Bury’s Ryan Lowe: ‘Jürgen Klopp Complimented Me on My Style and System’

 Bury’s attacking football has received plenty of praise thanks to the work of striker Nicky Maynard, left, and Jay O’Shea, right. Photograph: Alex Burstow/Getty Images
Bury’s attacking football has received plenty of praise thanks to the work of striker Nicky Maynard, left, and Jay O’Shea, right. Photograph: Alex Burstow/Getty Images
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Bury’s Ryan Lowe: ‘Jürgen Klopp Complimented Me on My Style and System’

 Bury’s attacking football has received plenty of praise thanks to the work of striker Nicky Maynard, left, and Jay O’Shea, right. Photograph: Alex Burstow/Getty Images
Bury’s attacking football has received plenty of praise thanks to the work of striker Nicky Maynard, left, and Jay O’Shea, right. Photograph: Alex Burstow/Getty Images

If you were asked to guess the highest-scoring teams in the top four divisions, you would pick Manchester City straight away. Norwich would not take too long. A bit of thinking would lead you to Luton. But a team you might not get but are right up there with the most prolific in the land are Bury.

The Shakers are the entertainers of League Two, with 85 goals in all competitions this season, playing with a gung-ho style that looks good fun but is probably not a relaxing watch for their supporters.

Since the turn of the year they have beaten Morecambe 3-2 having been three-up inside the hour; drawn 3-3 with Lincoln; beaten Oxford United 5-2; won 4-3 against MK Dons having been 3-1 down with 18 minutes left; and won 4-2 at Accrington having been two behind at half-time. The comparatively low-key 1-0 victory at Exeter this past weekend might have been medically prescribed to regulate collective blood pressure.

All of this is down to the manager, Ryan Lowe. A club hero who scored 72 times in three spells at Gigg Lane, spearheading their last two promotion campaigns, Lowe was dragooned into the manager’s chair twice last season, his two caretaker spells sandwiching Chris Lucketti’s calamitous 10 games in charge.

Lowe could not stop relegation but, having been given the job on a permanent basis, decided in the summer to do things his own way. And his own way is frantic, attacking, cavalier football. “Because I was a striker,” Lowe says, when asked why he chooses to play this way. “I loved scoring goals, wherever it was: whether it was on the pitch or in the back garden with my little lad. My assistant Steven Schumacher was a goalscoring midfielder. We loved playing an attacking style and most of the successful teams I played in had an attacking style.”

If that seems a bit risky for his first job at a League Two club – after all, it is one thing to try something like this with Premier League resources but another in the bottom tier of the Football League – Lowe says: “I’ve said a lot of times, ‘Why can’t Bury play like Liverpool or Manchester City?’ I think it’s the best way. You look at Barcelona, City, Liverpool: everything’s risky, isn’t it?

“People talk about philosophy but I wanted to instil a winning philosophy. We thought that just by outscoring teams we’d have more chance of doing that. I won’t change my style of play. There’s no point. At the moment we’re doing OK with it and you’ve got to stick with the way you do things. I always felt I wanted to do things my way and, if I’m not successful or it doesn’t work out, then at least I’ve tried my way. I was a striker. If you’d put me at centre-half, I’d be no good.”

Lowe settled on his system – loosely speaking a sort of 3-1-4-2 with two No 10s (usually converted wingers Jay O’Shea and Danny Mayor) and attacking wing-backs – after it went well in pre-season against Liverpool. “When someone like Jürgen Klopp compliments you on your style and your system, for me that was a big thing to say: ‘Let’s keep working on it.’”

Klopp is just one of the big names Lowe has picked the brains of. The Liverpool manager stuck around for a beer after that game. Lowe had found out what his favourite brand was and got a few bottles in and he has also spent time with Rafa Benítez and Brendan Rodgers. A trip to see Pep Guardiola is in the diary. “I’ll take as much information off anyone that I possibly can. I’m not saying I know everything – far from it. But I am saying I want to know everything.”

Steven Gerrard is another. The two men have been friends since they were in the Liverpool youth set-up and now here they are, taking their first swings at management at the same time, albeit under rather different levels of scrutiny. “We’ve been speaking lately quite a bit because we’ve just signed Jordan Rossiter from Rangers. Stevie’s in the public eye but he’s doing a fantastic job. I’m under the radar a bit because we’re not as big as them.”

Lowe emphasises that the most important thing to nail was Bury’s recruitment in the summer, particularly after the mess of last season when they finished bottom of League One. “We had some players who didn’t fulfil their potential, which resulted in getting relegated. We had to get rid of those players. We needed to freshen things up. I wanted players who had a little bit of passion about them, who could get bums off seats at Gigg Lane, because it hadn’t happened for a while. I wanted to change the culture of the football club, from selfishness, complacency, arrogance and a blame culture.”

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In some ways it is surprising Lowe is here at all, having been the man at the helm when the ship went down. The club could not have been blamed for giving someone else the permanent gig. Equally, the experience might have discouraged Lowe from taking it.

“If it had been any other football club, it might have put me off,” Lowe says. “But this is my club, so it didn’t. I wanted to bring the good times back to Bury, to the people who deserve to have good times. Slowly but surely I think we’re doing that.”

The Guardian Sport



What to Know About the 2026 Champions League Final

Fans of Arsenal cheer during the UEFA Champions League semi-finals 2nd leg match Arsenal FC against Atletico de Madrid, in London, Britain, 05 May 2026. EPA/NEIL HALL
Fans of Arsenal cheer during the UEFA Champions League semi-finals 2nd leg match Arsenal FC against Atletico de Madrid, in London, Britain, 05 May 2026. EPA/NEIL HALL
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What to Know About the 2026 Champions League Final

Fans of Arsenal cheer during the UEFA Champions League semi-finals 2nd leg match Arsenal FC against Atletico de Madrid, in London, Britain, 05 May 2026. EPA/NEIL HALL
Fans of Arsenal cheer during the UEFA Champions League semi-finals 2nd leg match Arsenal FC against Atletico de Madrid, in London, Britain, 05 May 2026. EPA/NEIL HALL

Arsenal became the first team to book its place in the 2026 Champions League final by beating Atletico Madrid on Tuesday.

Paris Saint-Germain or Bayern Munich will join the Premier League club in the showpiece at the Puskas Arena in Budapest, Hungary this month.

Defending champion PSG leads Bayern 5-4 after a thrilling first leg in Paris.

The second leg is on Wednesday in Munich.

Here's what to know about the Champions League final.

When is the Champions League final and what time is the kick off? This year's final will be staged in Budapest on May 30. Kick off time has been brought forward to 1800 CET, having traditionally been played 2100 CET. Governing body UEFA said the decision for an earlier kick off was to enhance the matchday experience for fans and to optimize logistics such as public transport.

Who is headlining the pre-match show? Rock band the Killers will be performing on the night. In recent years Linkin Park and Lenny Kravitz have headlined.

Arsenal is in the final for the first time since 2006. It is only its second time in the final and it has never won European club soccer's top competition, having lost to Barcelona in 2006.

Mikel Arteta's team was beaten in last year's semifinals by eventual champion PSG.

PSG is aiming to become only the second team to win back-to-back Champions League titles, having lifted the trophy for the first time last year.

Since the tournament was rebranded as the Champions League in the 1992-93 campaign only Real Madrid has retained the title, winning three times in succession from 2016-18.

Bayern has won the Champions League or European Cup on six occasions — most recently in 2020. Victory this year would see it equal AC Milan's total of seven titles to make the German giant the joint second most successful team in the competition's history behind Madrid, which is a 15-time winner.

About the Puskas Arena The 67,000-seater stadium was opened in 2019 and built on the same site as the previous Ferenc Puskas Stadion — named after the Hungarian and Real Madrid icon, who won three European Cups as a player.

Recent winners 2025 PSG
2024 Real Madrid
2023 Manchester City
2022 Real Madrid
2021 Chelsea
Most Champions League/European Cup wins 15 Real Madrid
7 AC Milan
6 Bayern Munich, Liverpool
5 Barcelona
4 Ajax
3 Manchester United, Inter Milan

Where is the 2026-27 Champions League final? The 2027 final will be staged at Atletico Madrid's stadium the Estadio Metropolitano. It is the second time it has held the final, having staged the 2019 showdown between Liverpool and Tottenham.

The city of Madrid has hosted the final on five previous occasions.


Kostyuk Withdraws from Italian Open with Physical Issues after Titles in Madrid, Rouen

Marta Kostyuk of Ukraine poses with the trophy after winning her women's singles finals match against Mirra Andreeva of Russia at the Madrid Open tennis tournament in Madrid, Spain, 02 May 2026.  EPA/CHEMA MOYA
Marta Kostyuk of Ukraine poses with the trophy after winning her women's singles finals match against Mirra Andreeva of Russia at the Madrid Open tennis tournament in Madrid, Spain, 02 May 2026. EPA/CHEMA MOYA
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Kostyuk Withdraws from Italian Open with Physical Issues after Titles in Madrid, Rouen

Marta Kostyuk of Ukraine poses with the trophy after winning her women's singles finals match against Mirra Andreeva of Russia at the Madrid Open tennis tournament in Madrid, Spain, 02 May 2026.  EPA/CHEMA MOYA
Marta Kostyuk of Ukraine poses with the trophy after winning her women's singles finals match against Mirra Andreeva of Russia at the Madrid Open tennis tournament in Madrid, Spain, 02 May 2026. EPA/CHEMA MOYA

Fresh off the biggest title of her career, Marta Kostyuk of Ukraine withdrew from the Italian Open due to hip and ankle issues, The Associated Press reported.

Kostyuk won the Madrid Open on Saturday and is up to a career-best No. 15 in the rankings this week. Having also won another clay-court title in Rouen, France, the week before Madrid, Kostyuk is on an 11-match winning streak.

“After the best stretch of my career, I was looking forward to Rome. But sometimes your body has other plans, and over the past few days I’ve been dealing with a hip issue. With my ankle still not fully at 100%, it’s just not smart to keep pushing right now, so I won’t be competing there this year,” Kostyuk posted on Instagram on Tuesday as the tournament in Rome began.

“Now it’s time to recover and get ready for Paris,” Kostyuk said, referring to the French Open, which starts May 24.


Infantino Defends World Cup Ticket Prices

FIFA President Gianni Infantino speaks during the 29th annual Milken Institute Global Conference at the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California on May 5, 2026. (Photo by Patrick T. Fallon / AFP)
FIFA President Gianni Infantino speaks during the 29th annual Milken Institute Global Conference at the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California on May 5, 2026. (Photo by Patrick T. Fallon / AFP)
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Infantino Defends World Cup Ticket Prices

FIFA President Gianni Infantino speaks during the 29th annual Milken Institute Global Conference at the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California on May 5, 2026. (Photo by Patrick T. Fallon / AFP)
FIFA President Gianni Infantino speaks during the 29th annual Milken Institute Global Conference at the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California on May 5, 2026. (Photo by Patrick T. Fallon / AFP)

FIFA president Gianni Infantino on Tuesday defended World Cup ticket prices, insisting that football's global governing body was obliged to take advantage of US laws that allow tickets to be resold for thousands of dollars above face value.

FIFA has faced searing criticism over the cost of World Cup tickets, with fan organization Football Supporters Europe (FSE) branding the pricing structure "extortionate" and a "monumental betrayal".

FSE filed a lawsuit with the European Commission in March targeting FIFA over "excessive ticket prices" for the tournament.

FIFA's own World Cup resale website, FIFA Marketplace, last week advertised four tickets to the July 19 final in New York at a cost of more than $2 million each.

Speaking at the Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills, Infantino said the eye-watering prices reflected demand to watch the World Cup.

"If some people put on the resale market, some tickets for the final at $2 million, number one it doesn't mean that the tickets cost $2 million," AFP quoted Infantino as saying.

"And number two it doesn't mean that somebody will buy these tickets," Infantino said. "And if somebody buys a ticket for the final for $2 million I will personally bring him a hot dog and a Coke to make sure that he has a great experience."

Fan groups have contrasted the difference in price of tickets for this summer with the Qatar World Cup in 2022.

The most expensive ticket for the final in 2022 was around $1,600 at face value, while in 2026 the most expensive ticket for the final is about $11,000 at its original price.

Infantino was adamant that the steep increase in face-value prices were justified.

"We have to look at the market -- we are in the market in which entertainment is the most developed in the world. So we have to apply market rates," Infantino said.

"In the US it is permitted to resell tickets as well. So if you were to sell tickets at the price which is too low, these tickets will be resold at a much higher price.

"And as a matter of fact, even though some people are saying that the ticket prices we have are high, they still end up on the resale market at an even higher price, more than double of our price."

Infantino said that FIFA received in excess of 500 million ticket requests for 2026, compared with fewer than 50 million combined for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.

The FIFA leader added that 25 percent of tickets for the group phase were priced at under $300.

"You cannot go to watch in the US a college game, not even speaking about a top professional game of a certain level, for less than $300," Infantino said. "And this is the World Cup."