Fund independent journalism |
|
|
| | | | 17/07/2024 Ten things you might have missed while Euros hogged the headlines |
| | | | THE RECAP | Sooner than you think, the club football season will be here. Perhaps the finest quality of an international tournament is its ability to sideline the silliness. Forget England, forget Gareth Southgate, this means more. Or at least, it goes on for longer. Anyway, to get you shipshape and lively for the season ahead, here’s what you might have missed. 1) Pep Guardiola’s off at the end of the season. Well, maybe. Reports that this may be his final campaign as the all-conquering, end-of-level boss emerged after Manchester City lost the FA Cup final but now the big decision for Big Blue will be delayed until the winter. City operatives – and Pep himself – are perhaps mindful of the deadening effect a similar situation had on Liverpool last season. 2) Talking of which, Arne Slot is in situ at Anfield, and has the approval of someone special: Jürg. “[Klopp] gave me more than a few good tips but what stood out for me was that he was so happy for me and that – and I think he said this in the media as well – he would be my biggest fan from now on,” cooed Slot. 3) Happily for many United fans – and many City fans, too – Erik ten Hag is still Manchester United manager, and that’s despite Southgate’s comfort in chinos and loafers making him ideal for the Big Sir Jim plan, which other than a couple of signings – Joshua Zirkzee from Bologna, likely Leny Yoro from Lille – seems mostly to centre on showing long-term back-office staff the door. | | Erik ten Hag is still here. Photograph: Ole Martin Wold/EPA | 4) If Eddie Howe is to be England manager, then Newcastle have been getting in negotiating practice. Having made Dan Ashworth serve a gardening leave period that would have given Capability Brown a bad back, they settled with Big Sir Jim over their outgoing sporting director for £10m as Premier League financial rules began to cut deep. 5) Chelsea, under the new management of Enzo Maresca, launched a new kit. “The melting pot pattern, resembling liquid gold and silver, is a fusion of our rich legacy with the ever-hot youth culture within our city,” roared a press release launched around the same time Enzo Fernández was live-Insta-ing that racist ditty about the makeup of France’s team after the, er, Copa América. 6) Brighton’s new manager Fabian Hürzeler, with sleeve tattoos that include ink inspired by David Beckham, is just 31 and born when 2 Unlimited’s No Limit was No 1 in the hit parade. 7) Steve Cooper is Leicester’s new manager, since you ask. Yes, Jamie Vardy’s signed a new contract. 8) Everton still don’t have a new owner but US billionaire – and Roma owner – Dan Friedkin is the latest, likeliest suitor. This is supposed to be Ev’s very last season at Goodison Park. | | Work at Bramley-Moore Dock rolls on. Photograph: Tony McArdle/Everton FC/Getty Images | 9) Arsenal haven’t signed anyone, aside from David Raya, who they already had. Panic? 10) Manchester City face 115 charges over alleged Premier League financial breaches, a saga that overhangs the season before another big winter decision. |
| | | | Your essential guide to Euro 2024 Join the Football Weekly podcast team every day during Euro 2024. Max Rushden, Barry Glendenning and a range of special guests will share (occasionally accurate) predictions, expert analysis and commentary on the biggest tournament on the continent. | Listen now |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
QUOTE OF THE DAY | | I hope the other 210 associations recognised by Fifa are inspired by the FAW’s leadership and commit to working together to unleash football’s full potential as a force for positive change in the world” – Common Goal co-founder Jürgen Griesbeck welcomes the Welsh FA signing up to the movement. The FAW is the first national association to do so and will give 1% of ticket sales for World Cup qualifiers to community projects in the country. | | Wales’s Jess Fishlock signed up to Common Goal last year. Photograph: Jayde Chamberlain/SPP/Shutterstock |
| | |
|
|
|
FOOTBALL DAILY LETTERS | | I see Frank Lampard and Steven Gerrard are in the running for the vacant England job. Perhaps they could share the role for several years before coming to the conclusion that they are just not compatible in the same dugout? And hey, it’d give England fans twice as much to moan about on unsocial media posts” – Justin Kavanagh. | | Worth remembering that we wouldn’t just be getting ‘Frank Lampard’s England’, we’d be getting ‘Frank Lampard’s England’s Frank Lampard’. It’s coming home, the ‘it’ for us non-England types being schadenfreude” – Mike Slattery. | | E J Thribb’s distant cousin writes: so farewell then, Gareth Southgate. What have you ever done for us, except for: the World Cups, the Euros, making it respectable to be an England football supporter again, casual wear, beards. So farewell then, Southgate G; arise Sir Gareth” – Richard Hirst. | | Could I be one of 1,057 enthusiastic pedants to point out that Harry Kewell being shown a door marked それをする by Yokohama F Marinos (yesterday’s News, Bits and Bobs) might lead to unfortunate confusion if Harry happens to be using Google Translate (‘Do It’) or imTranslate (‘Do That’). Perhaps あなたのバイクで, 息子 might be a bit clearer?” – Steve Malone (and no other enthusiastic pedants). | Send letters to [email protected]. Today’s prizeless letter o’ the day winner is … Justin Kavanagh. Terms and conditions for our competitions can be viewed here. |
| | |
|
|
|
RECOMMENDED LISTENING | On today’s revisiting of a special episode of Football Weekly, Nicky Bandini joins the pod to talk about her life and times. She looks back at following Arsenal in the mid-90s to living in America and work experience at Big Website, through to her transition and coming out five years ago. | | |
| | |
|
|
|
THE MACHINES RUMBLE ON | You thought the major summer football tournaments were over, didn’t you? How could you overlook Robocup 2024?! With 300 teams competing, it makes the 2026 World Cup look slim in comparison. And with performances that make England and France at the Euros look fluid, we reckon Fifa can rest assured the future of the human game is safe for another century at least. | | Well done, they’re miniature robots. Photograph: Hollandse Hoogte/Shutterstock |
| | |
|
|
|
MOVING THE GOALPOSTS | In the latest edition of our sister email, Osasu Obayiuwana reports on the “ridiculous” 19-month wait for the Wafcon finals and the chaos this will cause in African women’s football. |
| | |
|
|
|
NEWS, BITS AND BOBS | Chelsea say they have “instigated an internal disciplinary procedure” against Enzo Fernández over his involvement in those Argentina chants that included racist and homophobic slurs about members of the France team. In other Chelsea news, Lucy Bronze is a Blue. The defender has checked in on a two-year deal after her Barcelona contract expired and can’t wait to take the tube, visit the sites and dodge people filming themselves in the name of ‘content’. “I’m excited to be in London, to see what the capital holds and to be at a club that is renowned for winning so many trophies,” she cheered. | | Lucy Bronze, perhaps contemplating a visit to Madame Tussauds. Photograph: Chelsea FC | England are on their ay to Switzerland for Euro 2025 after a 0-0 draw with Sweden and captain Leah Williamson isn’t too concerned by the Lionesses’ underwhelming displays. “It was the same story ahead of the last Euros,” she reasoned. “We all know how that went and I think everybody wants more.” Jess Fishlock is now Wales’s record women’s scorer with her 45th goal for the nation in a 2-0 win over Kosovo that sealed a seeded spot in the Euro 2025 qualifying play-offs. “It’s just class,” she trilled. Luka Modric has signed a new one-year deal at Real Madrid – which we’re actually really chuffed about. | | Nope, that’s not his age. Photograph: Pedro Castillo/Real Madrid/Getty Images | Jaime Lozano has been flung through the Mexico door marked – and we’re not going to risk it – Do One, following their Copa América belly-flop. And new Dundee United signing Ryan Strain has been living up to his name in the 3-0 CIS Insurance Cup win over Stenhousemuir by limping off with hamstring-twang in the 55th minute. “It’s not an injury he’s had previously,” sighed manager Jim Goodwin. “He tried to backheel the ball and just felt a pop.” |
| | |
|
|
|
MEMORY LANE | 11 July 1996: Gianluca Vialli and Ruud Gullit take part in pre-season training with Chelsea after Euro 96. We’re not sure whether the ball is a children’s flyaway or perhaps a lightweight fad of the time that was supposed to improve the touch of players – not that either needed much help in that department. | | Gianluca Vialli and Ruud Gullit. Photograph: Louisa Buller/Associated Press |
| | |
|
|
|
HE EATS THE WHOLE OF A PINEAPPLE? |
| | | … there is a good reason why not to support the Guardian | Not everyone can afford to pay for news right now. That is why we keep our journalism open for everyone to read. If this is you, please continue to read for free. But if you are able to, then there are three good reasons to support us today. | 1 | Our quality, investigative journalism is a powerful force for scrutiny at a time when the rich and powerful are getting away with more and more |
| 2 | We are independent and have no billionaire owner telling us what to report, so your money directly powers our reporting |
| 3 | It doesn’t cost much, and takes less time than it took to read this message |
| Help power the Guardian’s journalism in this crucial year of news, whether with a small sum or a larger one. If you can, please support us on a monthly basis . It takes less than a minute to set up, and you can rest assured that you're making a big impact every single month in support of open, independent journalism. Thank you. | Support us |
|
|
| |
|
|
|