Jordan Henderson's Grit in Early Liverpool Days Created Golden Captain

Liverpool’s Jordan Henderson preferred staying at the club and earning success rather than joining Fulham. Photograph: John Walton/PA
Liverpool’s Jordan Henderson preferred staying at the club and earning success rather than joining Fulham. Photograph: John Walton/PA
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Jordan Henderson's Grit in Early Liverpool Days Created Golden Captain

Liverpool’s Jordan Henderson preferred staying at the club and earning success rather than joining Fulham. Photograph: John Walton/PA
Liverpool’s Jordan Henderson preferred staying at the club and earning success rather than joining Fulham. Photograph: John Walton/PA

Jordan Henderson is the most unassuming of captains, though by any measure he is now among the most successful. As Jamie Redknapp pointed out the night Liverpool’s Premier League title was confirmed, the midfielder has the honour of leading the champions of Europe, the world and now England, to which Henderson responded with a full-beam smile before admitting that he could not really think of anything to say.

“If feels pretty good, I’m just a bit lost for words at the moment,” the former Sunderland player said. “I didn’t want to talk about winning the league before we had actually done it, and now it’s happened I’m a little bit overwhelmed. You never really think of end moments like this because you are too busy concentrating on each game. What we have achieved has not fully sunk in yet. I can’t really describe it.”

Henderson was not being evasive or uncooperative, he really is that uncomplicated an individual. There are better speakers within the Liverpool squad, just as there have been more vocal and inspirational captains over the years, but Henderson just gets on with both his jobs and everyone admires the results.

Considering there have been occasions in recent seasons when his place in the starting lineup has not always been guaranteed, the respect in which Henderson is held at the club is one of the most endearingly old-fashioned aspects of Liverpool’s resurgence. The more successful a club becomes the more strident and opinionated its leading players tend to become, and it is generally felt that a strong character is needed to keep a lid on all the dressing-room tensions.

Henderson has that strength of character, but wears it quietly. He might be the nearest football equivalent to the cricket captain who is not necessarily the best batsman, bowler or all-rounder in the side but commands a place in the team through example and the ability to make the right decisions.

Despite Sir Alex Ferguson’s now infamous reservations about his gait or running style, there is no doubt Henderson can play – a half-century of England caps attest to that – and in some ways it is a pity he did not end up at Old Trafford because his style of captaincy would have formed a hilarious juxtaposition with that of Roy Keane.

Henderson has not always been appreciated at Anfield either – in an episode Brendan Rodgers would now favor brushing under the carpet, he was nearly sent to Fulham in 2012 as part of a proposed swap deal for Clint Dempsey.

The player’s own determination and drive came to the fore at that point, he simply told his manager he would not be interested in such a move and would prefer to work for success at Liverpool. Eight years on it is easy to see that Henderson has done just that, but most impressive at the time was the self-confidence of a young player who was not having an easy assimilation at the club and was operating in the giant shadow cast by Steven Gerrard.

Henderson’s attitude seemed to be that having moved from his boyhood club to a team with genuine potential, he was not about to give up on his dream or start going back down the ladder without giving his new situation everything he had.

History has shown who was right in the argument, thanks in no small measure to Rodgers being replaced by Jürgen Klopp. The German is well-known for demanding all his players give everything they have, and in that regard he can have no complaints about his captain.

It may also be the case that Henderson’s low-key leadership is a perfect fit with Klopp’s histrionic exuberance. You do not need two people waving their arms about and shouting, after all, and while Klopp does his scene-stealing stuff on the touchline Henderson continues reliably imposing yet unflashy work in midfield.

“What we have achieved in the last few seasons is amazing, but we wouldn’t have been able to do it without the manager,” Henderson says with typical modesty. “When he came through the door he changed everything.”

Again, history is not going to dispute that. The record books will show that after a quarter-century of trying Liverpool hit the jackpot when they recruited Klopp from Germany. Yet though they were in the bottom half of the table when he arrived, after losing their way under Rodgers in 2014-15, Henderson was already captain by virtue of his excellent performances the previous season and the vacuum left by Gerrard’s departure.

When Klopp took over in October 2015, Gerrard was in the United States playing for LA Galaxy and Henderson was unavailable with an ankle injury. The new manager wisely opted not to change anything, preferring to wait and see whether anything needed changing. With the honors piling up, he is still waiting.

The Guardian Sport



David Beckham: Inter Miami Not Rushing to Replace Head Coach

Inter Miami co-owner David Beckham attends a training session at the MLS soccer team's training facility, Wednesday, April 15, 2026, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. (AP Photo/Chris Arjoon)
Inter Miami co-owner David Beckham attends a training session at the MLS soccer team's training facility, Wednesday, April 15, 2026, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. (AP Photo/Chris Arjoon)
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David Beckham: Inter Miami Not Rushing to Replace Head Coach

Inter Miami co-owner David Beckham attends a training session at the MLS soccer team's training facility, Wednesday, April 15, 2026, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. (AP Photo/Chris Arjoon)
Inter Miami co-owner David Beckham attends a training session at the MLS soccer team's training facility, Wednesday, April 15, 2026, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. (AP Photo/Chris Arjoon)

Co-owner David Beckham said Inter Miami have to "let things settle down" before hiring a head coach after the sudden, early-season departure of Javier Mascherano on Tuesday.

Mascherano stepped down due to what he called personal reasons in a statement, with ESPN reporting that he made the decision over the weekend after a 2-2 draw with the New York Red Bulls.

Sporting director Guillermo Hoyos took over as interim manager for the Herons (3-1-3, 12 points), who return to action on ⁠Saturday against the ⁠Colorado Rapids in Commerce City, Colo.

Beckham said on CBS Sports that losing Mascherano at this time was "a difficult one." Mascherano, 41, was hired as the club's coach on Nov. 26, 2024. He guided the Lionel Messi-led squad to an MLS ⁠Cup title in 2025.

"He came off the back of last season by winning our first championship," Reuters quoted Beckham as saying. "He's an amazing person, a great coach, the players loved him, but obviously, these things happen in football clubs and we have to move on. We have to find a new coach at some point. But at the moment, we have to let things settle down. But, like ⁠I said, ⁠with owning a team, there are always challenges."

Mascherano replaced Gerardo "Tata" Martino. Inter Miami also reached the Leagues Cup final and CONCACAF Champions Cup semifinal last year.

This was the first club coaching job for Mascherano, who began coaching Argentina's youth national teams in 2021. His squads reached the Round of 16 at the 2023 FIFA U-20 World Cup in Argentina and the quarterfinals of the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris.

Inter Miami's chief soccer officer Alberto Marrero will assume sporting director duties for Hoyos.


Iran Participating in World Cup, FIFA President Confirms

FIFA President Gianni Infantino attends an economic conference in Washington. Kent NISHIMURA / AFP
FIFA President Gianni Infantino attends an economic conference in Washington. Kent NISHIMURA / AFP
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Iran Participating in World Cup, FIFA President Confirms

FIFA President Gianni Infantino attends an economic conference in Washington. Kent NISHIMURA / AFP
FIFA President Gianni Infantino attends an economic conference in Washington. Kent NISHIMURA / AFP

FIFA president Gianni Infantino said Wednesday that Iran will "for sure" participate in the 2026 World Cup despite the Middle East war.

"Iran is coming for sure. We hope that by then the situation will be a peaceful situation, that would definitely help," Infantino told an economic conference organized by broadcaster CNBC.

"But Iran has to come, they represent their people, they have qualified, the players want to play," he said of the team's upcoming matches scheduled in the United States in June.

Infantino had made similar comments in March, when he attended an Iran-Costa Rica friendly in Antalya, Türkiye, even though US President Donald Trump had previously suggested that Iranian players might not be "safe" in the United States, said AFP.

Iran is scheduled to play its three Group G matches in the United States -- two in Los Angeles, one in Seattle -- with their base for the tournament in Tucson, Arizona.

- 'Outside of politics' -

Iran's participation in the global tournament being co-hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico had been thrown into doubt by the conflict launched by the United States and Israel on February 28.

Iran raised the prospect of a "boycott" of the competition before asking FIFA to move its matches from the United States to Mexico, a request the world governing body rejected.

After several weeks of air strikes on Iran and Iranian reprisals against Israel and other countries in the region, a fragile truce came into effect on April 8.

But Tehran has sealed off the strategic Strait of Hormuz and since Monday Washington has imposed a blockade on ships coming from or heading to Iranian ports.

"Sports should be outside of politics," Infantino said on Wednesday.

"If there's nobody else that believes in building bridges and keeping them intact and together, we are doing the job," he said.

The World Cup, the first to feature 48 teams, starts on June 11.


Report: France’s Ekitike Out of World Cup with Ruptured Achilles

 Liverpool's Hugo Ekitike lies injured during the Champions League quarterfinal second leg soccer match between Liverpool and Paris Saint-Germain in Liverpool, England, Tuesday, April 14, 2026. (AP)
Liverpool's Hugo Ekitike lies injured during the Champions League quarterfinal second leg soccer match between Liverpool and Paris Saint-Germain in Liverpool, England, Tuesday, April 14, 2026. (AP)
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Report: France’s Ekitike Out of World Cup with Ruptured Achilles

 Liverpool's Hugo Ekitike lies injured during the Champions League quarterfinal second leg soccer match between Liverpool and Paris Saint-Germain in Liverpool, England, Tuesday, April 14, 2026. (AP)
Liverpool's Hugo Ekitike lies injured during the Champions League quarterfinal second leg soccer match between Liverpool and Paris Saint-Germain in Liverpool, England, Tuesday, April 14, 2026. (AP)

France forward Hugo Ekitike suffered a ruptured Achilles during Liverpool's Champions League clash against Paris St Germain on Tuesday and will miss the World Cup, French newspapers Le Parisien ‌and L'Equipe ‌reported on Wednesday.

The ‌23-year-old ⁠pointed to his ⁠Achilles tendon as medical staff attended to him before he was carried off on a stretcher at Anfield, ⁠where Liverpool lost ‌2-0 ‌in their quarter-final second leg, ‌exiting the competition with ‌a 4-0 aggregate defeat.

The French football federation (FFF) was not immediately available for ‌comment.

Ekitike has 17 goals in all competitions this ⁠season ⁠since Liverpool signed him from Eintracht Frankfurt for 69 million pounds ($93.58 million) in July.

The World Cup is being held in the United States, Mexico and Canada from June 11-July 19.