'An Inspiration and Motivation': Hopes and Fears in Benfica's Talent Factory

Gonçalo Ramos (right) celebrates with Paulo Bernardo after scoring for Benfica’s B team against Casa Pia AC last September. Photograph: Gualter Fatia/Getty Images
Gonçalo Ramos (right) celebrates with Paulo Bernardo after scoring for Benfica’s B team against Casa Pia AC last September. Photograph: Gualter Fatia/Getty Images
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'An Inspiration and Motivation': Hopes and Fears in Benfica's Talent Factory

Gonçalo Ramos (right) celebrates with Paulo Bernardo after scoring for Benfica’s B team against Casa Pia AC last September. Photograph: Gualter Fatia/Getty Images
Gonçalo Ramos (right) celebrates with Paulo Bernardo after scoring for Benfica’s B team against Casa Pia AC last September. Photograph: Gualter Fatia/Getty Images

“It was a dream come true,” Gonçalo Ramos says of his five-minute Benfica debut last season against Aves. “Only in my dreams would I imagine I’d come on and score two goals.” The forward is leading the new generation of players from the Portuguese club’s academy.

There is plenty of expectation at a club that turned out João Felix, Rúben Dias, Bernardo Silva, and João Cancelo. For the players it is about personal ambition but for Benfica the academy is a key part of the business model, proven by the fees earned in recent years from sales.

“All the players in Benfica’s academy, we look at these players as an inspiration, a motivation, and as confirmation that we are in the best place to reach the biggest stages in the world,” says the 19-year-old Ramos, part of the squad that faces Arsenal on Thursday in Athens in the first leg of their Europa League last‑32 tie.

Ramos’s journey began aged nine at one of Benfica’s five satellite training centers in Portugal, near his childhood home in the Algarve, before he moved to Lisbon as a teenager. He was privately educated by the club and his on-field development meant he played every position other than goalkeeper and right-back.

Nine academy graduates are in Jorge Jesus’s first-team squad, including Nuno Tavares, a 21-year-old full-back who played four times in the group stage. As part of their development, youngsters will be given a chance in the B team, who play in the second tier, where Ramos made his professional debut as a 17-year-old.

“Gonçalo is a striker with great physical ability, being able to get to finishing zones and score many goals,” says the Benfica B head coach, Nélson Veríssimo. “He really has a special sense to score goals. He has the attributes to be one of the best talents of Portuguese football.”

The B team are key to making players ready for the rigors of the top flight. “In the younger championships – over an entire season – our players have only two to three games with a high level of difficulty, but in the second division all games have this high level and all games pose great challenges for our players,” Veríssimo says.

He appreciates the importance of the youth setup, having progressed through it in the 1990s before joining its coaching staff almost a decade ago, including a spell as first-team caretaker manager.

The club hope the latest crop can succeed despite fears the pandemic could affect the younger generations. Academy players have missed a year of group training and games, leading to concerns over how to compensate when they are allowed back.

“We felt already a trend in the difficulty of finding talent with society evolving before Covid; now we feel it is going to be more difficult to find those players,” the technical director, Pedro Marques, says. “We just need to concentrate on practice, looking even better and more, and to try then to support and challenge them throughout their development.

“There is a generation who have been home for a year and the ones that are starting to play have other offerings at the moment, so we have to look at how we can get that passion back for the game on a big scale.”

Ramos is joined in the Benfica squad by João Ferreira and Tiago Araújo, part of the team that finished runners-up to Real Madrid in last season’s Uefa Youth League, having beaten Liverpool and Ajax. In addition to those with the first team, the club have high hopes for several others.

“In the national league you have some degree of stimulus but some of these boys have been playing against the same boys generation after generation,” Marques says. “When we go to the Youth League it’s an opportunity to play against different styles, players, and tactics and to enjoy the atmosphere around those games. The Youth League is a chance for the boys to play against some of the best academies in the world and test ourselves.”

Benfica sit fourth in the domestic league, a disappointing position considering their enviable history. The experienced squad includes Nicolás Otamendi and Jan Vertonghen, who have 197 caps between them, giving role models to learn from.

“It is important for the young players to get the opportunities and be in and around that environment,” Marques says. “In the academy our mission is to get the players ready to challenge in that environment. It is difficult in every club in the world for an academy player to get promoted and they play all the games. Things take some time but the important thing is the connection with the first team is there for players.”

Ramos is now enjoying the next stage of his education. “In my first year as a senior, it is the best that could happen to me,” the forward says. “Training and having teammates who are top of the world, helps me to grow. Even if they don’t tell me anything, I can learn from what they do; they force me to improve, if I want to overcome them.”

(The Guardian)



Kane Scores 60th Bundesliga Goal as Bayern Beats Heidenheim to Close in on the Title

Football - Bundesliga - 1. FC Heidenheim v Bayern Munich - Voith-Arena, Heidenheim, Germany - April 19, 2025 Bayern Munich's Harry Kane reacts. (Reuters)
Football - Bundesliga - 1. FC Heidenheim v Bayern Munich - Voith-Arena, Heidenheim, Germany - April 19, 2025 Bayern Munich's Harry Kane reacts. (Reuters)
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Kane Scores 60th Bundesliga Goal as Bayern Beats Heidenheim to Close in on the Title

Football - Bundesliga - 1. FC Heidenheim v Bayern Munich - Voith-Arena, Heidenheim, Germany - April 19, 2025 Bayern Munich's Harry Kane reacts. (Reuters)
Football - Bundesliga - 1. FC Heidenheim v Bayern Munich - Voith-Arena, Heidenheim, Germany - April 19, 2025 Bayern Munich's Harry Kane reacts. (Reuters)

Harry Kane scored his 60th Bundesliga goal in his 60th game to help Bayern Munich defeat Heidenheim 4-0 and close in on regaining the title on Saturday.

Kane scored the opening goal with a low shot from just outside the penalty area in the 13th minute and nears what would be the first major team trophy of a career filled with individual scoring accolades.

Kane is the fastest player to 60 goals in Bundesliga history, beating Erling Haaland’s mark of 65 games with Borussia Dortmund.

Bayern moves nine points clear of second-placed Bayer Leverkusen, which plays St. Pauli on Sunday. Four games remain after this week.

Bayern had a 2-0 lead before collapsing to lose 3-2 the last time it played in Heidenheim. It was a telling moment as Bayern surrendered the Bundesliga title last season to Leverkusen.

This time, Bayern didn't ease up.

Konrad Laimer scored Bayern's second goal on the counter six minutes after Kane's opener and Kane played a part in the buildup as Kingsley Coman made it 3-0 in the 36th on the rebound after Raphael Guerreiro's shot was saved. Joshua Kimmich added the fourth in the second half.

Union Berlin-Stuttgart sets goals record

Union Berlin and Stuttgart set a Bundesliga record with eight goals before halftime.

The score was 4-4 at the break, and that's how it ended, too.

Both sides are in the bottom half of the standings.

Andre Ilic scored twice for Berlin, while Suttgart had four different scorers.

Players hurt in collision

A painful-looking collision between Leipzig goalkeeper Peter Gulacsi and Holstein Kiel defender David Zec overshadowed their 1-1 draw.

Gulacsi and Zec collided while sprinting to reach the ball and both were substituted, with Gulacsi leaving the field on a stretcher. Gulacsi was conscious and went to hospital for tests, Leipzig said.

Soon after, Benjamin Sesko’s penalty salvaged a draw for Leipzig, which lost ground in the race to qualify for the Champions League.

Leipzig stayed fourth but fifth-placed Freiburg was a point behind following its 3-2 win over Hoffenheim. Mainz was sixth after conceding late in a 2-2 draw with Wolfsburg. Werder Bremen rose two places to seventh by beating Bochum 1-0.