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‘He lit up a room': Trent Alexander-Arnold pays tribute to Diogo Jota

‘He lit up a room': Trent Alexander-Arnold pays tribute to Diogo Jota

The Guardiana day ago
Trent Alexander-Arnold has described his former Liverpool teammate Diogo Jota as 'someone who lit up a room'. The Liverpool forward died along with his brother, André Silva, in a car accident in Spain on Thursday.
Alexander-Arnold is at the Club World Cup in the United States with Real Madrid having left Anfield at the end of their title-winning 2024-25 season. He spoke to Dazn after Madrid's quarter-final victory over Borussia Dortmund in New Jersey.
'Some things are bigger than the game,' the right-back said. 'It has been difficult but it's been very emotional, very heartwarming to see the footballing world uniting and come together to show their love and support to him and his family, and obviously his brother as well.
'So although it's been difficult, it's also been a nice showing out from everyone, all clubs, all people, uniting and showing love and support for what must be a mind-blowingly hard time for the family.
'I've been … around him and his brother, his family, his amazing wife, his parents, his amazing three children. It's truly, truly heartbreaking to wake up to news like that. It's something that you would never, ever expect.
'He was a very close friend, someone who lit up a room when he was in it. I shared the dressing room for five years [and have] amazing memories on and off the pitch with him. It goes without saying he will never be forgotten by anyone. He will live long in all our memories for the amazing man and player he was.'
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Joao Pedro needs to make an impression at Chelsea
Joao Pedro needs to make an impression at Chelsea

Telegraph

time23 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Joao Pedro needs to make an impression at Chelsea

Joao Pedro is not quite the full No 9 that Chelsea have bet the house on in times past. But the Brazilian is the latest signing to try to establish himself at a club where just about everyone is expendable, in a position that has been the hardest to fill. He may even start in Tuesday evening's Club World Cup semi-final having been summoned from holiday for a medical and then propelled into the quarter-final as a substitute. His performance against Palmeiras in the last 30 minutes was impressive, albeit against tired legs in the Philadelphia heat. In even more gruelling conditions, mid-afternoon in sweltering New Jersey, he will likely be called on to do the same. This time it is Fluminense, the club at which Joao Pedro spent his childhood before Watford signed him shortly after his 18th birthday. The Brazilian media at the MetLife Stadium ahead of the game far outnumbered the British or any other. This is the big one as far as they are concerned. Joao Pedro – or Nicolas Jackson – will be up against a Brazilian great, albeit on 40-year-old legs. Thiago Silva, formerly of Chelsea, turned professional before Joao Pedro turned one. Pedro, 23, looked like a man in form last week, and with Liam Delap suspended, it is the Brazilian or Jackson who will take the striker's role. A £50 million signing from Brighton and Hove Albion, he has already played a lot of football for one so young – more than 200 senior games. He ended his Brighton career outside the squad having had a training ground clash, circumstances unspecified, with team-mate Jan Paul van Hecke. 'I think the people who know me, know my character, but when two players want to win, these things happen and this is normal,' said Joao Pedro, speaking on Monday for the first time about the incident. 'It was just two players in the moment, we both wanted to win.' He reminded all concerned that he was the top goalscorer in the Europa League group stage last season. Of interest to Arsenal, he has had to bide his time, having spent three years at Watford in the Championship and Premier League. Enzo Maresca said that while he viewed Jackson as a conventional No 9, the Chelsea manager saw Joao Pedro differently. 'Joao can play in all the attacking positions for us,' Maresca said. 'He can play wide, he can play side to pitch [wide], he can play as a No 9.' At modern Chelsea, not much time is afforded before judgment is reached and players are traded. While Delap has the greater pressure in this regard, there are none who have been able to replicate the impact of Didier Drogba or, to a lesser extent, and later, Diego Costa. Some big names have come and gone – Andriy Shevchenko, Fernando Torres, Alvaro Morata, Romelu Lukaku – with the role having proved just too big for them. 'Joao, Liam, Nico, the ones that we have at the moment, they know exactly about No 9 at Chelsea,' Maresca said. 'But I said already many times… I prefer to have four or five players scoring 10-12 goals each, than just one striker scoring 40 goals. So, you can see last year, what we have done with Noni [Madueke], what we have done with Enzo Fernandez. And next season we expect more goals from all our attacking players. But for sure the ones that are playing as a No 9 with us, they know exactly Chelsea's style.' Madueke's situation will be instructive to Joao Pedro, Delap and their fellow summer signing Jamie Gittens. Madueke, signed in January 2023, and now an England international, is designated tradeable – with Arsenal and Newcastle United weighing up a possible transfer. Maresca said that Madueke was still in his plans for the next few days, should they reach Sunday's final, but with a caveat. 'I don't have any doubt that if we need Noni he is going to help us,' he said. 'At the same moment I can understand that as a human being when there are many noises around you it's not easy. But hopefully he can deal with that.' Romeo Lavia is still not fit. Levi Colwill is also suspended. But even so Chelsea are strong favourites to make the final against Real Madrid or Paris St-Germain. In the MetLife stadium on Monday the famous boxing announcer Michael Buffer was warming up, another Fifa signing that it hopes will give it cut-through in the US. 'We are ugly ducklings in financial terms,' said the Fluminense manager Renato Gaucho, 'Fluminense earns 10 per cent of the revenue of these [European] clubs. They are in the position to buy all these major players.' One of the latest for Chelsea is a Fluminense old boy himself. Joao Pedro certainly began his Chelsea career on Friday as a man in a hurry to make an impression and recent history should tell him that he needs to do so sooner rather than later.

Chelsea are favourites for final but they face a familiar foe in Thiago Silva
Chelsea are favourites for final but they face a familiar foe in Thiago Silva

The Guardian

time25 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Chelsea are favourites for final but they face a familiar foe in Thiago Silva

And then there was one. Nobody expected a Brazilian club to reach the Club World Cup semi-finals, and if any team was going to make a deep run in the tournament, it was not Fluminense. After winning the Copa Libertadores in 2023, they narrowly avoided relegation last year and have gone through four managers in less than two years. Thankfully for them, they are now coached by the charismatic Renato Gaúcho, who told us earlier in the tournament: 'It's no use having a team of 500 million reais, because football is decided on the field.' Throughout the tournament he has encouraged Brazilians to take pride in what their teams have achieved, despite being written off due to the wealth of the European sides. He has also told Fluminense fans to be loud and proud as they celebrate going further in the tournament than their Rio rivals Flamengo and Botafogo, and São Paulo giants Palmeiras. 'I ask the fans to wear the Fluminense shirt all over Brazil. Going to the beach, walking the dog, heading to the mall. Wherever you go, I ask Fluminense fans to wear the club's shirt. Everyone should be very proud of what this group is doing here,' he said after their 2-1 win against Al-Hilal in the quarter-finals. Renato, a Brazilian football legend who enjoyed something akin to rockstar celebrity status in the 1980s and 1990s, has not always been respected as a manager given his notorious love of the night. Globoesporte journalist Carlos Eduardo Mansur explains that his reputation during his playing days left many people 'doubting if he could be a manager with authority because he had fame as someone who liked the good life'. Despite tasting some success by taking Fluminense to the Copa Libertadores final in 2008, he looked as though he might end up being what is known in Brazil as a 'manager of the market' – one who continually changes clubs and rides the country's never-ending managerial merry-go-round 'because no one thought he actually took his profession seriously and would study football'. When Brazil were dismantled 7-1 by Germany at the World Cup in 2014, the Brazilian football association set up courses for its coaches. Renato mocked the idea of studying, preferring to play foot-volley and indulging in his love of hot sand and cold beer on the beach. 'Those who need to learn have to study; those who don't can take a holiday on the beach no problem,' he quipped. His nonchalance did not do much for his reputation. 'There was a desire in Brazil for better training for coaches, especially in the crisis that arose after the World Cup,' says Mansur. Though Renato won the Copa Libertadores with Grêmio in 2017, he bounced from one job to the next without winning many trophies. Somewhere along the line, though, he seems to have changed. 'Those who live alongside Renato today say he watches football compulsively, very dedicatedly – that he is super interested,' says Mansur. His dedication has even annoyed his family. He's said to have angered his daughter by turning down a dinner invitation in Miami after Fluminense drew with Mamelodi Sundowns and booked their place in the knockout stages. Renato gave his players free time to spend with their families, but he opted to stay in and analyse possible last-16 opponents instead. 'They think I don't study, but what I understand most is tactics,' he said after his team's landmark win against Inter in the last 16. Renato's teams have always enjoyed the attacking side of the game but the surprise at this tournament is just how well they have coped defensively. 'He was never one to lock many players into a system,' says Mansur. 'He gave a lot of freedom to the forwards, to the most technical and skilful players. The Grêmio team that won the Libertadores had a lot in this aspect, but defensively it lacked a bit of structure. In this tournament, though, Fluminense are adapting against strong opponents and have been defensively very solid. From a tactical point of view, this is the most surprising aspect of the campaign.' Two players are key to this improvement: their 44-year-old goalkeeper Fabio and 40-year-old defender Thiago Silva, who have limited their opponents to just four goals in five games at the tournament. Silva has shown his leadership abilities throughout. The centre-back took charge during a cooling break against Inter, giving tactical instructions and adapting the team's formation, helping them to win the game 2-0. Renato's critics say he showed a lack of authority and ideas by allowing a player to take over, but others have praised him for demonstrating his man-management skills – as a former player himself, he understands when to let his leaders talk. Renato can be compared to Brazil boss Carlo Ancelotti for this approach. 'He has a reputation of being a great locker-room leader, a players' manager,' says Mansur. 'He will go to a press conference and criticise his players, saying they lacked attention and commitment, yet there has never been any news of him losing control of the locker room. This is a very interesting trait of his career; he has a lot of leadership.' Letting Silva talk was definitely the smart move. The defender displayed impressive, seasoned knowledge of the game, which led to Fluminense's second goal. Silva has also gone viral for an emotional, rousing team talk he delivered before the game against Inter. He tells the story of his stepfather dying while he was in France playing for PSG. He now has to live with the regret of not visiting him in hospital – and he does not want his teammates to look back at their opportunity in front of them with regrets of their own. 'I didn't go to see him in hospital because I thought he was going to come out,' Thiago tells his teammates almost in tears. 'Don't hold back out there. Do it now. Do what we can do, right now. Don't put it off, because there's no time. Enjoy the moment. Joyfully but responsibly.' Having won trophies in Italy, France and England, Silva is among the best centre-backs of ​h​is generation. He will be 41 in September but Brazilians are coming around to the idea that he could be at heart of their defence under Ancelotti. 'He's been a huge leader for Fluminense. Ignácio and Freytes, who play alongside him in a back three, have improved their performances tremendously. Fluminense had much better defensive numbers in the Brazilian league after he returned to Brazil. 'He has shown a lot of leadership, but there have been some physical issues and injuries and that would be a concern in a tournament as demanding as the World Cup, with possibly seven games in a month if the team goes all the way. But the debate is back on in Brazil. He is performing at a very high level; he is a great leader; he is technically very good; and he imposes himself in duels against high-level attackers who are much younger than him. Renato is leading the campaign for Silva's return to the national team. 'I never tire of seeing Thiago Silva play,' says his manager. 'He is a leader and coach on the field. It is beautiful to see him play, to see him lead the team inside the four lines. It's a pleasure to work with him. He's helped us a lot because of his leadership and, in my humble opinion, he's still a Brazilian national team player.' The semi-final against Chelsea will be special for Silva. He enjoyed four successful seasons at Stamford Bridge, especially considering his advanced years in such a demanding league, and he won the Champions League – a trophy that had eluded him many times at PSG. He also won the Club World Cup, beating Palmeiras in the final in 2021, although winning the expanded tournament with Fluminense – the club where he started his youth career at the age of 14 – would be an achievement on a different level. 'One more! There are two left. It's not over,' he told Renato as they hugged on the pitch after seeing off Al-Hilal. Once more – as was the case against Dortmund, Inter and perhaps even Al-Hilal, Manchester City's conquerors – Fluminense go into their next game as underdogs. 'If you look at it on paper, Chelsea have invested more money and have more individual stars. But Fluminense have things that can take them through,' says Mansur. 'They have a great goalkeeper in great form; they've found a way to defend and make the team solid when under pressure; and they have Jhon Arias up front who is one of the candidates for best player of the tournament. Sometimes, in knockout tournaments, that's enough, so there's no doubt that Fluminense can continue, but I don't think they're the favourites.' This is an article by Tom Sanderson

No anthems or special balls - but Champions League starts now
No anthems or special balls - but Champions League starts now

BBC News

time41 minutes ago

  • BBC News

No anthems or special balls - but Champions League starts now

In some ways the purest form of the Champions League starts this is only 38 days since Paris St-Germain demolished Inter Milan at the Allianz Arena in front of the eyes of the world - but the vibe is very different as the new campaign kicks first qualifying round begins on Tuesday at 16:00 BST in Kuopio, Finland, with 28 teams - all of them champions of their country - in action this may be no Champions League anthem before games and clubs just use their own balls but it is the Champions League still - including Virtus, from San Marino, who are eight games away from the league Liechtenstein, who do not have a league, and Russia, who remain banned because of the war with Ukraine, do not get at least one Champions League is a long road to the 2026 final in Budapest in 326 days' time, although it is likely every club kicking off this week will be footnotes by Sport has a look at some of the stories, teams and ties involved this week. Could someone go all the way? Only 10 teams managed to go all the way through from the first round of Champions League qualifying to the group or league phase - including Slovan Bratislava last got past Struga, Celje, Apoel and Midtjylland... before losing all eight league games. But just getting there meant they earned more than £15m. And their 16 matches played were only one fewer than champions a team went all the way through to the final they could end up playing 25 Champions League games (a path that requires them featuring in the the knockout phase play-offs).Only one team have reached the knockout stages after starting in the very first round - Liverpool in Reds were Champions League winners in 2005, but finished fifth in the Premier League - and back then the holders did not automatically qualify. Uefa gave them special dispensation, but they had to start in the first round of got through three rounds of qualifying (as it was back then) - beating TNS, FBK Kaunas and CSKA Sofia - and won their group before a last-16 exit. The 552nd best team Virtus, champions of San Marino, are the lowest-ranked team in the draw by some distance. All of their players and staff have other 10-year club coefficients ranks them 552nd (out of 554 teams), a list that only includes teams who have played in Europe over that period of season was their debut in Europe, as they lost 11-1 to Romanian side FCSB in this round.A second consecutive league title has them competing again - this time against Bosnian champions Zrinjski the club accept they have very little chance of advancing and see it as a privilege to be involved. For one thing no Sammarinese team have ever won a Champions League they are confident of competing well in the Conference League third qualifying round, which the losers of this game will drop president Pier Domenico Giulianelli said: "This is our second time in the Champions League, and we're sure that the experience last year will be useful. "We know these will be two very tough matches, but I'm confident the boys will give their all on the pitch."The club are expecting about 1,000 fans at the San Marino Stadium in Serravalle, with about three-quarters of them coming from Bosnia. They usually get 50-100 people at their home only San Marino international is Alessandro Golinucci, who captained the country to their famous win over Liechtenstein last September which ended a 20-year run without a victory. The new boys The only Champions League debutants in the first round of qualifying are Armenian side FC season they went through every round of Conference League qualifying before reaching the league phase, where they lost one game 8-0 at Yerevan side, who were only formed eight years ago and named after the religious figure Noah, are a team trying to get places quickly under owner Vardges signed 16 players last summer and a new manager in Rui Mota. They went on to win the league and cup Mota left for Ludogorets (more on them in a bit) this summer, with 41-year-old Croatian Sandro Perkovic taking his place. Club development director Anna Ohanyan told BBC Sport: "Taking part in the Champions League qualifiers is a historic moment for FC Noah. "Just two seasons after the new management stepped in, we managed to qualify for the league phase of a European competition, became champions of Armenia, won the Armenian Cup - and now here we are in the first qualifying round of the Champions League. This is only the beginning."We fought hard to win the Armenian championship because we have bigger ambitions for ourselves and for Armenian football. This qualification gives us a chance to show that ambition to the whole of Europe."They play Montenegrin side Buducnost side Pafos FC, who enter at the second-round stage - where they play Maccabi Tel Aviv - are also in the competition for the first time. The regulars Bulgarian champions Ludogorets are in the first round of qualifying for the eighth consecutive six years before that they entered in the second qualifying round - under an old system where the first round only involved a handful of their 14 consecutive league titles have meant 14 years of Champions League qualifying. Twice they reached the groups: in 2014-15, where they earned a 2-2 draw with Liverpool, and 2009 they were an amateur third-tier team, who had never been in the top following year pharmaceutical multi-millionaire Kiril Domuschiev took them over, they won immediate promotion and have won the title in each and every top-flight season they have ever played year they take on Belarusian side Dinamo Minsk. The derbies There are two derbies between teams from neighbouring countries in the first qualifying side Shelbourne and Belfast club Linfield meet in a rematch of the 2005 Setanta Sports Cup, the old competition between the champions of the Republic of Ireland and Northern was also the last year Shels were in the Champions League until now - with a young Wes Hoolahan in the go into the game with a new manager in former West Ham defender Joey O'Brien after the surprise resignation of Damien as 57-time champions of Northern Ireland, are regulars at this stage. They are also managed by an ex-Premier League player, with former Leeds, Preston and Sunderland striker David Healy at the respective grounds are less than a two-hour drive apart - which for Shelbourne is a shorter journey than some league games. However, they have to stay in Belfast the night before the game because of pre-match media legs of that tie will be live on the BBC Sport website and other derby is between Levadia Tallinn of Estonia and Latvian side RFS (which once stood for Riga Football School but is now their name).They could meet again later this year if the irregularly held Livonian Cup - between the champions of Estonia and Latvia is played again. Paulius Jakelis, head of marketing and communications at RFS, told BBC Sport: "From a travel perspective, it's ideal - just a four-hour bus ride and we're there. "It means minimal travel costs, simpler planning and logistics, and much easier access for our fans." How about the British teams? Perennial Welsh champions TNS, who play their home games in England, play Shkendija of North Macedonia. Neutrals will hope it is half as dramatic as when they met at this stage in 2018 with Shkendija winning 5-4 on aggregate. The Macedonians won 5-0 at home, with TNS falling just short in the second leg in Oswestry's Park Hall with a 4-0 Red Imps, champions of British Overseas Territory Gibraltar - the second lowest-ranked league - face Faroese side their squad is 43-year-old Lee Casciaro, who has been with the club since 1998, and scored against Celtic in a shock first-leg win in of Glasgow teams, Rangers enter the Champions League at the second qualifying round against Panathinaikos. Celtic start off at the play-off six representatives - Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City, Newcastle and Tottenham - go straight into the league phase. What next for the losers? The teams who lose this round are not out of Europe entirely - dropping into the Conference League would go into the second round of the Conference League but a random draw picked two ties whose losers would go into the third round. San Marino club Virtus and Gibraltar's Lincoln Red Imps are involved in those two games - meaning they would be only two rounds away from the Conference League group who lose in the second round of Champions League qualifying would go into the third qualifying round of the Europa League by the way, and not the Conference League. Starting in the league phase, watch highlights of every Champions League game from 22:00 BST on Wednesday on BBC iPlayer and the BBC Sport website and will also be a Champions League Match of the Day on BBC One on Wednesday nights. Watch highlights of every Champions League game from 22:00 on Wednesday on BBC iPlayer and the BBC Sport website and will also be a Champions League Match of the Day on BBC One on Wednesday, from 22:40 to 00:00.

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