Kyle Walker: ‘The Whole England Vibe is Different – We’ve Taken Huge Steps’

 Kyle Walker missed the 2012 and 2014 tournaments because of injuries but was in France two years ago for the Iceland horror show. Photograph: Paul Greenwood/BPI/Rex/Shutterstock
Kyle Walker missed the 2012 and 2014 tournaments because of injuries but was in France two years ago for the Iceland horror show. Photograph: Paul Greenwood/BPI/Rex/Shutterstock
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Kyle Walker: ‘The Whole England Vibe is Different – We’ve Taken Huge Steps’

 Kyle Walker missed the 2012 and 2014 tournaments because of injuries but was in France two years ago for the Iceland horror show. Photograph: Paul Greenwood/BPI/Rex/Shutterstock
Kyle Walker missed the 2012 and 2014 tournaments because of injuries but was in France two years ago for the Iceland horror show. Photograph: Paul Greenwood/BPI/Rex/Shutterstock

It will soon be a year since Manchester City raised eyebrows by paying £50m for a full-back. Actually they paid £102m for two full-backs last summer, though Benjamin Mendy was to spend most of the season out injured. Kyle Walker, the original defensive investment, has enjoyed such a comfortable assimilation into City’s title-winning side and Pep Guardiola’s way of thinking that the fee is already starting to look a comparative bargain – to outsiders, at least. The traded commodity himself has never worried too much about valuation.

“As a player you don’t put a price tag on your own head,” Walker explains, taking a break from England’s preparations for their pre-World Cup friendlies. “You can’t go around thinking: ‘I’m worth that much.’ It is just business that gets sorted out by the chairmen. For me there was a little bit of proving people wrong, because a fee like that does attract attention, but I think we could all see the transfer market went a little crazy in the end.”

Together with John Stones and Fabian Delph, the 27-year-old is part of a Yorkshire core in the City defence that, it is hoped, will transfer to England. They look out for each other, look after each other and keep their feet firmly on the ground.

Walker is likely to be asked to move into a back three at some point in the next couple of months but feels well-qualified to do so. “I used to play central defence for Sheffield United,” he says. “I had Chris Morgan at the side of me which helped me a lot because, if I did anything wrong, I’d be sure to find out about it.

“I can still remember one of my first games. It was Hull away and they had Caleb Folan playing up front with Nick Barmby behind him. He was a classic target man and I had to mark him. ‘Morgs’ just told me: ‘Right, you deal with the headers and I’ll sweep up behind you.’ Right back is still my preferred position but as long as I’m on the field at the World Cup I’m completely happy to play anywhere.”

Walker will find himself up against some City team-mates when England play Belgium in the group stage, in addition to familiar Premier League names such as Eden Hazard and Romelu Lukaku. He is relaxed about the situation. He is relaxed about everything. He frequently talks of his career as a journey, one that began on a Sheffield housing estate and is now unfolding on the world stage, and if he seems capable of taking it all in his stride, it is possibly because he remembers the early steps so well.

“I got my first taste of real professional football on loan at Northampton,” he recalls, not something too many elite competitors in Russia will be able to boast. “I was 18 at the time and I played only nine games, but it was a massive opportunity for me. Sheffield were in the Championship and they were in League One when I went, so it meant I could get games.

“Stuart Gray was the manager and he gave me the chance to show what I could do. I’ve never looked back from there, that was the point where my career took off. Some of those players depended on winning games for their mortgage. I had been with Sheffield from age seven, my career was being looked after, so it was something I hadn’t quite seen before. Training with those players was a real learning curve for me.”

Walker’s career trajectory has indeed been ever upwards since. There were a few more loans in the first couple of seasons at Spurs but by 2012 he was recipient of the Professional Footballers’ Association’s young player of the year award, ahead of his team-mate Gareth Bale, and was named in the PFA team of the season.

While two trophies in his first season at City confirmed his latest move as a shrewd one, the progression has not always been as smooth on the international front. Walker missed out on Roy Hodgson’s squads for the 2012 Euros and 2014 World Cup through picking up injuries at critical stages of the season, and though he made it to France two years ago the memories of Euro 2016 are far from happy ones. “It was difficult to take, I’m not going to lie and say there were loads of positives,” he says. “It was a negative. In the game against Iceland my feeling was that things were going to plan when we went 1-0 up. Instead scoring an early goal might have put us off our guard.

“I don’t believe we thought we were already through but we were beginning to feel seeing out the game might be easy when a long throw came in and caught us by surprise.

“The whole vibe around England now is completely different. It is a younger set of players and we are taking huge steps in the right direction but we still probably need to get more streetwise.

“English footballers are honest, they will run for 90-odd minutes, but that is not always what you need. Sometimes you need to rein back a bit and try and control the game with your passing.

“When we come up against Belgium, say, it could be a deciding game but we need to realise that we don’t have to score in the first 10 minutes. If you can control the game you can wait until the 80th minute or longer if necessary. I’m trying to bring that calmness from Manchester City, and so is John.

“I’ve adapted my own game a bit since changing club. I stay back a bit more. When I was at Tottenham the fans wanted attack, attack, attack but, if you send too many bodies forward, you are liable for the counter. With England we are working in training on controlling situations a little better. If we can make it work on the pitch we will hopefully have a good tournament.”

The idea seems to be gaining traction that England can play without fear or pressure at this World Cup, because after the last couple of disappointments so little is expected of them. Walker does not entirely agree. “You shouldn’t be looking for a free pass, if you want to win things you should play every game like it’s your last,” he says. “I don’t think we should be talking about pressure either, when we are playing the game we’ve been good at since we were kids at the very highest level. Anyone would want to play in a World Cup, why fear anything?

“Everyone in the squad is there for a reason, the gaffer could have picked hundreds of others but this is the 23 he’s chosen to represent the country. That’s a privilege that should give you confidence. Just go out and enjoy it.”

The Guardian Sport



Hakimi Declared Fit for Morocco's AFCON Bid

Morocco's head coach Walid Regragui and Morocco's defender #02 Achraf Hakimi attend a press conference at Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium in Rabat, Morocco on December 20, 2025, ahead of the start of the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) football tournament. (Photo by Abdel Majid BZIOUAT / AFP)
Morocco's head coach Walid Regragui and Morocco's defender #02 Achraf Hakimi attend a press conference at Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium in Rabat, Morocco on December 20, 2025, ahead of the start of the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) football tournament. (Photo by Abdel Majid BZIOUAT / AFP)
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Hakimi Declared Fit for Morocco's AFCON Bid

Morocco's head coach Walid Regragui and Morocco's defender #02 Achraf Hakimi attend a press conference at Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium in Rabat, Morocco on December 20, 2025, ahead of the start of the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) football tournament. (Photo by Abdel Majid BZIOUAT / AFP)
Morocco's head coach Walid Regragui and Morocco's defender #02 Achraf Hakimi attend a press conference at Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium in Rabat, Morocco on December 20, 2025, ahead of the start of the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) football tournament. (Photo by Abdel Majid BZIOUAT / AFP)

Morocco captain and star player Achraf Hakimi is fit and ready for the host nation's Africa Cup of Nations bid but may not start in the tournament's opening game, coach Walid Regragui said on Saturday.

"Tomorrow will be my decision but he has more than done his job. His injury was not an easy one," Regragui told reporters in Rabat where Morocco play minnows Comoros in the first match on Sunday.

"I still have another night to sleep and decide whether he starts or whether we protect him and see how it goes for the remaining games.

"He is able to start, but he might not start."

Paris Saint-Germain right-back Hakimi, the African player of the year, has not played since coming off with a left ankle injury in a Champions League game against Bayern Munich on November 4.

The 27-year-old left the field in tears that night, clearly fearing for his chances of featuring at the Cup of Nations. The injury was later diagnosed as a severe sprain.

"I feel good. I am following the program given to me by the medical staff and the coach," Hakimi, who also came sixth in this year's Ballon d'Or ranking, said Saturday, according to AFP.

Regragui added: "He has made sacrifices over the last four or five weeks that nobody else could have made, and has set an example to the other players and the staff.

"Today we can see that the protocol we put in place after his injury has been more than positive but now we have the whole competition to manage."
Morocco will also face Mali and Zambia in Group A as they bid to win a first Cup of Nations since 1976.

The tournament runs into the New Year and will finish with the final in Rabat on January 18.


Kimmich, Neuer Headline Absentee List for Injury-hit Bayern

Bayern Munich's Belgian head coach Vincent Kompany arrives for the German first division Bundesliga football match between FC Bayern Munich and Mainz 05 in Munich, southern Germany on December 14, 2025. (Photo by Karl-Josef HILDENBRAND / AFP)
Bayern Munich's Belgian head coach Vincent Kompany arrives for the German first division Bundesliga football match between FC Bayern Munich and Mainz 05 in Munich, southern Germany on December 14, 2025. (Photo by Karl-Josef HILDENBRAND / AFP)
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Kimmich, Neuer Headline Absentee List for Injury-hit Bayern

Bayern Munich's Belgian head coach Vincent Kompany arrives for the German first division Bundesliga football match between FC Bayern Munich and Mainz 05 in Munich, southern Germany on December 14, 2025. (Photo by Karl-Josef HILDENBRAND / AFP)
Bayern Munich's Belgian head coach Vincent Kompany arrives for the German first division Bundesliga football match between FC Bayern Munich and Mainz 05 in Munich, southern Germany on December 14, 2025. (Photo by Karl-Josef HILDENBRAND / AFP)

Bayern Munich coach Vincent Kompany confirmed captain Manuel Neuer and Joshua Kimmich were among several absentees for Sunday's Bundesliga match against Heidenheim.

Speaking to reporters on Saturday ahead of the final match of the calendar year, Kompany said Sacha Boey would also miss out through injury, Konrad Laimer is suspended while Nicolas Jackson is away on Africa Cup of Nations duty with Senegal.

Long-term absentee Jamal Musiala returned to team training this week but would not return until 2026.

France winger Michael Olise, who had eye surgery earlier in the week, is expected to return, as is Luis Diaz who missed out last week with suspension.

The dependable Olise is yet to miss a match with injury since joining Bayern from Crystal Palace in 2024.

According to AFP, Kompany said Germany captain Kimmich is still struggling with an ankle complaint picked up on international duty in November.

"We've had so many matches recently, at a certain point the pain becomes too much," Kompany said, adding Kimmich had "been playing at the limit of what's too painful" for weeks.

Unbeaten Bayern have enjoyed a close to flawless league campaign this season, dropping just four points in their opening 14 matches.

League leaders Bayern sit six points clear of second-placed Borussia Dortmund, who have played a game more.

On Saturday, German tabloid Bild reported Bayern was set to extend with winger Serge Gnabry by two years until 2028.

The former Arsenal forward has played at Bayern since 2017 and has impressed this campaign, with five goals and seven assists in all competitions.

The 30-year-old has also returned to form at international level, with three goals and an assist in Germany's six World Cup qualifiers.


Arsenal's Arteta Says he Has to Earn the Right to Get Contract Extension

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta kicks back a ball during the English Premier League match between Arsenal FC and Wolverhampton Wanderers, in London, Britain, 13 December 2025.  EPA/TOLGA AKMEN
Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta kicks back a ball during the English Premier League match between Arsenal FC and Wolverhampton Wanderers, in London, Britain, 13 December 2025. EPA/TOLGA AKMEN
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Arsenal's Arteta Says he Has to Earn the Right to Get Contract Extension

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta kicks back a ball during the English Premier League match between Arsenal FC and Wolverhampton Wanderers, in London, Britain, 13 December 2025.  EPA/TOLGA AKMEN
Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta kicks back a ball during the English Premier League match between Arsenal FC and Wolverhampton Wanderers, in London, Britain, 13 December 2025. EPA/TOLGA AKMEN

Mikel Arteta suggested he could extend his contract at Arsenal beyond 2027 but says he still has to earn the right to continue as manager by winning silverware at the Premier League club.

Arteta, who completes six years in charge of Arsenal on Saturday, won the FA Cup with the North London club in 2020 but has yet to taste success in the league, his side finishing runner-up in ⁠the last three campaigns.

They are currently two points clear this season and have also reached the quarter-finals of the League Cup.

Asked whether he could see himself extending his stay beyond the end of his contract in 2027, Arteta told ⁠reporters on Friday: "Yes, but it’s about today. And a lot of things have to happen in the next few months as well to earn the right.

"I think a manager has to earn the right to be here tomorrow. A lot of things have to happen in the next few months as well to earn the right (for an extension),” Reuters quoted him as saying.

The Spaniard said ⁠Arsenal's lack of trophies was not down to substandard performances.

"You look at the performances, all the records that we had that were broken in the history of the club. We still haven't managed to do that (win trophies)," he added.

"That tells you the level we are in, which is a level that the Premier League has never experienced in the past."

Arsenal travel to Everton later on Saturday.