Nuno ESPírito Santo: ‘It Is like Coca-Cola, They Never Change the Recipe’

 Nuno Espírito Santo saw his side beat Manchester City on penalties to win the Premier League Asia Trophy in Shanghai. Photograph: Thomas Peter/Reuters
Nuno Espírito Santo saw his side beat Manchester City on penalties to win the Premier League Asia Trophy in Shanghai. Photograph: Thomas Peter/Reuters
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Nuno ESPírito Santo: ‘It Is like Coca-Cola, They Never Change the Recipe’

 Nuno Espírito Santo saw his side beat Manchester City on penalties to win the Premier League Asia Trophy in Shanghai. Photograph: Thomas Peter/Reuters
Nuno Espírito Santo saw his side beat Manchester City on penalties to win the Premier League Asia Trophy in Shanghai. Photograph: Thomas Peter/Reuters

Nuno Espírito Santo has been holding court for about 20 minutes, at one stage comparing the ingredients that go into making Coca-Cola with his own recipe for success at Wolves, when he leans in and makes a prediction that stops everyone in their tracks. “I will not give you clues, but football is gonna change,” Nuno says.

That intriguing comment comes in the middle of an answer about whether or not those players who experienced Premier League football for the first time with Wolves last season, when the Midlands club blazed a trail by taking 16 points off the top six, finishing seventh and qualifying for Europe for the first time in 39 years – they face Crusaders in the first leg of their second-round Europa League qualifier on Thursday evening – will be better for the experience.

“We started this season trying to develop, trying to improve. We are not going back trying to repeat the same things we did last pre-season. It doesn’t make sense,” Nuno says. “After two years of working we are the same people, we know everything. We have to go and look for better solutions, trying to anticipate. I will not give you clues but football is gonna change.

“The football you see now and are reflecting on this season, I will not say next season, but in two seasons’ time, is gonna change. I will not tell you, but there are normal effects of when teams sit, they affect naturally the rest of football. If you consider that … I am already telling you too many things. This is what we are trying to anticipate. All the managers are quite clear on how they want their teams to play, and how to perform. What I am trying to build and improve is, I know, I suspect, going to change.”

Asked whether a new cycle is coming, Nuno replies: “I know a new cycle is coming.” So is he talking about other ways of playing, through different systems? “Mmm, OK. You look at that, you look at systems, tactical aspects. But I’m telling you, for sure, in two seasons the football in the Premier League will change.”

As with a game of chess, Nuno seems to be thinking a few moves ahead. “It is a lot like chess,” he adds. “I think all the managers, for sure, we have to anticipate. The best way, it is chess. I tried to put myself inside the other managers’ heads. It is a good exercise. If I played against Wolves, what would I do?” Does he ever win in that scenario? “Never,” replies Nuno, with a wry smile.

Nuno has a reputation for being a man of few words when it comes to press conferences and it would be easy to form an opinion on him based on some of those awkward exchanges before or after matches. As anyone who is a regular visitor to Molineux will know, his programme notes are just as brief and would struggle to fill the back of a postcard. Small talk of any description is not really Nuno’s thing.

Yet the reality is that, in the right setting, the 45-year-old can be fascinating and engaging company. A couple of weeks ago, the former Valencia and Porto manager sat down with half a dozen journalists at Compton, Wolves’ training ground, and spoke candidly for more than 45 minutes across a wide range of topics, taking in everything from the mental cross-examination he puts himself through after a disappointing performance to the unwavering belief that he has in his own philosophy.

“Everybody knows how we play, everybody can see. It is the most important thing, an identity,” Nuno says. “When things don’t go so well, what are you gonna grab? Stick to it. It is like Coca-Cola, they never change the recipe. Diet, full sugar, no caffeine, maybe. But the recipe is always there.”

Nuno changed the system last season after Wolves picked up only one point from a possible 18, but not his “idea” – something he talks about a lot. The 3-4-3 that had previously served Wolves so well needed another layer, or an “extra line” as Nuno puts it, to give Wolves “the capacity to go higher on the pitch”. Deploying Rúben Neves in a slightly deeper role was the solution.

His overriding message, though, is that the basis of his approach – seizing the initiative defensively and stealing possession in areas that leave opponents unbalanced and exposed – will always remain the same. “The idea never changes,” Nuno adds. “I always look at the way I want to be in the game, even if I don’t have the ball I can be in control of the game … my defensive process has to be organised and strong enough to control the game. How I do that? By creating trigger points on where I want to recover the ball.”

Interestingly, Nuno takes no credit whatsoever for the decision to pair Raúl Jiménez and Diogo Jota up front midway through the season and the way that those two dovetailed so beautifully thereafter. “That is luck,” he says, almost dismissively. “One day I went: ‘Let’s try.’ Quality and talent of the players and dedication, belief – the way they believe in what you say and propose, it is always about that. You can have the brightest of ideas you can imagine, but if your players don’t believe – pah.” Presumably, though, it is Nuno who engenders that belief? “They give to me, honestly. It is the other way around.”

When it goes wrong, however, it is Nuno who shoulders the blame. So much so that his family would like to see him smile now and again. “They say I should enjoy it more. They say: ‘Even when you lose you shouldn’t be so down.’ But how can you not be down? When the team doesn’t play good you go home and you say: ‘Why? Why? Why? Why?’ And you go around the ‘why’ and the ‘how?’ It’s very hard to enjoy.”

One of the few occasions when Nuno did have genuine reason to feel low was after the FA Cup semi-final defeat against Watford in April, when Wolves threw away a 2-0 lead with 11 minutes remaining. Yet even then there was much to admire about the way his players responded, taking 10 points from their last five matches to secure seventh spot.

“It was a tough moment. It can disrupt a season and create problems but we reacted very well,” says Nuno. “After the result at Southampton [the week after Watford], the way we performed with steel and making our grief, if you can say that … we had a moment to gel and put the past behind you and look forward. The boys did fantastically.”

Although the transfer window has been frustrating so far for Wolves, pre-season has been rewarding in other ways. Wolves defeated Newcastle 4-0 before beating Manchester City on penalties in Shanghai on Saturday to win the Premier League Asia Trophy. That competition may rank low on their list of priorities this season but it meant a lot to Fosun, the club’s ambitious Chinese owners, and Nuno recognised that afterwards. The Portuguese handed his winners’ medal over to Guo Guangchang, Fosun’s chairman, as soon as he walked off.

The pursuit of more silverware starts with Thursday’s first leg against Northern Irish side Crusaders. It is the first European tie that Wolves have taken part in since 1980, when they lost 3-2 on aggregate to PSV Eindhoven in the old Uefa Cup, and the fact that it is a 30,000 sell-out says everything about the mood around Molineux these days. “This is what we work for,” says Nuno, smiling. “We work to give joy to the fans. If the fans are not happy, what’s the point?”

The Guardian Sport



Chelsea Announces Premier League-record Losses of $350M

Chelsea players react disappointed after the English Premier League soccer match between Everton and Chelsea in Liverpool, England, Saturday, March 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Jon Super)
Chelsea players react disappointed after the English Premier League soccer match between Everton and Chelsea in Liverpool, England, Saturday, March 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Jon Super)
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Chelsea Announces Premier League-record Losses of $350M

Chelsea players react disappointed after the English Premier League soccer match between Everton and Chelsea in Liverpool, England, Saturday, March 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Jon Super)
Chelsea players react disappointed after the English Premier League soccer match between Everton and Chelsea in Liverpool, England, Saturday, March 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Jon Super)

Chelsea made pre-tax losses of 262.4 million pounds ($350 million) in its latest financial results, the club announced Wednesday, a record high in the Premier League era.

Chelsea, whose owners are from US private equity, attributed the losses in part to “increased operating costs” in 2024-25 compared to the previous year.

The previous highest recorded pre-tax loss in the Premier League was the 197.5 million pounds (now $263 million) posted by Manchester City for the 2010-11 season, Britain’s Press Association reported, The AP news reported.

Revenue for the year ending June 30, 2025, was 490.9 million pounds ($650 million), Chelsea said — the second-highest on record for the London club. That included some of the money earned from its title-winning run at the Club World Cup.

Chelsea was deemed to be compliant with the Premier League’s financial rules for the three-year period ending 2024-25, which allows for maximum losses of 105 million pounds ($140 million) over that block. Spending on things like infrastructure, youth development and women’s football, for example, isn’t included when the league assesses clubs’ losses.


Ailing Italy at New Low After Missing Out on Yet Another World Cup

 Italy players react during a penalty shootout during the World Cup qualifying play-off final soccer match between Bosnia and Italy in Zenica, Bosnia, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP)
Italy players react during a penalty shootout during the World Cup qualifying play-off final soccer match between Bosnia and Italy in Zenica, Bosnia, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP)
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Ailing Italy at New Low After Missing Out on Yet Another World Cup

 Italy players react during a penalty shootout during the World Cup qualifying play-off final soccer match between Bosnia and Italy in Zenica, Bosnia, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP)
Italy players react during a penalty shootout during the World Cup qualifying play-off final soccer match between Bosnia and Italy in Zenica, Bosnia, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP)

Italians will once again be forced to watch a World Cup from the sidelines after another play-off disaster highlighted just how far one of the great footballing nations has fallen.

Four-time world champions, the football-mad country finds itself at its lowest ebb and without a clear path to a brighter future after missing out again through the play-offs, this time following a penalty shoot-out defeat to Bosnia and Hercegovina.

Gattuso the scapegoat?

Gennaro Gattuso knew he had a tough job on his hands when he was appointed in June, asked to replace Luciano Spalletti and take Italy to the World Cup with automatic qualification looking near-impossible after a 3-0 hammering at the hands of Erling Haaland's Norway.

One of the heroes of Italy's 2006 World Cup triumph, Gattuso remained vague on his future as coach even as Gabriele Gravina, the head of Italy's football federation (FIGC), asked him to stay beyond the end of his current contract which expires this summer.

Gattuso was a curious appointment given his spotty coaching career but Italy did not perform all that badly under him, with six wins from eight matches and 22 goals scored.

He has created a strong team spirit which was lacking under the volatile Spalletti, but another humbling defeat to Norway in November, 4-1 at the San Siro of all places, laid bare the limits of a team sorely missing the star power of years gone by.

And Gattuso could yet pay the price for his team's failure, which came after being outplayed almost from the first minute by the exuberant Bosnians, as Gravina's position at the head of the FIGC is not completely safe.

A board meeting next week will decide on whether Gravina, who was elected FIGC chief in 2018 after Carlo Tavecchio stepped down following Italy's first World Cup play-off defeat to Sweden the previous year, will stay in place.

Twenty years of hurt

The 20th anniversary of Italy's last World Cup win falls on July 9, during this summer's finals in the United States, Canada and Mexico.

But, if anything, that dramatic win on penalties over France feels even further away than that.

Faced with an empty summer, even Italy's victory at Euro 2020 has been devalued as the country fails to produce world class talent and its clubs, once the European elite, slip further behind their rivals, and above all the moneybags Premier League.

Italy, whose European title defense ended at the last 16 in 2024 with a footballing lesson by Switzerland, have not played a knockout match at a World Cup since 2006: for context, the iPhone was introduced to the market one year later.

"Today's results are the consequence of our attitude from 20 years ago, when we clung onto our best players like (Fabio) Cannavaro and (Francesco) Totti, thinking they would last forever," said Gianluigi Buffon, another World Cup winner from 2006 involved with the national team.

"Right then we should have been rethinking our tactical and technical models."

Grassroots reform

Too late to have any effect on the current senior team, the FIGC announced earlier this month a new project for youth football, led by long-term coach Maurizio Viscidi, who has had success with Italy's national youth teams.

Cesare Prandelli, Italy coach for the dismal display at the 2014 World Cup, is now involved in the FIGC's efforts to reform youth football after having criticized the way clubs coach the spontaneity out of young players.

"If 10 years ago we'd have had the good fortune to have a talent like Lamine Yamal, we would have let him get away," Prandelli said last year.

"Our coaches would have taken away his joy of playing."

The new project announced on March 18 centers on offering training for coaches at a vast number of youth football clubs who train some 700,000 children.

Simone Perrotta, who reports to Viscidi, told AFP on Monday that the aim is "to get the federation inside the clubs" and harmonize training methods in such a way as to encourage the development of individual skills and encourage invention.

Just 33 percent of Serie A players are eligible for national team selection.

That number is higher than the 29.2 percent of English players in the Premier League, while Germany (41.5 percent) and France (37.5 percent) both have a higher proportion of locals in top division squads.


Infantino Says Iran Will Play World Cup Matches in US as Planned

FIFA President Gianni Infantino follows a friendly soccer match between Iran and Costa Rica, in Antalya, southern Türkiye, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP)
FIFA President Gianni Infantino follows a friendly soccer match between Iran and Costa Rica, in Antalya, southern Türkiye, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP)
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Infantino Says Iran Will Play World Cup Matches in US as Planned

FIFA President Gianni Infantino follows a friendly soccer match between Iran and Costa Rica, in Antalya, southern Türkiye, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP)
FIFA President Gianni Infantino follows a friendly soccer match between Iran and Costa Rica, in Antalya, southern Türkiye, Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP)

FIFA president Gianni Infantino said on Tuesday that Iran will play their World Cup matches in the United States in June as scheduled despite the country's ongoing armed conflict with the tournament co-hosts.

The Iranian FA (FFIRI) has been pushing to relocate the team's three World Cup group matches from the US to Mexico, citing the American military involvement alongside Israel in strikes that sparked the current regional war.

The FFIRI said earlier this month they were in discussions with FIFA about a venue switch, while Iran's sports ministry has banned national and club sports teams from travelling to countries it considers hostile ‌until further notice.

Infantino, ‌however, was dismissive when asked about the possibility of a venue ‌switch ⁠during a surprise ⁠visit to Türkiye to watch Iran's 5-0 friendly win over Costa Rica.

"No, no, the matches will be where they should be according to the draw," he told reporters in the Turkish city of Antalya, where the Iran squad has been holding a training camp.

"It looks like we'll be in the right grounds. We're delighted because they're a very, very strong team, as we saw today. I'm very happy. I saw the team, I spoke to the ⁠players and the coaches."

Iran, who booked their place at the tournament ‌in March last year, are scheduled to play all ‌of their Group G matches on American soil -- two in Los Angeles and one in Seattle -- ‌against Belgium, Egypt and New Zealand.

US President Donald Trump said earlier this month that ‌while Iran's national team were welcome to play in the US, it might not be appropriate for their "life and safety".

Trump later made clear that any threat to the players would not come from the United States.

United Arab Emirates-based striker Sardar Azmoun was omitted from the squad for the training ‌camp amidst Iranian media reports that he had been expelled for a perceived act of disloyalty to the government.

Speaking directly to the Iranian players on Tuesday, Infantino pledged his support but steered clear of the wider issues surrounding the war.

"From now until the World Cup, I will do whatever I can to support the Iran national team," Infantino said, according to the FFIRI.

"If you want to organize a training camp or if there is any matter related to activities outside the country, whatever it is, I will help.

"Whenever you want, please stay in contact. I am at your service and will help with anything you need."

The World Cup takes place in the US, Mexico and Canada from June 11 to July 19.