Nuno EspíRito Santo: 'We Cannot Build a Gameplan Based on a Draw … Always to Win'

 Nuno Espírito Santo, manager of Wolves, has picked the same starting XI in all eight Premier League games so far and will face Watford on Saturday afternoon. Photograph: Jordan Mansfield/Getty Images
Nuno Espírito Santo, manager of Wolves, has picked the same starting XI in all eight Premier League games so far and will face Watford on Saturday afternoon. Photograph: Jordan Mansfield/Getty Images
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Nuno EspíRito Santo: 'We Cannot Build a Gameplan Based on a Draw … Always to Win'

 Nuno Espírito Santo, manager of Wolves, has picked the same starting XI in all eight Premier League games so far and will face Watford on Saturday afternoon. Photograph: Jordan Mansfield/Getty Images
Nuno Espírito Santo, manager of Wolves, has picked the same starting XI in all eight Premier League games so far and will face Watford on Saturday afternoon. Photograph: Jordan Mansfield/Getty Images

Nuno Espírito Santo has an embarrassing story to get off his chest. The Wolverhampton Wanderers manager has been explaining why he tends to look the other way if one of his young players arrives at training in a flashy car or spends £500 on a pair of trainers. Instead of throwing his weight around, he prefers to act on instinct and take his cue from performances on the pitch. “It is not [my] money,” Nuno says. “What gives you the authority to decide?”

Anyway, he was young once and he has made mistakes. How about the time, for instance, when he bought a plot of land overlooking Santuário da Penha, a famous church in Guimarães? The Portuguese calls it an extravagance but he was going to build his dream home at the top of the highest hill in the city. All Nuno needed was permission from the council before pressing ahead with his plan. He looks back now and admits he probably should have asked the question before finalising the purchase.

“When I did, they said ‘no’,” he says. “Afterwards I went again and asked: ‘Can I build?’ And they said: ‘No, the area is protected.’ It comes up for application every 15 years when they allow some development. But they told me: ‘This area here? Forget about it. You cannot build there.’ I should have checked it out.

“But it was in 2002 and I was 27. It was perfect. We sometimes go and just sit there. The views are fantastic. But building? No, they don’t allow it. Because it’s over 200 metres they won’t allow it.”

Nuno is sitting with a group of reporters at Wolves’ training ground and he asks whether anyone fancies buying the land. He has his audience in the palm of his hand, mainly because sharing that anecdote has revealed a self-deprecating streak. It is believable when the former goalkeeper says he is strict but not overbearing.

He is professional and composed but he does not take himself too seriously. He is not the type to have informers tracking his players in Wolverhampton. “They have Instagram,” Nuno says. “They are so proud of showing themselves and the bullshit they are doing that you don’t have to chase them.”It is another witty line. Nuno has found happiness since arriving at Wolves in the summer of 2017 and helping them to steamroller the Championship last season. The former Porto, Rio Ave and Valencia manager insists he has no plans to leave Molineux – with the backing of the club’s Chinese owners, there is a belief that Wolves can challenge the Premier League elite – and he talks about his determination to build an identity that runs through the entire club.

Nuno, part of José Mourinho’s trophy-winning squad at Porto from 2002 to 2004, has an eye for group dynamics. He has created a culture where everyone greets each other in the morning. Perhaps it comes from his upbringing on the island of Príncipe. “I grew up with no shoes because my house was there and the beach was there,” he says. “There were no cars and we played. It was paradise.”

Wolves have set a Premier League record by playing the same starting XI in their first eight games, which is why Nuno paid tribute to the club’s medical staff after being named September’s manager of the month. “I hope I win it again,” he says. “That time it will be for the guys from the kitchen. Everybody is important. If you don’t have a kit-man then you are ruined.

“I give an example. Wolverhampton, January, a training session at 10am. It’s minus-five degrees. A player comes in a bad humour and it’s because the kit-man hasn’t given him his hat and gloves. We have a problem. You have to have a good support staff. If a player has had a bad night, the first person he will share his mood with is the physio. If you have someone in that role who is supportive, that’s the first message.”

What about the player who moans because of the weather? “It doesn’t happen,” Nuno says. “Because I have already talked to the kit-man. I say: ‘Whatever they want, if it makes sense give it to them.’ Instead of trying to solve things by punishments, we change the environment so the player gets educated. Another example. One player comes to training late, so you wait for him. Instead of fining him £1000, we say: ‘What happened in your life that made us have to wait for you to start working?’”

When the interview finishes, Nuno pulls out a couple of empty notepads and says he was hoping to sketch out a few tactical formations. For 75 minutes, though, the conversation has focused on his leadership qualities. Nuno loves talking about football but it is difficult not to feel that his views on life inform his attacking approach.

Some teams try to sit back after promotion to the Premier League. Yet Wolves have sparkled in their 3-4-3 system and occupy seventh place. They held Manchester United at Old Trafford last month and earned plaudits for refusing to be cowed when they drew 1-1 with Manchester City in August.

Most managers simply hope for the best against Pep Guardiola’s champions. Not Nuno, though. “We never play like that,” he says. “We will never play like that. It doesn’t make sense. How can you build a gameplan based on just drawing? You have a corner, you get one goal, you are losing, you lose your gameplan.

“The players look and say ‘now what?’

“What you have to become is really strong in what you do. That’s the point of building a team. You don’t know any other way – it would be absurd to do it any other way.”

It has been suggested that Rafael Benítez’s Newcastle United side have been very defensive against the big sides. “No comment at all,” Nuno says. “I am speaking about myself. We cannot build a gameplan built on a draw. Everything can change so fast. You have to prepare to win. How? Every last ball we can win. That’s the gameplan. Always to win.

“The way you analyse? How they build? What they like? They want to play on the outside, so let’s make them play on the inside. You take routines away from the other team. Your gameplan is to recover the ball here because you want to go there. We don’t do gameplans to draw.”

Nuno suggests that former footballers are more qualified to comment on tactics. But he also knows that some people are after attention. “Sometimes a polemic tweeter is more important than a normal view,” he says.

“You know how things move. What sells more, criticism or compliments? What do people like more? They enjoy blood. You? If you have to write ‘oh, they were very good’ or do you want to tear into them? You know what I mean.”

Does he enjoy blood? “No,” Nuno says. “I live in peace.”

The Guardian Sport



Sublime Sinner Secures Safe Passage at US Open as Swiatek Rolls On

Italy's Jannik Sinner plays a return to Australia's Christopher O'Connell during their men's singles third round match on day six of the US Open tennis tournament at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York City, on August 31, 2024. (AFP)
Italy's Jannik Sinner plays a return to Australia's Christopher O'Connell during their men's singles third round match on day six of the US Open tennis tournament at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York City, on August 31, 2024. (AFP)
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Sublime Sinner Secures Safe Passage at US Open as Swiatek Rolls On

Italy's Jannik Sinner plays a return to Australia's Christopher O'Connell during their men's singles third round match on day six of the US Open tennis tournament at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York City, on August 31, 2024. (AFP)
Italy's Jannik Sinner plays a return to Australia's Christopher O'Connell during their men's singles third round match on day six of the US Open tennis tournament at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in New York City, on August 31, 2024. (AFP)

Jannik Sinner avoided the fate of his top rivals, reaching the fourth round of the US Open while fellow top seed Iga Swiatek gained momentum in her quest for a sixth Grand Slam title after a pep talk from Serena Williams on Saturday.

With defending champion Novak Djokovic forced out by a shock loss to Alexei Popyrin in the third round on Friday and another title contender, Carlos Alcaraz, sent crashing by Botic van de Zandschulp in round two a day earlier, all eyes were on Sinner.

The Italian, who has managed the intense scrutiny following a doping controversy in the build-up to the tournament, thumped Christopher O'Connell 6-1 6-4 6-2 to underline his credentials as the outright favorite at the year's final major.

"This sport is unpredictable, no? Whenever you drop a little bit of your level, you know, if it's mental, if it's tennis-wise or physical, at the end it has a huge impact on the result," Sinner said about the exits of Djokovic and Alcaraz.

"Both opponents who they lost against played incredible tennis. And it happens.

"So I just watch on my side what I have to do, you know, that I guess I've done, and then we'll see what I can do."

Up next for the Australian Open champion is Tommy Paul, who is among a group of players keen to end a 21-year American wait for a homegrown major winner, since Andy Roddick claimed the title in New York.

Paul, the 14th seed, recovered from a first-set wobble to overcome Canadian Gabriel Diallo 6-7(5) 6-3 6-1 7-6(3) and hoped to counter Sinner's "bang-bang tennis" when they clash.

"He's probably the best ball striker on tour and I'm not," Paul said. "I don't want to go toe to toe just banging on the baseline with him. I want to try and mix things up."

Paul's compatriot and sixth seed Jessica Pegula advanced in the women's draw with a 6-3 6-3 win over Jessica Bouzas Maneiro, but Ashlyn Krueger fell 6-1 6-1 to Liudmila Samsonova.

‘Positive energy’

French Open champion Swiatek later swatted aside Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova 6-4 6-2 with a near-flawless performance after a chat with 23-times major winner Williams, who returned to the US Open as a fan having stepped away from tennis in 2022.

"It was really nice to see her. She has a lot of positive energy. It's nice that she came onsite and she was chatting with the players," a star-struck Swiatek said.

"It was nice that she approach me, because I wouldn't, for sure, find the courage to do that if it was the other way round. But, yeah, she's really nice and really positive.

"I'm happy she's following tennis and my game, because she told me she's cheering for me."

Roland Garros and Wimbledon runner-up Jasmine Paolini beat Yulia Putintseva 6-3 6-4 as the diminutive Italian continued to fly under the radar, but she could face a big hurdle with Czech Karolina Muchova up next.

Muchova, who is rediscovering her best form after 10 months out with a wrist injury, outclassed Anastasia Potapova 6-4 6-2.

Australian Alex de Minaur's injury problems are more recent, but the 10th seed shrugged off a frustrating hip issue that has dogged him since Wimbledon to outlast Briton Dan Evans 6-3 6-7 (4-7) 6-0 6-0.

Evans beat Karen Khachanov in the longest US Open match of the professional era on Tuesday at five hours and 35 minutes but finally ran out of gas.

Caroline Wozniacki showed she had plenty left in the tank since her comeback in 2023 after a three-year break following the births of her two children as the 34-year-old Dane eased past Jessika Ponchet 6-3 6-2.

Briton Jack Draper, who is carrying the torch for his nation following the retirement of Andy Murray this summer, beat Van de Zandschulp 6-3 6-4 6-2.

Daniil Medvedev, the only former New York champion left in the men's draw, breezed past Flavio Cobolli 6-3 6-4 6-3 and set his sights on going all the way, as he did in 2021.

"It's the only Grand Slam where I have that chance," fifth seed Medvedev said.

"I for sure didn't expect to have this in the fourth round when Novak and Carlos are here. It's a fun feeling from one side but from the other side it's a new tournament.

"I need to play my best to try to win it again."