José Gomes: Robson Was a Symbol of What English Football Means

 Jose Gomes watches his side take on QPR in December. Photograph: Bryn Lennon/Getty Images
Jose Gomes watches his side take on QPR in December. Photograph: Bryn Lennon/Getty Images
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José Gomes: Robson Was a Symbol of What English Football Means

 Jose Gomes watches his side take on QPR in December. Photograph: Bryn Lennon/Getty Images
Jose Gomes watches his side take on QPR in December. Photograph: Bryn Lennon/Getty Images

For a young coach in Portugal’s second city during the mid-1990s the choice between university classes and a trip to Porto’s practice pitches barely registered. José Gomes would not think twice about skipping an afternoon’s studies when he heard a training session was open; he was spellbound by the famous English manager who had taken over at the club he loved and, in his words, “it was like time stopped” as he stood at the side and watched the old master put the players through their paces.

Gomes is hardly alone in having a Sir Bobby Robson story but the feelings stirred by those glimpses of his work have particular resonance. A month has passed since Gomes was appointed the manager of Reading and it was while watching Robson during that 1994-95 season that he resolved to make working in England his ultimate goal.

“The way that this man, in his 60s, passed such passion to his players … I looked at him and it was impossible to split him from English football. He was like a symbol of what English football means.”

Gomes vividly recalls a drill in which António Folha, the Portugal winger, enraged Robson with repeated errors. “He was shouting at him, ‘Stupid, stupid,’” he says. “But a few seconds later Folha, in the same exercise, did well and Robson dropped to his knees on the ground [he mimics a figure with arms aloft], shouting, ‘Fantastic. Fantastic.’ The guy is 62 and living one simple football exercise with such intensity and love. I keep this picture in my mind for ever, because it is the way a manager must respect his job.”

It has taken almost two and a half decades but Gomes’s wish has come true. He joins Reading “full of motivation and energy” and a glance at the Championship table shows both will be needed. They are in the relegation mire after a disastrous first half of the season under Paul Clement, although Tuesday’s draw at Bolton, a place lower in 23rd, brought them to within a point of safety before Saturday’s meeting with Aston Villa.

“I arrived in the middle of the war; I didn’t know the directions the bombs were coming from,” says Gomes of his start, which pitched him into a frantic Christmas schedule. He does, at least, have experience of adapting quickly. Gomes is 48 but an extraordinary professional career, which began as a coach at Paços de Ferreira a year after those encounters with Robson, has involved 21 positions in seven countries. He regards most of what has passed as preparation for the job he faces now.

Gomes remembers travelling to England for Euro 96 with some friends, visiting Portugal’s camp but refusing to hunt autographs with them because he felt he might be working with international players soon and feared a loss of face. Initially he took mid-ranking jobs around Portugal: some as assistant, some as fitness coach and, by the mid-2000s, several as head coach.

It was during a spell as a fitness coach at Benfica that he met Jesualdo Ferreira, who remains active at the age of 72. “He is a master of the small details a player must improve on,” Gomes says of Ferreira, whom he later assisted at Porto, Málaga and Panathinaikos.

By 2013 he felt it was time to go solo again and an opportunity arose at Videoton, the celebrated Hungarian club. “The mentality and organisation were completely different,” Gomes says. “At Paços de Ferreira we had 17 directors who lived and breathed the club’s problems. At Videoton the owner did not even know the rules of football.”

When Gomes wanted something resolving he would meet Viktor Orban, the prime minister and a Videoton fan whose passion for football is – political considerations to one side – well documented. “We’d go for coffee or dinner and Orban would help me,” he says. “He’s a football man, loves to talk football.”

When tensions between Hungary and Ukraine mounted, Orban became preoccupied. Gomes left Videoton, satisfied with league finishes of second and fourth but frustrated at the club’s reluctance to appoint a director of football. Efforts to secure a job in England fell short; bored of watching matches on television, he accepted an offer to join the Saudi club Al-Taawoun.

The Buraidah-based club, 375km from Riyadh, qualified for the Asian Champions League under his watch. “If I’d had this experience 10 or 15 years previously I could have stayed there for a maximum of a week. It’s a completely different pressure, culture and mentality. You arrive in a new country with different people and rules, and the important thing is not to lose your ideas and the way to follow them.”

He describes the exasperation caused on an almost daily level by the Saudis’ preference for telling white lies. If a player had overslept and missed training, his staff would report he had been involved in a car crash, reluctant to anger the manager. Another player’s maternal grandfather “died” on more than one occasion.

He walked into a shower cubicle to find three of his squad smoking; it turned out they were in the overwhelming majority. Gomes learned that sometimes there are things you have to let go and, across two spells at Al-Taawoun that sandwiched a stint at Al-Ahli and a season in the UAE with Baniyas, he felt enriched.

His progress back in Portugal with Rio Ave, whom he had led to sixth place this season with some slick attacking football, persuaded Reading to make their move. Early performances have been promising; a win over Nottingham Forest suggested they have the wherewithal to pull clear and there was honour in an FA Cup defeat at Manchester United.

“Ole Gunnar Solskjær told me after that game, ‘Don’t change your style, follow your ideas, your football is great,’” he says. “I feel I’m ready to help this club, these players, go the right way. We have all the conditions here to achieve what we want, and then next year go for more ambitious targets.”

The Guardian Sport



Nine-man Bayern Come from Behind to Rescue 1-1 Draw at Leverkusen

14 March 2026, Leverkusen: Munich's Luis Diaz celebrates scoring his side's first goal during the German Bundesliga soccer match between Bayer 04 Leverkusen and FC Bayern Munich at the BayArena. Photo: Federico Gambarini/dpa
14 March 2026, Leverkusen: Munich's Luis Diaz celebrates scoring his side's first goal during the German Bundesliga soccer match between Bayer 04 Leverkusen and FC Bayern Munich at the BayArena. Photo: Federico Gambarini/dpa
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Nine-man Bayern Come from Behind to Rescue 1-1 Draw at Leverkusen

14 March 2026, Leverkusen: Munich's Luis Diaz celebrates scoring his side's first goal during the German Bundesliga soccer match between Bayer 04 Leverkusen and FC Bayern Munich at the BayArena. Photo: Federico Gambarini/dpa
14 March 2026, Leverkusen: Munich's Luis Diaz celebrates scoring his side's first goal during the German Bundesliga soccer match between Bayer 04 Leverkusen and FC Bayern Munich at the BayArena. Photo: Federico Gambarini/dpa

Bundesliga leaders Bayern Munich had two players sent off and two goals disallowed but came back from a goal down to snatch a 1-1 draw at Bayer Leverkusen on Saturday.

Bayern have 67 points ahead of second-placed Borussia Dortmund, who closed the gap to nine after a 2-0 home victory over Augsburg, with eight games remaining, Reuters reported.

The Bavarians, fresh from Tuesday's 6-1 demolition of Atalanta in the Champions League last 16, had Nicolas Jackson sent off for a wild ⁠tackle before the ⁠break. Forward Luis Diaz, who scored a 69th-minute equalizer, joined him on the sidelines after a second booking for diving. The hosts made a perfect start when Garcia fired them into the lead as Bayern, with top scorer Harry Kane on the bench, failed to settle.

They put the ball in the net through Jonathan ⁠Tah but the effort was disallowed following a VAR review for hand ball. It got worse three minutes from halftime when Jackson was dismissed for his reckless tackle on Martin Terrier.

Malik Tillman should have added another for Leverkusen when he was sent through with a clever Patrik Schick backheel but the US international fired wide with only Bayern keeper Sven Ulreich to beat.

Bayern's third-choice keeper, making a rare appearance due to injuries to Manuel Neuer and Jonas Urbig, also denied Schick in a one-on-one.

Kane, back ⁠after missing two ⁠matches with a muscle injury, challenged keeper Janis Blaswich and tapped in from close range a minute after coming on, only for the goal to be disallowed for handball by the England captain.

Diaz did better, slotting in after a defensive blunder from Robert Andrich and Michael Olise's record-breaking 17th assist of the season, to level but he got his marching orders six minutes from time for a spectacular dive in the box. There was more late drama when the hosts thought they had won it in stoppage time through substitute Jonas Hofmann's close-range effort but a VAR review showed a narrow offside position.


Iran Says Wants to Play World Cup Matches in Mexico

Will Iran play its World Cup matches in Mexico? (Reuters)
Will Iran play its World Cup matches in Mexico? (Reuters)
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Iran Says Wants to Play World Cup Matches in Mexico

Will Iran play its World Cup matches in Mexico? (Reuters)
Will Iran play its World Cup matches in Mexico? (Reuters)

Iran has suggested to move its World Cup matches from the United States to co-hosts Mexico in connection with the Middle East war.

Sports minister Ahmad Donyamali was quoted by state news agency Irna as saying that they would look into the proposal together with the world governing body FIFA.

"I hope that conditions can be created so that our boys can take part at the World Cup after all," Donyamali said.

"It is important to make careful use of all sporting aspects to ensure that participation is still possible.”

Iran are set to face Belgium, New Zealand and Egypt in the group stage with all three matches to be played in the US, which hosts the June 11-July 19 tournament together with Mexico and Canada.

The US and Israel have been carrying out air strikes against Iran since February 28. Tehran is carrying out counterstrikes in the region.

Donyamali ruled out Iran's participation at the World Cup on Wednesday.

US President Donald trump said the next day it was not "appropriate" for Iran to play for safety reasons. Iran dismissed this, saying that decisions were made solely by FIFA.


Iran State Media Says Two More Footballers Pull Australia Asylum Bids

The members of Iran's women's football team who did not claim asylum in Australia arrived at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport on March 11, 2026 © ARIF KARTONO / AFP
The members of Iran's women's football team who did not claim asylum in Australia arrived at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport on March 11, 2026 © ARIF KARTONO / AFP
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Iran State Media Says Two More Footballers Pull Australia Asylum Bids

The members of Iran's women's football team who did not claim asylum in Australia arrived at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport on March 11, 2026 © ARIF KARTONO / AFP
The members of Iran's women's football team who did not claim asylum in Australia arrived at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport on March 11, 2026 © ARIF KARTONO / AFP

Two more players of the Iranian women's football team, which competed in the Asian Cup in Australia, and one member of the backroom staff have withdrawn their requests for asylum in the country, Iranian state media said on Saturday.

Seven members of the visiting women's football delegation -- six players and one backroom staff member -- had sought sanctuary in Australia after they were branded "traitors" at home for refusing to sing the national anthem during the ongoing war between Iran and the US and its ally Israel, AFP reported.

One of the players had withdrawn her request earlier in the week and linked up with the rest of the team who are returning to Iran via Malaysia, according to Iranian media and Australian authorities.

State broadcaster IRIB said on Saturday "two players and a member of the technical staff of the women's national football team, have given up on their asylum application in Australia and are currently heading to Malaysia."

It posted a picture of the three women -- wearing the Islamic hijab -- as they were apparently about to board a plane.

The rest of the team are believed to still be in the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur awaiting their return to Iran.

According to Australian authorities, the first woman who changed her mind over the asylum application exposed the location of the other asylum seekers when she contacted Iran's embassy in Australia.

They were then forced to change the safe house where they were living.

Rights groups have repeatedly accused Iranian authorities of pressuring athletes abroad by threatening relatives or with the seizure of property if they defect or make statements against the Islamic republic.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has lauded the bravery of the women, vowing they would be welcomed with open arms.

But Iran's governing football body has accused Australia of kidnapping the players and forcing them to forsake their home nation against their will.

Iranian players fell silent as the national anthem played ahead of a tournament match in Australia, an act seen as a symbol of defiance against the Islamic republic.

A presenter on Iranian state TV branded the players "wartime traitors", fuelling fears they faced persecution, or worse, if they returned home.

Five players, including captain Zahra Ghanbari, slipped away from the team hotel under the cover of darkness to claim asylum in Australia.

Two more team members -- a player and a support staffer -- claimed asylum before the team flew out of Sydney earlier this week.