Steven Reid: ‘Roy Hodgson is an Inspiration – Working with Him Fits Perfectly’

 At 37 Steven Reid is closer in age to the players than the manager and acts as a go-between, but says he is no pushover: ‘there comes a point where you have to be firm’. Photograph: Graeme Robertson for the Guardian
At 37 Steven Reid is closer in age to the players than the manager and acts as a go-between, but says he is no pushover: ‘there comes a point where you have to be firm’. Photograph: Graeme Robertson for the Guardian
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Steven Reid: ‘Roy Hodgson is an Inspiration – Working with Him Fits Perfectly’

 At 37 Steven Reid is closer in age to the players than the manager and acts as a go-between, but says he is no pushover: ‘there comes a point where you have to be firm’. Photograph: Graeme Robertson for the Guardian
At 37 Steven Reid is closer in age to the players than the manager and acts as a go-between, but says he is no pushover: ‘there comes a point where you have to be firm’. Photograph: Graeme Robertson for the Guardian

Steven Reid winces. “We had a staff game yesterday so I’m feeling the effects a little bit. I’ve probably played twice in the last six months when we’ve been short of players. Actually the gaffer has been quite complimentary – playing that game yesterday I was thinking: ‘Tell you what …’ But you wake up the next morning and you know that’s just wishful thinking.”

A little more than 18 months after calling time on a career during which he underwent no fewer than 10 operations and racked up a more than a decade’s service in the Premier League as well as a World Cup finals appearance for Republic of Ireland, the former Millwall, Blackburn, West Brom and Burnley player has settled into the next phase of his career. Whereas most players hang up their boots without a plan about what to do next, it is no accident that Reid finds himself learning his new trade as Crystal Palace’s first-team coach under the tutelage of the former England manager Roy Hodgson.

“The original plan was to join the coaching staff under Steve Clarke at West Brom but I went on to have another season at Burnley,” Reid says. “It wasn’t a career that had great moments all the way through – for about five years I was probably about 50% to 60% of what I was when I had that season at Blackburn under Mark Hughes when we finished sixth. Most family photos I look through now I’ve got an ice pack on my knee. When I suffered my cruciate injury, that was the moment that my career almost took another path. I knew I needed to make a plan and that’s when my coaching journey began.”

The chronic pain caused by his injuries meant the all-action midfielder who had burst through Millwall’s youth setup under Billy Bonds was forced to adapt to a new position in defence in his latter years. But it was his conversations with Hodgson and then Clarke while at West Brom that convinced Reid to pursue a new goal. “In the last two or three years you almost become a coach on the pitch anyway as a senior player. Roy was an inspiration. It was a great time to be there. We have always had a very professional relationship.”

When Hodgson called six weeks after Reid decided to leave his first coaching post, at Reading last summer, he had no hesitation in accepting. “Roy wanted a young coach alongside him and it all just seems to fit perfectly. We have chats about all sorts of things. A lot of what he says goes over my head because he’s reading books and watching films that I’ve never heard of. We had a discussion last week about the languages he can speak – he learned French at school and then picked up Swedish early on in his career. A bit of German, Italian … and he makes it sound so easy: ‘Three or four months and I’ve got it.’

“We have a good bit of banter because of my age and the gaffer’s age. We can give each other a bit of stick. Often the perception with people who have not worked with him is massively different to the man that he is: still the most enthusiastic person that I’ve met in the game.”
That enthusiasm has certainly rubbed off on his apprentice. At 37 Reid is much closer in age to the majority of Palace’s players and often acts as a conduit between them and the manager, although he insists he is no pushover. “There comes a point where you have to be firm with the players and tell the truth,” he says. “At the moment there’s no time frame for the future – I know I’m lucky enough to be in this position now. If you look too far ahead you can come unstuck. You’re talking about 92 league clubs, so that means 92 assistants and probably half that for first-team coaches. It’s a difficult position to get into but I like to pride myself on doing things right, like I did when I was a player.”

With Chris Hughton the only manager in the Premier League from a black, Asian or minority ethnic background, does Reid believe the adoption of the Rooney Rule by the Football Association and Football League is necessary? “Obviously there is a problem when you look at the number of black players compared to the number in coaching or administration, particularly at the top end. It doesn’t make sense. I think the Rooney Rule is a good thing but we also need the numbers to make it work. It can’t just be an interview for an interview’s sake. We need more and more numbers getting into top-flight positions – not just coaching, but administration and those that are making decisions – to take us to that next level.”

Reid is halfway through his Uefa Pro-Licence course and pauses for a moment when asked whether he is the only BAME candidate. “There’s me, Jason Euell ... you’ve got me thinking now. So it’s a very small percentage of the group. Unfortunately most people who come out of the game can’t afford £6,000 for your A licence and another £8,500 for your Pro Licence.

“There is funding for BAME candidates from the PFA so perhaps more needs to be done to make people more aware of that. But the bottom line is that there has to be a desire to do it because it is hard work. If I can in a small way influence some of the black players who play under me to think, ‘Actually, there’s a path forward for me in this coaching game’, then that’s got to be positive.”

The only relegation of Reid’s career came in his final season with Burnley and he is confident Palace can avoid it this year. “We’ve shown that we can compete with the best in the league, so hopefully we can end the season in a good way.”

The Guardian Sport



Britain Imposes Sanctions on RSF Leaders, Including Hemedti’s Brother

British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper. (AP)
British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper. (AP)
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Britain Imposes Sanctions on RSF Leaders, Including Hemedti’s Brother

British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper. (AP)
British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper. (AP)

Britain on Friday imposed sanctions on senior commanders of Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces (RSF), accusing them of involvement in mass killings, systematic sexual violence and deliberate attacks on civilians in Sudan.

The UK government said Abdul Rahim Hamdan Dagalo, the RSF’s deputy commander and brother of its leader Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, known as Hemedti, along with three other commanders suspected of involvement in the crimes, are now subject to asset freezes and travel bans.

In an official statement, British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper said: “The atrocities taking place in Sudan are so horrific they scar the conscience of the world. The overwhelming evidence of heinous crimes - mass executions, starvation, and the systematic and calculated use of rape as a weapon of war - cannot and will not go unpunished.”

The RSF’s actions in el-Fasher are not random: they are part of a “deliberate strategy to terrorize” populations and seize control through fear and violence. The impact of their actions is visible from space. Satellite images of el-Fasher show blood-stained sand, clusters of bodies, and evidence of mass graves where victims have been burned and buried. There needs to be accountability for these actions, and urgent steps taken to avoid this happening again, it added.

Sanctioning RSF leaders suspected of mass killings and sexual violence in el-Fasher “sends a clear message that those who commit atrocities will be held accountable,” it continued, underscoring Britain’s commitment to preventing further crimes.

Those sanctioned include Abdul Rahim Hamdan Dagalo, the RSF deputy commander, whom the UK said there are reasonable grounds to suspect of involvement in mass killings, ethnically motivated executions, systematic sexual violence including gang rape, kidnapping for ransom, arbitrary detention, and attacks on health facilities and aid workers.

Also sanctioned is Gedo Hamdan Ahmed, the RSF commander in North Darfur, who is suspected of involvement in mass killings, sexual violence, kidnappings and attacks on medical teams and humanitarian staff.

The list further includes Al-Fateh Abdullah Idris, an RSF brigadier suspected of responsibility for violence against people based on ethnicity and religion and for deliberately targeting civilians, and Tijani Ibrahim Moussa Mohamed, an RSF field commander suspected of responsibility for the deliberate targeting of civilians in el-Fasher.

Britain urged all parties to the conflict to immediately end atrocities, protect civilians and remove obstacles to humanitarian access.

The government also pledged an additional £21 million to provide food, shelter, healthcare and protection for women and children in hard-to-reach areas on the brink of collapse. The funding, the statement said, will enable aid agencies to reach 150,000 people, meet basic needs, keep hospitals operating and reunite families separated by war.

The sanctions come after the United States, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Saudi Arabia proposed a three-month ceasefire plan in November, followed by peace talks. While the RSF initially accepted the plan, it later launched intensive drone strikes on army-held areas.

The war in Sudan, which erupted in April 2023 between the army and the RSF, has displaced millions.

Earlier this month, the UN Human Rights Council adopted a UK-led resolution condemning atrocities and mandating an urgent investigation into crimes committed in el-Fasher.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has described the war as a “scandal,” announcing plans to convene talks between the Sudanese army and the RSF in Geneva to press both sides to respect international humanitarian law, protect civilians and implement commitments made under the Jeddah Declaration.


Bolivian Court Orders Ex-president Jailed for 5 Months on Corruption Charges

Former Bolivian President Luis Arce Catacora enters San Pedro prison after a judge ordered him held in pre-trial detention for five months as part of an investigation into alleged embezzlement, in La Paz, Bolivia, December 12, 2025. REUTERS/Claudia Morales
Former Bolivian President Luis Arce Catacora enters San Pedro prison after a judge ordered him held in pre-trial detention for five months as part of an investigation into alleged embezzlement, in La Paz, Bolivia, December 12, 2025. REUTERS/Claudia Morales
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Bolivian Court Orders Ex-president Jailed for 5 Months on Corruption Charges

Former Bolivian President Luis Arce Catacora enters San Pedro prison after a judge ordered him held in pre-trial detention for five months as part of an investigation into alleged embezzlement, in La Paz, Bolivia, December 12, 2025. REUTERS/Claudia Morales
Former Bolivian President Luis Arce Catacora enters San Pedro prison after a judge ordered him held in pre-trial detention for five months as part of an investigation into alleged embezzlement, in La Paz, Bolivia, December 12, 2025. REUTERS/Claudia Morales

A Bolivian court on Friday ordered the country's former President Luis Arce to remain detained for five months while he awaits trial on corruption charges, the latest development in a case that threatens to exacerbate Bolivia's political tensions.

Arce, 62, a leader from Bolivia’s Movement Toward Socialism party, was elected in 2020 and left office a month ago following the election of Bolivia's first right-wing leader in nearly two decades. He strongly denies the charges of breach of duty and financial misconduct. He faces up to six years in prison if convicted.

Two days after Arce's sudden arrest on the streets of Bolivia's capital of La Paz, a judge ordered his detention in a virtual hearing Friday, The Associated Press reported.

Arce was transferred to one of Bolivia's largest prisons in La Paz at night. No trial date was announced.

The accusations concern the alleged diversion of millions of dollars from a state fund into private accounts and date back to when Arce served as economy minister under former President Evo Morales from 2006 until 2017.

Although the scandal first broke in 2017, investigations into the alleged graft stalled during Morales' presidency as Bolivia's courts proved submissive to the political power of the day. The case was reopened when conservative President Rodrigo Paztook office last month, ending almost two decades of dominance by the Movement Toward Socialism, or MAS, party.

Paz campaigned on a promise to clean up the government and seek justice for corruption as he rode to power on a wave of outrage over Bolivia's worst economic crisis in four decades.

Arce criticized the charges as political persecution.

“I’m a scapegoat,” he told the judge, insisting that he had no personal involvement in the government fund under scrutiny, which supported the Indigenous people and peasant farmers who formed the backbone of MAS support.

“The accusations are politically motivated.”

Officials involved in the previous iteration of the investigation say Arce is accused of siphoning off money from rural development projects to secure loyalty from MAS-allied union and Indigenous leaders during election campaigns.

Morales was elected to three consecutive terms, but was ousted in 2019 when his reelection to an unprecedented fourth term sparked accusations of fraud and mass protests.

Arce's lawyers asked the judge to grant his release pending trial, citing the ex-president's battle with kidney cancer several years ago.

But Judge Elmer Laura denied the appeal, and even exceeded the prosecution’s request of three months in a juvenile detention center by ordering five months in a state prison.

“These are crimes that directly affect state assets and resources that were allocated to vulnerable sectors," Laura said.


Iran Detains 18 Crew Members of Foreign Tanker Seized in Gulf of Oman

St Nikolas ship X1 oil tanker involved in US-Iran dispute in the Gulf of Oman which state media says was seized is seen in the Tokyo bay, Japan, October 4, 2020, in this handout picture. Daisuke Nimura/Handout via REUTERS
St Nikolas ship X1 oil tanker involved in US-Iran dispute in the Gulf of Oman which state media says was seized is seen in the Tokyo bay, Japan, October 4, 2020, in this handout picture. Daisuke Nimura/Handout via REUTERS
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Iran Detains 18 Crew Members of Foreign Tanker Seized in Gulf of Oman

St Nikolas ship X1 oil tanker involved in US-Iran dispute in the Gulf of Oman which state media says was seized is seen in the Tokyo bay, Japan, October 4, 2020, in this handout picture. Daisuke Nimura/Handout via REUTERS
St Nikolas ship X1 oil tanker involved in US-Iran dispute in the Gulf of Oman which state media says was seized is seen in the Tokyo bay, Japan, October 4, 2020, in this handout picture. Daisuke Nimura/Handout via REUTERS

Iranian authorities detained 18 crew members of a foreign tanker seized in the Gulf of Oman on Friday that they said was carrying 6 million liters of smuggled fuel, Iranian media reported on Saturday, citing the Hormozgan province judiciary.

It said those detained under the ongoing investigation include the captain of the tanker, Reuters reported.

The semi-official news agency Fars said the crew were from India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.

The authorities said the tanker had committed multiple violations, including "ignoring stop orders, attempting to flee, (and) lacking navigation and cargo documentation".

Iran, which has some of the world's lowest fuel prices due to heavy subsidies and the plunge in the value of its national currency, has been fighting rampant fuel smuggling by land and sea to neighboring countries.