Filippo Beccari e Roberto De Simone vincono la Pitturina Ski Race

La squadra formata da Filippo Beccari e da Roberto De Simone vince la Pitturina Ski Race. Nella prima prova della Coppa delle Dolomiti vittoria al femminile è per Elisa Compagnoni e Federica Osler.

Domenica mattina a Sega Digon in Val Comelico, un cielo velato ha dato il buongiorno alle 90 squadre iscritte alla settima edizione della Pitturina Ski Race, gara di scialpinismo a squadre inserita nel calendario della Coppa delle Dolomiti. In quota invece, un cielo terso aspettava il passaggio degli atleti. Infine uno splendido sole ha accolto l’arrivo vittorioso di Filippo Beccari in squadra con Roberto De Simone che a braccia alzate hanno fermato il cronometro con il tempo di 2:22’48’’. In campo femminile c’è stata la bella prestazione di Elisa Compagnoni e di Federica Osler che hanno vinto davanti alle friulane Monica Sartogo e Anna Finizio.

Subito dopo la partenza è iniziata la battaglia tra la coppia Beccari-De Simone e Thomas Trettel-Ivo Zulian. Trettel-Zulian hanno condotto la gara fino alla seconda salita quando i vincitori della gara Fisi del Marmotta Trophy disputata sabato, hanno preso il comando mantenendo la prima posizione fino al traguardo. Beccari-De Simone hanno tagliato la linea d’arrivo iscrivendo così i loro nomi nell’albo d’oro della gara organizzata dallo Spiquy Team, alle loro spalle, con un ritardo di circa quattro minuti, hanno confermato la seconda piazza Trettel-Zulian. In terza posizione hanno chiuso Lois Craffonara e Michael Moling. Craffonara e Moling per conquistare il terzo gradino del podio hanno dovuto battagliare, scambiandosi più volte le posizioni, con Marco Del Missier e Paolo Meizinger e con Enrico Frescura ed Elia Della Pietra. Tra le donne la coppia formata da Elisa Compagnoni e Federica Osler ha condotto sin dalle prime fasi di gara su Monica Sartogo e Anna Finizio. Sulle lunghe salite la valtellinese e la trentina hanno avuto la meglio giungendo al traguardo con un vantaggio di nove minuti sulle atlete dell’US Aldo Moro.

«E’ stata un’edizione “storica” – ha detto Michele Festini coordinatore del Comitato Organizzatore – con la Pitturina Ski Race abbiamo voluto ricordare i tragici avvenimenti della Prima Guerra Mondiale che si sono svolti proprio sulle cime e sulle creste che gli atleti hanno percorso in occasione di questa settima edizione. Inoltre abbiamo avuto la conferma che le nostre scelte, il pacco gara a chilometri zero e il raduno di Casera Pianformaggio, sono state apprezzate. Durante lo svolgimento della gara circa una settantina di persone sono salite a Casera Pianformaggio per fare il tifo ai concorrenti, ma anche per passare qualche ora in amicizia e in serenità. Infine devo ringraziare tutti i miei volontari che ancora una volta con il loro lavoro hanno reso indimenticabile la Pitturina».

– RISULTATI E CLASSIFICHE

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Ethan Pringle, boulder highball a Prilep in Macedonia

Il video del climber statunitense Ethan Pringle su un bellissimo boulder a Prilep in Macedonia.

Non è il boulder più difficile del mondo, anzi, si tratta solo di un V3 – un boulder di 6A per intenderci – ma per noi rappresenta l’essenza dell’arrampicata: una linea così bella che non la puoi non salire. Se a questo aggiungiamo che si trova a Prilep in Macedoina, un posto per certi versi ancora magico ed integro, allora si capisce perché il top climber statunitense Ethan Pringle non abbia voluto lasciarsi sfuggire l’occasione.

14/11/2014 – Macedonia e i boulder di Prilep con Niccolò Ceria
Il report di Niccolò Ceria dopo il suo viaggio arrampicata in Macedonia per scoprire i boulder attorno a Prilep.

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Cima Scotoni, invernale di Simon Gietl e Gerhard Fiegl su Waffenlos

A metà febbraio 2015 Simon Gietl e Gerry Fiegl hanno effettuato la probabile prima salita invernale di Waffenlos sulla Cima Scotoni, Fanis, Dolomiti.

La Cima Scotoni ancora una volta come meta di arrampicata per l’alpinista altoatesino Simon Gietl. Dopo la prima invernale nel 2012 della via Zauberlehrling e dopo l’apertura di Agoge nello stesso anno, adesso – approfittando dello strabiliante periodo di alta pressione attorno a carnevale – ha ripetuto insieme a Gerhard Fiegl Waffenlos, la via di 550m aperta nel 1993 sulla parete ovest da Helmut Gargitter e Claus Obrist. Ecco il report di Simon Gietl.


WAFFENLOS
di Simon Gietl

“Le previsioni del tempo avevano promesso per la settimana di carnevale tempo stabile in tutte le Alpi e mi era chiaro che insieme al mio compagno di cordata Gerry Fiegl ci saremo diretti in direzione Cima Scotoni per tentare una salita invernale della via Waffenlos.

Già dieci giorni prima della salita mi ero recato a San Cassiano in Alta Badia per fare una foto della parete ovest della Cima Scotoni. Siccome c’era ancora molta neve in parete ho dovuto rinviare il progetto e quindi con Gerry, il mio compagno della spedizione in Patagonia nel gennaio 2014, ci siamo accordati per la settimana successiva.

Il 17 febbraio siamo saliti con i nostri sci al rifugio Scotoni. Faceva piuttosto freddo e visto che avevamo programmato di salire soltanto il primo tiro eravamo felici di poterci riposare al caldo del rifugio caldo e berci un bel caffè caldo. Il giorno seguente siamo ripartiti alle 9:30 e dopo circa un’ora siamo arrivati all’attacco.

Siccome avevo salito la via nel 2007 insieme a mio fratello Manuel mi ricordavo la linea perfettamente. Il raggi di sole che ci hanno raggiunti avevano quasi gli stessi effetti benefici del caffè del rifugio Scotoni. Come previsto, abbiamo salito i primi tiri della via e da subito ci è stato chiaro che avremmo dovuto tornare il giorno seguente con la nostra attrezzatura da bivacco.

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La mattina successiva è stata, nonostante la salita più rilassata sulle corde fisse lasciate il giorno prima, emozionante e tutt’altro che noiosa, sulle sottili corde da 6 millimetri. Ben presto abbiamo raggiunto la prima cengia dove ci siamo fermati per fare una pausa. Alle 11:30 abbiamo continuato la salita. La roccia non sempre solida, e a volta difficile da proteggere, ci ha richiesto la massima concentrazione. Gerry ha salito il friabile 8° tiro, poi ho arrampicato io da capocordata. Siccome eravamo riusciti a salire tutto in libera fino a quel punto, ero molto motivato a non cadere sul tiro chiave. Con gli avambracci enormi ho raggiunto la sosta circa 20 minuti più tardi, molto felice di aver salito anche questo tiro in libera. Ora ci separavano soltanto 80 metri dalla seconda cengia.

Poco dopo le 17:00 abbiamo raggiunto il nostro obiettivo della giornata, la cengia. I sole ci stava salutando con gli ultimi raggi e abbiamo deciso di salire ancora un tiro, per partire avvantaggiati la mattina seguente. Stanchi ma felici abbiamo cucinato qualcosa di buono e poi ci siamo addormentati nei nostri sacco a pelo.

Verso le 9:00 della mattina seguente, dopo una notte con temperature fino a -18°C, abbiamo iniziato a muoverci nella nostra tenda. Dopo una ricca colazione a base di cereali al cioccolato, siamo tornati al nostro “lavoro”. Gli ultimi metri si sono rivelati puro divertimento e alle 11:30 ci siamo ritrovati in cima al pilastro.”

di Simon Gietl

29/12/2014 -Wüstenblume, prima invernale sul Sass de la Crusc per Gietl e Holzknecht
Dal 22 al 23 dicembre gli alpinisti altoatesini Simon Gietl e Adam Holzknecht hanno effettuato la prima invernale della via Wüstenblume, Sass de la Crusc in Dolomiti.

Concerns remain despite stricter checks on gasoline sales after KyoAni arson attack

KYOTO – Fuel distributors and others are voicing concerns over instructions given by the authorities on July 25 to apply stricter procedures when selling gasoline following the deadly arson attack on Kyoto Animation Co.’s studio last month.

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The instructions came after Shinji Aoba, 41, allegedly doused and ignited the KyoAni studio in Kyoto with gasoline he bought from a nearby gas station. The July 18 arson attack left 35 people dead and dozens injured.

In response to the incident, Japanese authorities, including the Fire and Disaster Management Agency, have urged gas stations across the country, through industry groups, to confirm the customers’ identification and the purpose of their purchase when selling gasoline in containers. They also asked that the gas stations keep record of such sales.

Through such moves, the authorities hope to identify suspicious individuals and prevent similar incidents from happening.

Some are worried that the tightened procedures may lead to other problems, while others expressed skepticism about the meaning of such changes.

Since the KyoAni arson attack, there have been a string of incidents where copycat attacks have been threatened.

A controversial art exhibit held this month in Aichi Prefecture was closed down after the event’s organizers received a fax message saying, “I’ll go (to the event) with a gasoline container.”

The Aichi Prefectural Police arrested a man who allegedly sent the message on charges of forcible obstruction of business.

There have also been arrests in Tokyo and Hokkaido over similar incidents.

A gas station operator in Kyoto has started keeping sales records in response to the instructions.

The operator said that although keeping such records is time-consuming, many customers have agreed to the changes.

On the other hand, another operator asked what the gas station should do if a customer does not comply with such checks. “If we refuse to sell (gasoline), it may lead to problems,” the operator said.

“Even if we ask what (the gasoline) will be used for, we cannot know if we are being lied to,” a senior official of an industry group in Kyoto Prefecture said. “What’s the point of the restrictions?”

Nobuo Komiya, a professor at Rissho University, noted that while the identity confirmation aspect may cause people to hesitate to commit impulsive crimes, it will not be enough to stop criminals who are willing to die during such acts.

“What we need are measures to clamp down on people who are about to commit crimes,” Komiya said.

Despite toned down rhetoric, no compromise likely as Taro Kono gets set to meet with South Korean counterpart in China

SEOUL/TOKYO – South Korea and Japan have toned down the rhetoric but show little sign of compromise in a bitter political and economic dispute as their foreign ministers prepare to meet in China this week.

Relations between the two neighbors are at their worst in years, with a trade row rooted in a decades-old dispute over compensation for Koreans forced to work during Japan’s colonial rule of South Korea.

Foreign ministers Taro Kono, Kang Kyung-wha of South Korea and Wang Yi of China will have trilateral meetings in Beijing from Tuesday evening to Thursday.

“We will have to actively express our position, but I am leaving with a heavy heart because the situation is very difficult,” Kang said before departing for China where a one-on-one meeting with Kono is set for Wednesday.

Their August meeting in Bangkok, where cameras captured the unsmiling pair making perfunctory handshakes, achieved little. A day later, Japan cut South Korea from a whitelist of favored trade partners, drawing retaliatory measures from Seoul.

“We expect to exchange views on various issues between Japan and the ROK, such as the issue of former civilian workers from the Korean Peninsula,” Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement, using the acronym of South Korea’s official name, the Republic of Korea.

The Beijing talks would reaffirm Japan’s “close bilateral cooperation” with South Korea, as well as trilateral ties with the United States, the ministry said.

Since the Bangkok meeting, Seoul has urged a “cooling off period” and Japan approved shipments of a high-tech material to South Korea for the second time since imposing tighter export controls in July.

Nevertheless, the dispute is far from over.

South Korea warned this month it may consider revoking a military intelligence sharing pact with Japan, though an official at the presidential Blue House said on Tuesday no decision had been taken.

Seoul has also raised concerns about Japan’s handling of contaminated water from the Fukushima nuclear plant, a South Korea official said, though it may not bring it up in Beijing.

South Korea and other countries have restrictions on imports of produce from areas around the Fukushima site where three reactors melted down after an earthquake and tsunami in 2011.

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While both sides have moderated their public statements, observers do not expect any major breakthroughs this week.

“I don’t think Japan is going to show a nice face to Seoul this time,” said one former Japanese diplomat familiar with the government’s position.

Japan believes South Korea’s economy is hurting more in the trade row, and “doesn’t mind waiting for further concessions from Seoul,” said the ex-diplomat.

Citing national security, Japan in July launched controls on exports of some key materials used in chips and displays made by South Korea firms, threatening to disrupt the global supply chain.

Later this month a decision to remove South Korea from Japan’s list of trading partners with fast-track access to a number of materials is scheduled to go into effect.

South Korea has responded by removing Japan from its own trade whitelist, and South Korean consumers are boycotting Japanese products and avoiding travel to Japan.

There also has been no progress in resolving the issue that triggered the latest chill in relations — a series of South Korean court rulings that ordered Japanese firms to compensate South Koreans forced to work for them.

“I don’t think we can expect a big change in the situation as a result of tomorrow’s meeting because the forced labor issue is at the root of the deterioration in ties and there hasn’t been any new development regarding that,” said Kyungjoo Kim, a professor at Tokai University in Tokyo.

Controversial art exhibit’s closure leaves Japan pondering limits of freedom of expression

Ever since a section of a public art exhibition in Nagoya was closed after coming under a barrage of complaints and threats, Japan has been in a state of introspection over its freedom of expression.

Amid the intense debate, two fundamental questions remain: In the age of social media, did people jump to conclusions about the two artworks at issue, and, is there a point where art becomes too political for the public to stomach?

The works in question were video footage featuring an image of Emperor Hirohito (known posthumously as Emperor Showa) being incinerated with a blowtorch, and a sculpture representing “comfort women,” who worked in wartime brothels, including those against their will, to provide sex to Japanese soldiers.

Emperor Showa was worshiped as a living god before the end of World War II. Still in Japan, more than 70 years later, defacing an image of a modern emperor in the name of art is taboo.

The statue representing comfort women is similar to those that have been installed by South Korean activists in several cities around the world.

The sculptures placed overseas are usually accompanied by a plaque claiming that as many as 200,000 women were abducted to work in brothels established by the Japanese military. The Japanese government disputes that figure and description.

Many interpreted the two works as an insult to the late emperor and Japan in general. They were in a mini exhibition intended to showcase political taboos that was part of Aichi Triennale 2019, one of Japan’s largest international art festivals. The name of the mini exhibit was “After ‘Freedom of Expression?’”

Festival officials threatened

As the festival’s management office started business for the day at 8:45 a.m. on Aug. 1, phone calls, emails and fax messages of protest were already flooding in, forcing all 23 workers there to deal with them until 8 p.m., when the phone service was finally switched over to an answering machine for more calls that were expected to come in overnight.

The protests included threats and harsh verbal abuse toward the officials who were fielding the calls. The festival’s organizing committee felt compelled to cancel the mini exhibition just three days after it opened, sparking the intense debate about the state of freedom of expression in Japan.

Furthermore, some art and media experts raised a fundamental question about the incident: Was the post on social media thought to have sparked the furor, which claimed a video artwork insulting the emperor was being displayed, actually correct in the first place?

Probably not, at least regarding the image of the emperor by artist Nobuyuki Oura. And even the statue of a girl symbolizing comfort women is open to multiple interpretations regarding its intent, media and art experts say.

“Oura has said his works are not intended to criticize the emperor,” said Yoshitaka Mori, an art professor at Tokyo University of the Arts and an expert on art, media and postmodern culture. “But he always lamented it was never understood.”

Mori personally knows Oura well and even organized a public talk with him after showing Oura’s movies that dealt with the imperial system.

Oura and his collage print works featuring images of the emperor are well-known among experts who study freedom of expression in Japan, but most protesters probably are not aware of him or his works.

In 1986, a series of prints by Oura titled “Holding Perspective” and featuring collage images of Emperor Showa were displayed in an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, Toyama.

The museum bought some of those works. But after facing harsh protests from local politicians and right-wing activists, the museum sold all of them and burned its last 470 copies of the exhibition catalog.

The burning video footage of the emperor displayed at Aichi Triennale is from the “Holding Perspective” series. Thus it presumably represents criticism of the politicians and right-wingers who “incinerated” the copies of the catalog.

“In a sense, it is the right-wingers and the (local) assembly that burned the image of the emperor,” Mori said.

However, numerous netizens only saw a very short clip of the video that circulated on Twitter with no explanation about the background of the artwork or Oura himself.

According to Mori, Oura “is not a left-winger” who is against the imperial system.

In 2011, he directed a film titled “Tenno Gokko” (“Playing Emperor”), which featured a young man fascinated by the imperial system. Since the film didn’t particularly criticize the emperor system, it drew criticism from some left-wingers, according to Mori.

But most netizens probably saw only fragmented information about the works on social media, jumping to conclusions without learning about any of the context of those works, Mori said.

“If you look at the context, those artworks in the exhibition would be seen in totally different ways,” he said. “But some people labeled them as ‘anti-Japan’ and rushed to judgment. You can find plenty of such opinions on the internet.”

The same may be said of the comfort woman statue, although it is true South Korean activists have used similar statues to spread their message.

Formally titled “Monument of Peace,” artists Kim Seo-kyung and Kim Eun-sung say they created the work not only to criticize Japan but also to send a message to male-dominated South Korean society, which has long discriminated against former comfort women.

According to the official explanatory note about the statue, the girl’s feet not touching the ground was meant to symbolize the fact that comfort women could not return to their hometowns.

And even if they did have the courage to return, their lives were insecure and unstable because their communities would not accept them, according to the note.

“Let’s look at art first and let’s think about them after that,” said Kozo Nagata, a professor of media studies at Musashi University and one of five key curators who organized the mini exhibition about freedom of expression.

“Some believe this statue of a girl delivers an excessively political message, but others think it carries a universal, human message about peace — the intention of the artists was the latter,” Nagata said. “But no (substantial) discussion will start unless you actually see the work. So it’s very important to have a venue where you can see it.”

But in these politically charged times — especially as Tokyo and Seoul grow increasingly at odds with each other — some have failed to view this as art and instead as a politically motivated exhibition.

Among them are Nagoya Mayor Takashi Kawamura and Osaka Gov. Hirofumi Yoshimura.

Kawamura said that allowing such pieces to be shown in a public art exhibition funded by taxpayer money would be tantamount to local governments accepting the South Korean activists’ claim that Japanese authorities “forcibly recruited hundreds of thousands” of Korean women to work in wartime brothels. Aichi Triennale is co-organized by the city of Nagoya and Aichi Prefecture, and funded with public money.

“This is like trampling on the hearts of the Japanese people,” Kawamura said, adding that he believes the vast majority of Japanese people agree with him.

Yoshimura, meanwhile, said the exhibition was “anti-Japan propaganda,” and any public art show should not be allowed to feature video footage of a person burning an image of the emperor.

But journalist Daisuke Tsuda, who serves as the Aichi Triennale’s art director, has repeatedly emphasized that the primary purpose was to show why those works were withdrawn from art exhibitions in the past because of political controversy.

Freedom of expression

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Masahiro Sogabe, a professor of constitutional studies at Kyoto University, said the general consensus among academic experts is that freedom of expression should be guaranteed as much as possible and elected officials should not intervene in the selection of art for a public event. Politicians should instead respect the decisions of art experts when they select works for a public exhibition, he said.

If they do, then logically public entities that organize and fund such an event will not be held responsible for controversy stemming from the selections, Sogabe explained.

“Under freedom of expression, being ‘unpleasant’ or ‘anti-Japan’ must not be the reason to regulate any artwork,” he said. “So this incident has brought into focus how limited freedom of expression in Japan is. In that sense, the cancellation of the mini exhibition itself met” some of its organizers’ goals, he said.

Sogabe also emphasized that the freedom of expression should be given equally to anyone regardless of their political creed — either left or right — citing a 1995 landmark Supreme Court ruling.

In that lawsuit, an extreme left-wing group sought damages from the municipal government of Izumisano, Osaka Prefecture, for rejecting its request to use a community hall in the city. The ruling turned down the group’s demand, saying the city’s rejection was justified because the group had a record of violence against other activists.

But at the same time, the Supreme Court concluded that any party, even what is widely regarded as a hate-speech extremist group, must be allowed to use a community hall unless “imminent danger to lives or property” is a realistic possibility, Sogabe explained.

“In the case of an exhibition at a museum, someone must choose artworks to be exhibited,” he said. “But it should be curators or other art experts — not politicians — who are tasked with deciding which works are of value.”

Japan revoked record number of visas in 2018 as authorities stepped up crackdown

Immigration authorities revoked a record 832 visas in 2018, more than double the figure of a year earlier, Justice Ministry data showed Monday.

The most common reason was ceasing to conduct an activity permitted by the visa category. A further 100 people lost their visa because they obtained it by misrepresentation or fraud.

In 393 cases, or 46.5 percent of total, individuals either remained in Japan after their term expired or they failed to apply to change the visa status within three months of ceasing a permitted activity. Among these were 298 students who dropped out of school but did not leave and technical trainees who stopped showing up to work.

People married to a Japanese national who divorced but failed to change their visa also fell under this category.

In all, 218 lost their visas because they were engaged in activities other than those permitted. This figure represented a more than eightfold increase from the 25 cases in 2017. The ministry has launched a crackdown on foreigners suspected of such violations.

Students accounted for the biggest share, with a total of 412 having their visas revoked, many after they were found to be working part-time. Another large group were foreign nationals who traveled to Japan under the Technical Intern Training Program.

Overall, the figures represented a sharp increase from 385 in 2017 and 294 in 2016.

The ministry began keeping such records in 2005. However, it only began publishing the figures by residence status last year.

The ministry can annul a visa for a wide range of reasons, including when an individual obtains residency without disclosing that they were previously denied entry to Japan. Those who fail to report a change of address within 90 days of moving are also at risk.

In many cases, the targeted individuals left of their own accord. In all, 446 people subject to enquiries exited the country before the deportation process could be completed, the officials said.

According to the ministry, there were 2.73 million foreigners in Japan as of December 2018, including 337,000 students and 328,360 with technical trainee visas.

By nationality, Vietnamese accounted for 50 percent of revocations, followed by Chinese nationals at 18 percent and Nepalese at 7.5 percent.

As the number of foreigners choosing Japan as a place to live and work rises, the Justice Ministry is stepping up a crackdown on those who flout the system, said Kazuyuki Motohari, an official with the ministry’s Immigration Services Agency.

Motohari said the system allowing the ministry to annul visas was revised in 2017 to address the growing problem of foreign trainees disappearing from their place of work. He attributed the record high revocations to this change, an amendment to the Immigration Control and Refugee Recognition Act.

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“Previously we had to wait three months to take any punitive measures against (missing trainees), but it’s highly likely many of them have found employment elsewhere (by that point),” he said. “There’s no way that this is legal, so this revised system allows us to track them.”

Motohari said the amendment also gave more power to immigration control officers to investigate suspected violations.

And the crackdown will continue. The ministry plans to “exert more control” over people who flout the rules by working more closely with the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare, Motohari said. Cooperation could include exchanging data, including employment records held by the labor ministry, and lists of residence cards kept by the Justice Ministry.

Liverpool forward Salah responds to Neville exit claims

Mohamed Salah has insisted that he is “happy” at Liverpool despite Gary Neville tipping him to leave the club “in the next 12 months”.

The Egyptian has been influential in the Reds success over the last year or so that has seen them finish second in the Premier League and win the Champions League.

Salah has scored 55 goals in 76 Premier League appearances for the club, leading to links with the likes of Spanish giants Real Madrid.

“Salah’s going to leave in the next 12 months, I can see it already,” Neville said on Sky Bet’s The Big Debate last week.

“He [Jamie Carragher] knows, he won’t say it. He will [leave], I can absolutely guarantee it.

“I can see it, you can feel it, you can smell it.”

And Salah dismissed those rumours, insisting he’s happy at the club and in the city.

Salah told CNN: “I’m happy at Liverpool. I’m happy in the city – I love the fans and they love me. I’m happy at the club.”

 

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‘Formal move’ made for Liverpool youngster amid ‘concerns’

Liverpool have received a ‘formal offer’ from Danish side Nordsjaelland to take striker Bobby Duncan on loan.

Duncan, Steven Gerrard’s cousin, joined Liverpool from Manchester City in August 2018.

The 18-year-old began to attract attention from clubs across Europe, leading to Liverpool considering offering him a new contract.

But he remains on the same terms with two years remaining on his contract, and has ‘concerns’ about his ‘pathway’ to the first team.

The Daily Mail say Duncan ‘is understood to be open to moving abroad’ in search of regular football, having become unconvinced as to whether he can break into Jurgen Klopp’s plans or not.

Liverpool have already received a ‘formal offer’ from Nordsjaelland over a season-long loan, which includes paying his entire weekly wage.

The European champions are ‘now weighing up the offer’ for a player they consider to be ‘one of the brightest talents’ in their youth set-up.

 

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Allardyce takes credit for ‘terrific’ £50m Man United star

Sam Allardyce has hailed Aaron Wan-Bissaka for settling so soon at Manchester United.

Questions were raised as to whether Wan-Bissaka could handle the pressure of his £50m move to Old Trafford so soon into his professional career.

The right-back only made his Crystal Palace first-team debut in February 2018, playing one full season of Premier League football before joining United.

Wan-Bissaka was only converted to a right-back relatively late in his development, crediting Palace first-team coach Kevin Keen and youth coaches Richard Shaw and Dave Reddington for the switch this summer.

Sorry, no: it was all Allardyce.

“We converted him into a right-back at Palace, so I know him very, very well,” Allardyce told talkSPORT.

“He didn’t break into the team when I was there, but he was training with us every day and he always looked the best prospect of the youngsters.

“He’s done a terrific job.

“There’s big pressure on him, a £50m signing and playing for Manchester United, but he looks very comfortable, I’m glad to say.”

 

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