Newport’s Pádraig Amond: ‘I’m the Weirdest League Two Footballer Ever’

Pádraig Amond, right, celebrates scoring his side’s second goal during the FA Cup fourth-round replay against Middlesbrough. Photograph: Athena Pictures/Getty Images
Pádraig Amond, right, celebrates scoring his side’s second goal during the FA Cup fourth-round replay against Middlesbrough. Photograph: Athena Pictures/Getty Images
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Newport’s Pádraig Amond: ‘I’m the Weirdest League Two Footballer Ever’

Pádraig Amond, right, celebrates scoring his side’s second goal during the FA Cup fourth-round replay against Middlesbrough. Photograph: Athena Pictures/Getty Images
Pádraig Amond, right, celebrates scoring his side’s second goal during the FA Cup fourth-round replay against Middlesbrough. Photograph: Athena Pictures/Getty Images

It is approaching 7.30pm on Monday and Pádraig Amond has just finished taking a training session with Newport County’s under-15 and under-16 teams. “Emergency defending” was the theme of the evening and as Amond worked through various drills, focusing on being outnumbered and “how to deal with the overload”, it was hard to escape the feeling that the Irishman will soon have a chance to practise what he preaches. “There’s going to be loads of that against Manchester City, isn’t there?” Amond says, smiling.

Pep Guardiola’s side visit Rodney Parade in the FA Cup fifth round on Saturday and it seems safe to assume none of City’s players will have prepared for the tie by coaching in their academy. “I’m doing nothing else on an evening, so why not?” says Amond, who has been training the youngsters every Monday and Thursday since August. “I want to be one step ahead of everyone and that’s why I started my badges when I did. I’ve no interest in finishing playing anytime soon, though.”

Amond, who is the League Two club’s top scorer with 18 goals, laughs when it is put to him that what he is doing with Newport is the equivalent of Sergio Agüero coaching City’s schoolboys on an evening. “Yeah,” says Amond, pausing for a moment as he tries to picture that scene. “He’s probably not doing that, is he? I wish I had his bank balance!”

Agüero would no doubt have been impressed with the goal Amond scored to double Newport’s lead against Middlesbrough in last week’s FA Cup replay. In a move straight off the training ground, Amond darted to the near post to sweep home a glorious first-time shot, on the half volley, from a short corner. It was so good that it is tempting to wonder how many times he has watched it back. “A few,” Amond says. “A few hundred!

“I’ve never hit a ball as sweet in my life. But I’ll be honest with you, I specifically went through that technique the night before here, coaching with one of the young strikers. It wasn’t a set piece we were working on, it was just the timing of your run across the near post, so when the ball is coming back, and what way to hit it.

“With that goal against Middlesbrough, there’s a split second where I’m the only person either in the ground, or watching the game on TV, who knows where that’s going and it’s like time slows down. The moment it came off my foot, I knew it was in the top corner. And for that split second it’s the best feeling in the world. If you could bottle that feeling and sell it, you would be a multimillionaire.”

Manchester City have plenty of those within their star-studded squad and it will be fascinating to see how they cope with the humble surroundings of Rodney Parade, in particular a playing surface that has been battered by the combination of rugby, football and poor weather. “I think the pitch looks a lot worse than it is,” Amond says. “But I wouldn’t be surprised if City rocked up with their own ground staff to work on it before the game.”

Amond is talking in a dugout next to the pitch where he has been coaching for more than two hours. Gregarious and generous with his time, he is an instantly likable character and has quite a CV. “I’m the weirdest League Two footballer ever,” Amond says, laughing.

The 30-year-old is referring to the fact Cristiano Ronaldo made his Real Madrid debut against him and that he had a spell in the top flight in Portugal with Paços de Ferreira early in his career. Nicolás Otamendi marked him on one occasion, as a substitute in a 3-0 defeat to Porto in 2010 – “I remember but I don’t think he will” – and in the corresponding game, later in the season, Amond came off the bench to set up the equalising goal in a 3-3 draw in which Radamel Falcao and James Rodríguez played. “That was my last touch in Portuguese football, away to Porto,” Amond says. “They got the trophy [for being champions] before the game. Pizzi scored a hat-trick for us and got a £15m move to Atlético Madrid afterwards.”

Amond, in contrast, joined Accrington Stanley. He later moved on to Morecambe, Grimsby and Hartlepool, where he suffered relegation from the Football League on the final day of the 2016-17 campaign to the benefit of Newport, the club he would sign for three months later and where he has helped to create some wonderful FA Cup memories over the last two seasons with his goals against Tottenham, Leicester and Middlesbrough. “It’s amazing how things work out,” Amond says. “The gaffer [Michael Flynn] keeps saying he saved my career. I keep telling him that I’m going to make his career.”

With a prolific record in the lower leagues, and some hugely impressive performances in the FA Cup this season and last, Amond is entitled to wonder whether he is capable of making that step up. “I still believe I can play at a high level,” he says. “I still believe I can play for Ireland. And maybe the last couple of months have given me more belief and determination than ever.”

Amond has had a few brushes with the big time, none more so than in July 2009 when he was in the Shamrock Rovers side that hosted Real Madrid in a pre-season friendly. Ronaldo had not long completed his then world-record £80m transfer from Manchester United, meaning the 10,000 fans shoehorned into the Tallaght Stadium were treated to the sight of the Portugal international making his first Real Madrid appearance.

Shamrock lost 1-0, courtesy of a late Karim Benzema goal, but Amond came away with a prized possession. “The half-time whistle was approaching and everyone was shuffling towards Ronaldo to try to get his shirt. I saw Raúl loosening his top and asked if I could have his. He said I could and then gestured for me to swap mine. I said: ‘I think I’m playing the second half.’”

Amond breaks into laughter as he tells that story but his expression quickly changes when asked whether he plans to get a City shirt. “It doesn’t cross my mind. This is a game I want to win – as stupid as that might sound.There’s no point in me doing an interview like this with you if I trivialise it by saying it will be a great day for the club. I want to make it a great day for us. I want to enjoy the day the right way, like I did against Leeds, Spurs, Leicester and Middlesbrough. Whether it’s blind faith or not, I don’t know. But I still believe we can do something.”

(The Guardian)



Moriyasu Hails Japan’s Late Tactical Switch as Ito Sinks Scotland 1-0 Amid Hampden Boos

Hajime Moriyasu head coach of Japan gestures during the international friendly soccer match between Scotland and Japan in Glasgow, Britain, 28 March 2026. (EPA)
Hajime Moriyasu head coach of Japan gestures during the international friendly soccer match between Scotland and Japan in Glasgow, Britain, 28 March 2026. (EPA)
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Moriyasu Hails Japan’s Late Tactical Switch as Ito Sinks Scotland 1-0 Amid Hampden Boos

Hajime Moriyasu head coach of Japan gestures during the international friendly soccer match between Scotland and Japan in Glasgow, Britain, 28 March 2026. (EPA)
Hajime Moriyasu head coach of Japan gestures during the international friendly soccer match between Scotland and Japan in Glasgow, Britain, 28 March 2026. (EPA)

Japan coach Hajime Moriyasu hailed his team's tactical flexibility after a late Junya Ito strike secured a 1-0 victory over Scotland in a pre- World Cup friendly at Hampden Park, leaving the home side facing a chorus of boos.

In a key warm-up for their eighth successive World Cup appearance, the Samurai Blue overcame a bright Scotland start to dominate the second half. Substitute Ito proved the difference in the 84th minute with a clinical finish from 12 yards to settle a tight contest.

While Scotland manager Steve Clarke admitted he was “surprised and disappointed” by the negative reaction from the Tartan Army, Moriyasu focused on his side’s defensive discipline and late clinical edge.

“I am very pleased to play in such a fantastic atmosphere,” Moriyasu said. “It was a tough game and we managed to keep a clean sheet. Toward the end, we changed the setup to get the goal. It was great for building confidence.”

The visitors survived an early scare when Zion Suzuki pushed a Scott McTominay effort onto the post, but Japan gradually asserted control. Kodai Sano clipped the bar before the break, and the pressure eventually told when Ito got the breakthrough.

The result leaves Scotland winless in four meetings against Japan as both sides prepare for the World Cup in North America starting in June.

Japan plays England at Wembley Stadium in London on Tuesday.


Sabalenka Sinks Gauff to Win Second Straight Miami Open Title

Aryna Sabalenka poses with the Butch Buchholz trophy after defeating Coco Gauff of the United States during the Women's Singles Final on Day 12 of the Miami Open Presented by Itau at Hard Rock Stadium on March 28, 2026, in Miami Gardens, Florida. (Getty Images/AFP)
Aryna Sabalenka poses with the Butch Buchholz trophy after defeating Coco Gauff of the United States during the Women's Singles Final on Day 12 of the Miami Open Presented by Itau at Hard Rock Stadium on March 28, 2026, in Miami Gardens, Florida. (Getty Images/AFP)
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Sabalenka Sinks Gauff to Win Second Straight Miami Open Title

Aryna Sabalenka poses with the Butch Buchholz trophy after defeating Coco Gauff of the United States during the Women's Singles Final on Day 12 of the Miami Open Presented by Itau at Hard Rock Stadium on March 28, 2026, in Miami Gardens, Florida. (Getty Images/AFP)
Aryna Sabalenka poses with the Butch Buchholz trophy after defeating Coco Gauff of the United States during the Women's Singles Final on Day 12 of the Miami Open Presented by Itau at Hard Rock Stadium on March 28, 2026, in Miami Gardens, Florida. (Getty Images/AFP)

Aryna Sabalenka won her second straight Miami Open title on Sunday beating Coco Gauff 6-2, 4-6, 6-3 to complete a "Sunshine Double" Indian Wells-Miami sweep.

The world number one from Belarus, fresh off her first triumph in the California desert, became the fifth woman -- and the first since Iga Swiatek in 2022 -- to win both of the elite early season hardcourt WTA 1000 titles.

"It means a lot," Sabalenka said after joining Poland's Swiatek, German great Steffi Graf, Belgian Kim Clijsters and fellow Belarusian Victoria Azarenka on the list of women to win both titles in the same year.

"My goal always been to put my name in the history, and I just did it."

Sabalenka underscored her WTA dominance in a season in which her only defeat to date was her Australian Open finals loss to Elena Rybakina -- who she went on to beat in the Indian Wells title match and in the semi-finals here.

She handed Gauff her first career defeat in a hardcourt final.

The American had won her first nine, including a triumph over Sabalenka in the 2023 US Open championship match.

Gauff had also beaten the Belarusian for the title on the red clay of Roland Garros last year.

So Sabalenka said she wasn't surprised to see Gauff dig in, even after the Belarusian pocketed the first set with a ruthless display of power and precision.

She broke Gauff to open the match and, after Gauff saved three break points in a gritty fifth game, broke the American again in the seventh before serving it out in 37 minutes without facing a break point herself.

In a tense second set, Gauff's first break point chance -- from a blistering backhand passing winner in the second game -- sparked a jubilant reaction from the crowd at Hard Rock Stadium, home of the NFL's Miami Dolphins that is just about an hour away from Gauff's Delray Beach home.

But Gauff couldn't convert, slamming a forehand into the net on the next point as Sabalenka held.

It needed another gutsy hold from Gauff to keep it on serve in the fifth game.

Up 40-0, she wasted three game points with a pair of errors off the ground and a double fault then had to save a break point before taking the game.

But Gauff was finding more depth on her returns and broke Sabalenka for the first time to take the second set.

"I knew that she's going to try her very best to fight in this match," Sabalenka said.

"I was just trying to keep a positive mindset going into the third set. I'm super happy how well I handled my emotions how well I stayed focused from the very beginning to the very end."

- What a month -

And the third set, again, was virtually all Sabalenka.

She broke to open the final frame and broke again when Gauff sailed a backhand long on Sabalenka's first match point.

"What a month," said Sabalenka, who along with two prestigious titles acquired a new puppy and got engaged to boyfriend Georgios Frangulis.

Gauff was also feeling grateful after a rocky March that saw her withdraw from her third-round match at Indian Wells with a nerve issue that caused "scary" pain in her left arm.

She had said after a dominant semi-final win over Karolina Muchova that she was making progress with the inconsistencies in her serve and forehand, although seven double faults hurt her cause against Sabalenka.

And after considering skipping the event, the 22-year-old was thrilled to reach the final for the first time.

"I feel like I'm nowhere near my peak of my tennis, so I think it gives me comfort a little bit playing these tournaments and having great results," she said.


Man City Close in on WSL Title with 3-0 Derby Win

Vivianne Miedema celebrates her first goal as Manchester City dominate at Old Trafford. Photograph: Craig Brough/Action Images/Reuters
Vivianne Miedema celebrates her first goal as Manchester City dominate at Old Trafford. Photograph: Craig Brough/Action Images/Reuters
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Man City Close in on WSL Title with 3-0 Derby Win

Vivianne Miedema celebrates her first goal as Manchester City dominate at Old Trafford. Photograph: Craig Brough/Action Images/Reuters
Vivianne Miedema celebrates her first goal as Manchester City dominate at Old Trafford. Photograph: Craig Brough/Action Images/Reuters

A quick-fire first-half double from Vivianne Miedema set Manchester City on course for a 3-0 WSL derby win over Manchester United at Old Trafford that left them on the cusp of winning the league title for the first time since 2016.

The leaders moved up to 49 points after 19 of 22 games with Manchester United second on 38 points. Chelsea, who have won the last six titles, are third on 37 points and Arsenal, who have three games in hand over City, are fourth on 35.

On a day when the weather swung from bright spring sunshine to dark clouds and driving rain, City started off at a frenetic pace and did not let up until they had the three points firmly in the bag, Reuters reported.

Lauren Hemp smacked a shot off the crossbar in the 16th minute and Miedema gave City the lead a minute later from the ensuing corner with a looping header that evaded the dive of Phallon Tullis-Joyce in the United goal.

Two minutes later Miedema scored again as City swept up the pitch with a brilliant passing move, Kerstin Casparij crossing for her unmarked Dutch compatriot to leap into the air and send a downward header bouncing into the net.

Casparij netted the third four minutes after the break, steaming in at the far post to convert after Hemp's cross flew just over the head of City striker Bunny Shaw.

Marc Skinner's United looked a step slow in everything they did, and did not manage an effort on target until late in the second half. It was far too late, though, as City cruised to victory to close in on their first title in 10 years.

In a day of derbies in the WSL, Liverpool held on for a 3-2 win at Everton in the early kickoff, and Arsenal host Tottenham Hotspur in Saturday's late game.