[article]
Wales have jumped ahead of UEFA to gain control of a potential Euros suspension for Liverpool fullback Neco Williams.
The Liverpool Echo says Williams was a surprise starter for Wales on Saturday - despite having been sent off just days earlier in France.
Williams had been expected to miss his country's final Euro 2020 warm-up match against Albania in Cardiff having been given his marching orders in Nice on Wednesday.
However, the Football Association of Wales determined they had jurisdiction over the disciplinary process rather than FIFA or UEFA.
And having sanctioned Williams "directly", they permitted the Reds right-back to feature in Saturday's match.
A statement from the FAW said: "FIFA have confirmed that as per article 27.2 of the FIFA Disciplinary Code the match falls under the jurisdiction of UEFA. UEFA Disciplinary Regulations do not legislate for sanctions related to friendly matches.
"The FAW have therefore sanctioned Neco Williams directly for the red card."
Williams was arguably Wales' best performer as they were held to a frustrating goalless draw in front of 6,500 fans at the Cardiff City Stadium - the first time in 18 months supporters had been able to attend a national team match.
[/article]
Think he needs more games, though that will mean we'll need to bring in cover.
Neco Williams on song for Wales as the Liverpool defender leaves fans chanting his name after a fine display against Albania in final Euro 2020 warm-up game
[article]
By the end of a bruising last warm-up game on Saturday, a new chant was emanating from the ‘Red Wall’ of Wales fans. It was their equivalent of the legendary Yaya/Kolo Toure anthem that Manchester City fans always sang, only with Neco and Jonny Williams’ names substituted.
‘Neco, Neco, Neco, Neco, Neco, Neco, Neco Williams...’ This was some send-off to Baku, where Wales play Switzerland on Saturday, and the evidence of the past week is that the young Liverpool defender will leave it all out on the pitch in Azerbaijan.
His harsh early dismissal against France last week left him devastated, with team-mates using jocularity to help him get past it. By Saturday against Albania, he was back
at right wing back, playing with his head up and making things happen.
The boy from Cefn Mawr, near Wrexham, has certainly
had his share of challenges at Liverpool. Not least the
stress fracture in his spine discovered on his first day of pre-season under Steven Gerrard’s Under-18s. While his contemporaries worked with the Liverpool legend, he was initially not even able to enter the gym.
He was a
part of the young side that drew 5-5 with Arsenal and won on penalties — a night, the season before last, when Mesut Ozil revealed the small margin for error at the top level.
Williams’ ball out of defence put a 16-year-old Harvey Elliott under pressure. Within seconds Ozil had pounced and Bukayo Saka scored.
There was also the
Champions League home defeat by Atalanta in a very young side last November and
the mistake during a 7-2 hammering of Lincoln City in the Carabao Cup which prompted such levels of online abuse that Williams briefly deleted his Twitter account.
But
Jurgen Klopp has always considered this to be a part of the process. For Williams, one of the abiding memories of the season just past will be the sight of
the manager enveloping him in a hug after another young Liverpool side had beaten Ajax to secure progress to the Champions League knockout stage.
Williams provided the vital assist for Curtis Jones that night.
It was because of Williams’ development that Ki-Jana Hoever left for Wolves as leverage for Diogo Jota’s arrival last summer. Nuno Espirito Santo wanted Williams as part of the deal but Klopp, who had offered him a five-year deal last August, was not interested. ‘Thank God that Neco is now here, he said.
It is Williams’ flexibility that Wales interim manager Rob Page likes. He can play him either side of defence. He was a left-sided midfielder, man-marking Paul Pogba, before his dismissal against France.
He was at his best in the second half against Albania. Page’s favoured 3-5-2 did not work and it was when Cardiff City striker Kieffer Moore was introduced after the break that the team looked balanced.
There was a glimpse of a combination that could pay a major dividend when Manchester City’s 21-year-old Matt Smith manoeuvred the ball into Williams’ path in the second half. Williams’ strike was Wales’ best attempt in a goalless game.
The debate in Wales this week will revolve around whether Moore should start against the Swiss, with Aaron Ramsey behind him.
Equally significant is Williams’ deployment on the right, in a system which gives him space to run into. Wales need to reap maximum benefit from the player everyone’s singing about.
[/article]