Guillermo Ochoa Transfer 2014: Liverpool Interested in Mexico, El Tri Goalkeeper

Guillermo Ochoa has had a stand out World Cup 2014, and is now being highly sought after by several clubs.
Guillermo Ochoa Transfer 2014: Liverpool Interested in Mexico, El Tri Goalkeeper
Mexico's goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa waves to fans after the group A World Cup soccer match between Brazil and Mexico at the Arena Castelao in Fortaleza, Brazil, Tuesday, June 17, 2014. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
7/2/2014
Updated:
7/5/2014

Guillermo Ochoa has had a stand out World Cup 2014, and is now being highly sought after by several clubs.

According to the Daily Mirror, Liverpool is about to join the bidding war.

The Merseyside giants hope that Ochoa can give some competition to their current no. 1 goalkeeper, Simon Mignolet.

Mignolet has yet to feature at the World Cup, because his national side prefers Thibaut Courtois between the posts. 

Ochoa’s agent Jorge Berlanga told Spanish newspaper AS that, “Many clubs are interested in my client but we still have not received any concrete offers.”

“Now it is normal that many clubs will be interested in him after he played so well at the World Cup.”

See an AP story below. 

FIFA to Consider Allowing 4th Sub in Extra Time 

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Substitutes have made a big impact at the World Cup, and there could be more of them in four years’ time.

FIFA’s coaching advisers will propose before the 2018 World Cup kicks off that teams can use a fourth substitute in extra time.

“I think that’s an idea that we will put” to football’s rules-making panel, Gerard Houllier, a member of the FIFA technical study group, said at a briefing on Wednesday.

Up to three replacements are currently allowed, even when knockout matches go to 30 extra minutes after scores are level in regulation time.

Houllier said changing the rules could see fewer players struggle with muscle problems in high-intensity matches.

“It’s a good idea. Only in extra time. Maybe if someone is injured, why not?” the former France coach said.

So far, substitutes have scored 29 goals after coming off the bench in Brazil, already a World Cup record with eight matches left to play. The previous mark was 23 at the 2006 tournament in Germany, FIFA said.

“Substitutes play such an important part because they come with a freshness and attitude,” Houllier said. “Nearly a quarter of (all) the goals have been scored in the final 15 minutes of the game.”

Those goals by subs have often been game-changing, rather than additional scores in blowout victories.

Klaas-Jan Huntelaar came on late when the Netherlands were losing 1-0 to Mexico in the round of 16 on Sunday. Huntelaar teed up Wesley Sneijders for an 88th-minute leveler and then scored the decisive stoppage-time penalty.

On Monday, Belgium could not beat inspired United States goalkeeper Tim Howard until substitute Romelu Lukaku was sent on in extra time, and quickly set up Kevin De Bruyne for the equalizing goal, then scored the second in a 2-1 win.

The Americans also got a decisive late goal in its opening group match from defensive replacement John Brooks.

FIFA has asked Houllier’s group to propose ideas to football’s rules panel, which is known as IFAB.

The panel was denied the chance to approve a fourth sub at its annual meeting in March 2012, when FIFA withdrew the proposal.

Houllier suggested it should now be revisited.

“At this World Cup everything is going so quick, so fast, the tempo has been so high,” he said. “As a technician we would like to have in extra time the possibility to have another substitution.”

Larry Ong is a New York-based journalist with Epoch Times. He writes about China and Hong Kong. He is also a graduate of the National University of Singapore, where he read history.