Jarrod Bowen: From Playing Without Pay to Scoring for Fun at Hull

 Jarrod Bowen has been in irresistible goalscoring form for the resurgent Tigers. Photograph: Lee Smith/Action Images
Jarrod Bowen has been in irresistible goalscoring form for the resurgent Tigers. Photograph: Lee Smith/Action Images
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Jarrod Bowen: From Playing Without Pay to Scoring for Fun at Hull

 Jarrod Bowen has been in irresistible goalscoring form for the resurgent Tigers. Photograph: Lee Smith/Action Images
Jarrod Bowen has been in irresistible goalscoring form for the resurgent Tigers. Photograph: Lee Smith/Action Images

At the start of December, when Hull were in the Championship relegation zone, it would have been easy for the club, in a city synonymous with cream-coloured telephone boxes, to raise the white flag. Fast-forward seven weeks and Nigel Adkins’s side are the country’s form team, suddenly looking up rather than down. Six league wins on the bounce have propelled them to within four points of the play-offs, while the maligned vice-chairman, Ehab Allam, has spoken of renewed optimism. It has been a concerted team effort but no player has been more instrumental than Jarrod Bowen, who has scored nine goals in his past eight matches.Hull have done some shrewd business in recent years – handsomely profiting from the sales of Harry Maguire and Andy Robertson to Leicester City and Liverpool respectively – but, considering they did not pay a penny for Bowen in July 2014 after he left the now defunct Hereford United, the 22-year-old forward may well top the lot. Before arriving in east Yorkshire Bowen held talks with West Bromwich Albion and Wolves but joined Hull, for whom he made his Premier League debut three years ago, after impressing the then academy manager and now first-team coach, Tony Pennock. He is not the only one flying the flag for Hereford in the Football League, with Sam Clucas at Stoke and Marley Watkins at Bristol City.

Bowen, a workaholic with a sweet left foot and an insatiable appetite for goals, has scored five in his past three matches, in which Hull have hit 11 without reply. With 13 goals in this campaign, he is three away from eclipsing last season’s tally with four months of the season to play. On Saturday he will try to build on those numbers at Villa Park, against the team who rejected him at the age of 10 and at the stadium where he scored his first Hull goal last season, sending his watching family into frenzy in the away end. Bowen’s journey is a refreshing tale, from cleaning boots and sweeping changing rooms at Edgar Street to being eulogised in front of tens of thousands.

Less than five years ago a 17-year-old Bowen was part of the Hereford team that defeated Welling in front of 480 spectators at the tail end of a season that was followed by the club’s expulsion from the fifth tier for failing to pay creditors and, a few months later, by their liquidation. He had signed for Hereford as a scholar shortly after joining the youth team – led by the former Bristol Rovers striker Peter Beadle – following a six-week trial at Cardiff City. Bowen impressed in the FA Youth Cup, helping Hereford to the fourth round, where a Manchester City team including Angus Gunn prevailed in extra time. When Martin Foyle resigned as manager in March 2014 with the club haemorrhaging money, Beadle assumed caretaker charge for the last eight games and threw in Bowen at the deep end: he made his debut at Barnet and scored what proved the winner against Alfreton as Hereford won three of their final five matches.

“He acquitted himself extremely well,” Beadle says. “Every game he got stronger. Jarrod has a lot of qualities but the one I really like is that he understands what he needs to do to play in a certain environment. The first day or two, he had to get up to speed in the first team but, very quickly, he was aware of what he needed to do and put it into practice. He had a hand in keeping the club up [before their expulsion], which was an amazing achievement when you think those players were not being paid. He took to it all like a duck to water.”

As a scholar, Bowen was hardly earning megabucks (around £70 a week) but he too went without. He was thrust into a relegation fight in an increasingly toxic atmosphere, a result of a growing discord between fans and his troubled local club; Bowen was born 13 miles up the A49, in Leominster. “Nobody was getting paid, playing staff or management staff,” Beadle says. “How many players these days would have stayed and played for nothing, for their own futures? Not many would have done that but they did. For Jarrod to go through that at that age, and he has also been a part of a relegation from the Premier League, that would have been tough.

“To watch the team that he had a soft spot for as a kid crumble around him and fall away must have been desperately hard for him at 16 and 17. To then be brave enough and say: ‘I’m going to move away from home’, and probably about as far away as he could, to earn a career in football says a lot. He has seen lots of highs and lots of lows that will all stand him in good stead because he knows how good it can be but also how bad things can get.”

The Guardian Sport



Italiano Appointed Besiktas Coach

Italian Vincenzo Italiano named Besiktas coach. (Reuters)
Italian Vincenzo Italiano named Besiktas coach. (Reuters)
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Italiano Appointed Besiktas Coach

Italian Vincenzo Italiano named Besiktas coach. (Reuters)
Italian Vincenzo Italiano named Besiktas coach. (Reuters)

Vincenzo Italiano has been appointed coach of Turkish side Besiktas, the Istanbul-based club announced on Saturday.

The 48-year-old Italian will coach the club until the end of the 2027-2028 season, Besiktas said in a statement, AFP reported.

The former coach of Serie A clubs Fiorentina and Bologna, becomes the 11th manager at Besiktas in the past five years, following Frenchman Valerien Ismael, Dutchman Giovanni van Bronckhorst and Norwegian Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.

Crowned Turkish champions for the 16th time in 2021, Besiktas have since struggled to compete with Galatasaray and Fenerbahce, the two other big Istanbul clubs.


AlUla Designates Scenic Open-Air Venues for 2026 FIFA World Cup Screenings

Fans can watch all Saudi national team matches alongside prominent international, Arab, and Gulf fixtures - SPA
Fans can watch all Saudi national team matches alongside prominent international, Arab, and Gulf fixtures - SPA
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AlUla Designates Scenic Open-Air Venues for 2026 FIFA World Cup Screenings

Fans can watch all Saudi national team matches alongside prominent international, Arab, and Gulf fixtures - SPA
Fans can watch all Saudi national team matches alongside prominent international, Arab, and Gulf fixtures - SPA

AlUla Governorate has prepared several open-air fan zones for residents and tourists to watch 2026 FIFA World Cup matches, blending international football excitement with the region’s renowned natural beauty and unique rock formations while catering to a growing influx of summer visitors.

Fans can watch all Saudi national team matches alongside prominent international, Arab, and Gulf fixtures.

The tournament’s timing in summer boosts AlUla’s appeal, allowing visitors to combine the global sporting event with exploring local heritage sites and participating in outdoor recreational activities during the cooler evening hours, SPA reported.

This viewing experience is fully supported by diverse hospitality options, ranging from luxury resorts and desert accommodations to heritage hotels situated in AlUla Old Town.

These integrated facilities reinforce the region's strategy to expand its tourism and entertainment portfolio, positioning AlUla as a preferred year-round destination.


Iran World Cup Squad Heads to Mexico as US Visa Row Erupts

Iran's Mehdi Torabi, right, poses for a photo with fans after a friendly soccer match between Iran and Mali, in Antalya, southern Türkiye, Thursday, June 4, 2026, ahead of the World Cup soccer tournament. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)
Iran's Mehdi Torabi, right, poses for a photo with fans after a friendly soccer match between Iran and Mali, in Antalya, southern Türkiye, Thursday, June 4, 2026, ahead of the World Cup soccer tournament. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)
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Iran World Cup Squad Heads to Mexico as US Visa Row Erupts

Iran's Mehdi Torabi, right, poses for a photo with fans after a friendly soccer match between Iran and Mali, in Antalya, southern Türkiye, Thursday, June 4, 2026, ahead of the World Cup soccer tournament. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)
Iran's Mehdi Torabi, right, poses for a photo with fans after a friendly soccer match between Iran and Mali, in Antalya, southern Türkiye, Thursday, June 4, 2026, ahead of the World Cup soccer tournament. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

Iran lashed out at the United States on Saturday for refusing visas to some of its World Cup squad support staff as the players were to leave Türkiye for Mexico.

The row erupted just days before the June 11 start of the 2026 World Cup, which is being jointly hosted by the United States, Mexico and Canada.

The Iranian players, who have been at a training camp in the southern Turkish resort of Antalya since May 18, received their visas late on Friday, Washington's envoy to Türkiye Tom Barrack said on X, hailing the work of the US embassy in Ankara in "processing visas for Iran's national football team".

But Iran's embassy to Türkiye hit back Saturday with a furious response, saying a "large" number of managerial and executive staff and others had been denied visas.

"You have now escalated the deliberate and discriminatory treatment against Iran's national football team to its highest level," the embassy wrote on X.

"FIFA must hold the US accountable for violations of its rules and for the discriminatory treatment of Iran's national football team."

Iran's Football Federation, whose chief Mehdi Taj was reportedly among those denied a visa, also hit out, describing the decision as "political interference in sport in its worst form".

"By extending its hostile behaviour towards the Iranian nation into the field of sport, the ... US government has deprived Iran's national team of.. the opportunity to compete without discrimination," it said, pledging to pursue the matter with FIFA.

Iranian state TV's correspondent in Antalya said the players and their technical staff had received visas, but 15 others on the administrative and management side had not.

It said the matter would be followed up in Mexico.

In April, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said any problem would not be with the Iranian players but "some of the other people (they) would want to bring with them", suggesting they may have ties to the Revolutionary Guards, a group on the US terror blacklist.

Taj himself is a former Guards member, Iranian media in the diaspora have said.

Team Melli were scheduled to leave Antalya for Mexico on a 3:20 pm (1220 GMT) flight that Taj said earlier this week would include a stopover in Spain before arriving in Mexico early on Sunday.

But Iran's state TV gave a later departure time of 5:30 pm.

The team will be based in the northwestern border city of Tijuana for the duration of the tournament, but all three of their group stage matches are due to be held in the United States.

Iran, who are in Group G, will play New Zealand and Belgium in Los Angeles on June 15 and 21, followed by a game against Egypt in Seattle on June 26.

Ahead of their departure on Saturday, Iran played a final friendly against Mali in Antalya on Thursday which they won 2-0. They played a first match on May 29, beating Gambia 3-1.