Manchester City   Angelo Palombo   Rômulo
Manchester United   Juan Carlos Medina   Alex
Newcastle   Josué Castillejos   José Juan
Norwich   Antonio Nocerino   Preben Røed
Reading   Luke Williams   Jonathan Lattanzi
Sheffield Wednesday   Neil Lindley   Johan Dumont
Southampton   Eddie Munnelly   Thiaguinho
Swansea   Davy Klaassen   Nicolas Serrano
Tottenham   Marquinhos Santos   Tommaso Borrelli
West Bromwich Albion   José Manuel Juardo   Guilherme
West Ham United   Hugo Viana   Leonardo
Wolverhampton Wanderers   Matt Elliott   Nenad Davidov