Dean Smith: ‘Villa Have Won the Top Trophy. Challenging in Europe Has to Be the Aim’

 Dean Smith led Aston Villa to Premier League safety on the final day of the last campaign but says: ‘We won’t be happy just hanging on this season.’ Photograph: Nathan Stirk/Getty Images
Dean Smith led Aston Villa to Premier League safety on the final day of the last campaign but says: ‘We won’t be happy just hanging on this season.’ Photograph: Nathan Stirk/Getty Images
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Dean Smith: ‘Villa Have Won the Top Trophy. Challenging in Europe Has to Be the Aim’

 Dean Smith led Aston Villa to Premier League safety on the final day of the last campaign but says: ‘We won’t be happy just hanging on this season.’ Photograph: Nathan Stirk/Getty Images
Dean Smith led Aston Villa to Premier League safety on the final day of the last campaign but says: ‘We won’t be happy just hanging on this season.’ Photograph: Nathan Stirk/Getty Images

Dean Smith did his job exceptionally well last season, his first in the Premier League in a managerial career that began at Walsall in 2011. Almost everything that could go wrong for Aston Villa did – including key injuries and chronic individual mistakes in a rapidly assembled squad – but Smith kept morale high and made shrewd use of the pandemic-enforced suspension to repair what had been the top-flight’s leakiest defense and, ultimately, pull clear of the drop.

“At times there was just a candle flickering but we managed to get some electricity and heat things up a bit,” says Smith of the late-season power surge. “We faced three shots on target in the last four games, which was an incredible team effort.” Villa’s ambitions for this season, and beyond, are much bigger and Smith is certainly not talking them down.

“Villa footballers have won the top trophy before, the European Cup in 1982,” he says. “I’m not saying I’m going to lead the team to that but that has to be the aim: to plan, over the next five or six years, to try to be challenging in Europe and things like that. You see the progress Wolverhampton have made over the last three years and that’s been fantastic to see as a fellow Midlander. You can’t help but admire what they’ve done. So a club as historically esteemed as ourselves should be aiming at that level as well. That’s what our owners will be aiming at and that’s what we have to aim at as coaching and playing staff.”

The billionaire owners, Wes Edens and Nassef Sawiris, have helped bankroll the record purchase of the striker Ollie Watkins this month for a fee that could reach £33m, the £16m acquisition of the defender Matty Cash and the arrival of the goalkeeper Emiliano Martínez from Arsenal for about £20m. The Lyon forward Bertrand Traoré is close to joining for about £19m and there may be another addition or two. “Our mantra [for recruitment] this season was quality over quantity,” says Smith. “Last season was quantity because we needed to get 12 or 13 players in.”

The club evidently believed the £130m forked out last season after Smith guided the team out of the Championship could have been spent better, because as soon as the campaign ended the sporting director, Jesús García “Suso” Pitarch, was let go. He has been replaced by Johan Lange and a head of football recruitment, Rob Mackenzie, was hired. Rumors suggested Suso had brought in players Smith had not wanted. It would be easy, maybe even politic, for Smith to let those rumors flourish but he has too much integrity for that.

“Whatever was speculated before, I was in full agreement with the players brought in with Suso and I will be with Johan as well,” he says. “I felt for Suso last season because it was such a big turnover and I thought we did a fantastic job doing what we did. You’ll never hear a bad word about Suso from me. I really enjoyed working with him. The club decided to go in a different direction.

“My role [in recruitment] is pretty much the same. As soon as Johan came into the club we sat down and profiled the positions we needed and then it’s a case of me adding some names I liked in those positions. Then it’s down to the recruitment department, headed by Rob and with Johan’s input, to come up with players that a) fit the profile, b) fit the personality profile and c) are actionable. They come up with a list and I sit down with the coaches and decide the best ones.”

Smith hopes the quality over quantity mantra, plus his coaching, will enable him to field a more consistent lineup. “Last season we probably only had a handful of players who you could say were guaranteed starters, your A+ players. The team changed around quite a bit.

The idea was always to build that small core of players into a bigger one in the second season so you can have nine or 10 players who you look at and say: ‘He must be doing something poorly if he’s not starting a game.’ You look at Liverpool and other top teams, that’s what they have, a real core of eight-nine players who are playing week in, week out because of their quality.”

Smith identifies the core players from last season as Tyrone Mings, John McGinn, Douglas Luiz and Jack Grealish, who this week signed a new five-year contract. Smith and Grealish, Villa fans since childhood, enjoy a close relationship. The manager says Grealish is the best player he has worked with; Grealish says Smith gets the best out of him and is “like a father figure”. Smith was delighted to see Grealish make his England debut last week, especially as it has provided a stimulus that should serve Villa even more.

“He fully deserved that cap. He said he went there and got his head down and worked but learned a lot from rubbing shoulders with top players like Harry Kane and Raheem Sterling. It was great for him to see the level he has to continue to reach and become consistent at.

“Jack has previously credited a change in his attitude to when JT [John Terry] came into this club as a player. He saw how professional JT was and learned from that and he’ll have learned even more again from the England camp.

“One of the first things he did [after the England trip] was come to me and say: ‘Gaffer, can we have a four-week schedule so we can plan. I saw some of the other lads had that and it would be great for us.’ He’s never asked me for that before, we only give two weeks. It’s great that he wants to keep getting better.”

The Guardian Sport



Marseille Coach De Zerbi Describes ‘Brawl’ Between Teammates Rabiot and Rowe

Marseille's Italian head coach Roberto De Zerbi gestures during a press conference at the Robert-Louis-Dreyfus training center also known as "La Commanderie", in Marseille, southern France on August 22, 2025. (AFP)
Marseille's Italian head coach Roberto De Zerbi gestures during a press conference at the Robert-Louis-Dreyfus training center also known as "La Commanderie", in Marseille, southern France on August 22, 2025. (AFP)
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Marseille Coach De Zerbi Describes ‘Brawl’ Between Teammates Rabiot and Rowe

Marseille's Italian head coach Roberto De Zerbi gestures during a press conference at the Robert-Louis-Dreyfus training center also known as "La Commanderie", in Marseille, southern France on August 22, 2025. (AFP)
Marseille's Italian head coach Roberto De Zerbi gestures during a press conference at the Robert-Louis-Dreyfus training center also known as "La Commanderie", in Marseille, southern France on August 22, 2025. (AFP)

Marseille players Adrien Rabiot and Jonathan Rowe brawled as if in a pub fight, coach Roberto De Zerbi said Friday, detailing their locker room clash that sent the French club into turmoil.

France midfielder Rabiot and England Under-21 forward Rowe were put on the transfer list this week and told by the club to leave this week in the fallout of their fight after a season-opening loss at Rennes in the French league last Friday.

De Zerbi said the players had initially been temporarily removed from the squad on Monday but the situation had then degenerated.

“Not because of Marseille, but because of the entourage,” the coach said in an apparent reference to Rabiot’s mother and agent, Véronique Rabiot, who criticized senior Marseille officials.

The furor has affected Marseille's plans for the season with just 10 days left in the transfer window and one month before the 1993 European Cup winner returns to the Champions League.

De Zerbi said he was annoyed that Rabiot’s mother had forgotten how much he supported her son, including making him captain in his debut season in Marseille.

“No one can walk all over me, or the club,” said the Italian coach, adding he felt like a father to his players.

De Zerbi said he came from the streets and had seen similar fights but never such a clash in soccer as that between Rabiot and Rowe.

“It was a fight, a brawl, the likes of which I’d never seen in all the years of my career,” said the 46-year-old De Zerbi, whose playing and coaching career took him to almost 20 different clubs in Italy, England, Romania and Ukraine.

De Zerbi said Rabiot and Rowe had to be separated by team bodyguards in a chaotic scene at Rennes during which another player, 17-year-old Darryl Bakola, fell to the ground after fainting.

Rabiot was sorry for what happened, the coach said, while Rowe is reportedly in talks over a move to Italy with Bologna.

Marseille hosts newly promoted Paris FC on Saturday.


City Defender Dias Signs Contract Extension Until 2029

FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - Premier League - Wolverhampton Wanderers v Manchester City - Molineux Stadium, Wolverhampton, Britain - August 16, 2025 Manchester City's Ruben Dias reacts REUTERS/Chris Radburn
FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - Premier League - Wolverhampton Wanderers v Manchester City - Molineux Stadium, Wolverhampton, Britain - August 16, 2025 Manchester City's Ruben Dias reacts REUTERS/Chris Radburn
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City Defender Dias Signs Contract Extension Until 2029

FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - Premier League - Wolverhampton Wanderers v Manchester City - Molineux Stadium, Wolverhampton, Britain - August 16, 2025 Manchester City's Ruben Dias reacts REUTERS/Chris Radburn
FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - Premier League - Wolverhampton Wanderers v Manchester City - Molineux Stadium, Wolverhampton, Britain - August 16, 2025 Manchester City's Ruben Dias reacts REUTERS/Chris Radburn

Manchester City defender Ruben Dias has signed a contract extension that will keep him with the club until 2029, City announced on Friday.

The 28-year-old center back has lifted 10 trophies, including a historic treble in 2023, since he arrived from Benfica in 2020.

The Portugal international was named 2020/21 Premier League Player of the Season and the Football Writers' Association Footballer of the Year, and was a key part of City's historic feat of becoming the first team to win four consecutive top-flight titles in 2024.

"I'm so proud to represent this great Club. City are where I want to be – at the top of the sport, competing for trophies," said Dias, who has made 223 appearances for City. "The Club's ambition aligns perfectly with mine and as a footballer there is nothing better than that.

"My job now is to be the best I can be for the duration of this contract, so that I can play my part in helping us challenge for more silverware."

According to Reuters, City's Director of Football Hugo Viana praised Dias for his hard work and professionalism.

"He is a leader in the dressing room and on the pitch. He is one of our captains, the players listen to him and Pep and the coaching staff love working with him. He is the ultimate professional," Viana said. "Every time Ruben pulls on a City shirt, he gives his all for the badge."


Alexander Isak Won’t Play Against Liverpool but Still Has Newcastle Future, Howe Says 

05 February 2025, United Kingdom, Newcastle Upon Tyne: Newcastle United's Alexander Isak arrives ahead of the England Carabao Cup Semi-Final second leg soccer match at St. James' Park. (dpa)
05 February 2025, United Kingdom, Newcastle Upon Tyne: Newcastle United's Alexander Isak arrives ahead of the England Carabao Cup Semi-Final second leg soccer match at St. James' Park. (dpa)
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Alexander Isak Won’t Play Against Liverpool but Still Has Newcastle Future, Howe Says 

05 February 2025, United Kingdom, Newcastle Upon Tyne: Newcastle United's Alexander Isak arrives ahead of the England Carabao Cup Semi-Final second leg soccer match at St. James' Park. (dpa)
05 February 2025, United Kingdom, Newcastle Upon Tyne: Newcastle United's Alexander Isak arrives ahead of the England Carabao Cup Semi-Final second leg soccer match at St. James' Park. (dpa)

Newcastle manager Eddie Howe remains hopeful Alexander Isak can be reintegrated into the squad, despite the disgruntled striker saying his relationship with the club cannot continue in an explosive midweek post on social media.

Isak broke his silence on his discontent at Newcastle by posting a statement on Instagram, saying the club has broken promises about an agreement that would allow him to leave amid interest from Liverpool and reiterating his desire to move.

Newcastle responded to Isak's outburst by saying no club official had made a commitment to let the striker leave and that it had not received a good enough offer from another team for the Sweden international. The transfer window closes on Sept. 1.

In a twist to the saga, Liverpool is the visitor to St. James' Park on Monday and Howe said Isak would not be involved, missing a second straight game after the 0-0 draw at Aston Villa on the opening weekend of the league.

Howe still believes, however, that the club can resolve its differences with Isak.

“He is contracted to us, he is our player,” Howe said at a news conference on Friday that was dominated by questions about Isak. “My wish is that he'd be playing on Monday night with us, but he won't be and that’s regrettable at this moment.

“But 100% I want to see him back in a Newcastle shirt.”

Howe said Newcastle “justifiably” responded to Isak's social-media post in midweek even though ideally he'd want to keep such matters behind closed doors

The manager added that Isak continues to train away from the main squad and they haven't met this week.

“There’s no issues between us,” Howe said. “Of course, it's a difficult situation from both sides and it's far from ideal for both parties.”

With 23 goals, Isak was second in the Premier League scoring chart behind Liverpool’s Mohamed Salah last season.