Gabriel Jesus: Relentless, Tenacious, and Now Ahead of Sergio Agüero?

 ‘Gabriel Jesus has a harrying physical presence, an intensity that isn’t dissipated away from the comforts of the Etihad Stadium.’ Photograph: Alex Livesey - Danehouse/Getty Images
‘Gabriel Jesus has a harrying physical presence, an intensity that isn’t dissipated away from the comforts of the Etihad Stadium.’ Photograph: Alex Livesey - Danehouse/Getty Images
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Gabriel Jesus: Relentless, Tenacious, and Now Ahead of Sergio Agüero?

 ‘Gabriel Jesus has a harrying physical presence, an intensity that isn’t dissipated away from the comforts of the Etihad Stadium.’ Photograph: Alex Livesey - Danehouse/Getty Images
‘Gabriel Jesus has a harrying physical presence, an intensity that isn’t dissipated away from the comforts of the Etihad Stadium.’ Photograph: Alex Livesey - Danehouse/Getty Images

Glory, glory Hallelujah, é Gabriel Jesus. The busker outside the Maracanã knew his audience. For a while the walkway to the stadium was closed before Brazil’s Olympic final, the crowd backing up down the stairs as fans in yellow shirts sang along to the in-vogue dirge of the Rio Games, a chant set to the tune of the American civil war song about John Brown’s body mouldering in his grave and adapted here to take in the feats of a slightly built 19-year-old utility attacker from the slums of São Paulo.

Six months on Gabriel Jesus would find himself looking a little cold and sad on breaks from hotel life in wintry Lancashire, a latecomer to the first raft of players to join Pep Guardiola at Manchester City. Fast forward another three years, 38 goals, four trophies and two semi-serious injuries, and City’s roving centre-forward produced his best moment to date for the club at Real Madrid on Wednesday.

There were plenty of fine performance at the Bernabéu. Jesus was something else, laying on a masterful display of deep attacking craft in a performance that may prove transformative, not only for himself but for the trajectory of this team. Glory indeed. But what next? Perhaps the answer lies in remembering how high his sights have always been set. Jesus is an unusual Brazilian in one sense: back home they actually do know how good he is.

Unlike other teenage exiles he took some time to bloom before the inevitable European move, scoring 37 times in 22 games in the under-17 championships, getting himself sent off for fighting (a decent PR move in itself) and forming part of that gold-medal-winning frontline alongside Neymar and Luan, the importance of which you probably have to be Brazilian to really get.

Whereas in England there will still be a slight sense of shock at just how good he was in Madrid. There has been a lurking sense of something lightweight about City’s backup striker, a view founded in his stick-thin physique when he joined, and in the assumption this is an essentially decorative footballer, a player made from sherbet and icing sugar.

Ask Sergio Ramos about that. From the opening minutes on Wednesday Jesus’s movement had something nightmarish about it. He kept pulling away into difficult spaces on the left, drawing Ramos across. Twice he bumped away the great defensive sneak, King Shithouse himself, with a shimmy of the hips.

His second-half goal was beautifully taken, the ball headed back across Thibaut Courtois in a gentle parabola from a strange hovering position. But best of all, and a point of distinction when it comes to City and centre-forwards: he was simply relentless.

By the end of the match Jesus had racked up four shots at goal, two headers, three dribbles and 42 touches. He had played at No 9, No 10, left wing and auxiliary central midfield. He had also mustered two tackles and two interceptions in the middle of it all. By way of comparison, Sergio Agüero has played three Champions League games and hasn’t got past one of either.

There had been some surprise at Jesus even being in the starting XI. His presence was lumped in with Raheem Sterling’s seat on the bench and the selection of the one-man wrestle-defence disaster zone, Nicolás Otamendi, as some kind of gamble. Again, this makes sense only if you haven’t really been watching.

Jesus may be slight with an agreeably rat-packish air about him, a footballer who looks as if he might also have popped up playing backing clarinet on an early Chet Baker album. But, besides that full range of attacking gears, he also has a harrying physical presence, an intensity that isn’t dissipated away from the comforts of the Etihad Stadium, and which speaks to how the Agüero-Jesus dynamic may work from here.

City have one significant task in their sights over the next three months: to win the Champions League, stick it to The Man, storm the Swiss bastille and all the rest of it.

Before Wednesday and the Bernabéu, the clearest obstacle was their complete lack of traction in this kind of game. Away in Europe really has been another country. Defeats at Spurs, Liverpool, Barcelona, Monaco and Madrid have been accompanied by an alarming sense of meekness.

How to change this? What patterns to recalibrate? One thing does stand out. In last season’s defeat at Spurs Agüero started up front and made no tackles, no interceptions and no blocks. He won no headers. He touched the ball 18 times. In defeat at the Bernabéu in 2016 he drew a similar statistical blank.

Agüero is a supreme creative finisher. But the fact remains he hasn’t scored away from home against a top-class team in a meaningful competition since November 2017 and the third goal in a 4-2 defeat of Napoli. By contrast what Guardiola loves about Jesus is not only his movement and his presence but the fact he plays on every pitch against every opponent as though this is all the same stage.

The goals have come too, with 13 in 18 appearances (11 starts) since the end of November. Jesus scores against the big teams too: Liverpool, Spurs, Arsenal, Leicester, Real Madrid. In the past two years City have lost three times when he has started the game and once when he has made it to 70 minutes on the pitch. Part of the thinking behind his recruitment was that he would in time surpass Agüero and become City’s most effective striker.

Perhaps this has now happened. It feels as if it is a key subplot in the endgame to City’s season. There is still the second leg of this tie to survive. But Real are not what they were. The house of Zidane is a grand old creaking thing these days, a squad stuffed with ghosts and skeletons.

From there it would be two tricky steps to Istanbul and a shot at one of the more strangely gripping Champions League triumphs. Part of the thrill is that narrowing of focus. City were intensely disciplined in Madrid, at a stage when Guardiola has sometimes blinked. Jesus up front was key to this. It could be key from here.

The Guardian Sport



Maresca Leaves Chelsea After Just 18 Months in Charge

Chelsea's Italian head coach Enzo Maresca reacts during the UEFA Champions League league phase day 6 football match between Atalanta Bergamo and Chelsea FC at Bergamo Stadium, in Bergamo on December 9, 2025. (AFP)
Chelsea's Italian head coach Enzo Maresca reacts during the UEFA Champions League league phase day 6 football match between Atalanta Bergamo and Chelsea FC at Bergamo Stadium, in Bergamo on December 9, 2025. (AFP)
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Maresca Leaves Chelsea After Just 18 Months in Charge

Chelsea's Italian head coach Enzo Maresca reacts during the UEFA Champions League league phase day 6 football match between Atalanta Bergamo and Chelsea FC at Bergamo Stadium, in Bergamo on December 9, 2025. (AFP)
Chelsea's Italian head coach Enzo Maresca reacts during the UEFA Champions League league phase day 6 football match between Atalanta Bergamo and Chelsea FC at Bergamo Stadium, in Bergamo on December 9, 2025. (AFP)

Enzo Maresca left his role as Chelsea head coach on Thursday after just 18 months in charge, the Premier League club announced.

The Italian's exit from Stamford Bridge comes with the club fifth in the Premier League table -- 15 points adrift of leaders Arsenal -- with one win in their last seven top-flight games.

"Chelsea Football Club and head coach Enzo Maresca have parted company," said a club statement.

Speculation about Maresca's position increased during Chelsea's poor run of recent results amid reports of a worsening relationship between the coach and the club's hierarchy.

"With key objectives still to play for across four competitions including qualification for Champions League football, Enzo and the club believe a change gives the team the best chance of getting the season back on track," Chelsea added.

Maresca did not attend the post-match press conference following a frantic 2-2 draw with Bournemouth on Tuesday, although his absence was attributed to illness.

The draw meant Chelsea had dropped 13 points at home from winning positions this season -- the bulk of the 15-point deficit between the Blues and Arsenal.

His decision to substitute Cole Palmer just after the hour mark during the Bournemouth game was booed by Chelsea fans.

Maresca has stood by comments made on December 13 after a league win at home to Everton when he said many people at Chelsea "didn't support me and the team".

He repeatedly refused to clarify the comments, although he insisted they were not an attack on the club's supporters.

The 45-year-old said the days leading up to the 2-0 victory over Everton were "the worst 48 hours" of his time at Chelsea.

Maresca's stock at Chelsea was high after the Blues beat Barcelona 3-0 in the Champions League in November.

- Man City talks -

But damaging defeats by Leeds, Atalanta and Villa increased the pressure on the Blues boss.

Maresca had also been linked as a potential successor to Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola should he end his decade-long stay at the Etihad Stadium at the end of the season.

It has been reported that Maresca twice informed Chelsea of talks with City, where he previously worked as one of Guardiola's assistants, as his contract required him to reveal negotiations with other clubs.

Chelsea sit 13th in the Champions League table and are likely to miss out on direct qualification for the last 16 via a top-eight finish.

But they have progressed to the semi-finals of the League Cup, where they will face Arsenal over two legs.

Maresca's contract had been due to run until the summer of 2029, with a club option of a further year.

Chelsea won the UEFA Conference League and the Club World Cup in 2025 and Maresca also led them back into the Champions League via a fourth-placed finish in the Premier League in his only full season in charge.

"Thank you for everything, mister, and to your staff. For the work and the trust from day one, and for the memories," Chelsea defender Marc Cucurella posted on social media alongside pictures of the Spain international with Maresca.

The Blues return to action on Sunday at Manchester City, the first of nine fixtures across four competitions during a congested January schedule.

Liam Rosenior, the head coach of French club Strasbourg, owned by Chelsea's parent company BlueCo -- a consortium headed up by US billionaire businessman Todd Boehly -- is a candidate to replace Maresca despite the 41-year-old's lack of Premier League experience.

Former Barcelona head coach Xavi, Crystal Palace manager Oliver Glasner, Fulham's Marco Silva and Bournemouth boss Andoni Iraola are other potential contenders for the job.


Hakimi, Salah and Osimhen Head Star-packed AFCON Last-16 Cast

Morocco's Achraf Hakimi gestures during the Africa Cup of Nations group A soccer match between Zambia and Morocco in Rabat, Morocco, Sunday, Dec. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
Morocco's Achraf Hakimi gestures during the Africa Cup of Nations group A soccer match between Zambia and Morocco in Rabat, Morocco, Sunday, Dec. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
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Hakimi, Salah and Osimhen Head Star-packed AFCON Last-16 Cast

Morocco's Achraf Hakimi gestures during the Africa Cup of Nations group A soccer match between Zambia and Morocco in Rabat, Morocco, Sunday, Dec. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
Morocco's Achraf Hakimi gestures during the Africa Cup of Nations group A soccer match between Zambia and Morocco in Rabat, Morocco, Sunday, Dec. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

A star-studded cast led by Achraf Hakimi, Mohamed Salah and Victor Osimhen switch to knockout fare from Saturday, when the Africa Cup of Nations resumes in Morocco.

Paris Saint-Germain defender Hakimi was crowned 2025 African player of the year in November. Liverpool attacker Salah and Galatasaray striker Osimhen were the runners-up.

After 36 matches spread across six groups, the 16 survivors from 24 hopefuls clash in eight second-round matches over four days.

Fit-again Hakimi is set to lead title favorites Morocco against Tanzania, Salah will captain Egypt against Benin and Osimhen-inspired Nigeria tackle Mozambique.

AFP Sport looks at the match-ups that will determine which nations advance to the quarter-finals, and move one step closer to a record $10 million (8.5 million euros) first prize.

Senegal v Sudan

Veteran Sadio Mane and Paris Saint-Germain 17-year-old Ibrahim Mbaye, in two appearances off the bench, have been among the stars as 2022 champions Senegal confirmed why they are among the favorites by winning Group D. Sudan, representing a country ravaged by civil war since 2023, reached the second round despite failing to score. Their only Group F win, against Equatorial Guinea, came via an own goal.

Mali v Tunisia

"If we carry on playing like this we will not go much further," warned Belgium-born Mali coach Tom Saintfiet after three Group A draws. Tunisia did well to hold Morocco, but were woeful against Nigeria until they trailed by three goals. The Carthage Eagles then scored twice and came close to equalizing.

Morocco v Tanzania

A mismatch on paper as Morocco, whose only previous title came 50 years ago, are 101 places above Tanzania in the world rankings. The east Africans ended a 45-year wait to get past the first round thanks to two draws. Morocco boast a potent strike force of Brahim Diaz from Real Madrid and Ayoub El Kaabi of Olympiacos. They have scored three goals each to share the Golden Boot lead with Algerian Riyad Mahrez.

South Africa v Cameroon

South Africa debuted in the AFCON 30 years ago by hammering Cameroon 3-0 in Johannesburg. It should be much closer when they meet a second time with only four places separating them in the world rankings. In pursuit of goals, South Africa will look to Oswin Appollis and Lyle Foster while 19-year-old Christian Kofane struck a stunning match-winner for Cameroon against Mozambique.

Egypt v Benin

Struggling to score for Liverpool this season, Salah has regained his appetite for goals in southern Morocco. He claimed match winners against Zimbabwe and South Africa to win Group B. Benin celebrated their first AFCON win 25 years after debuting by edging Botswana. The Cheetahs are a compact, spirited outfit led by veteran striker Steve Mounie, but lack punch up front.

Nigeria v Mozambique

Livewire Osimhen is a huge aerial threat and could have scored hat-tricks against Tanzania and Tunisia in Group C, but managed just one goal. Fellow former African player of the year Ademola Lookman has also impressed. Mozambique lost 3-0 in their previous AFCON meeting with the Super Eagles 16 years ago. It is likely to be tighter this time with striker Geny Catamo posing a threat for the Mambas (snakes).

Algeria v DR Congo

The clash of two former champions is potentially the match of the round. It is the only tie involving two European coaches -- Bosnian Vladimir Petkovic and Frenchman Sebastien Desabre. Algeria and Nigeria were the only teams to win all three group matches. Former Manchester City winger Mahrez has been an inspirational captain while scoring three times.

Ivory Coast v Burkina Faso

This is the only match featuring nations from the same region. Burkina Faso and defending champions Ivory Coast share a border in west Africa. Manchester United winger Amad Diallo was the only winner of two player-of-the-match awards in the group stage. The Ivorian now face impressive Burkinabe defenders Edmond Tapsoba and Issoufou Dayo.


After Waiting 36 Years, French Soccer Fans Finally Have a Capital City Derby again as PSG Faces PFC

Fireworks explode as Paris Saint-Germain's players parade on a bus on the Champs-Elysees avenue in Paris on June 1, 2025, a day after PSG won the 2025 UEFA Champions League final football match against Inter Milan in Munich. (AFP)
Fireworks explode as Paris Saint-Germain's players parade on a bus on the Champs-Elysees avenue in Paris on June 1, 2025, a day after PSG won the 2025 UEFA Champions League final football match against Inter Milan in Munich. (AFP)
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After Waiting 36 Years, French Soccer Fans Finally Have a Capital City Derby again as PSG Faces PFC

Fireworks explode as Paris Saint-Germain's players parade on a bus on the Champs-Elysees avenue in Paris on June 1, 2025, a day after PSG won the 2025 UEFA Champions League final football match against Inter Milan in Munich. (AFP)
Fireworks explode as Paris Saint-Germain's players parade on a bus on the Champs-Elysees avenue in Paris on June 1, 2025, a day after PSG won the 2025 UEFA Champions League final football match against Inter Milan in Munich. (AFP)

It's taken quite some time, but the first capital city derby in French men's league soccer since 1990 takes place on Sunday when Paris Saint-Germain hosts Paris FC.

A very local derby, too, with PSG's Parc des Princes stadium literally across the street from PFC's new home ground — 44 meters away according to the Paris City Hall website.

After winning promotion last season, Paris FC changed stadium and now plays at Stade Jean-Bouin, which traditionally held rugby matches.

Sunday's contest pits the defending French and European champion against a side struggling in the top tier. PFC has lost half its games, and was 14th in the 18-team league heading into this weekend's 17th round.

PFC's top scorer this season is skillful midfielder Ilan Kebbal with six goals, more than any PSG player. But he is away with Algeria at the Africa Cup of Nations.

PSG has coped with injuries to star forwards Ousmane Dembélé and Désiré Doué this season. That might have affected results because, for a change, PSG is not top but in second spot behind surprise leader Lens. Heading into Sunday's derby, PSG had already lost two league games, as many defeats as all last season.

While PSG has won a record 13 French league titles and 16 French Cups, PFC's trophy cabinet is bare. The PFC men's team has never won the league or even a cup.

Paris FC's takeover late last year by France's richest family, the Arnaults of luxury empire LVMH, promised to spice up Ligue 1.

Paris FC owner Antoine Arnault is the son of billionaire Bernard Arnault, and the family's cash input will prove crucial to the chances of PFC becoming a serious rival to PSG. Antoine used to be a PSG season-ticket holder and enjoys a cordial relationship with PSG president Nasser Al-Khelaïfi.

Before this season, PSG’s previous city rival was Matra Racing, which became Racing Paris 1 and beat PSG in the last men’s league derby in Paris in 1990. Antoine won't have to wait so long for another derby, because PSG is hosting PFC in the French Cup's last 32 on Jan. 12.

Fleeting rivalries, stadium shares

Parisian soccer history can be a bit confusing.

Paris FC men's team was created in 1969 and merged with Stade Saint-Germain to form Paris Saint-Germain, or PSG, in 1970.

The merger ended abruptly in 1972 with PSG losing its professional status and PFC staying in division 1, and playing at Parc des Princes. PSG kept the name and returned to play at the stadium in 1974 after winning promotion back to the top flight, coinciding with PFC's relegation.

Matra Racing was only briefly on the scene.

Matra spent a few seasons in the French top flight — sharing the Parc des Princes stadium — but the club faded after French media baron Jean-Luc Lagardère withdrew his backing in 1989. Matra was relegated the following year, when it was called Racing Paris 1, despite beating PSG in the derby.

Red Star's ambition

There may be more local derbies in the capital next season, with Red Star chasing promotion from Ligue 2.

Red Star is based in the northern suburbs of Paris and is second in Ligue 2. The team has long been respected for being close to its working-class fans in the Saint-Ouen-sur-Seine suburb.

Home games are played at the 5,600-capacity Stade Bauer, which has stands selling food right outside the entrance gates. Red Star’s down-to-earth image has remained the same for decades, with the club becoming increasingly trendy and attracting a new section of fans appreciating its old-school ways.

Plans are in place to increase capacity to 10,000 next year and the club says it hopes to have 80% of homegrown local players in the first team by 2030.

Founded in 1897, Red Star is among the oldest clubs in France. It has a famous founder in Jules Rimet, the longest-serving president in FIFA history (1921-54), and the World Cup trophy was named after him.

Red Star's period of success was after World War I, with the club winning four French Cups in the 1920s.