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At Least 1 Dead After Altercation Between Fans, Police at Boca Juniors vs. Gimnasia

Oct 7, 2022
LA PLATA, ARGENTINA - OCTOBER 06: Fans of Gimnasia cover their faces as they are affected by tear gas after a match between Gimnasia y Esgrima La Plata and Boca Juniors was cancelled as part of Liga Profesional 2022 at Juan Carmelo Zerillo Stadium on October 6, 2022 in La Plata, Argentina. The match was stopped at nine minutes of play and later cancelled amid serious incidents outside the stadium with fans and police officers who used tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse the crowd. It was reported a fan of Gimnasia died and many were injured.(Photo by Gustavo Garello/Jam Media/Getty Images)
LA PLATA, ARGENTINA - OCTOBER 06: Fans of Gimnasia cover their faces as they are affected by tear gas after a match between Gimnasia y Esgrima La Plata and Boca Juniors was cancelled as part of Liga Profesional 2022 at Juan Carmelo Zerillo Stadium on October 6, 2022 in La Plata, Argentina. The match was stopped at nine minutes of play and later cancelled amid serious incidents outside the stadium with fans and police officers who used tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse the crowd. It was reported a fan of Gimnasia died and many were injured.(Photo by Gustavo Garello/Jam Media/Getty Images)

One person died after a clash between fans and police during Thursday night's Argentine Primera División match between Boca Juniors and Gimnasia at Estadio Juan Carmelo Zerillo.

ESPN reported the game was called off by referee Hernan Mastrangelo after just nine minutes as tear gas used by police outside the venue made its way toward the pitch. Local police said Gimnasia fans were attempting to force into an already packed stadium.

"Unfortunately, there is a dead person. He died of a heart problem when he was transported to the hospital," Buenos Aires Province minister of security Sergio Berni said.

An estimated 10,000 fans were outside the stadium trying to gain entry, according to BBC Sport. Gimnasia supporters were the only ones eligible to enter since fans of visiting clubs have been barred from away matches in the Buenos Aires Province since 2013 because of violence, per ESPN.

"The AFA strongly repudiates the events that took place today in the vicinity of Gimnasia stadium and expresses its commitment to continue working to eradicate this kind of incidents that tarnishes the spirit of football," the Argentine Football Association said in a statement.

Mastrangelo said he decided to call off the match because the "air became unbreathable" and there were "no security guarantees" amid the tense situation, per BBC Sport.

Gimnasia center back Leonardo Morales also described a scary scene, according to ESPN.

"My 2-year-old son couldn't breathe," Morales said. "We feel desperate and worried about all the people in the stands. This is crazy. We were playing a normal football game and it turned it into this and the feeling that our relatives almost died."

Police used rubber bullets in addition to the tear gas in an effort to regain control of the situation.

The news comes after at least 125 people were killed in Indonesia following a crowd surge during a soccer match between Arema and Persebaya Surabaya on Saturday. Police used tear gas after fans entered the pitch, leading to a crush that also left more than 300 people injured.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo said Wednesday that locked doors and steep stairs contributed to the tragedy, and he confirmed FIFA President Gianni Infantino offered support to help fix the country's soccer management.

Play in the Argentine Primera División is scheduled to resume Saturday.

Mauricio Pochettino Wants to Work with Lionel Messi at Newell's Old Boys

Mar 19, 2020
Tottenham Hotspur's Argentinian head coach Mauricio Pochettino gestures during the English Premier League football match between Tottenham Hotspur and Sheffield United at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, on November 9, 2019. (Photo by Ian KINGTON / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE. No use with unauthorized audio, video, data, fixture lists, club/league logos or 'live' services. Online in-match use limited to 120 images. An additional 40 images may be used in extra time. No video emulation. Social media in-match use limited to 120 images. An additional 40 images may be used in extra time. No use in betting publications, games or single club/league/player publications. /  (Photo by IAN KINGTON/AFP via Getty Images)
Tottenham Hotspur's Argentinian head coach Mauricio Pochettino gestures during the English Premier League football match between Tottenham Hotspur and Sheffield United at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, on November 9, 2019. (Photo by Ian KINGTON / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE. No use with unauthorized audio, video, data, fixture lists, club/league logos or 'live' services. Online in-match use limited to 120 images. An additional 40 images may be used in extra time. No video emulation. Social media in-match use limited to 120 images. An additional 40 images may be used in extra time. No use in betting publications, games or single club/league/player publications. / (Photo by IAN KINGTON/AFP via Getty Images)

Mauricio Pochettino has said he would like to link up with Lionel Messi at Argentinian outfit Newell's Old Boys in the future. 

Both men have history at the club: Pochettino graduated from the youth ranks and played for the club's senior side between 1989 and 1994 before joining Espanyol.

Messi, meanwhile, started his youth career with Newell's before joining Barcelona's famed La Masia academy in 2001.

Messi, 32, has previously said that it is his "dream" to one day return to the Rosario-based club to play.

Pochettino, who has been without a job since being sacked by Tottenham Hotspur in November, has now said he would welcome the chance to work with his fellow Argentinian, per Radio del Plata (h/t Chris Burton of Goal):

"I want to return to Newell's with Messi. I can still wait, [for an opportunity] and the best [possible scenario] would be in 10 years with Messi."

Pochettino enhanced his reputation during his tenure at Spurs between 2014 and 2019.

He oversaw one of the most successful periods in the club's history and established Spurs as Champions League regulars, culminating in their run to last season's final:

When he was sacked, the move was seen by many as an overly-hasty one from Tottenham, and he remains one of the most attractive managers in the game:

When Pochettino departed Tottenham they were 14th after 12 games of the 2019-20 Premier League season.

Jose Mourinho has guided them to eighth after 29 games, but qualification for the 2020-21 Champions League still seems unlikely:

Before football was suspended across Europe due to the coronavirus pandemic, Spurs were on a six-game run without a win in all competitions, which included being knocked out of the FA Cup and Champions League.

It is not completely out of the question Mourinho could leave Tottenham at the end of 2019-20, and it is likely many Spurs fans would be happy to see Pochettino then reappointed. 

Why so Many Brazilians Are Named After Argentinian Legend Juan Roman Riquelme

Feb 13, 2020

"[Riquelme] treated the ball with such kindness that it looked after him all over the pitch, with the humility of a dog kissing his feet." — Brazilian 1970 World Cup winner Tostao.

"If we have to travel from point A to point B, everyone would take the six-lane highway and get there as quickly as possible. Everyone, except Riquelme. He would choose the winding mountain road, that takes six hours, but that fills your eyes with scenes of beautiful landscapes." — Former Argentina and Real Madrid star Jorge Valdano.

"I enjoyed football to the maximum. I hope the people have enjoyed it alongside me. I tried to have a good time." — Juan Roman Riquelme


There is a famous saying in South America that "Brazilians love to hate Argentinians, while Argentinians hate to love Brazilians," but when it comes to Juan Roman Riquelme, stereotypes and conventions rarely apply. 

The former Argentina international became a footballing legend during two spells at Boca Juniors, in between a dazzling spell in Spain for Barcelona and especially Villarreal in the mid-2000s.

Riquelme's unique, casual brilliance was a perfect example of jogo bonito (the beautiful game), but he never represented a Brazilian team in his career. Instead, fans in the country only ever got to watch him do damage to their teams. 

And yet, take a look at the team sheets from the recent Copa Sao Paulo and you will see that, six years since his retirement, Riquelme's name still echoes all around Brazilian football...literally.

Attracting crowds of 10,000 fans, scouts from Europe's big guns and powerful agents, the Copa Sao Paulo opens the curtain to the football season in Brazil every January. It's the country's premier youth tournament, but it's also widely regarded as its most democratic.

This season's edition featured 127 teams from every corner of the continent-sized nation, pitching Brazilian giants against barely-heard-of minnows over three weeks across the state of Sao Paulo.

With no top-flight matches drawing attention, the Copinha, as it is affectionately known, is the main source of domestic football on TV in January. 

For many players, the U20 competition is seen as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to get themselves into the limelight and, with some luck, earn a lucrative move.

Rewind a year, and Gabriel Martinelli found himself in that very position, making headlines with Brazilian third-tier club Ituano; now he's bagging goals for Arsenal in the Premier League. 

The Brazilian wonderkid is just the latest talent to successfully take a path that was also followed by the likes of Neymar, Gabriel Jesus, Roberto Firmino, Casemiro and Marquinhos.

However, with over 3,000 teenagers hoping to achieve the same goal, it's not easy to stand out.

Riquelme Sousa Silva was among those who impressed this season, netting six goals in five games, including a hat-trick, to help Atletico Goianiense record their best-ever campaign in the Copinha.

Yet, as he had somehow been anticipating, most of the questions he took afterwards had nothing to do with his killer instinct inside the box.

"They were mostly about my name," he chuckles, explaining why he was christened after the Argentinian former midfielder.

"It was because of my uncle—he was a huge fan of Boca Juniors around the time I was born [in 2001], and then, one night, they say they were watching this Boca match and he asked my father if he could name me after Riquelme. My father accepted, even though he didn't know much about him and wasn't really into football.

"My mother had other plans for me, but eventually she consented too."

Raised in Aguiarnopolis, a countryside town in Tocantins state with a population of just over 5,000, Atletico's 18-year-old striker says he had never met any other Brazilians with the same name.

He wouldn't have had to look far in Copa Sao Paulo, though, to find a namesake.

In total, there were 12 boys named after Riquelme playing at this year's tournament—enough to field a whole team, with another Riquelme on the bench. 

All of them were born in the early 2000s, when Boca ruled South American football. Back then, the Buenos Aires giants won the Copa Libertadores three times in four years, thrashing Brazilian sides along the way.  

BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA - JUNE 14: Juan Roman Riquelme of Boca Juniors gestures during the semi final first leg match between Boca Juniors and Universidad de Chile as part of Copa Libertadores 2012 at Estadio Alberto J. Armando on June 14, 2012 in Buenos
BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA - JUNE 14: Juan Roman Riquelme of Boca Juniors gestures during the semi final first leg match between Boca Juniors and Universidad de Chile as part of Copa Libertadores 2012 at Estadio Alberto J. Armando on June 14, 2012 in Buenos

No matter whom they played against, they looked invincible, much of it being down to Riquelme's elegance on the ball as he dictated their rhythm with his classic style. 

The way he played the game filled Brazilians with nostalgia because their own country seemed unable to produce old-fashioned playmakers of his ilk. "In the past, we used to have players like Riquelme," Pele reflected in an interview with Brazilian television in 2006.

This obsession contributed to the rise of what might be called the "Generation Riquelme" in Brazil.

They are all similar in name but separated by just a few letters, as highlighted during the Copinha: Among the 12 Riquelmes, there were some unconventional spellings, such as Rikelme, Rickelme, Rikelmi, Riquelmy, Riquelmo and even an Aimar Riquelme (mixing the Boca legend with Pablo Aimar, an iconic player for Boca's fierce rivals, River Plate).

Two of the Riquelmes featured for Cruzeiro and started together in a game during the group stage. It wasn't a unique situation at the club either. With five players named after Riquelme in their academy, Cruzeiro included four of them in a matchday squad last year.

The U20 team's coach, Celio Lucio, a former centre-back who won the Copa Libertadores with the club in 1997, deals with them in his daily routine.

"It isn't that difficult [to tell them apart] because they have different haircuts, don't play in the same position, and more importantly, they aren't all in the same age group," he explains, while admitting he is not the biggest fan of naming kids after greats.

"This whole thing brings a very big pressure on the athletes. I remember seeing a lot of boys called Lineker around. These are situations that should be handled very carefully, demanding some psychological work to make sure their names don't become a burden at some point."

According to the latest population census, taken in 2010, there are 622 Brazilians named after legendary English striker Gary Lineker.

That's nowhere near the popularity that Riquelme has reached, though, leaping from 202 registrations in the '90s to 14,037 in the 2000s. It represents a growth of 6,894 percent, the second-biggest among male names in the period.

The first one? Rikelme, which increased 10,057 percent after going from 26 to 2,641 babies in the same interval.

And it is not just football fans who have been giving their offspring the name of the Argentine maestro; footballers have been at it too. 

Former Porto and Brazil international goalkeeper Helton Arruda christened one of his sons Riquelme, while Ronaldo Angelim, a retired centre-back who scored Flamengo's Brasileirao title-winning goal in 2009, did the same. 

"He was a great midfielder, someone I enjoyed watching play," Angelim says. "But it was actually because of my ex-wife [Ricassia]. We had already picked a [football] name similar to mine for our first son, Ronald de Boer, so when we heard that our second one was coming, we named him after her."

Despite his baby face and general shyness, Riquelme, who many consider to be Boca's all-time greatest player, was a revolutionary in all senses of the term.

It's no coincidence that El Grafico magazine had him on one of its historic covers as Che Guevara. His die-hard fans call themselves "soldiers of Riquelme." They might have never realised, however, that his army was so big in Brazil as well.

Ezequiel Fernandez Moores, Argentina's leading sports columnist, has followed Riquelme since he broke through at La Bombonera in 1996 and fully understands the fascination he causes on the other side of the frontier.

"If Brazil is the home of artistic football, then, it seems logical to me, that they pay homage to the most artistic player we've had in recent times," Moores argues.

"[Diego] Maradona and [Lionel] Messi are from another dimension, famous on a much more global scale. Riquelme is a distinct phenomenon. He's admired by those who really get this game, who know he did impossible things not because of his excellent technique and skills, but because of his character, his dignity, as an artist of the ball.

"Therefore, it doesn't come as a surprise that when [Danielle] De Rossi was unveiled at Boca, he admitted having a WhatsApp group with different players, all of them midfielders, one of whom's photo was of Riquelme.

"For that reason, I assume he had such impact in Brazil. Not just because his most memorable masterclasses were against Brazilian clubs in decisive matches, but also for standing for a type of football that no longer exists, from the past, one where the ball was moved around and the player didn't need to run so much. Perhaps, this explains this nostalgia about Riquelme.

"Like Zidane, they have a beautiful name, an artistic one as well: Zinedine and Roman."

While Brazil have a whole generation of Riquelmes coming through their youth ranks, it's just as curious that the same will never happen in Argentina while it's not an accepted name at the country's registration offices.

The closest they will get are the 193 boys named Juan Roman in 2002, a time when the Boca Juniors idol was destroying Brazilians and spreading the legend that makes his compatriots still refer to him as "the last great No. 10." 

Brazil, however, may be gearing up to strike back with their very own Riquelme in the near future.

              

Follow Marcus on Twitter: @_marcus_alves.

Zlatan Ibrahimovic 'Wants to Play' for Boca Juniors, Says Director Jorge Anro

Sep 29, 2019
CARSON, CA -SEPTEMBER 15: Zlatan Ibrahimovic #9 of Los Angeles Galaxy during the Los Angeles Galaxy's MLS match against Sporting KC at the Dignity Health Sports Park on September 15, 2019 in Carson, California.  Los Angeles Galaxy won the match 7-2 (Photo by Shaun Clark/Getty Images)
CARSON, CA -SEPTEMBER 15: Zlatan Ibrahimovic #9 of Los Angeles Galaxy during the Los Angeles Galaxy's MLS match against Sporting KC at the Dignity Health Sports Park on September 15, 2019 in Carson, California. Los Angeles Galaxy won the match 7-2 (Photo by Shaun Clark/Getty Images)

Zlatan Ibrahimovic "wants to play" for Boca Juniors and the club can afford to bring the LA Galaxy star to Argentina, according to director Jorge Anro. 

The Boca director told Mundo Boca Radio (h/t Goal's Matt Dorman) that the club are in a healthy enough financial position to land the 37-year-old striker.

"It is true that Ibrahimovic wants to play for Boca and it is true that we are in a position to bring him in," Anro said. "The club is in a very good moment institutionally. It is so good financially that it can afford those luxuries. We would be able to pay Zlatan's contract."

Ibrahimovic's agent, Mino Raiola, has recently taken to Twitter to shoot down speculation the former Sweden international could leave Major League Soccer and head to Boca Juniors:

The striker has been at LA Galaxy since March 2018. He signed for the club a day after leaving Premier League club Manchester United after his contract with the Red Devils are cancelled.

Ibrahimovic has proved a huge hit for the Galaxy, netting 22 goals in 27 games in his first season. He has racked up another 28 in the current campaign to continue his prolific form:

The striker's hat-trick in a 7-2 win over Sporting Kansas City saw him break the Galaxy's record for most goals in a single season. He told reporters after the win: "I think I am the best ever to play in MLS. And that, without joking."

LA Galaxy general manager, Dennis te Kloese told ESPN Deportes (h/t Tom Marshall at ESPN FC) that Ibrahimovic's future at the club will be decided at the end of the season.

The former Manchester United man will turn 38 in October but has shown he still has plenty to offer despite heading towards the end of a glittering career.

Boca Juniors sound willing to try to tempt Ibrahimovic to Argentina. The club made a splash in the transfer market during the summer by landing Daniele de Rossi on a free transfer.

The midfielder joined the club after 18 years at Roma and was warmly welcomed by supporters. He went on to score on his debut for Boca against Almagro in the Copa Argentina.

Daniele De Rossi's Great South American Adventure with Boca Juniors

Aug 21, 2019
LA PLATA, ARGENTINA - AUGUST 13: Daniele De Rossi of Boca Juniors celebrates after scoring the first goal of his team during a match between Boca Juniors and Almagro as part of Round of 32 of Copa Argentina 2019 at Estadio Ciudad de La Plata on August 13, 2019 in La Plata, Argentina. (Photo by Marcelo Endelli/Getty Images)
LA PLATA, ARGENTINA - AUGUST 13: Daniele De Rossi of Boca Juniors celebrates after scoring the first goal of his team during a match between Boca Juniors and Almagro as part of Round of 32 of Copa Argentina 2019 at Estadio Ciudad de La Plata on August 13, 2019 in La Plata, Argentina. (Photo by Marcelo Endelli/Getty Images)

They couldn't believe it. When word first began to filter through that Daniele De Rossi—a FIFA World Cup winner with Italy in 2006 and a bona fide AS Roma legend having played his whole professional career with his hometown team—was going to join Boca Juniors, the reaction of football fans in Argentina was incredulity.  

"When Nicolas Burdisso—who was one of De Rossi's teammates at Roma and is now director of football at Boca Juniors—came out and said a couple of months ago, 'We're going to get Daniele De Rossi,' people laughed," says Sam Kelly, founder of the Hand of Pod podcast.

"Boca have done this in previous years, saying they were going to bring in this-and-that signing. They did it with Ronaldinho a few years ago, and it tends to get laughed at.

"Then we heard De Rossi was mulling over whether to come to Buenos Aires or to move to L.A. At that point, everyone here in Argentina thought he's obviously going to L.A. Galaxy because they will pay him on time. They'll probably pay him more. If you had De Rossi's money, wouldn't you rather be in Los Angeles than Buenos Aires?

"Then he said: 'I'm retiring from football.' Fans from [Boca's rivals] River Plate were saying, 'OK, De Rossi was so desperate not to come to Boca Juniors that he's decided to retire instead.' Suddenly, one day, he said he'd changed his mind and was going to come to Boca.

"It's a weird situation. I still can't get that it has happened. From 16 years of following the Argentinian league, I've always wanted to see a European with no connections to Argentina be sentimental enough or curious enough to come down here and take part in this wonderful footballing culture that Argentina has, with all of its problems, but also with a lot of good things.

"He's clearly not done it for money but for personal reasons. You often hear the cliche from footballers, 'I'd love to play in La Bombonera [Boca's iconic stadium].' He appears to really mean it."

De Rossi, who turned 36 in July, has had a glittering career. He made his Serie A debut with AS Roma under Fabio Capello in January 2003, and he won the league's prestigious Player of the Year award in 2009, which is a notable achievement for a defensive midfielder.

He also scored in Italy's penalty shootout victory against France in the 2006 FIFA World Cup final in Germany, and he amassed more than a century of caps for his national team before retiring in 2017.

"It's a surprise that De Rossi has come here," says Carlos Navarro Montoya, a legendary goalkeeper with Boca Juniors who is known as "El Mono" (The Monkey) by fans. "You could see the reaction when he arrived in Buenos Aires at the airport. It was packed with a lot of fans. The people of Boca received him very well, with fondness. You can see it has affected him.

"The fans have a lot of empathy for him because he has chosen to come here instead of more lucrative offers in other countries. I admire him for this. He could play with another team in another league with fewer obligations, less pressure, but instead, he decided to take this challenge. Boca is a team that is under permanent pressure to win all the competitions it enters.

"It's about something more than football. He's taken it for personal reasons. It's about 'ilusion' (a dream). He didn't come here for any other reason. He's prioritising sporting goals, obviously, rather than the pursuit of money. It's a distinctive story, something different."

De Rossi is travelling in unchartered territory. Several of his former teammates at AS Roma played in Argentina's premier division, including Fernando Gago, who featured for Boca Juniors in last year's Copa Libertadores final; Gabriel Heinze, who left AS Roma to play with Newell's Old Boys in 2012; and Burdisso, who learnt his trade as a youth team player at Boca and in its first team for several seasons before leaving for Italy. He returned to the club as sporting director earlier in 2019. 

There have been several Argentinian greats who have come home after triumphing in the great leagues of Europe, such as Diego Maradona; Juan Roman Riquelme, who returned to Boca from Villarreal in 2007; and Carlos Tevez, now a teammate of De Rossi's at Boca having first returned to the club from Juventus in 2015 after playing in that year's UEFA Champions League final.

What makes De Rossi's case stand out is that he is a top European-born player. Even players like the former Juventus pair Mauro Camoranesi—a FIFA World Cup winner with De Rossi in 2006 who finished his playing career with spells at two clubs in Buenos Aires, Lanus and Racing—and David Trezeguet, the scorer of France's golden goal in the UEFA Euro 2000 final and whose goals helped River Plate gain promotion in 2012, both grew up in Argentina.

"The only precedent for this high-profile a European coming to Argentina would be Trezeguet joining River during River's season in the second division, but obviously Trezeguet has connections to Buenos Aires because he grew up here, and he grew up as a River fan. On the one hand, European, check. World Cup winner, check. Slightly over the hill but clearly better than everyone else in the league, check.

"On the other hand, his arrival wasn't quite as surprising—except to Europeans—because people in Argentina were aware that Trezeguet had spent his adolescence in Buenos Aires before he went to Monaco. De Rossi is completely from left field. He doesn't have any connection with Buenos Aires. He just fancied coming here to play football."

Pablo Lisotto, a journalist with La Nacion, notes that Boca fans have already started motivating De Rossi by shouting "Forza Tano!", a reference to the abbreviation "tano."

In Argentina, locals refer affectionately to an Italian as "tano." Boca's roots, of course, go back to an Italian neighbourhood in Buenos Aires in which the club sprung from in 1905. 

"In the neighbourhood where Boca originated, the inhabitants call it the 'Republic of Boca,' as if that was a country in itself," says Lisotto. "There, most of the people are of Italian origin living in 'conventillos' (tenements). Immigrants having arrived from cities like Naples and Genoa. Boca's nickname 'The Xeneizes' comes from 'Los Genoveses'—from Genoa, the Italian port city."

Lisotto believes that De Rossi's robust, all-action style will help him to adapt to the rigours of Argentinian football. Famously, De Rossi has a hazard-symbol tattoo on one of his calf muscles of a footballer snapping into another player's ankle with a sliding tackle, and he wears a No. 16 jersey in homage to the notorious Manchester United enforcer Roy Keane

BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA - AUGUST 18: Daniele De Rossi of Boca Juniors gestures during a match between Boca Juniors and Aldosivi as part of Superliga 2019/20 at Estadio Alberto J. Armando on August 18, 2019 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. (Photo by Marcelo End
BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA - AUGUST 18: Daniele De Rossi of Boca Juniors gestures during a match between Boca Juniors and Aldosivi as part of Superliga 2019/20 at Estadio Alberto J. Armando on August 18, 2019 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. (Photo by Marcelo End

"This type of play is very familiar for Boca," says Lisotto. "The kind of player who fights for every ball. Historically, those players are well recognised at Boca. The club's fans appreciate the player who physically gives everything on the pitch—those players who sweat the jersey."

Diego Simeone, who returned from his European adventures to play with Racing in 2005, sounded a note of caution, however, when speaking to No Toda Pasa (h/t Ole).

He reckons De Rossi could struggle to adapt to the more freewheeling nature of Argentinian league football:

"It's not going to be easy for De Rossi. He comes from an Italian culture that is very tactical. The spaces are reduced, with the lines of the team close together. In Argentinian football, the teams are much more open, and this is complicated for those who are not used to it. It happened to me when I came back from Spain. The spaces on the field in Argentina were much more open, and I found this very hard."

So far, the signs are good, though. De Rossi scored on his debut last week with a header in a Copa Argentina game against Almagro, although Boca lost the tie on penalties.

The real test begins on Wednesday when Boca play the first leg of their quarter-final Copa Libertadores clash against LDU Quito in Ecuador. If, as expected, Boca progress, they could face eternal rivals River Plate in the semi-final.

It would give Boca a chance to avenge last year's historic defeat in the final and bring De Rossi within a step of achieving what he claimed on Boca's website would be "the crowning moment" of his career. It would be the realisation of an amazing dream.

Download the B/R Football Ranks podcast. Subscribe here. New episodes every Wednesday

Follow Richard on Twitter: @Richard_Fitz

Daniele De Rossi Announced by Boca Juniors After Transfer from Roma

Jul 25, 2019
REGGIO NELL'EMILIA, ITALY - MAY 18:  Daniele De Rossi of AS Roma looks on before the Serie A match between US Sassuolo and AS Roma at Mapei Stadium - Citta' del Tricolore on May 18, 2019 in Reggio nell'Emilia, Italy.  (Photo by Marco Luzzani/Getty Images)
REGGIO NELL'EMILIA, ITALY - MAY 18: Daniele De Rossi of AS Roma looks on before the Serie A match between US Sassuolo and AS Roma at Mapei Stadium - Citta' del Tricolore on May 18, 2019 in Reggio nell'Emilia, Italy. (Photo by Marco Luzzani/Getty Images)

Boca Juniors announced on Thursday that Daniele De Rossi has joined the club following his departure from Roma:

The 36-year-old midfielder left the Serie A side at the end of last season after 18 years with the club and will continue his career in Argentina.

De Rossi is expected to sign a deal with Boca that will extend to March 2020, according to Juampi Reynoso at AS

Supporters warmly welcomed De Rossi upon his arrival in Argentina:

The Italian completed a medical on Thursday, has had a tour of the club's Bombonera ground and will be presented at a press conference on Monday, according to Football Italia:

De Rossi has been praised for his decision to move to Boca Juniors:

The Italian is a talented, tenacious midfielder who spent his entire career at Roma. He was not too happy to be allowed to leave the club when his contract expired at the end of last season:

He made over 600 appearances for the Italian side—only Francesco Totti has made more—and was part of the Italy squad that won the 2006 FIFA World Cup.

His former Roma team-mate Leandro Paredes told TyC Sports (h/t Football Italia) that the new signing is excited to play for his new team.

"He told me that he can't wait to start and would play on Sunday if he could. He's crazy about the idea of wearing the Boca jersey," he said. "I'm not kidding, when he makes his debut, I want to be in the stands watching him."

De Rossi's move to Boca Juniors has already proved to be a hit with supporters and is likely to be the last of his career.

River Plate Refuse to Play Copa Libertadores Final vs. Boca Juniors in Madrid

Dec 1, 2018
Fans of Argentina's River Plate react to the announcement that the final Copa Libertadores soccer match against Argentina's Boca Juniors was suspended, at Antonio Vespucio Liberti stadium in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Sunday, Nov. 25, 2018. South American soccer body CONMEBOL said on Sunday that the second leg of the final will be rescheduled after Boca’s bus was attacked by River fans on Saturday. (AP Photo/Ricardo Mazalan)
Fans of Argentina's River Plate react to the announcement that the final Copa Libertadores soccer match against Argentina's Boca Juniors was suspended, at Antonio Vespucio Liberti stadium in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Sunday, Nov. 25, 2018. South American soccer body CONMEBOL said on Sunday that the second leg of the final will be rescheduled after Boca’s bus was attacked by River fans on Saturday. (AP Photo/Ricardo Mazalan)

There has been yet another twist in the Copa Libertadores final saga, as River Plate have announced they will not travel to Madrid to face rivals Boca Juniors at the Santiago Bernabeu in the second leg.

As reported by Nicholas Mendola of NBC Sports, River Plate slammed the Argentinian football association in a press release for moving the fixture abroad: "The Argentine Football Association (AFA) can not and should not allow a handful of violent ones to impede the development of the Superclasico in our country."

The match was scheduled to be played at River Plate's Monumental stadium on November 24 but was postponed and then suspended after several Boca players were injured on the team bus during violence ahead of the game. Injuries were caused by smashed windows, while tear gas also made its way into the vehicle, with players "appearing groggy and disorientated," per the Independent.

On Thursday, South American football governing body CONMEBOL announced the contest had been rescheduled for December 9 and moved to Europe.

That decision was widely criticised by the likes of Rob Harris of the Associated Press:

Paris Saint-Germain's Dani Alves also voiced his criticism, per sportswriter Juan G. Arango:

According to Mendola, River Plate argued the move "distorts the competition" and affect their chances of winning. Boca Juniors hosted the first leg, which finished 2-2.

Per Argentinian football expert Peter Coates, the club stated the security issues that allowed the assault on the team bus to happen were not their responsibility:

The Copa Libertadores champion is scheduled to take part in the FIFA Club World Cup, which kicks off on December 12.

Copa Libertadores Final Postponed Again in Aftermath of Fan Violence

Nov 25, 2018
This aerial view shows the Monumental stadium in Buenos Aires taken before the all-Argentine Copa Libertadores second leg final match between River Plate and Boca Juniors which was postponed until November 25 following an attack on the Boca team bus by fans of River, on November 24, 2018. - Saturday's 'superclasico' Copa Libertadores final second leg between Argentine arch rivals River Plate and Boca Juniors was postponed until Sunday following a 'shameful' attack on the Boca team bus that left players affected by smoke inhalation and broken glass. (Photo by IVAN PISARENKO / AFP)        (Photo credit should read IVAN PISARENKO/AFP/Getty Images)
This aerial view shows the Monumental stadium in Buenos Aires taken before the all-Argentine Copa Libertadores second leg final match between River Plate and Boca Juniors which was postponed until November 25 following an attack on the Boca team bus by fans of River, on November 24, 2018. - Saturday's 'superclasico' Copa Libertadores final second leg between Argentine arch rivals River Plate and Boca Juniors was postponed until Sunday following a 'shameful' attack on the Boca team bus that left players affected by smoke inhalation and broken glass. (Photo by IVAN PISARENKO / AFP) (Photo credit should read IVAN PISARENKO/AFP/Getty Images)

The final of the 2018 Copa Libertadores between River Plate and Boca Juniors was postponed for a second time Sunday after CONMEBOL, South American football's governing body, ruled there weren't equal conditions for both teams.

The fixture was originally scheduled to be played Saturday but was postponed until Sunday after Boca's team bus was attacked on its way to the Estadio Monumental in Buenos Aires, per BBC Sport. CONMEBOL later confirmed Sunday's rescheduled fixture was off, per journalist Rory Smith:

River Plate came back on two occasions to draw 2-2 at La Bombonera in the final's first leg, but it's now uncertain when the decider will be resumed if it is at all.

Tony Mogan of the Evening Standard reported Boca made a request for the fixture to be moved a second time, and it looks as though the authorities have responded.

The final was pushed back at El Monumental several times Saturday after Boca's bus had been attacked during the drive across Buenos Aires. Some players suffered cuts caused by broken windows and were also affected by tear gas that was used by police.

Boca veteran and Argentina icon Carlos Tevez directed blame for the situation squarely with CONMEBOL, whom he said were adamant for players to go on even after some were hospitalised, via Goal:

BBC Sport added some Boca players were being sick in the dressing room after reaching the stadium on Saturday, while Pablo Perez was one of those taken to hospital after getting glass in his eye.

River Plate were the favourites to come out on top at home, faced with the opportunity to win their second Copa Libertadores in the space of three years. Boca haven't won the international tournament since 2007.

Sports writer Ben Hayward gave a saddened summary of events:

There is no confirmation yet in regards to when the final's second leg will be played.

Boca Juniors, River Plate Draw 2-2 in Copa Libertadores Final 1st Leg

Nov 11, 2018
Gonzalo Martinez of Argentina's River Plate control the ball during a Copa Libertadores first leg final match against Argentina's Boca Juniors in Buenos AIres, Argentina, Sunday, Nov. 11, 2018. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)
Gonzalo Martinez of Argentina's River Plate control the ball during a Copa Libertadores first leg final match against Argentina's Boca Juniors in Buenos AIres, Argentina, Sunday, Nov. 11, 2018. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)

River Plate and Boca Juniors played out a thrilling 2-2 draw in the first leg of the 2018 Copa Libertadores final on Sunday.

The hosts twice took the lead through Ramon Abila and Dario Benedetto, but River Plate hit back, tying things through Lucas Pratto and an own goal from Carlos Izquierdoz. The two rivals were as evenly matched on the pitch as the final score suggests.

The first leg was supposed to be played on Saturday but was pushed back a day because heavy rains flooded the pitch of the iconic La Bombonera stadium.

As expected, the atmosphere was on point before kick-off:

Boca Juniors saw more of the ball early but couldn't create much with their possession, while the visitors threatened on the counter and with set pieces.

Lucas Martinez Quarta missed a fantastic chance early, powering a header wide from a promising position. Per sportswriter Sam Kelly, it should have been the opener:

It wasn't the only good chance that went begging, as Agustin Rossi denied Rafael Borre. Rossi was kept busy as River Plate improved during the half, hitting the hosts at will on the counter.

Per sportswriter Daniel Edwards, it wasn't a surprise to see that the tactical battle went the visitors' way:

To make matters worse, Boca Juniors lost star forward Cristian Pavon to injury before the half-hour mark, forcing an early substitution and some tactical changes.

The rivalry exploded shortly after the half-hour mark with two quick goals. First, the hosts took the lead through Abila, pouncing on a second effort after the initial save from Franco Armani.

La Bombonera erupted, but their joy was short-lived. Minutes after the opener, the Boca defence went to sleep, and Pratto sneaked in to nick an equaliser.

Sportswriter Rupert Fryer couldn't believe it:

Borre went agonisingly close to making it 2-1 for the visitors just before half-time, again catching out the defence before firing narrowly wide.

The half ended on a high, as Benedetto restored Boca's lead with a clever header that beat Armani. The semi-final hero was the man who replaced Pavon.

At half-time, sportswriter Peter Coates noted the match was living up to its immense hype:

Sebastian Villa was lucky not to get sent off early in the second half after he tried to win a penalty by diving. He had already been booked, and the official let him off the hook.

River Plate patiently worked their way forward, but Boca appeared to stay in control rather comfortably until Izquierdoz deposited the ball into his own net off a cross. Per Coates, the equaliser was deserved:

The hosts brought on Carlos Tevez as they chased a winner, but momentum was with River Plate, who thrived as the crowd went quiet.  

Borre got himself booked and suspended for the second leg, and Boca Juniors took control of the match late, with few chances to speak of. Benedetto had a wonderful opportunity to win it late after great work from Tevez, but goalkeeper Armani pulled off a fantastic save to preserve the draw.

The contest was on a knife's edge, but there would be no more goals, setting up what should be a fantastic second leg.

         

What's Next?

The rivals will meet again in the second leg on November 24, this time at River Plate's El Monumental stadium.