Newcastle’s Sean Longstaff: The New Carrick With Added Ice in His Veins

Rafael Benítez can see the likeness with Michael Carrick in Sean Longstaff ‘s play but the 21-year-old has additional attributes.
Photograph: Richard Lee/BPI/REX/Shutterstock
Rafael Benítez can see the likeness with Michael Carrick in Sean Longstaff ‘s play but the 21-year-old has additional attributes. Photograph: Richard Lee/BPI/REX/Shutterstock
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Newcastle’s Sean Longstaff: The New Carrick With Added Ice in His Veins

Rafael Benítez can see the likeness with Michael Carrick in Sean Longstaff ‘s play but the 21-year-old has additional attributes.
Photograph: Richard Lee/BPI/REX/Shutterstock
Rafael Benítez can see the likeness with Michael Carrick in Sean Longstaff ‘s play but the 21-year-old has additional attributes. Photograph: Richard Lee/BPI/REX/Shutterstock

Anyone who has watched Sean Longstaff play will understand why his name appears in sentences also featuring the words balance, poise, vision, and assurance.

Perhaps a little part of that is due to the year in which Newcastle’s midfielder of the moment spent every spare hour virtually living on an ice rink in Stockholm where his father, David, starred for Djurgården, one of Sweden’s leading ice hockey teams.

By the time he returned to north-east England and began playing football for North Shields juniors, Sean was still only five but, already, his game seemed unusually well calibrated. For one so young, his calmness under pressure suggested that something of the Stockholm ice had transported itself into his veins.

Unbeknown to a primary school prodigy swiftly recruited by Newcastle’s academy, his father’s career had reached a sliding-doors moment. David Longstaff’s talent was much coveted – he would become the first Great Britain ice hockey player to win 100 caps – and there were offers to emigrate to Canada from NHL sides.

A new life on another continent beckoned but he and his wife Michelle – an excellent netball player – could not quite break the ties to north Tyneside where David, 44, is the player-coach of Whitley Warriors.

Staying put dictated that Sean and his brother Matty – two years younger and another midfielder, impressing for Newcastle’s Under-23s – were destined to concentrate on football rather than ice hockey.

Already, Sean has emulated his uncle, the former winger Alan Thompson, in breaking into Newcastle’s first team. The 21-year-old has spent part of this week telling television interviewers he is “living the dream” after earning lavish plaudits in the course of the 12 appearances – eight in the Premier League – he has made for Rafael Benítez’s side this season.

Since making his league debut as a substitute in the 4-0 Boxing Day defeat at Liverpool, highlights have included a key role in a January home win against Manchester City and his first league goal, scored in Tuesday’s 2-0 home victory over Burnley.

Longstaff’s two-footed central-midfield skills have attracted the attention of the England Under-21 manager, Aidy Boothroyd, who seems certain to call him up to his next squad, not to mention numerous comparisons with another Geordie, the former Manchester United and England midfielder Michael Carrick.

If the similarities in the pair’s straight-backed running style are irresistible, they also share a certain serenity, namely that invaluable knack of appearing to always find time on the ball and rarely looking rushed or snatching at passes.

Throw in vision and a varied passing range and we are in doppelgänger territory but Benítez emphasizes some differences. “I can see that [the Carrick likeness],” says Newcastle’s manager. “But, at this stage, Sean has more mobility and stamina. Certainly he has the technique and he can use both feet as well.”

(The Guardian)



James Blake Says Future of Tennis is in Good Hands

Tennis - Italian Open - Foro Italico, Rome, Italy - May 7, 2025 General view inside the court during the round of 128 match between Serbia's Dusan Lajovic and Japan's Yoshihito Nishioka REUTERS/Aleksandra Szmigiel
Tennis - Italian Open - Foro Italico, Rome, Italy - May 7, 2025 General view inside the court during the round of 128 match between Serbia's Dusan Lajovic and Japan's Yoshihito Nishioka REUTERS/Aleksandra Szmigiel
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James Blake Says Future of Tennis is in Good Hands

Tennis - Italian Open - Foro Italico, Rome, Italy - May 7, 2025 General view inside the court during the round of 128 match between Serbia's Dusan Lajovic and Japan's Yoshihito Nishioka REUTERS/Aleksandra Szmigiel
Tennis - Italian Open - Foro Italico, Rome, Italy - May 7, 2025 General view inside the court during the round of 128 match between Serbia's Dusan Lajovic and Japan's Yoshihito Nishioka REUTERS/Aleksandra Szmigiel

James Blake believes men's tennis is poised for another Golden Era thanks to blossoming rivalries between the likes of Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner as the ex-world number four prepares to return to action himself as part of the new Legends Team Cup.
Blake, who retired from the ATP Tour in 2013 after a career spent battling greats including Andre Agassi, Andy Roddick, Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, said every changing of the guard brings anxiety that the sport will regress.
"With every generation there's this dread of a doomsday situation," he told Reuters from a golf course in San Diego.
"What's going to happen when all these legends leave? I remember when it was, 'What is the Tour going to do when (Pete) Sampras and Agassi are gone?'
"And then before you know it Roger and Rafa show up. Novak (Djokovic) is still hanging on, not wanting to pass the torch, but at this point it's kind of being ripped out of his hands by the likes of Sinner and Alcaraz."
He said the contrast in playing styles and personalities - the passionate Alcaraz's improvisational assault verse the emotionally reserved Sinner's aggressive baseline slugging - makes them ideal foes.
"The game just gets better and better," said Blake, who is the tournament director of the Miami Open and a commentator for ESPN.
"I'm never gonna be one of those commentators that says, you know, back in my day, we would do it better than this.
"No. The game keeps getting better and I love that about it. And seeing how Sinner plays makes me very happy I'm retired. The guy just has absolutely zero holes. So it's really fun to see."
LEGENDS TEAM CUP
Blake will make his return to competitive tennis this summer when the Legends Team Cup debuts.
Blake, Spanish former world number one Carlos Moya and two-time Davis Cup champion Mark Philippoussis of Australia are the captains of the team competition, which divides 18 former players into three teams.
Blake said it will not be like the "hit and giggle" exhibition events former pros sometimes take part in, in part because of the $12 million total prize purse on the line.
"When you leave from being a pro tennis player, your competitive spirit doesn't leave," said the 45-year-old Blake.
"You maybe can't play at that absolute top, top level that we were all at and we're all used to and your body starts failing you a little bit.
"So to have an opportunity to still really compete with others that have that ability and that fire is such a cool concept."
The first Legends Teams Cup event will see Team Blake take on Team Philippoussis in St. Barth June 12-14.