David Seaman: ‘Bernd Leno Came Back From His First Mistake Perfectly'

Bernd Leno warms up before the Fulham match on October 7 — his first Premier League start for Arsenal. Photo by Catherine Ivill/Getty Images
Bernd Leno warms up before the Fulham match on October 7 — his first Premier League start for Arsenal. Photo by Catherine Ivill/Getty Images
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David Seaman: ‘Bernd Leno Came Back From His First Mistake Perfectly'

Bernd Leno warms up before the Fulham match on October 7 — his first Premier League start for Arsenal. Photo by Catherine Ivill/Getty Images
Bernd Leno warms up before the Fulham match on October 7 — his first Premier League start for Arsenal. Photo by Catherine Ivill/Getty Images

It is the nature of goalkeepers to watch games through their own specialist lens. As David Seaman has observed Arsenal’s season unfold, he has been particularly curious to see how Bernd Leno has quietly wrestled the gloves off Petr Cech. Seaman, whose own standards were forged out of winning nine major trophies during his time at Arsenal, has been struck by the way Leno has gone about his business over the last few weeks.

But there was one particular test that made the most vivid impression. Leno was blamed for a goal Arsenal conceded against Liverpool as he pushed the ball straight to James Milner. It was not the mechanics of the goal in itself that Seaman was interested in. It was how Leno dealt with his first moment of scrutiny in the Premier League spotlight that mattered more.

“You look at that and think: ‘Right, you have had a blip, let’s see how you react.’ That is exactly what I look for in a goalkeeper: how they respond after making mistakes,” Seaman says. “We all make mistakes and he has come back perfectly, full of confidence, showing a good strong character. I am really impressed.”

Leno arrived in the summer from Bayer Leverkusen for €22m (£19.2m), a club-record fee for a goalkeeper but, unlike his expensive contemporaries at Liverpool and Chelsea, he had to bide his time before the opportunity to assert himself in the team presented itself. Cech began the season as Unai Emery’s first choice. Leno was able to concentrate on settling in without intense pressure. According to Seaman, the first job for any new goalkeeper is to prove himself to his own group.

“The lads would have seen a lot of him in training and they accept you through that – it can work the other way and they can see how bad someone is! But that is the first thing you have to do, to get the respect of the lads. If they see it in training the next thing is the question: ‘Can they do it in a match?’ That’s more easily said than done. We used to have a lot of players who were great in training but just couldn’t transfer it to match day. They would get too nervous.”

The clamor for Leno to displace Cech intensified because of the sticky moments the veteran endured with the ball at his feet at the start of the season. Seaman disliked that debate. “What used to really annoy me was people saying: ‘He can’t kick it out.’ The ball was being played back to his right foot by the center-halves, which really infuriated me because he is a left‑footed player. They needed to take that into consideration. His goalkeeping was still brilliant and defensively we were still very weak. He was having four, five, six vital saves to make per game.”

After Cech suffered a hamstring injury Leno stepped in, having watched six Premier League matches from the bench. When Seaman began at Arsenal he walked into one of the most stable defenses in the history of English football. Leno has had no such luxury. Arsenal switch from a back four to a three, they have not had a trusted left‑back for the past month and they have been making do without two experienced center-backs in the long-term absentee Laurent Koscielny and, for a few weeks, Sokratis Papastathopoulos. Rob Holding is young and Shkodran Mustafi is prone to sudden errors.

Seaman empathizes: “It is really challenging because you don’t know what they are going to do. That’s one of the biggest things I noticed when I left Arsenal for Manchester City. I’d got a Russian as my left-back, a Chinese guy as my right-back, and two French center-halves who hardly spoke. It was a massive shock. It’s hard to predict what players are going to do when it is changing a lot, so you don’t get accustomed to habits as quickly as you should do. It helps when you know a certain player might not mark tight at set pieces, so you need to remind them, or might switch off when the ball is around the halfway line so an opposing striker could suddenly run clear.”

Seaman has seen enough quality in Leno to predict the 26-year-old can become a reliable presence in Arsenal’s goal for a good few years. “So far he has been brilliant. I don’t know what footed he is because he is that good with both. The only way you can tell is if he takes a goal‑kick. I am impressed by his shot-stopping ability and the other thing I like about him is he gets on with the save. He doesn’t try to make it look flash.”

Well, it takes one to know one and Seaman finds Leno’s placid approach familiar. There is a notable contrast to the antics of another German goalkeeper at Arsenal, suggesting Leno may be a sort of anti‑Jens Lehmann. “He is not a massive bawler. He just makes the save with no need to scream and shout. A little bit like me,” Seaman says, chuckling. “In my era, if you looked at Peter Schmeichel and myself you saw two totally different goalkeepers who did it right. I wasn’t a screamer and shouter. Schmeichel was. His way got the best out of him and my way got the best out of me.”

Seaman hopes cool focus stands Leno in good stead for Sunday’s fiery encounter with Tottenham. “When you go into a north-London derby there is all sorts going through your head,” he says. “There’s fear of losing. When I came I knew exactly what it meant to the fans but that brings pressure. The only bit of advice I would give is just play your game. Don’t try to do something different or you might spoil it.

“Looking at Arsenal’s overall picture the biggest thing that comes to my mind is confidence is back. We are not as tight defensively as I would like it to be. I want the goalkeeper to have nothing to do, or one or two saves. That means we are in control. But after a tough start to the season we have bounced back brilliantly. It’s a big month coming up and with confidence I think we will surprise a few people.”

(The Guardian)



Egypt Teammates Rally Behind Unsettled Salah before AFCON 

Liverpool's Egyptian striker #11 Mohamed Salah warms up ahead of the English Premier League football match between Leeds United and Liverpool at Elland Road in Leeds, northern England on December 6, 2025. (AFP)
Liverpool's Egyptian striker #11 Mohamed Salah warms up ahead of the English Premier League football match between Leeds United and Liverpool at Elland Road in Leeds, northern England on December 6, 2025. (AFP)
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Egypt Teammates Rally Behind Unsettled Salah before AFCON 

Liverpool's Egyptian striker #11 Mohamed Salah warms up ahead of the English Premier League football match between Leeds United and Liverpool at Elland Road in Leeds, northern England on December 6, 2025. (AFP)
Liverpool's Egyptian striker #11 Mohamed Salah warms up ahead of the English Premier League football match between Leeds United and Liverpool at Elland Road in Leeds, northern England on December 6, 2025. (AFP)

While the future of Mohamed Salah at Liverpool hangs in the balance, Egypt teammates have rallied behind the national team captain ahead of the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations in Morocco.

The record seven-time continental champions are in Group B with Angola, South Africa and Zimbabwe, and will be based in southern coastal city Agadir throughout the first round.

"Players like him do not get benched," said striker Ahmed "Kouka" Hassan on social media, referring to Salah being a substitute in the last three Liverpool fixtures, and coming on only once.

"If he starts on the bench, you must make sure he is the first to come on, after 60 minutes, 65 at the latest.

"Mo is not just a teammate, he is a leader, a legend for club and country. Keep working hard brother, every situation in life is temporary, moments like this pass, what stays is your greatness."

Head coach and former star Hossam Hassan posted a photograph of himself and Salah and a message: "Always a symbol of perseverance and strength."

"The greatest Liverpool legend of all time," wrote winger Ahmed "Zizo" El Sayed. Goalkeeper Mohamed Sobhy called Salah "always the best".

Liverpool have struggled in their title defense this season and lie 10th after 15 rounds, 10 points behind leaders Arsenal. Salah has also battled with just four goals in 13 top-flight appearances.

After twice surrendering the lead in a 3-3 draw at Leeds United last Saturday, Salah told reporters "it seems like the club has thrown me under the bus".

"I think it is very clear that someone wanted me to get all of the blame (for the slump)... someone does not want me in the club."

Salah was omitted from the squad that travelled to Milan for a Champions League clash with Inter on Tuesday and has hinted that he may not play for Liverpool again.

- 'Great feeling' -

Although Egypt last won the AFCON 15 years ago in Luanda, Salah, 33, believes they will lift the trophy again before he retires.

"It will happen -- that is what I believe. It is a great feeling every time you step on the field wearing the Egyptian colors."

Salah has suffered much heartbreak in four AFCON tournaments as Egypt twice finished runners-up and twice exited in the round of 16.

He created the goal that put the Pharaohs ahead in the 2017 final, but Cameroon clawed back to win 2-1 in Libreville.

Hosts and title favorites Egypt were stunned by South Africa in the first knockout round two years later, conceding a late goal to lose 1-0.

Egypt reached the final again in 2022 only to lose on penalties to Senegal after 120 goalless minutes in Yaounde.

In Ivory Coast last year, Salah suffered a hamstring injury against Ghana and took no further part in the tournament. Egypt lost on penalties to the Democratic Republic of Congo in a last-16 clash.

This year, Egypt boast an array of attacking talent with Salah, Omar Marmoush from Manchester City, Mostafa Mohamed of Nantes and Mahmoud "Trezeguet" Hassan and Zizo from Cairo giants Al Ahly.

Group B is the only one of the six in Morocco featuring two qualifiers for the 2026 World Cup, with Egypt and South Africa heading to the global showpiece in North America.

South Africa exceeded expectations by finishing third at the 2024 AFCON, but Belgian coach Hugo Broos expects a tougher campaign in a tournament that kicks off on December 21.

"It will be harder because every opponent will be more motivated to beat us after our bronze medals," said the tactician who guided Cameroon to the 2017 AFCON title.

Angola and Zimbabwe recently changed coaches with France-born Patrice Beaumelle and Romanian Mario Marinica hired.

The Angolans have reached the quarter-finals three times, including last year, while the Zimbabweans have never gone beyond the first round.


Pressure Is on Real Madrid Coach Xabi Alonso Ahead of Champions League Match Against Man City 

Real Madrid's head coach Xabi Alonso in action during a training session at Valdebebas sports city in Madrid, Spain, 09 December 2025. (EPA)
Real Madrid's head coach Xabi Alonso in action during a training session at Valdebebas sports city in Madrid, Spain, 09 December 2025. (EPA)
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Pressure Is on Real Madrid Coach Xabi Alonso Ahead of Champions League Match Against Man City 

Real Madrid's head coach Xabi Alonso in action during a training session at Valdebebas sports city in Madrid, Spain, 09 December 2025. (EPA)
Real Madrid's head coach Xabi Alonso in action during a training session at Valdebebas sports city in Madrid, Spain, 09 December 2025. (EPA)

The pressure is mounting on Real Madrid coach Xabi Alonso ahead of Wednesday's Champions League match with Manchester City.

Madrid has won just two of its last seven in all competitions including a 2-0 loss to Celta Vigo over the weekend.

Ahead of the City match, Alonso had to contend with reports in the Spanish media that he had lost control of the locker room.

“This is a team, and we all stand together,” he said. “In soccer, you can change perspective quickly, and we’re at that point.”

Doubts over Kylian Mbappé's availability added to Alonso's concerns. The France striker trained separately to the rest of the team on Tuesday, having reportedly had issues with his left leg.

City manager Pep Guardiola sympathized with Alonso, who he coached as a player at Bayern Munich.

“Barcelona and Real Madrid are the toughest clubs to be manager of because of the environment,” he said. “It’s a difficult place but he knows it — it’s the reality of being here."

Other games on Wednesday include defending champion Paris Saint-Germain at Athletic Bilbao, Arsenal at Club Brugge and Italian champion Napoli at Benfica.


Chelsea’s Maresca Rues ‘Easy Goals’ Conceded in Loss to Atalanta 

Chelsea's coach Enzo Maresca leaves the pitch after losing the UEFA Champions League soccer match between Atalanta BC and Chelsea FC, in Bergamo, Italy, 09 December 2025. (EPA)
Chelsea's coach Enzo Maresca leaves the pitch after losing the UEFA Champions League soccer match between Atalanta BC and Chelsea FC, in Bergamo, Italy, 09 December 2025. (EPA)
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Chelsea’s Maresca Rues ‘Easy Goals’ Conceded in Loss to Atalanta 

Chelsea's coach Enzo Maresca leaves the pitch after losing the UEFA Champions League soccer match between Atalanta BC and Chelsea FC, in Bergamo, Italy, 09 December 2025. (EPA)
Chelsea's coach Enzo Maresca leaves the pitch after losing the UEFA Champions League soccer match between Atalanta BC and Chelsea FC, in Bergamo, Italy, 09 December 2025. (EPA)

Chelsea manager Enzo Maresca was disappointed by how his side conceded two second-half goals to throw away their lead and slump to a 2-1 Champions League defeat at Atalanta on Tuesday.

Joao Pedro broke the deadlock for Chelsea after 25 minutes, but Serie A side Atalanta returned with far more intent after the break and overturned the deficit through goals from Gianluca Scamacca and Charles De Ketelaere.

Maresca said his side should have taken the chances they had to add to their first-half lead.

"After we conceded the 1-1 (goal), we lost a little bit of control of the game, and then we conceded the second one," he told reporters.

"I think both goals, we can avoid both of them. They're quite easy goals."

The win put Atalanta near the top of the Champions League table, putting them in the mix for direct qualification for the round of 16 with 13 points, while Chelsea have 10.

If the Premier League club do not win their remaining games against Cypriot side Pafos and Italy's Napoli, they will likely finish outside the top eight and be forced to play a two-legged playoff match.

"Probably with two wins, probably with 16 points, you can be in the top eight," the Italian manager added.

"Not sure about that, but now the focus has to be the next game. And then the next one, for sure. If we want to try to finish top eight, we need to win both.

"Otherwise, we try to play the playoff and then go to the next round."

Chelsea next host Everton in a league match on Saturday.