‘He Was the Posh Boy with a Toughness in Him’: Gareth Southgate As a Player

Gareth Southgate attempts to dispossess Tottenham’s Paul Walsh during a First Division game eight months after he made his Crystal Palace debut. Photograph: Colorsport/REX/Shutterstock
Gareth Southgate attempts to dispossess Tottenham’s Paul Walsh during a First Division game eight months after he made his Crystal Palace debut. Photograph: Colorsport/REX/Shutterstock
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‘He Was the Posh Boy with a Toughness in Him’: Gareth Southgate As a Player

Gareth Southgate attempts to dispossess Tottenham’s Paul Walsh during a First Division game eight months after he made his Crystal Palace debut. Photograph: Colorsport/REX/Shutterstock
Gareth Southgate attempts to dispossess Tottenham’s Paul Walsh during a First Division game eight months after he made his Crystal Palace debut. Photograph: Colorsport/REX/Shutterstock

Monday evening in south Croydon and the last few stragglers are meandering from the 3G pitch towards the car park. Simon Osborn and Bobby Bowry have just concluded a grueling two-and-a-half-hour training session with 70 children, coaches in their element as they put six age groups through their paces at the thriving Volenti Academy. Both are hoarse but, as the caretaker agitates to lock up for the night and Osborn curses the prospect of missing Love Island, talk turns to an old team-mate.

Bowry had always seen something in Gareth Southgate, a single-mindedness to set him apart, which makes the prospect of his former captain at Crystal Palace leading the nation to the World Cup anything but surprising. Osborn, who had succeeded the current England manager as Palace’s youth‑team captain back in the late 1980s, echoes the sentiment.

“We all know he’s a ‘nice guy’ but people seem to think that means he’s soft, which is nonsense,” he says. “He’s not afraid to make difficult decisions, to leave out people like Jack Wilshere or Joe Hart, or attack the Wayne Rooney situation head on despite barely having his feet under the desk. He was that close to getting the boot at Palace. He had to fight to get where he is now.”

Southgate’s rise to overseeing the England team at the summer’s tournament in Russia is often considered in the context of his personal recovery from missing that penalty at Euro 96, or even in his reinvention within the junior set-up at the Football Association after his brush with Premier League management at Middlesbrough. But Osborn and Bowry can cast their minds back further to the early toils of his playing days as a YTS apprentice on £27.50 a week when he, like them, was toughened up on the windswept quagmire of Palace’s Mitcham training ground by senior professionals whose respect had to be earned.

There had been the threat of rejection in the early days, the brutal warnings from the youth-team manager Alan Smith that, unless the teenager coped better, physically and mentally, with the demands of the game, then a life in football would forever be elusive.

“The reason they kept him on was he was so dedicated, so professional and always thinking,” says Osborn.

“He was the posh boy, the Crawley lad – I know that’s not posh but he was educated and to us, coming out of Croydon, well spoken – who had done well in his O-levels. He was always thinking about improving, though that was probably a curse as well because he would over-analyze himself after games. He’d be the one beating himself up if he’d made a mistake but that’s also what drove him on.

“At Mitcham the reserve team trained on one pitch and the first team on the other, and you’d get dragged across at a young age to make up the numbers with the seniors now and again. You had to earn the respect of people like Andy Gray, Geoff Thomas, Mark Bright and Ian Wright. You couldn’t be overawed because they’d eat you alive. Even in reserve-team football you came up against seasoned professionals. You had to grow up fast.”

Bowry recalls Bright “absolutely burying John Salako” but, when the winger set up a goal on the Saturday, the striker would “buy him a shirt and a pair of trousers, respect earned”. Southgate faced the same challenge. “Gareth was strong and athletic, good feet, but he just wasn’t prepared to fail,” says Bowry. “He just worked harder.

“But there was a good camaraderie among the younger guys, who all found themselves in the same position. I’d had the chance to join Arsenal for more money, a contract waiting for me to sign, but one day on trial at Palace and the welcome lads like Gareth gave me convinced me I could relate to these people. He set the tone. He was one of those in pre-season who, mentally, thought he could beat the most natural runners in the team. He’d try and take them on, racing them. He’d do the same against Mo Farah now, probably. He wasn’t going to let anything get in his way.”

He was also arguably the most sensible, apart from one infamous night during a prestigious youth-team tournament in Viareggio, Tuscany. That evening in Italy a rare dabble with tequila slammers took its toll. “He ended up spewing all over the chairman, Ron Noades, in the lift back up to the room,” says Osborn. “Ron didn’t say anything but the clothes were waiting for Gareth outside his door the next morning to be dry cleaned. That was the exception because he was the straight-laced one, usually. If there was a night out, he’d be the one telling us he’d sorted the taxis out so we were back by the curfew.

“We’d tell him to: ‘Shut up, Gareth, we’re coming back later,’ and ‘Nord’ him off [Nord was Southgate’s nickname, a moniker pinned on him by the coach Wally Downes who likened his precise way of speaking to that of It’ll be Alright on the Night’s Denis Norden] but, at the age of 22, he’d replaced Andy Thorn, a good professional, as the first-team captain. That says it all.” Seven of that youth team went on to play in the top flight. Osborn and Southgate, at 19 and 20, made their full senior league debuts in the same fixture, a 3-0 defeat at Anfield in April 1991. Palace finished third in the First Division that year.

Bowry’s playing career took him from Palace to Millwall to Colchester and, heading up Volenti’s player management wing, he has had regular recent dealings with his former club-mate over his client Alfie Mawson. The grassroots coaching programme is thriving to the extent that it boasts a waiting list to work under such as Bowry, Osborn and, among others, Dean Austin. Austin still coaches at the group’s site in St Albans despite his appointment as manager of Northampton Town.

The sessions at Croydon’s Harris Academy have established Volenti as a hub for young hopefuls, while Volenti have partnered with the Palace for Life Foundation to provide a football and education programme for over-16s.

“We develop players,” Bowry says. “Our aim was to be a part of the community and we’ve got kids from Camberwell, Peckham, New Cross, one from Ruislip, others from north London coming to the education programme. Kids from Wimbledon, Fulham, Palace, Charlton also come down here to do extra sessions.”

Southgate, who has always been so passionate about youth development, would admire the set-up as much as his former team-mates are impressed by his progress to Russia. “We had a pre-season in Portugal back in 1994 and Alan had Gareth rooming with Ray Wilkins,” adds Bowry. “Alan said to Ray: ‘Mentor this one, he’s going places.’ And he has. All the way to Russia. Good luck to him.”

(The Guardian)



Rybakina Topples Pegula to Book Place in WTA Finals Title Clash in Riyadh

 Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan acknowledges the applause from the crowd after her win against Jessica Pegula of the United States in the women's singles semifinal match at the WTA tennis finals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Friday, Nov. 7, 2025. (AP)
Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan acknowledges the applause from the crowd after her win against Jessica Pegula of the United States in the women's singles semifinal match at the WTA tennis finals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Friday, Nov. 7, 2025. (AP)
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Rybakina Topples Pegula to Book Place in WTA Finals Title Clash in Riyadh

 Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan acknowledges the applause from the crowd after her win against Jessica Pegula of the United States in the women's singles semifinal match at the WTA tennis finals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Friday, Nov. 7, 2025. (AP)
Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan acknowledges the applause from the crowd after her win against Jessica Pegula of the United States in the women's singles semifinal match at the WTA tennis finals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Friday, Nov. 7, 2025. (AP)

Elena Rybakina came from a set down to dismantle Jessica Pegula 4-6 6-4 6-3 on Friday and make the WTA Finals title clash in Riyadh, where the Kazakh will face either Aryna Sabalenka or Amanda Anisimova for a shot at her first season-ending crown.

World number one Sabalenka meets American Anisimova next at the King Saud University Sports Arena in a rematch of their US Open final in September, which the Belarusian won in straight sets to claim her fourth Grand Slam trophy.

Pegula dialed up the intensity after an early exchange of breaks in the opening set, as the 2023 runner-up eased to a 4-2 lead when Rybakina appeared to struggle with accuracy due to a shoulder issue sustained during her warm-up a day earlier.

"It was such a tough battle. It's always difficult to play against Jessica and she started pretty well," Rybakina said.

"It was very quick, she broke me and it wasn't easy to come back. I'm glad I managed to find my way in the second and win it in a three-set battle."

The 31-year-old Pegula promptly closed out the first stanza thanks to Rybakina's 25th unforced error, but there was a sudden shift in momentum in the next set as she found herself 1-4 behind and in danger of being dragged the distance.

Pegula recovered her rhythm and pushed hard in her bid to draw level in the set, but Rybakina responded fiercely in the 10th game to force a decider, where the pair swapped breaks again in a tight battle.

A forehand into the net from Pegula at the end of the eighth game handed the advantage back to Rybakina, who remained calm to hold in the next game and secure the victory that maintained her perfect record in the season finale.

"My serve helped me when I needed it," said Rybakina, who sent down 15 aces.

"I was trying to stay focused on each point when we had some tough rallies. In the end I managed to push myself a bit more."


Tommy Fleetwood Sits at the Top of the Leaderboard after 36 Holes in Abu Dhabi

Fleetwood in tie for lead at halfway stage in Abu Dhabi - AFP
Fleetwood in tie for lead at halfway stage in Abu Dhabi - AFP
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Tommy Fleetwood Sits at the Top of the Leaderboard after 36 Holes in Abu Dhabi

Fleetwood in tie for lead at halfway stage in Abu Dhabi - AFP
Fleetwood in tie for lead at halfway stage in Abu Dhabi - AFP

Tommy Fleetwood produced another strong round on Friday to head into the weekend at the Abu Dhabi Championship tied for the lead with fellow Englishman Aaron Rai.

Fleetwood started his second round with three birdies in a row and carded seven in total, shooting a six-under 66 to climb to 14-under for the tournament, AFP reported.

The two-time former winner and reigning FedEx Cup champion began the day in a five-way share of the lead but soon hit the front after catching up with early starter Nacho Elvira.

Fleetwood's lone bogey came at the 15th but he gained that stroke back on the next hole with a putt from 12 feet.

"That was good, especially when you've had a good round the day before. They always say it's hard to follow up a good round with another good one, or a low one with another one."

Fleetwood is level with Rai, who delivered the highlight of the day with an albatross at the par-five second hole.

"I actually caught it a little bit clean off the face, the line was great. I think it probably pitched around the front edge and chased its way down there," said Rai, who holed out from around 220 yards.

"We couldn't see it from back on the fairway, so it was a nice surprise."

Rai carried that momentum through his round and added five birdies to sign for an eight-under 64.

"It was really good. Struck it really well tee-to-green. Had a lot of chances. Just felt very stress-free overall," he said.

Richard Sterne, Andy Sullivan and Nicolai Hojgaard are two shots behind at the head of the chasing pack.

Shane Lowry, who matched Ryder Cup team-mate Fleetwood on Thursday, dropped off the pace with back-to-back bogeys to close out round two as he recorded a three-under 69.

Rory McIlroy is six shots off the top as the Northern Irishman carded another four-under 68. Matt Fitzpatrick and Robert McIntyre are a further shot behind.


UK Police Arrest 11 Around Soccer Match between Aston Villa, Israeli Club Maccabi Tel Aviv

Pro Palestinian campaigners protest outside Villa Park, ahead of the Europa League soccer match between Aston Villa and Maccabi Tel Aviv in Birmingham, England, Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025. (Joe Giddens/PA via AP)
Pro Palestinian campaigners protest outside Villa Park, ahead of the Europa League soccer match between Aston Villa and Maccabi Tel Aviv in Birmingham, England, Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025. (Joe Giddens/PA via AP)
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UK Police Arrest 11 Around Soccer Match between Aston Villa, Israeli Club Maccabi Tel Aviv

Pro Palestinian campaigners protest outside Villa Park, ahead of the Europa League soccer match between Aston Villa and Maccabi Tel Aviv in Birmingham, England, Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025. (Joe Giddens/PA via AP)
Pro Palestinian campaigners protest outside Villa Park, ahead of the Europa League soccer match between Aston Villa and Maccabi Tel Aviv in Birmingham, England, Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025. (Joe Giddens/PA via AP)

British police said Friday that 11 people were arrested the previous night around the highly charged Europa League soccer match in Birmingham between English Premier League side Aston Villa and Maccabi Tel Aviv, a match that saw fans of the Israeli team banned.

In an update Friday, West Midlands Police said five of those arrested were on suspicion of racially aggravated offenses. The others included failure to comply with orders and breaching the peace.

The police force deployed more than 700 officers around the Villa Park stadium over concerns of clashes between pro-Palestinian and pro-Israeli groups, The AP news reported

Though tensions were high ahead of the match, there were no serious incidents.

A pro-Palestine protest was held outside the stadium before kick-off, where hundreds turned up with Palestinian flags and anti-Israeli banners.

There was a flashpoint as a woman holding an Israeli flag walked past but she was quickly escorted away by police before it escalated.

There was also a counter-Israeli protest at the other side of Villa Park, with protesters holding up signs reading “Keep antisemitism out of football." Five vehicles were driven past the ground carrying electronic billboards showing messages opposing antisemitism.

One of the messages, beside a Star of David, read “Ban hatred not fans” while another carried a quote from French soccer legend Thierry Henry saying football is not about goals but bringing people together.

The match, which Aston Villa won 2-0, was in the spotlight after officials in Birmingham decided last month to ban visiting fans from attending. The decision was widely criticized, including from British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, but lauded by others, who said Maccabi fans have a recent history of violence.

West Midlands Police said it had deemed the match to be high risk “based on current intelligence and previous incidents,” including violence and hate crimes that took place when Maccabi Tel Aviv played Ajax in Amsterdam last season.

Following the furor, Maccabi announced they would decline any away tickets for the clash,

The ban came at a time of heightened worries about antisemitism in Britain following a deadly attack on a Manchester synagogue last month and calls from Palestinians and their supporters for a sports boycott of Israel over the war against Hamas in Gaza. Hopes that the recent ceasefire would ease tensions appear premature.