Daily Trust

Brian Idowu signs for Lokomotiv Moscow

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Nigerian defender Brian Idowu has completed his switch to Russian champions Lokomotiv Moscow on a free transfer.

The Super Eagles internatio­nal has left his former club Amkar Perm after it was dissolved due to financial troubles.

Idowu has penned a three-year contract which will see him stay at the club until the end of the 2020/21 season.

During the winter break, the Stadion outfit reportedly ran out Zvezda of cash and they had their 2018/19 Russian Premier League license revoked by the Russian Football Union, thus, leaving the wing-back clubless.

Idowu joined the Red and Blacks in 2010 and will now begin a new chapter in his career after signing a three-year deal with the Russian top-flight champions.

Speaking to the club’s official website, Idowu expressed delight in the move, saying he is looking forward to a fruitful stay in Moscow.

The Saint Petersburg-born player represente­d Nigeria at the 2018 FIFA World Cup, playing in all three group games as the Super Eagles failed to make it past the preliminar­y stage.

“I am very glad to switch to Lokomotiv. I’m really looking forward to joining the team at the training camp,” Idowu told the club’s official website.

Mario Mandzukic scored in the 109th minute as Croatia came from behind to beat England 2-1 after extra time on Wednesday and reach their first World Cup final, where they will face France on Sunday, and send the Balkan nation into raptures.

England, appearing in their first semifinal since 1990, had looked on course for their first final since 1966 as they led through Kieran Trippier’s fifthminut­e free kick and totally dominated the opening half.

Croatia, in their first semi since 1998, leveled through Ivan Perisic after 68 minutes and then looked the more dangerous side.

It stayed level at 90 minutes, meaning Croatia faced extra time for the third successive game, having got past Denmark and Russia on penalties.

But just when it looked as if they would become the first team to appear in three shootouts at a single World Cup Mandzukic struck with a well-taken low shot.

England had got off to a flying start when Trippier curled a superb free kick into the top corner.

It was his first goal for his country, England’s 12th of the tournament and ninth from a set-piece, but they should have added more from open play as they reveled in the space they were being given in the first half.

Harry Kane shot weakly at Danijel Subasic when through, then forced the rebound against a post and Raheem Sterling was a constant thorn in the Croatia defence, though again his final ball was too often astray.

The best chance for a second goal, however, was wasted by an unmarked Jesse Lingard when he curled wide when a goal looked certain. Croatia had been desperatel­y poor but started to get a foothold in the game as the match rolled past the hour mark and Luka Modric’s influence grew.

England paid the price for those early misses when Perisic showed great determinat­ion to get in front of Kyle Walker to meet a curling Sime Vrsaljko cross and though his boot was arguably high, Walker was stooping and there were few complaints.

Perisic should have added another three minutes later when ragged defending presented him with a great shooting chance but he cannoned the ball against a post.

It was a different game from then on, with Croatia suddenly playing with accuracy and purpose as England lost their shape and composure, though Kane missed a chance to win it in stoppage time when he headed wide from a free kick.

Vrsaljko cleared a John Stones header off the line midway through the first extra period.

But it was Croatia who struck in the 109th minute when Perisic won a header on the edge of the box and the ball dropped for Mandzukic whose firm low finish beat Pickford.

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