logo
‘I cut off his head six times': the sculptors behind football statues

‘I cut off his head six times': the sculptors behind football statues

The Guardian2 days ago
At its heart, football is about community. A feeling of shared identity and purpose. A place where supporters gather to watch their team. The games, goals and moments that live on in the club's collective memory through a shared act of will. The people responsible for these defining moments – shrewd managers, inspiring captains, prolific goalscorers – are increasingly immortalised in statues.
A sculptor is enlisted to preserve their likeness in a single definitive pose. The subjects take on a size and form, literally larger than life, befitting the impact they had on the club and community that chooses to honour them. According to the Sporting Statues Project, which is run by Chris Stride and Ffion Thomas, there are more than 100 football statues in the UK. The vast majority have been made since the turn of the millennium and there are even more in progress. They have exploded in popularity, becoming the established means of commemoration.
Alan Herriot has been sculpting for most of his life. The 73-year-old from Edinburgh has worked on a wide range of projects, from playful figures for tourist attractions to poignant military monuments. His first football sculpture was installed in July 2012. As a Manchester United supporter, the subject held huge personal significance.
'Denis Law was so revered,' says Herriot. 'He was my hero when I was a kid. When we played football, we were running about gripping the sleeves of our shirts. We tried to mirror our heroes and Denis was one of them, without a shadow of a doubt.'
Law achieved legendary status with Scotland and United. A stylish player and ruthless finisher, he won the Ballon d'Or in 1964. In recognition of a local hero who had a global impact, the Denis Law Legacy Trust commissioned Herriot to produce a statue of the striker to go in the Aberdeen Sports Village.
'They wanted the classic finger-in-the-air pose when he scored against England after they'd won the World Cup. We beat them 3-2,' says Herriot, recalling a famous win at Wembley in 1967. 'After that was done, they wanted me to cast another one to keep in storage so that later on it could be sited somewhere in the city.'
The second statue, a replica of the first, was installed on Aberdeen's Marischal Squaret in November 2021. 'He came to the unveiling,' recalls Herriot. 'At that time, Denis wasn't looking so well. He had the beginnings of dementia and he was apologising to anybody if he couldn't remember their name. He was such a nice fella. He had time for everybody. Never a bad word came out of him.
'Whenever you meet celebrities, you try not to be too grovelling. You just try to be yourself. They know who they are and what they've done and why they're getting a statue made. It's probably a lot of fun for them. It was so nice to meet him and his family. After the unveiling, we went back to the town hall in Aberdeen and Sir Alex Ferguson was there. Now I wish I had done, but I didn't even introduce myself to him.'
Herriot's connection with Manchester United deepened when he made a statue of Jimmy Murphy, which is now proudly displayed outside the Stretford End at Old Trafford. In the wake of the Munich disaster, amid doubts about the club's future, Murphy steered them to the FA Cup final as Matt Busby recovered in hospital. He played a crucial role in ensuring the club survived some of its darkest days.
Herriot had virtual meetings with the Manchester Munich Memorial Foundation and Murphy's family as they weighed up which sculptor to hire. At his wife's behest, he made a maquette – a scale model of his eventual sculpture – to show them. Her instinct was right as he won the contract and a chance to pay homage to an unsung hero who shunned the limelight, burnishing Murphy's legacy.
'The family wanted a particular pose,' says Herriot. 'They wanted to show Jimmy in his old tracksuit. That's how he was – a hands-on fella. Great coach. Great instigator. He could instil a bit of life into the team. It's a shame they haven't got someone like him now at Manchester United.'
Herriot speaks passionately about many things, including football, which is closely entwined with his family. Alex Young and Jackie Neilson, two famous former players, were his brothers-in-law. After winning two league titles and the Scottish Cup with Hearts, Young became a club hero during his eight years at Everton. The elegant forward was nicknamed 'The Golden Vision' and remains fondly remembered, with an Alex Young suite at Goodison Park.
While Neilson didn't reach those extraordinary heights, he still fared well. The midfielder played for St Mirren throughout his career and was a Scottish Cup winner in 1959. Full international honours eluded him – unlike Young, who scored five goals in his eight senior caps – but he made almost 400 appearances for the Buddies.
When sculpting, Herriot follows a trusted process that has served him well over the years. 'I tend to use an aluminium armature, almost like a stick figure. You can bend it to whatever shape you need,' he says. 'That's mounted on to a turntable so I can get around the thing. I build up the shapes using two-part foam and I can carve that back.
'Basically, you spray the stuff on and within 10 to 20 minutes it's hard. You can just build that up and then carve it back really accurately. It's light and it's strong. If I make a mistake, I can cut it off. Doing it that way, I end up with a good shaped figure, which is in proportion, and has got quite a lot of detail on it. Sometimes I'll rub down the foam and then treat it with resin so there's a slightly hard surface to it. It just takes the clay a bit better.
'From that point on, I use an oil-based clay. It's a slower process, and it's harder to work than the wet, grey clay we normally use in sculpture, but the great thing is that you don't have to wet it down and then keep covering it up with polythene. You just leave it. It's like plasticine: it doesn't go hard, but it's hard enough.
'Once it's finished, and I've done all the modelling, the foundry will come in. They need at least three months to cast it, make the moulds and put it into bronze. When you put something into bronze, you can burnish bits and pieces and you start getting that really nice detail, even just down to the veins on the hand. Wee details like that make it lifelike.'
The statue of Jim McLean that stands outside Tannadice Park was also sculpted by Herriot. The former Dundee United manager and chairman is shown holding the Scottish Premier Division trophy, which he secured in 1983 when he led the club to their first – and so far only – league title. As is often the case, his figure serves as a welcome reminder of former glories.
Most recently, Herriott has been sculpting two Swindon Town legends. After successfully bringing Don Rogers' League Cup-winning goal against Arsenal back to life, he's now working on a statue of his former teammate John Trollope, whose association with the club stretches back to the 1950s. Trollope made a record 889 appearances for Swindon, before serving as manager and then in various coaching capacities.
'He was completely dedicated to the club, so if anyone should have a statue it's definitely him. I'm standing here looking at what I've done so far and it's looking good. It's going to be a really nice one. This is life-and-a-quarter size, so the figure is about seven-and-a-half feet high. It's a lovely scale,' says Herriot, who works from a studio at the bottom of his garden.
He admits that generating a good likeness can be a maddening task that requires multiple attempts, particularly when working from photographs. 'I'm my own worst critic. If I'm not happy with it, it doesn't go out. It simply doesn't happen. When it came to Don Rogers, for instance, I cut that head off six times! It's kind of scary when you do that.
'You're looking at something for so long that, I don't know what happens, your proportions go out the window or something happens in your brain. Whatever it is, I've at least got the sense to come back in the next day and go: 'That is just outrageous!' In sculpture, to wrestle with something is a mistake. Just rip it up and start again.'
Andy Scott is best known for creating The Kelpies, two 30-metre-high horse heads made of stainless steel. Situated between Falkirk and Grangemouth, where the Forth and Clyde canal meets the river Carron, they tower over the surrounding landscape. After spending most of his life in Glasgow, Scott moved to the United States eight years ago.
Following a spell in Philadelphia, he's now in Los Angeles. A Rangers fan, he has produced sculptures of two of their greatest players – John Greig and Jim Baxter. The first statue was designed to mark the 30th anniversary of the Ibrox disaster, when 66 Rangers supporters were crushed to death in a stairwell following an Old Firm game in January 1971. Greig was captain that day. 'An artist called Senga Murray, who's done all the paintings and murals for Rangers in the Blue Room, got in touch and asked if I was interested in doing the job. Of course, I jumped at it,' recalls Scott.
'I worked very closely with a colleague, an old friend of mine, Alison Bell, who's a fantastic sculptor, because we had to turn it around very quickly. The last time I passed it in Glasgow it still had floral tributes at the bottom. It's obviously become a very important thing for fans of the club and especially for families who lost people in that disaster.'
Baxter played many games with Greig for club and country, and he had his own statue just a couple of years later. It was installed outside the Miners' Welfare Institute in his home town, Hill of Beath. The skilful midfielder, who taunted England by juggling the ball during the famous 3-2 win that Law scored in, is regarded as one of Scotland's most talented players. More than just his physical likeness, Scott tried to depict Baxter's personality and playing style.
'He was a larger-than-life character. In Glasgow, we have this word 'gallus'. It's a kind of cockiness or self-assurance. Jim Baxter had that in spades,' says Scott. 'I noticed that he didn't so much kick the ball as scoop it. I tried to get that too. He's got the ball on the outside of his leading foot. I tried to capture the fact that he was known as 'Slim Jim'. He held his elbows high and he had quite an ungainly running style.'
Representing movement is one of the greatest challenges of sculpting a footballer. Although much of the game's appeal lies in its fast-paced, dynamic action, trying to convey that in such a fixed medium can be difficult. Sometimes, little artistic flourishes can make all the difference, as Scott details with reference to his trio of Manchester City statues: Vincent Kompany, David Silva and Sergio Agüero. They were constructed using the same technique as The Kelpies.
'Rather than just welding the steel plates in a random arrangement, I had them lined up so that they would accentuate the direction – the flow – of the creases in the shirts. The way that you arrange the steel plates as you weld them together creates a kind of visual dynamic. I can't think of the right words, to be honest with you. I guess that's what makes it art,' laughs Scott.
'The way I make the steel, there's a perforation to it. The light can come through and that helps give it a shimmer. Visually, it comes alive a little bit in a way that a big static lump of steel wouldn't. I'm very pleased with how it came out. It seemed to capture the movement of the players quite well. A bit like football itself, it takes a lot of practice.'
Unlike the vast majority of football statues, which are made with clay and cast in bronze, Scott's use of steel makes his work for City very distinctive – silvery, bright and almost futuristic in appearance. He believes this bold look worked in his favour.
'I think that's what caught the eye of Man City. It's such an unusual technique and it has a certain modernity to it. A contemporary feel that they really appreciated. When you go to the Etihad, they have a lot of structural galvanised steel there, so it suits the ethos and the aesthetic of the stadium very well,' says Scott.
'It was very demanding. Steelwork is physically very different. If you make a mistake in clay, you can just change it with your thumb. With steel, you need to chop it off with oxyacetylene. You need to grind it all back, get in behind it, redo it and reweld it. It's a very laborious process, which, if I'm honest, I underestimated, but I just had to work hard. We got there in the end.'
Statues of Kompany and Silva were delivered to the same deadline. Both players had helped to transform City. They did so using different attributes, reflected in the way Scott chose to represent them. Kompany's pose shows him in a specific moment, after the final whistle blew on a vital 1-0 win over Leicester in his last home game for the club. The defender, renowned for his leadership skills and winning mentality, had scored the only goal to move City a step closer to retaining the Premier League title.
'He'd already decided he was leaving but he hadn't told anyone, so if you watch the game again, and you know that in the back of your mind, you can see that mixture of emotions as he's walking off,' says Scott. 'It was an incredible goal that he'd just scored. It was almost a poignant celebration. He had his head down and it was quite a contemplative pose. But with the arms outstretched it was almost messianic. It summed up that, for a while, he was Mr Manchester City.'
Silva's pose was more traditional as Scott sought to reflect the midfielder's graceful movement and vision. 'I've caught him, with the ball at his foot, about to scoop it away. The way he played the game – looking two moves ahead – he was something else. I think they really appreciated that pose. He's quite upright and looking over in the distance the way that he did.'
There was only one option when it came to Agüero – the shirt-twirling celebration after his injury-time winner against Queens Park Rangers to dramatically wrest the title away from Manchester United in 2012. But sculpture is about far more than just surface-level aesthetics. Statues need substance as much as style.
'We had to do some very clever thinking to make sure they would stand up, and be rigid enough to withstand any potential mishaps, yet make them look effortless. When you're doing public sculpture, you've always got to think, 'What if?' It didn't really cross my mind that anyone would want to vandalise them – football fans show a lot of respect for sculptures, even at opposing teams' stadiums – I was more concerned that someone might hang a scarf around them or climb on them in a moment of joy.'
With the statues of Silva and Agüero, both players only have one foot on the ground, which has to support a lot of weight above. 'We had to do some quite serious structural work with steel tubes concealed inside the ankles. The base plate is a marvel of engineering but that's all hidden underneath. Those two especially presented quite considerable technical challenges,' says Scott.
The biggest test of all is impossible to prepare for. Football incites strong emotions: supporters feel protective of their club and how they're perceived. As a result, any statue has to satisfy a demanding audience. On some occasions, even the subject themselves. If the slightest shortcoming is perceived, it's liable to be ruthlessly exploited by rival fans on social media.
'You're capturing someone's life – what they meant to that club, those fans and their families – with your own hands. It's an incredible gift to be given, but a big responsibility. It can mess with your head a little bit if you think about it too much,' says Scott.
'I understand the passion. I've been to a lot of games in my time. I totally get it. It puts a lot of pressure on you, and football fans can be a fickle bunch. For every 99 people who think your work's great, there'll be one who really hates it. There's nothing you can do; you're never going to please everyone.'
He admits that time is often the ultimate judge. 'Once these big public sculptures have been unveiled, a measure of their success is that they fall into the collective ownership of the public. They become part of the community, the building or the setting they inhabit. Oftentimes, people won't even think about who made it. If they're successful, it's as if they've always been there.'
This is an article from Nutmeg magazine
Follow Nutmeg on Facebook and Substack
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mourners to gather in Portugal for wake of Liverpool footballer Diogo Jota
Mourners to gather in Portugal for wake of Liverpool footballer Diogo Jota

The Independent

time16 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Mourners to gather in Portugal for wake of Liverpool footballer Diogo Jota

Mourners are set to gather to honour Liverpool footballer Diogo Jota at a wake in Portugal on Friday morning, a local parish priest has said. Jota and his younger brother, Andre Silva, died in a car accident in Zamora, Spain, in the early hours of Thursday morning. Less than two weeks ago Jota, who was 28, married his long-term partner Rute Cardoso. The couple have three children together. Jose Manuel Macedo, parish priest at the Igreja Matriz de Gondomar in Sao Cosme, told the PA news agency in a translated message that a wake for the brothers will take place at 8am at the nearby Capela da Ressurreicao before their funeral at the Igreja Matriz on Saturday at 10am. According to BBC Sport, Jota was returning for pre-season training next week via ferry after being advised not to fly following minor surgery. Liverpool's 'heartbroken' players have spoken of their pain in paying tribute to their team-mate. Reds captain Virgil van Dijk said on Instagram he was 'absolutely devastated and in total disbelief.' The Dutch defender wrote in a post alongside a picture of Jota with the Premier League trophy: 'What a human being, what a player, but most importantly what an unbelievable family man. 'You meant so much to all of us and you always will! For your family to lose two sons, a husband and a father is just unimaginable. So cruel and unfair. 'My heart is breaking for all of your beautiful family, for Rute and for your kids. I promise you that in these difficult times and beyond we will always be there for your family. 'A champion forever, number 20 forever. It's been a privilege to have stood by your side on the pitch, and to have been your friend off it. 'We will miss you beyond words and never forget you. Your legacy will live on, we will make sure of it! Rest in perfect peace Diogo & Andre.' Andy Robertson, one of the players with the longest association with Jota, also paid an emotional tribute. 'The ones I'm thinking about most right now are the family. Their loss is too much to bear. I'm so sorry that they have lost two such precious souls – Diogo and Andre,' he posted on Instagram. 'For the team and the club, we'll try to cope with this together… however long that takes. 'For me, I want to talk about my mate. My buddy. The bloke I loved and will miss like crazy. I could talk about him as a player for hours, but none of that feels like it matters right now. 'It's the man. The person. He was such a good guy. The best. So genuine. Just normal and real. 'Full of love for the people he cared about. Full of fun. He was the most British foreign player I've ever met. 'I can't believe we're saying goodbye. It's too soon, and it hurts so much. But thank you for being in my life, mate – and for making it better.' 'Heartbroken' former manager Jurgen Klopp, for whom his Christian faith has played a big part in his life, wrote on Instagram: 'This is a moment where I struggle! There must be a bigger purpose! But I can't see it!' Liverpool, who are supporting Jota's family, have opened a book of condolence, both physical in the Anfield Road Stand and online, lowered flags to half-mast and closed all stores and the museum and suspended all tours until Monday. UEFA announced a moment of silence would be observed at Women's Euro 2025 matches on Thursday and Friday, while the 'devastated' Portuguese Football Federation said: 'Diogo Jota was not only a fantastic player…but also an extraordinary person who was respected by all his team-mates and opponents. 'We have lost two champions. Their deaths represent irreparable losses for Portuguese football, and we will do everything we can to honour their legacy every day.' Fans left wreaths, scarves and shirts at a makeshift shrine outside Anfield, with Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner, attending a conference in Liverpool, among those to lay flowers in person. There were similar scenes outside Molineux. Local police, investigating the accident at 1230am on Thursday in the municipality of Cernadilla, Zamora, said: 'In the absence of a conclusion of the experts' evidence, everything points that a car left the road, due to a tyre blowout while overtaking.' Jota won 49 caps and scored 14 goals for Portugal, last month winning the Nations League for a second time. International team-mate Cristiano Ronaldo wrote on X: 'It doesn't make sense. Just now we were together in the National Team, just now you had gotten married. 'To your family, your wife, and your children, I send my condolences and wish them all the strength in the world. I know you will always be with them. Rest in Peace, Diogo and Andre. We will all miss you.' Jota scored 65 goals in 182 Liverpool appearances, nine coming last season as Arne Slot's side won the Premier League title, having previously lifted the FA Cup and Carabao Cup. He signed for Wolves, initially on loan, from Atletico Madrid in 2017 and helped win the Championship in his first season, ultimately scoring 44 goals in 131 appearances. Jota's career began at Portuguese side Pacos de Ferreira before moving to Atletico, where he did not play a game but was loaned out to Porto.

Beth Mead interview: We're now judged like England men's team – that is a good thing
Beth Mead interview: We're now judged like England men's team – that is a good thing

Telegraph

time17 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Beth Mead interview: We're now judged like England men's team – that is a good thing

Beth Mead has experienced the highest of highs as a footballer and the lowest of lows as a daughter who lost her mother just a few months later. It was three years ago that Mead won the European Championship with England, ending the tournament with the Golden Boot and the year as BBC Sports Personality of the Year. Her life changed forever. She became a household name, a celebrity. And at the same time, she was left without her mum, June, to help steer her through it. 'Our lives changed almost overnight,' Mead tells Telegraph Sport. 'It was a big change at rapid speed. I went into the tournament as a footballer and came out of it as someone who was famous. That wasn't what I was expecting. 'Women's football in this country changed forever after that tournament. At Arsenal, our attendances flew through the roof. There was more television coverage and the game changed for the better. 'In terms of the celebrity side, it was a little weird at first. On a personal level, it was a big change, but whenever someone came up to me, in the back of my mind, I knew this was good for women's football. I'm an extrovert, it comes more easily to me to speak to people, but some found it a little harder to adapt.' There were challenges ahead for Mead, though. An anterior cruciate ligament injury in late 2022 ruled her out of the following year's World Cup and then she had to navigate her way through the trauma of losing a parent, without the release of playing the sport she loved. 'I think I went from the highest high in my life to the lowest of lows in the space of six months,' she says. 'I found out quite quickly after the Euros that my mum's cancer was terminal. I was trying to manoeuvre being this person who had achieved something they had always dreamed of, to being a daughter who was going to lose her mum. 'I was trying to come to terms with a new life with the dread of knowing that my mum was not going to be by my side. We were incredibly close, that was a tough path to figure out. 'To then do my ACL alongside that, it was a really horrible time, but it has helped mould me into the person I am today. I am a very lucky person because of the people I have around me. The people who really love me. You find out who those people are in dark moments like that. 'I have a great family and a family away from family, the Arsenal girls. They showed up for me at the hardest time of my life. Those moments when I thought I can't do this, they were by my side to help show me I could.' It has given the 30-year-old a unique perspective on not just football, but life. Back in the England squad as they prepare to defend their European crown in Switzerland, Mead has been through so much. She has forged strength in the face of adversity; a sense that whatever is thrown at her, she will overcome. These are qualities England need more than ever. The Lionesses have reached at least the semi-finals of every major tournament since 2015, but their form recently has been patchy. There has been criticism of their performances and players have departed. The sudden retirement of Mary Earps on the eve of the Euros was closely followed by that of Fran Kirby, another key figure in their success. When England's captain in Australia, Millie Bright, announced she was making herself unavailable for selection for the Euros to prioritise her 'mental and physical wellbeing' there was a sense of crisis engulfing the camp. Bright, like Earps, is understood to have been told she was no longer a guaranteed starter by manager Sarina Wiegman. Where once there had been only praise and good wishes, there were now barbed questions and scrutiny of the motives behind those decisions. Expectations are incredibly high too. You might argue the Lionesses have become victims of their own success but, interestingly, Mead does not entertain the idea they are victims of anything. Her message is a blunt one: this is what women's football wanted – deal with it. 'We are being judged how the England men's team always has been,' said Mead, with the sort of straight-talking approach that betrays her Yorkshire roots. 'One hundred per cent that is a good thing for me. That is how big women's football has become. It doesn't make it easier for some people and yes, it can be difficult, but top and bottom, we have to deal with it and cope with it. If there is criticism in the media, if there is outside noise, it should give us an extra point to prove.' Reflecting on England's inconsistency since winning the Euros in 2022 and reaching the World Cup final a year later, Mead expands on her point. 'It has been up and down [since the World Cup],' she says. 'We've had some good performances and some not good ones. I guess we have been in a transition period. 'There was a lot of familiarity in the group and that changed through retirements. We've had more change on the eve of the tournament, but that is done. We have to pull together, make it right and deliver. I always back us going into tournaments that we will get it right. 'There might be a perception that we are not the same force we were. But that was around the team when we went to the World Cup and the team got to the final. 'We know what comes as part and parcel of playing for England now. The expectations are huge and there is pressure, there is noise, but we are going out there to win the thing. 'I don't shy away from that expectation and pressure, we have to embrace it and as one of the senior players that is what I've been drilling into people. We're playing for England, this is what comes with it. 'There is going to be criticism attached to that. Throughout my career, I've always been criticised as well as praised. It's not something that worries me or bothers me. 'I understand that for some people it's not easy to have to deal with that and it can hurt. It's not our favourite part of playing the game, but we wanted the game to grow, we wanted the attention and with that expectation comes pressure. If you don't live up to it, there will be criticism. It should just give us an extra fire inside to prove people wrong. 'There is nothing better than shutting people up by performing on the pitch. That is the challenge we take on and it is one we are relishing. I think we should use it as motivation, not shy away from it. People can say what they want, we win games and it all goes away. Suddenly the story is different, isn't it?' Mead is diplomatic when asked about the loss of three senior players, insisting she respects their decision, but echoed the words of Wiegman when she said the squad had already moved on. 'They are big characters we are going to miss,' she says. 'They are players I've played with for a long time at international level. It will be a little bit weird not having them there, but at the same time, everyone has their own journey. These girls made their decisions for whatever reason and you have to respect that. 'We have to push on with the players we have here now. National teams evolve, there are always going to be changes. The last Euros was three years ago, you've got to make the best out of the situation, not worry about players who aren't going to be there.' There will always be one person Mead will miss; someone she will always struggle to cope without. 'I still think about my mum every single day,' she adds. 'Something will happen… a song on the radio, I'll hear her voice when someone says something. There are days when I think about her more than others, but there is always something. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Beth Mead MBE (@bethmead_) 'When I got the call from Sarina to say I had been called up to the England squad, she said to me I'm super happy for you to be in the squad, the first without your mum and that makes it very very different. 'For her to still understand and recognise that for me, it was very special. She lost her sister just before the Euros and we have that connection. We have lost someone we love and everything that comes with that. It never leaves you, but you have to get on with life.' It is an approach England will do well to follow this summer. 'I want to inspire kids when we play in Euros this summer' How do famous names spend their precious downtime? In our weekly My Saturday column, celebrities reveal their weekend virtues and vices. This week: Beth Mead 8am What time the day starts depends on what time kick-off is. I would love a lie-in, but my dog Myle really doesn't. She's a little cocker spaniel, brown with a white chest and ginger paws. I'm biased but she's gorgeous and I love her to bits. She's like me – full of energy, and a big personality, a big alpha woman 9am I've been away from my partner Vivianne [Miedema, who plays for Manchester City] since she left Arsenal, so it's nice to have quality time whenever we can. When it's not a match day, we'll go for a walk and have brunch and a coffee. I live by the countryside near St Albans so Myle is free to roam wherever she likes, as long as she behaves. 10am I live very close to the Arsenal training ground, so I drive over and get my breakfast at the club. I'm a creature of habit and eat what I eat to be able to feel good on the pitch, so it'll be avocado on toast with scrambled eggs or anything else to do with eggs, I'm a big egg fan. 11am We get on the bus to travel to the club. I play Monopoly Deal with Caitlin Foord, Katie McCabe and Alessia Russo. Katie has got 10 wins more than most of us, so we're not happy about that. We use a few rude words sometimes. 12pm Head into the stadium where I'll always go straight to see the physio. I'm actually very chilled before a match – when I'm on the physio bench, I play Candy Crush on my phone so that I don't think about the game too much, I just switch my brain off. 2pm When I go out for the warm-up, I'm in full focus mode. I'm getting old now so I've got to do that little bit of extra work, prepare correctly, and then get out there and play a good game of football. 5pm A lot of the girls find it really hard to switch off after a match, but it's one of my superpowers – I think some of them are very envious. But, win or lose, I'll always look at myself in the mirror, check my own performance, and look at what went right and what went wrong, and what could be done better. I'll then go over it the next day with coaches, looking at clips of the match. I'm my own worst enemy, definitely my harshest critic. 7pm It's nice to switch off and cook for myself. I'm very good at risotto and can make a nice lasagne or fajitas. I don't go out often but, if I do, it's for good food, good people and good chat. It depends where I am as to how much I get recognised. If one person talks to you, you're in trouble, other times, I pass by unnoticed. I meet a lot of young fans at McDonald's Fun Football sessions, where boys and girls have a safe environment to play for free. I never got the chance to do something like this as a kid and it would have made my footballing journey a lot easier. It's nice to meet them and give them a core memory – it depends who they support though, maybe not if they're the Chelsea fans! But I hope we can inspire every single one of them while we're out in Switzerland representing the nation. 9pm I've seen Game of Thrones right the way through before and gone back to the beginning. I'm watching it with Steph Catley, my close friend [and Arsenal team-mate], so it's fantastic seeing her reaction when a character dies. We've also been watching Married At First Sight: Australia – that is a very entertaining show. 10.30pm Chill in the bath. Then it's the same bedtime every night, I'm serious about my routine. My head hits the pillow and I'm out. My dad is like that so it's something he passed on to me, which I very much don't take for granted. ​​Beth Mead kicked off the first McDonald's all-girls Fun Football day, with up to 300,000 hours of free coaching sessions across the UK this summer.

Lewis Hamilton returns to Silverstone in last chance saloon for first Ferrari year
Lewis Hamilton returns to Silverstone in last chance saloon for first Ferrari year

The Independent

time29 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Lewis Hamilton returns to Silverstone in last chance saloon for first Ferrari year

If you'd told Lewis Hamilton four months ago, amid the hoopla of Formula One's biggest-ever driver move, that he would be 'hoping and praying' for a strong result at his beloved Silverstone, he'd likely have laughed you out of the room. Either that or he'd have rolled his eyes. Take your pick. After all, this was the seven-time F1 world champion moving to the fabled Ferrari. A driver in need of rejuvenation after three years of frustration at Mercedes was joining a team seemingly on the up, having come within a whisker of last year's constructors' title. Everything seemed perfectly aligned. With the whole world watching, what could possibly go wrong? Well, come race 12 and the halfway stage of the 2025 season, the answer is unavoidable: pretty much everything. It has been an eye-opening, gut-wrenching opening salvo for the 40-year-old in red. From amateurish radio communications and irritation in the rain of Australia in round one to an overwhelming lack of car performance throughout, Hamilton has endured his worst-ever start to an F1 season. Even for the biggest of pessimists, this was not in the forecast. Eleven races, zero podiums. Sixth in the world championship, closer to the bottom of the standings than the top. Never mind winning, Hamilton is now on the longest podium-less streak of his career, at 13, stretching back to Las Vegas last November. As ever, it makes this weekend's British Grand Prix a significant marker in his season. A venue he has won at nine times, and been on the podium for 11 consecutive years, represents Hamilton's best chance to smell the Moet & Chandon champagne once more. Of course, his fond memories here come as recently as last year, when he broke a 31-month winless streak with a memorable and brilliant victory. If it's going to happen anywhere for Hamilton in 2025, it's going to be this weekend. 'There is always magic here at Silverstone,' he said, with an optimistic outlook, at media day on Thursday. 'It is a very, very special race and I am hoping all sorts of things can help us. I am hoping and praying. 'I cannot wait for Friday. Driving a Ferrari at Silverstone for the first time will be special and unique in its own way. We have the best fans here, and for a British driver, they really do make a difference. 'I have shown that to you time and time again. I hope this weekend they really make the difference for us.' LEWIS HAMILTON'S FIRST 11 RACES Hamilton is accurate to some extent: his best displays do come in front of the British fans, of which we can anticipate a modicum more to come decked in scarlet over the next three days. In fact, amid a full schedule which for the first time includes British F4 alongside F3, F2 and F1, Silverstone organisers are hoping to have a record 500,000 people attend. Lando Norris even has his own 10,000-capacity 'Landostand' at Stowe corner, beating Hamilton and George Russell in the British popularity rankings. Yet relying on the fans in the grandstands is not the customary route to results in Formula 1; a sport where the drivers genuinely struggle to hear the noise generated by the supporters, given the scorching sound of the V6 hybrid engine. The biggest nadir so far, unquestionably, was a contrasting second round in China. All looked rosy when Hamilton took pole for the shortened sprint race and, without a serious challenge, cruised to victory. Yet 24 hours later, both Hamilton and teammate Charles Leclerc 's cars had been disqualified. For team principal Fred Vasseur, it was an embarrassing state of affairs. LEWIS HAMILTON'S RUN OF PODIUMS AT SILVERSTONE In the weeks since, we've had issues uncovered and not eradicated. We've had anger on the radio towards race engineer Riccardo Adami. We've even had boredom: Hamilton has regularly been running on his own in races, too quick for the midfield pack but too slow to compete at the top. 'Where is Lewis?' says the hypothetical fan switching on Sky Sports F1 mid-race. 'No man's land,' is often the riposte. But this weekend, there is hope. Ferrari unveiled a much-needed upgrade to the floor of their car at the last race in Austria and were the second-quickest team. A further development of the rear suspension is expected this weekend. It feels like something of a last-chance saloon for the Scuderia, as teams up and down the grid begin to turn their full attention to new regulations next year. Yet more so than car modifications, as so often is the case in Northamptonshire, rain is in the air on Sunday. 'We are not as quick as McLaren,' Hamilton said. 'If it stays dry, they will walk the race.' But if it rains, nobody masters a wet-dry conflux like Hamilton around these parts. A win may still be out of the question – though championship frontrunners Norris and Oscar Piastri have already shown that mistakes and collisions are possible – but a podium feels obtainable. Yet for Hamilton, historical statistics are not what he's here for; he simply wants to see progress. A lot of progress. 'I don't look at those (podium) statistics, so it is not something that affects me or I think about,' Hamilton said. 'But we are here at Silverstone. What better place to change that run.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store