‘Canceling Christmas’ and Poppygate: Premier League Guide for New Arrivals

A poppy design is displayed in the crowd as players and officials line up for a minute’s silence prior to a Premier League match between Leicester City and Everton. (Getty Images)
A poppy design is displayed in the crowd as players and officials line up for a minute’s silence prior to a Premier League match between Leicester City and Everton. (Getty Images)
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‘Canceling Christmas’ and Poppygate: Premier League Guide for New Arrivals

A poppy design is displayed in the crowd as players and officials line up for a minute’s silence prior to a Premier League match between Leicester City and Everton. (Getty Images)
A poppy design is displayed in the crowd as players and officials line up for a minute’s silence prior to a Premier League match between Leicester City and Everton. (Getty Images)

Welcome, talented football player from Abroad! As one of our age-old sayings goes: to be signed to an English Premier League side is to win first prize in the lottery of life. There is some dispute as to whether you now play in the biggest league on earth, or the best league on Earth, or the richest league on Earth, or the most relentlessly self-dramatizing league on Earth. But you almost definitely play in the somethingest league on Earth. Congrats!

Crucially, you’ve decided to ply your trade in the country that was most instrumental in winning the second world war. What do you mean, you thought you’d just played a World Cup there this summer? No. Not at all. Please don’t make that mistake again. Perfectly naturally, the war is still a big part of top-flight football over here, and the likely first flashpoint for you to navigate will come in the buildup to Remembrance Day in November.

It has long has been deemed that the most respectful way to honor those who died to ensure our freedom is to spend the month in advance screamingly policing whether this club – or indeed that club – is going to embroider a poppy into its strip for the fixtures closest to that date. Of course, even after that, the illusion of choice remains – you, player from another land, can choose to opt out of wearing the poppied strip.

And that’s totally cool. All that will happen is a journalist from the Daily Telegraph or Daily Mail will find out what country you come from, and write 1,500 words on what they didn’t do in the war. Uruguay? URUGUAY?! They didn’t do anything in the war. Furthermore, you will be unable to so much as visit the supermarket without having a photographer almost literally up in your grill, providing pictures to accompany more #content suggesting that you insult our war dead.

On a related note, don’t make even a minor fuss about anything to do with your job anywhere near one of the dates of the major battles in the first world war. You will discover that the most reasonable point many will care to make in rejoinder is that you would have been crap at the Somme, or Ypres, or whatever it is. So decide how much you mind about fixture congestion, or whatever it is. And then decide whether you’d mind more about standing two foot deep in mud, in a trench, having not slept since March. If the answer’s yes, keep your gently-voiced criticism in the vault.

Anyway: fixture congestion. One of the most insane things about your new homeland is that you may be required to play in the Premier League a mere 48 hours before you might be required to play in the Champions League. I know! Crazy. They’re basically asking you to pull a sporting all-nighter. You’re like the Keith Richards of football. Will it kill you? There’s simply not enough research currently available to be sure. Still: make a will before you undertake this for the first time.

Speaking of the fixture list, do you like Christmas? Oh dear. Not only will you be playing on Boxing Day, but you may be at one of the clubs whose early-December run of form is so unsatisfactory that you will learn – again from the newspapers – that the manager has “canceled Christmas”.

Other quirks? At most places of work, someone showing you the ropes will murmur: “Oh that’s Pete, he’s been there a long time, he goes off on one a lot but no one takes any notice.” Our Pete is José Mourinho. You need to understand that everyone is completely bored with his nonsense, and will consequently talk about him more than anything else, including their own families, for as long as he’s around.

At the same time, other managers will attempt to style themselves as the grownup in the room, by saying things like: “Why is [insert rival manager’s name] even talking about us? I am not even going to talk about why [rival manger] is talking about us. I am focused only on talking about how I am not even going to talk about how [rival manager] is talking about us.”

The average emotional age of a press-conferencing Premier League manager is 12. Given that someone like Jürgen Klopp’s emotional age is his actual age, you need to think what that means about the lower end of the scale.

So all that remains of our crash course is vocabulary. Don’t worry. Given it’s your third language, your English will be excellent, but you will still be foxed by terms such as “on the brink” and “mind games”. The trick to these is that the words in them don’t mean what those words usually mean. Take “the brink”. The brink can be vast, easily dwarfing the Arctic shelf. It can take months to traverse the brink. The aforementioned Mourinho was sighted on the brink a couple of weeks ago – but he could be there for some time.

So those are the basics. Regard them all as charming idiosyncrasies, or be judged as having failed to “settle”. I know the badges say something different, but the real motto of every Premier League club is exactly the same. “It’s not us; it’s you.”

The Guardian Sport



Veteran Brazilian Defender Thiago Silva Signs for Porto

(FILES) Fluminense's Brazilian defender #03 Thiago Silva participates in a training session at the Harrison Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, on July 7, 2025, on the eve of the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 semifinal football match between Brazil's Fluminense and England's Chelsea. (Photo by JUAN MABROMATA / AFP)
(FILES) Fluminense's Brazilian defender #03 Thiago Silva participates in a training session at the Harrison Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, on July 7, 2025, on the eve of the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 semifinal football match between Brazil's Fluminense and England's Chelsea. (Photo by JUAN MABROMATA / AFP)
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Veteran Brazilian Defender Thiago Silva Signs for Porto

(FILES) Fluminense's Brazilian defender #03 Thiago Silva participates in a training session at the Harrison Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, on July 7, 2025, on the eve of the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 semifinal football match between Brazil's Fluminense and England's Chelsea. (Photo by JUAN MABROMATA / AFP)
(FILES) Fluminense's Brazilian defender #03 Thiago Silva participates in a training session at the Harrison Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, on July 7, 2025, on the eve of the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 semifinal football match between Brazil's Fluminense and England's Chelsea. (Photo by JUAN MABROMATA / AFP)

Former Chelsea and Paris Saint-Germain defender Thiago Silva has signed for Porto at the age of 41, the Portuguese club announced on Saturday.

One of the finest center-backs of his generation, Silva arrives in Porto after a two-season spell with Fluminense in his native Brazil.

"Thiago Silva is a Dragon,” AFP quoted a club statement as saying in reference to the side's nickname.

The move completes something of a circle in his career as he played for Porto's B side in the 2004-05 season.

He then moved on to Dynamo Moscow, before a stint with Fluminense's senior team and then AC Milan where he won a Serie A title, before a 2012 switch to Paris.

He left PSG in 2020 with seven French league crowns and signed for Chelsea, winning the Champions League with the Blues at Porto's Estadio do Dragao stadium.

In all Silva has a total of 32 trophies in his decorated career, and could well add another as Porto are leading the Primeira Liga by five points.


Africa Cup of Nations Moved to Every Four Years

Soccer Football - Africa Cup of Nations - Final - Senegal v Egypt - Olembe Stadium, Yaounde, Cameroon - February 6, 2022 General view of the Africa Cup of Nations trophy on display before the match REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany
Soccer Football - Africa Cup of Nations - Final - Senegal v Egypt - Olembe Stadium, Yaounde, Cameroon - February 6, 2022 General view of the Africa Cup of Nations trophy on display before the match REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany
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Africa Cup of Nations Moved to Every Four Years

Soccer Football - Africa Cup of Nations - Final - Senegal v Egypt - Olembe Stadium, Yaounde, Cameroon - February 6, 2022 General view of the Africa Cup of Nations trophy on display before the match REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany
Soccer Football - Africa Cup of Nations - Final - Senegal v Egypt - Olembe Stadium, Yaounde, Cameroon - February 6, 2022 General view of the Africa Cup of Nations trophy on display before the match REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany

The Africa Cup of Nations will ​in future be held every four years instead of every two years, the Confederation of ‌African Football ‌said on ‌Saturday.

The ⁠surprise ​decision ‌was made at the organization’s executive committee meeting in the Moroccan capital and announced ⁠at a press conference ‌by CAF ‍President ‍Patrice Motsepe, Reuters reported.

The tournament, ‍which brings in an estimated 80% of CAF’s revenue, has ​traditionally been held every two years since ⁠its inception in 1957.

Sunday marks the start of the 35th edition, hosted in Morocco with the home team taking on Comoros.


Mohamed Salah Apologized to His Liverpool Teammates over Contentious Comments

 Liverpool's Egyptian striker #11 Mohamed Salah (R) sits on the bench during the English Premier League football match between Liverpool and Brighton and Hove Albion at Anfield in Liverpool, north west England on December 13, 2025. (Photo by Paul ELLIS / AFP)
Liverpool's Egyptian striker #11 Mohamed Salah (R) sits on the bench during the English Premier League football match between Liverpool and Brighton and Hove Albion at Anfield in Liverpool, north west England on December 13, 2025. (Photo by Paul ELLIS / AFP)
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Mohamed Salah Apologized to His Liverpool Teammates over Contentious Comments

 Liverpool's Egyptian striker #11 Mohamed Salah (R) sits on the bench during the English Premier League football match between Liverpool and Brighton and Hove Albion at Anfield in Liverpool, north west England on December 13, 2025. (Photo by Paul ELLIS / AFP)
Liverpool's Egyptian striker #11 Mohamed Salah (R) sits on the bench during the English Premier League football match between Liverpool and Brighton and Hove Albion at Anfield in Liverpool, north west England on December 13, 2025. (Photo by Paul ELLIS / AFP)

Mohamed Salah apologized to his Liverpool teammates after complaining of being “ thrown under the bus ” by the Premier League champion, midfielder Curtis Jones said.

Jones told broadcaster Sky Sports on Saturday that Salah took the time to address the issue with them, The AP news reported.

“Mo is his own man and he can say his own stuff. He apologized to us and was like, 'If I've affected anybody or made you feel any sort of way, I apologize.' That's the man that he is," Jones told Sky. “He was the exact same Mo, he had a big smile on his face and everybody was exactly the same with him. I guess it’s just part of wanting to be a winner.”

Dropped by Slot The 33-year-old Egypt star has scored 250 goals for Liverpool overall but has only netted five times this season in 20 games.

Last season was one of his best with 34 goals in 52 outings for Liverpool, and he clinched the player of the year award from the Professional Footballers’ Association for the third time.

Salah, who is now at the Africa Cup of Nations, made his explosive comments about feeling unfairly treated at Liverpool after being dropped for a third game in succession.

In the wake of those comments, Liverpool coach Arne Slot left Salah out of the squad for a Champions League game at Inter Milan. But following subsequent talks with Slot, Salah returned to the team against Brighton last Saturday.

Unbeaten run Since losing 4-1 at home to PSV Eindhoven in the Champions League in late November, Liverpool was unbeaten in five matches heading into a Premier League game at Tottenham later Saturday.

“We’re past that now and we’re gelling well as a team," Jones added. “Playing well and starting to win games.”