Sol Bamba: ‘the Gaffer Always Reminds Me Not to Be Beckenbauer’

 Sol Bamba, after a career that has included spells in France, Italy and Turkey, wants to finish his career at Cardiff. Photograph: Gareth Phillips/Guardian
Sol Bamba, after a career that has included spells in France, Italy and Turkey, wants to finish his career at Cardiff. Photograph: Gareth Phillips/Guardian
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Sol Bamba: ‘the Gaffer Always Reminds Me Not to Be Beckenbauer’

 Sol Bamba, after a career that has included spells in France, Italy and Turkey, wants to finish his career at Cardiff. Photograph: Gareth Phillips/Guardian
Sol Bamba, after a career that has included spells in France, Italy and Turkey, wants to finish his career at Cardiff. Photograph: Gareth Phillips/Guardian

Sol Bamba knows what the message will be from Neil Warnock as he leaves Cardiff’s home dressing room on Sunday. “Before we go out, the gaffer always reminds me and says: ‘Don’t be Beckenbauer. Just kick or head it. When it’s on, pass it, but if it’s not on, just put it up there.’ And that’s why I like him – he’s honest.”

Bamba, by his own admission, has not always been an easy player to manage, particularly in his early days at Paris Saint-Germain, where an Argentinian centre-back by the name of Mauricio Pochettino tried to take him under his wing, but there is something about Warnock that gets the best out of him. Told that Cardiff’s manager thinks the world of him, Bamba chuckles but sounds sincere when he replies: “I think the world of him as well.”

All in all, it has not been a bad couple of years since the two got together. Warnock celebrated the eighth promotion of his managerial career in May, when Cardiff returned to the Premier League, and Bamba, who had been without a club when Warnock brought him to Wales in October 2016, was named in the Championship team of the year.

Yet as good as they have been for one another, and as well as they get on, arguably the first thing that comes to mind for most people when they think of Bamba and Warnock is that fracas on the touchline at Portman Road, when the Ivorian was sent off and ended up shoving his manager after raging at the fourth official.

Bamba, who comes across as a likable character, cringes. “That was bad,” he says, shaking his head. “Especially when I got home ... when the kids went to school everyone was talking about it. I was embarrassed because you tell your kids to be a certain way and then they see you doing that. It’s probably one of my biggest regrets.”

At least he has made up for it since. He has been a rock at the back for Cardiff, so much so that Warnock claimed in December that Bamba was a better defender than Virgil van Dijk. “I heard that one,” Bamba says, smiling. “We know the gaffer. That’s what he’s like. I said to him when he said it, which was just before a game: ‘You’ve put me in trouble now.’”

Listening to Bamba for more than an hour, on the record and then for a long time afterwards when he expresses an interest in working in journalism once he retires, it is easy to see why the 33-year-old is so popular. Gregarious and candid with his thoughts, he is happy to chat about anything and everything.

“I love defending. Absolutely love it,” Bamba says. “When I go into a game I set myself a target: I don’t want to lose a header anywhere on the pitch. Sometimes I see defenders and I ask myself: ‘Does he actually like defending?’ But I love going into a tackle, winning a challenge or a header. That’s why it’s good here because the fans appreciate that. In France or in Italy, when you do a good defensive tackle, they’re not bothered. But here they like that and that makes me want to defend even more.”

France and Italy are two of the six countries where Bamba has played club football during a nomadic career that started with PSG. Born in France to Ivorian parents, he took up a residential place at PSG’s academy at the age of 11, against the better judgment of his mother, who wanted her son to become a doctor. It was several years later, and after he had been converted from a deep‑lying midfielder, that Bamba crossed paths with Pochettino.

“I first trained with the first team when I was 16 and he was there,” Bamba says. “He was a centre-half and he was good to me. He gave me good advice, how to position myself and how to defend. Because I used to tackle a lot [by going to ground] and he used to try to encourage me to be better by saying: ‘Try to stay on your feet.’”

Bamba made two appearances for PSG before going on to play for Dunfermline and Hibernian and, looking back, accepts that he was too headstrong at times in France. “Instead of speaking to the manager with respect, I’d go in shouting, sometimes swearing,” he says. “I realised when I moved that my behaviour wasn’t right.”

After that stint in Scotland, Bamba joined Leicester before signing for Trabzonspor in Turkey and then Palermo. In a sign of his growing maturity, he decided in Turkey and Italy that he wanted to find a language school that could work around his training regime, despite being under no pressure to do so by his clubs. All of which means Bamba can speak Turkish, Italian, English, French and the Ivorian dialect that his father used at home.

His Italian would have been handy when he was at Leeds, where Bamba had regular conversations with Massimo Cellino and publicly aired his frustration with the way things were being run . “I said to the owner before I said that [to the media], that I didn’t think he was doing the right thing,” Bamba says. “He used to call me and even came to my house a few times. I said to him: ‘It’s coming from you. We’re looking up to you and if we see you not doing the right thing, we’re not going to respond.’

“At the time I didn’t feel as though I had much to lose because I was on loan from Palermo, so I was probably the only one free to do it.”

Although Bamba later joined Leeds permanently, he left as a free agent in September 2016 and moved to Cardiff the following month, when Warnock finally signed a player he had been pursuing for four years. Cardiff were in relegation trouble at the time and Bamba could sense the desperation among the fans.

“The troubles they had with the owners and everything that happened over the years, they were dying for something good to happen, like a team to give them some pride back – a team that would fight for everything. For the last two years they’ve had that.”

It is a measure of how happy Bamba feels at Cardiff that he talks about finishing his career at the club – and hopefully in the Premier League. Despite Cardiff spending relatively conservatively in the summer, Bamba takes encouragement from back-to-back clean sheets and something money cannot buy.

“What the gaffer did is repay what we did for him, if I can put it like that, because we went up as an entire group and he wanted to keep it like that,” he says. “We needed to add one or two and that’s what we did. But the team spirit and togetherness is already there, he didn’t want to break that and that’s going to take us a long way”

The Guardian Sport



Sunderland Worst Hit by Losing Players to African Cup of Nations 

14 December 2025, United Kingdom, London: Sunderland's Habib Diarra (L) and Leeds United's Gabriel Gudmundsson battle for the ball during the English Premier League soccer match between Brentford and Leeds United at the Gtech Community Stadium. (dpa)
14 December 2025, United Kingdom, London: Sunderland's Habib Diarra (L) and Leeds United's Gabriel Gudmundsson battle for the ball during the English Premier League soccer match between Brentford and Leeds United at the Gtech Community Stadium. (dpa)
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Sunderland Worst Hit by Losing Players to African Cup of Nations 

14 December 2025, United Kingdom, London: Sunderland's Habib Diarra (L) and Leeds United's Gabriel Gudmundsson battle for the ball during the English Premier League soccer match between Brentford and Leeds United at the Gtech Community Stadium. (dpa)
14 December 2025, United Kingdom, London: Sunderland's Habib Diarra (L) and Leeds United's Gabriel Gudmundsson battle for the ball during the English Premier League soccer match between Brentford and Leeds United at the Gtech Community Stadium. (dpa)

Premier League Sunderland will have to do without six players over the next few weeks and are the club worst hit as the Africa Cup of Nations takes its toll on European clubs competing over the holiday season.

Sunderland, eighth in the standings, had four of their African internationals in action when they beat Newcastle United on Sunday, but like 14 other English top-flight clubs will now lose those players to international duty.

The timing of the African championship, kicking off in Morocco on Sunday and running through to January 18, has long been an irritant for coaches, with leagues in Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal, and Spain also affected.

Hosting the tournament in the middle of the season impacts around 58% of the players at the Cup of Nations, though the Confederation of African Football did try to mitigate the impact by moving the start to before Christmas, so it is completed before the next round of Champions League matches.

The impact on European clubs was also lessened by allowing them to release players seven days, rather than the mandatory 14 days, before the tournament, meaning they could play for their clubs last weekend.

Sunderland's Congolese Arthur Masuaku and Noah Sadiki, plus full back Reinildo (Mozambique), midfielder Habib Diarra (Mali), and attackers Chemsdine Talbi (Morocco) and Bertrand Traore (Burkina Faso) have now departed for Morocco.

Ironically, Mohamed Salah’s absence from Liverpool to play for Egypt should lower the temperature at the club after his recent outburst against manager Arne Slot, but Manchester United will lose three players in Noussair Mazraoui, Bryan Mbeumo and Amad Diallo, who scored in Monday’s 4-4 draw with Bournemouth.

France is again the country with the most players heading to the Cup of Nations, and with 51 from Ligue 1 clubs. But their absence is much less impactful than previously as Ligue 1 broke after the weekend’s fixtures and does not resume until January 2, by which time the Cup of Nations will be into its knockout stage.

There are 21 players from Serie A clubs, 18 from the Bundesliga, and 15 from LaLiga teams among the 24 squads at the tournament in Morocco.


Rodgers Takes Charge of Saudi Team Al-Qadsiah After Departure from Celtic 

Then-Celtic head coach Brendan Rodgers greets supporters after a Europa League soccer match between Red Star and Celtic at Rajko Mitic Stadium in Belgrade, Serbia, Sept. 24, 2025. (AP)
Then-Celtic head coach Brendan Rodgers greets supporters after a Europa League soccer match between Red Star and Celtic at Rajko Mitic Stadium in Belgrade, Serbia, Sept. 24, 2025. (AP)
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Rodgers Takes Charge of Saudi Team Al-Qadsiah After Departure from Celtic 

Then-Celtic head coach Brendan Rodgers greets supporters after a Europa League soccer match between Red Star and Celtic at Rajko Mitic Stadium in Belgrade, Serbia, Sept. 24, 2025. (AP)
Then-Celtic head coach Brendan Rodgers greets supporters after a Europa League soccer match between Red Star and Celtic at Rajko Mitic Stadium in Belgrade, Serbia, Sept. 24, 2025. (AP)

Brendan Rodgers has returned to football as the coach of Saudi Arabian club Al-Qadsiah, six weeks after resigning from Scottish champion Celtic.

Al-Qadsiah, whose squad includes Italian striker Mateo Retegui and former Real Madrid defender Fernandez Nacho, is in fifth place in the Saudi Pro League in its first season after promotion.

Rodgers departed Celtic on Oct. 27 and has opted to continue his managerial career outside Britain for the first time, having previously coached Liverpool, Leicester and Swansea.

In its statement announcing the hiring of Rodgers on Tuesday, Al-Qadsiah described him as a “world-renowned coach” and said his arrival “reflects the club’s ambitious vision and its rapidly growing sporting project.”

Aramco, the state-owned Saudi oil giant, bought Al-Qadsiah in 2023 in a move that has helped to transform the club’s status.

“This is a landmark moment for the club,” Al-Qadsiah chief executive James Bisgrove said. “The caliber of his experience and track record of winning reflects our ambition and long-term vision to establish Al-Qadsiah as one of Asia’s leading clubs.”

Rodgers is coming off winning back-to-back Scottish league titles with Celtic, where he won 11 major trophies across his two spells. He also won the FA Cup with Leicester.

Al-Qadsiah's last two coaches were former Liverpool striker Robbie Fowler and former Spain midfielder Michel.


Portugal to Return to F1 Calendar in 2027 and 2028 

12 July 2025, United Arab Emirates, Abu Dhabi: Red Bull driver Max Verstappen leads into turn one during the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix at the Yas Marina Circuit, Abu Dhabi. (dpa)
12 July 2025, United Arab Emirates, Abu Dhabi: Red Bull driver Max Verstappen leads into turn one during the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix at the Yas Marina Circuit, Abu Dhabi. (dpa)
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Portugal to Return to F1 Calendar in 2027 and 2028 

12 July 2025, United Arab Emirates, Abu Dhabi: Red Bull driver Max Verstappen leads into turn one during the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix at the Yas Marina Circuit, Abu Dhabi. (dpa)
12 July 2025, United Arab Emirates, Abu Dhabi: Red Bull driver Max Verstappen leads into turn one during the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix at the Yas Marina Circuit, Abu Dhabi. (dpa)

Formula One will return to Portugal's Portimao circuit in 2027 and 2028 after the Dutch Grand Prix at Zandvoort drops off the calendar.

Formula One announced a two-year deal in a statement on Tuesday.

The 4.6-km Algarve International circuit in the country's south last hosted the Portuguese Grand Prix in 2020 and 2021, both seasons impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic with stand-in venues.

In 2020, seven-times world champion Lewis Hamilton took his 92nd career win at Portimao, breaking the record previously held by Michael Schumacher. Hamilton also won in 2021.

"The interest and demand to host a Formula One Grand Prix is the highest that it has ever been," said Formula One chief executive Stefano Domenicali, thanking the Portuguese government and local authorities.

The financial terms of the deal were not announced.

"Hosting the Grand Prix in the Algarve reinforces our regional development strategy, enhancing the value of the territories and creating opportunities for local economies," said Economy Minister Manuel Castro Almeida.

Portugal first hosted a grand prix in Porto in 1958, with subsequent races at Monsanto and Estoril near Lisbon. The late Brazilian great Ayrton Senna took his first grand prix pole and win at the latter circuit in 1985.

Formula One announced last year that Zandvoort, a home race for four-times world champion Max Verstappen, would drop off the calendar after 2026.

The championship already features a record 24 races and Domenicali has spoken of European rounds alternating to allow others to come in.

Belgium's race at Spa-Francorchamps is due to be dropped in 2028 and 2030 as part of a contract extension to 2031 announced last January.