Jorginho: ‘I Certainly Don’t Consider Myself to Be Sarri's Golden Boy'

 Jorginho insists he is not Maurizio Sarri’s golden boy at Chelsea. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian
Jorginho insists he is not Maurizio Sarri’s golden boy at Chelsea. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian
TT

Jorginho: ‘I Certainly Don’t Consider Myself to Be Sarri's Golden Boy'

 Jorginho insists he is not Maurizio Sarri’s golden boy at Chelsea. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian
Jorginho insists he is not Maurizio Sarri’s golden boy at Chelsea. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

Jorginho abandons Italian and breaks into English only once but, when he does, it is born of exasperation. The prickly subject of his close relationship with Maurizio Sarri has been raised and with it the notion he is untouchable: that his is the first name on the Chelsea team sheet, as the manager’s lieutenant out on the pitch, charged with delivering the utopia of Sarriball. He is the golden boy who can do no wrong.

He listens to the cliched assumptions as they are relayed in translation, mustering a grim chuckle of disbelief before something snaps. “But I’m not special,” he says, interrupting the interpreter and tapping the desk to labour his point. “I’m a normal player. Like all the other players. I don’t want to be special. It’s good … no, it’s perfect to be the same as everyone else. I don’t want to be a special one.” Which, of course, makes for a break from the norm in these parts.

It is the second sitting of this interview, the flow interrupted earlier in the afternoon when Sarri called an impromptu team meeting before training. For the record, Jorginho discovered the change in schedule like everyone else when the news flashed up on one of the big screens dotted around the first-team building at Cobham. He had gone on to conduct a warm-down session in the gym – more stretches than the weights his teammate Antonio Rüdiger had mischievously suggested he might need to bulk up – before resuming reflections on a continuing adaptation to life in England.

The previous few days had actually brought an upturn in fortunes, with his name even chorused by the travelling support as a first goal from open play secured a win at Fulham last Sunday. Yet matches like that have been a rarity. Retreat 10 days and he had been booed on to the field 14 minutes from time in a comfortable Europa League success over Malmö at Stamford Bridge, local scepticism laid brutally bare. Even an improved collective display in the Carabao Cup final was tainted by a rare penalty miss in the shootout. It was hard to avoid a pang of sympathy as the 27-year-old glanced to the heavens in despair that afternoon.

Jorginho needs no reminding he has still to convince Chelsea fans that he can impose himself on the Premier League. “The fans are entitled to have their opinion, to be supporters and think whatever they like,” he says. “It also gives me strength to work more to change their views on me. Even if they think I am Sarri’s man, I want to show them why Sarri likes me, that I am a good player and they are wrong to have that attitude towards me.

“But I have never had any doubts. I believe in myself. I know how hard I am working and how much effort I am putting in. So, while I accept [the critics’] views, I don’t share them. I respect their opinion, I listen, I stay calm and work hard, trying to do better.”

Jorginho is hardly the first player to arrive in the Premier League and find the helter-skelter somewhat overwhelming. Only four players have run further than his 310.77km in the top flight this season but he suffers at Chelsea for lacking the dynamism of Michael Essien or N’Golo Kanté, the World Cup-winner whose holding role he has assumed.

There has been no evidence as yet of explosive quality, with his attributes more subtle. No one can match his 2,162 successful passes, or the 1,229 he has delivered in his opponents’ half. But, if 542 have still found their way to a teammate in the final third, he was tainted with the aimless side-to-side plod to which the team’s style descended when confidence drained.

That he personifies how Sarri is seeking to play is inescapable, which has left him fending off those claims of favouritism. The pair had arrived in tandem – so complicated had negotiations been with the Napoli president, Aurelio De Laurentiis, that the £57m fee for the player effectively ended up incorporating the compensation due for the coach – as if they come as a package.

When Sarri suffers, as he has through much of the winter, Jorginho is the on-field scapegoat. He shares Sarri’s desperation to make it work.

“It is up to me to do better, even when I am tightly marked, but I believe Sarri’s football can work in England. It is a style of play which is highly organised, which is entertaining for the fans, a style which requires us to have a lot of possession and allows us to control and win games. It is normal for it to take time for everyone to learn what they should be doing. Pep Guardiola also had problems in his first year, so why shouldn’t Sarri have problems as well?

“Look, I have a completely normal relationship with Sarri. I don’t go out for dinner with him. I don’t go round to his house. Our work is very professional: he speaks and explains what he wants me to do, and I try to implement what he wants on the pitch. I am just a player who can help him do the things he wants his team to do. He’s shouted at me when I’ve got things wrong, just as he has everyone else. I certainly don’t consider myself to be his golden boy.”

Sarri, in turn, is not even the most influential coach in Jorginho’s life. That honour befalls his mother Maria Tereza Freitas, a former No 10 in amateur football in the Brazilian state of Santa Catarina, who had drilled technique into the four-year-old Jorge Luiz Frello Filho on the beach in Imbituba. Maria Tereza brought up Jorginho and his older sister, Fernanda, as a single parent and, despite her son departing for Hellas Verona’s academy at the age of 15, the family remain tightknit.

“She was a good player, better than my dad, although he helped me in different ways. But she was the one taking me to the beach, coaching me on my technique, lots of short passes, changing direction, when I was small. She took those sessions so seriously and would get upset with me if I made mistakes.”

It had also been Jorginho’s mother who convinced him to opt for Chelsea ahead of Guardiola’s Manchester City last summer, enticed by “a wonderful history” in London. When she visited Stamford Bridge and saw her son’s name on the shirts in the club shop, she was overcome. “She realised I had reached a level that had always been a dream for her, for me and for all of our family. I have to be ready for the lows because you have to be strong enough to climb back up to the highs.

“I’ve had tough times before. Leaving Brazil when I was so young, saying goodbye to my family and friends to go to another culture, that was so difficult. Coming here from Italy was difficult too but I have more experience. I have my own family [his second child was born two hours after the 2-0 win over Fulham in December], and a different support network around me.

“I deal with that pressure as an adult, and I’m better prepared for it. Ultimately, all the fans hope for is that their team wins and that the players give their all. So if you work hard, leave everything out on the pitch and achieve good results, then these are all of the necessary ingredients to make sure you are liked.”

The Guardian Sport



Arsenal Keen to End 20-Year Wait for Champions League Final When It Hosts Atletico Madrid

 Arsenal's Spanish manager Mikel Arteta attends a press conference at the Emirates Stadium in London on May 4, 2026, on the eve of their UEFA Champions League league semifinal, second-leg football match against Atletico Madrid. (AFP)
Arsenal's Spanish manager Mikel Arteta attends a press conference at the Emirates Stadium in London on May 4, 2026, on the eve of their UEFA Champions League league semifinal, second-leg football match against Atletico Madrid. (AFP)
TT

Arsenal Keen to End 20-Year Wait for Champions League Final When It Hosts Atletico Madrid

 Arsenal's Spanish manager Mikel Arteta attends a press conference at the Emirates Stadium in London on May 4, 2026, on the eve of their UEFA Champions League league semifinal, second-leg football match against Atletico Madrid. (AFP)
Arsenal's Spanish manager Mikel Arteta attends a press conference at the Emirates Stadium in London on May 4, 2026, on the eve of their UEFA Champions League league semifinal, second-leg football match against Atletico Madrid. (AFP)

Arsenal has waited 20 years to get back into another Champions League final, and 22 years for another Premier League title.

Now both are within reach, starting with the second leg of their semifinal at home against Atletico Madrid on Tuesday.

The first leg ended 1-1 in Madrid last week after offsetting penalties for two teams looking for a first European Cup title. Arsenal will be hoping its home field advantage at Emirates Stadium makes the difference in the return.

“After 20 years to be in this position again,” Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta said. "We are so hungry to get the game that we want (Tuesday) and go through to that final.”

Arsenal routed Atletico 4-0 at home in the league phase in October, but expect Diego Simeone's side to be a lot more solid defensively in the return to London.

“I’m going to try to tell the team to play like they did in the second half (in Madrid)," Simeone said. "If it’s that easy it would be great. We have a lot of faith in what we’re doing.”

Both teams have been boosted by injury returns as forward Julian Alvarez is expected to play for Atletico and Arteta said captain Martin Odegaard and forward Kai Havertz are both available.

Atletico reached the final twice under Simeone, in 2014 and 2016, losing both times to crosstown rival Real Madrid.

Arsenal lost its only final in 2006 to Barcelona. This time, defending champion Paris Saint-Germain or Bayern Munich will await the winner. Those two play their second leg on Wednesday after a pulsating 5-4 win for PSG in the first leg.

Arsenal's quest for a first Premier League title was also boosted on Monday by Manchester City drawing at Everton 3-3, meaning the Gunners can clinch the trophy by winning their last three games.

Atletico is only fourth in La Liga, 25 points behind leader Barcelona.


A Coaching Great? Luis Enrique Has PSG on Brink of Another Champions League Final

 PSG's head coach Luis Enrique during the French League One soccer match between Paris Saint-Germain and Lorient in Paris, France, Saturday, May 2, 2026. (AP)
PSG's head coach Luis Enrique during the French League One soccer match between Paris Saint-Germain and Lorient in Paris, France, Saturday, May 2, 2026. (AP)
TT

A Coaching Great? Luis Enrique Has PSG on Brink of Another Champions League Final

 PSG's head coach Luis Enrique during the French League One soccer match between Paris Saint-Germain and Lorient in Paris, France, Saturday, May 2, 2026. (AP)
PSG's head coach Luis Enrique during the French League One soccer match between Paris Saint-Germain and Lorient in Paris, France, Saturday, May 2, 2026. (AP)

Luis Enrique will join a select group of coaching greats if he leads Paris Saint-Germain to Champions League glory again this season, and it is his remarkable management that has the French club tantalizingly close to reaching the final once again.

PSG head to Munich for the second leg of their semi-final against Bayern on Wednesday defending a 5-4 lead from an incredible first meeting which was one of the greatest matches in the competition's history.

"It was the best game I have been fortunate enough to be involved in as a coach," Luis Enrique said after that encounter at the Parc des Princes.

He nevertheless believes his side will need to score another three goals at the Allianz Arena in order to see off the German champions and secure a place in the May 30 final in Budapest.

But he and his side need not look too far back for inspiration -- their last visit to Munich ended in PSG hammering Inter Milan 5-0 in last season's final as they won the Champions League for the first time in their history.

Maybe, after all he has achieved in his career, Luis Enrique could have simply walked away following that triumph, his job done. But his motivation has remained intact this season.

"Last season we achieved the objective that everyone around us had been dreaming of. But we want to continue making history and that now means winning two Champions Leagues in a row," said the Spaniard on the eve of this campaign.

He has now taken PSG to the Champions League semi-finals for the third time in as many seasons since being appointed in 2023.

Thanks to him, PSG have moved on in spectacular fashion from the era of Kylian Mbappe, Lionel Messi, Neymar, and of regular European disappointments.

To put their consistency under Luis Enrique into more context: before his arrival, PSG had reached the Champions League semi-finals three times in their history.

His success seems to come down to that motivation, and an intensity of personality which comes across in the way his team plays -- high energy, incessant pressing, terrifying pace.

"He is the most positive person I have met in my life. He is always motivated and always in a good mood. We all learn from him and his way of seeing things," said PSG's Qatari president Nasser al-Khelaifi.

- Intensity -

His side also stand on the verge of another Ligue 1 title -- albeit their financial advantage over the rest of France's clubs makes that far less remarkable.

Luis Enrique turns 56 on Friday, but that intensity also comes across in how he lives his life.

This is a man who has competed in triathlons and run several marathons -- once going under the three-hour mark in Florence. Sometimes seen walking around the training ground barefoot, in September he fractured a collarbone after falling off his bike.

He was quickly over that injury and fully focused on PSG. So much so that the man who played in three World Cups and coached Spain in Qatar in 2022, is apparently not remotely interested in the approaching tournament in North America.

"I am the coach of PSG. I don't care about anything else. I'm not interested," he said recently in response to one World Cup-related question.

The former Real Madrid and Barcelona midfielder really made his name as a coach when he led the Catalans, featuring Messi, Neymar and Luis Suarez, to a treble of Champions League, La Liga and Copa del Rey in 2015.

This season his squad management has been remarkable, albeit undoubtedly helped by that margin PSG have in Ligue 1.

Captain Marquinhos, for example, has started more games in Europe than in Ligue 1. Ballon d'Or winner Ousmane Dembele has started just nine times in Ligue 1, as many as in the Champions League.

Meanwhile, the devastating Khvicha Kvaratskhelia has been arguably the best player in this season's Champions League.

Up to now it has been a triumph of management, but the biggest test awaits in Munich on Wednesday.

If PSG can see off a brilliant Bayern team, Luis Enrique will be a step closer to becoming just the fifth coach to win three European Cups or Champions Leagues, after Carlo Ancelotti, Bob Paisley, Zinedine Zidane and Pep Guardiola.


Bayern’s Kompany Promises Repeat Fireworks in PSG Champions League Semi

Bayern Munich's Belgian head coach Vincent Kompany arrives for the German first division Bundesliga football match between FC Bayern Munich and Heidenheim in Munich on May 2, 2026. (AFP)
Bayern Munich's Belgian head coach Vincent Kompany arrives for the German first division Bundesliga football match between FC Bayern Munich and Heidenheim in Munich on May 2, 2026. (AFP)
TT

Bayern’s Kompany Promises Repeat Fireworks in PSG Champions League Semi

Bayern Munich's Belgian head coach Vincent Kompany arrives for the German first division Bundesliga football match between FC Bayern Munich and Heidenheim in Munich on May 2, 2026. (AFP)
Bayern Munich's Belgian head coach Vincent Kompany arrives for the German first division Bundesliga football match between FC Bayern Munich and Heidenheim in Munich on May 2, 2026. (AFP)

Bayern Munich coach Vincent Kompany has promised to stick with his high-octane, high-risk approach in Wednesday's Champions League semi-final second leg against holders Paris Saint-Germain.

PSG hold a one-goal advantage from last week's incredible 5-4 first leg in Paris, where some of the game's leading attackers were given free rein to go for the jugular.

Despite the match in the French capital being lauded as one of the best games of the modern era, Kompany and his side have faced criticism for being too vulnerable at the back.

But the former central defender has repeatedly promised not to change a thing and even doubled down as six-time European Cup winners Bayern look to blast their way to the final in Budapest.

- 'Can't lose what makes us strong' -

Already Bundesliga champions, Bayern have scored 116 goals in 32 games -- a record in the league and among the best anywhere in Europe.

This approach does leave them vulnerable, however.

The Bavarians have conceded 16 goals in their past six games, with just one clean sheet.

And while Bayern's squad has been heavily rotated in some of those matches, the 21 goals they scored in that six-game run also shows the potency of their playing style.

Suspended for the opening leg, Kompany watched the match from the stands.

The Belgian, who is coaching just his second season in the Champions League, said he saw room for improvement.

"I'm not the kind of person who sees things in black or white. For me, what happened in Paris is perfectly logical," Kompany said on Friday.

"I also would be glad to keep a clean sheet, but what we absolutely cannot do is lose what made us strong."

The strategy has paid clear dividends in the competition so far.

Against Real Madrid in the quarter-final second leg, a Manuel Neuer blunder gifted Arda Guler an opener after just 36 seconds.

Real took the lead three times on the night, but Bayern fought back each time before delivering the knockout blow with two goals in the final five minutes.

Against PSG, the hosts looked to have taken the game away from Bayern with two goals in three second-half minutes.

But Kompany's team pushed upfield and scored two of their own in a four-minute spell to force their way back into the tie.

As someone many of the Bayern dressing room will have looked up to during his playing days, Kompany has built a strong relationship with his squad, who clearly back the supercharged strategy.

After Bayern came from 2-0 and 3-2 down to draw 3-3 with Heidenheim on Saturday with a Michael Olise goal in the 10th minute of stoppage time, Joshua Kimmich promised more of the same against PSG.

"We're not going to change our style of play in three days and just sit back and defend," Kimmich said.

"We have to win, regardless of whether it's another 5-4, a 3-2, or a 1-0 victory."

- 'PSG won't change' -

The Parisians return to Munich, where they won the title last year, and are expected to play as openly as their hosts.

Luis Enrique said his side would need "at least three goals" in Munich, despite already holding a one-goal advantage.

Kompany also cited PSG's swashbuckling run to the crown last season as an example of success following a courageous approach.

"PSG were never going to change the style that won them the Champions League last year," Kompany said.

"We come into the match as the team that has won the most games and scored the most goals in Europe.

"Is anyone going to take a backward step? Nobody will accept that."

Having served his suspension, Kompany will once again be on the touchline on Wednesday.

"Every team uses the tools at their disposal," he said on Saturday.

"We'll use ours. There's things we can improve on, but it's about winning, we won't forget that."