Ryan Gauld: 'Being Called Mini Messi Didn't Bother Me but People Expected More'

Ryan Gauld in action last December for Farense, who were on course for promotion to Portugal’s top flight when the season was halted.
Photograph: Gualter Fatia/Getty Images
Ryan Gauld in action last December for Farense, who were on course for promotion to Portugal’s top flight when the season was halted. Photograph: Gualter Fatia/Getty Images
TT

Ryan Gauld: 'Being Called Mini Messi Didn't Bother Me but People Expected More'

Ryan Gauld in action last December for Farense, who were on course for promotion to Portugal’s top flight when the season was halted.
Photograph: Gualter Fatia/Getty Images
Ryan Gauld in action last December for Farense, who were on course for promotion to Portugal’s top flight when the season was halted. Photograph: Gualter Fatia/Getty Images

Ryan Gauld wasn’t short of suitors when seeking a transfer from Sporting Lisbon last summer, proving reputations such as his linger. The Scot dubbed “Mini Messi” as a teenager might have been expected to board the first flight out of Portugal but he had other ideas. Gauld took the path to Farense, a little-fancied club in the second tier who have defied consensus by earning promotion courtesy of a season abandonment confirmed on Tuesday.

“I felt like I hadn’t accomplished everything I wanted to here,” Gauld says from his home in Vilamoura. “I would have been leaving without showing to everyone what I can do. I wanted to stick around and prove myself.

“I think I’m looked at as a player who had talent but hasn’t really shown it yet. They have reason to think that because there were high expectations when I went to Sporting; I was destined for great things. I have always done all I could to make things work out but they didn’t go as planned. I’m a bit young yet to write myself off – there is still time. I wanted to get back to the first division here to prove a point.”

Perhaps most importantly, Gauld sounds comfortable in his own skin and happy. “I’ve managed 23-24 games on the trot without injury. It’s my longest spell of consecutive 90 minutes, most goals, longest time with no injuries and that’s exactly what I was needing.”

Gauld’s earlier rise makes “rapid” appear an understatement. The Messi comparisons came after he broke through at Dundee United as a 16-year-old in 2012. Sporting paid £3m for him two years later on a six‑year deal with a €60m exit clause. After a promising start in Lisbon – Gauld played 90 minutes for the first team in December 2014 – things turned sour. Still only 24, Gauld is up to speed with the ugliness of the beautiful game.

“There’s a good side and a bad side, that people don’t really see,” he says of Sporting. “One thing I came away from Sporting having not enjoyed was the way I was dealt with. The positive side is they are a huge club, known all over Europe, and to be a part of that for a few years was an honor.”

Was the Messi moniker, for one so young, a burden? “I wasn’t bothered by it but it’s when you see it on social media: ‘This guy was meant to be Mini Messi, look at him now.’ All that kind of nonsense. The actual name didn’t bother me, it was just when people read that they judged me a little quicker and expected more.

“The first time I read it I was laughing; John and Andy cut it out the paper and stuck it in my room. I was 17, delighted to be playing football every day and in such a good United team. I had nothing to complain about.”

Of those flatmates John is Souttar, now of Hearts; Andy is a certain Robertson, who needs no introduction. Gauld laughs when contemplating whether he envisaged Robertson’s journey to Champions League winner with Liverpool. “To begin with probably not because he was this wee quiet boy who came in for a pre-season. We didn’t have a left-back, Barry Douglas had just left, so [United manager] Jackie McNamara took in Andy and Graham Carey on trial.

“We all thought: ‘Graham Carey is quite a well-known player in the SPL, as long as he does well he’ll be signing.’ Graham had a good pre‑season but we went to Germany, played a couple of games and Jackie told Andy he would be our left-back. He developed incredibly from the start of that season to the end and has just kept rising. It’s as if he will never stop developing. There isn’t much else for him to accomplish in his career but nothing would change the boy he is. We still keep in touch.”

Gauld’s experience doesn’t look especially unusual: injuries, competition for places, changes of coach and ineffectual loans hampered his development. The difference with him was simple; people in Scotland, desperate for a global star, noted every setback.

“There was still a lot of expectation over here because it wasn’t often Sporting would pay a lot of money for a young player. So people expected big things. I soon realized the B team and junior team was full of brilliant 17‑ and 18‑year‑olds. They already have that level of in-house talent.

“The hardest thing was people in Scotland and England expected things to happen straight away, that I would walk into the team. Sporting’s midfield three at the time all won the 2016 Euros with Portugal – Adrien Silva, William Carvalho, João Mário – and played big parts in that. I don’t think people understood how hard it would be for me but I gave it all I could; I have no regrets.

“My first season was my best. At 18 I was playing the League Cup games, got a few goals, coming off the bench. At the time I thought it was a great start but there was a change of manager that summer and the new one didn’t fancy me.

“It was a gradual thing. I spent two years in the B team, then was out on loan but got called back because Sporting took the huff with the team I was at. Then I was chucked back into the B team and started thinking: ‘It’s maybe not going to work here.’ The next pre‑season, I was quickly sent to the group that wasn’t needed or wanted by the manager.”

If Messi was Gauld’s supposed parallel, Cristiano Ronaldo is the Lisbon poster boy. Sporting developed the forward before his sale to Manchester United. “Any time a young boy breaks into the first team, they don’t want to say anything but they are hoping it can happen again,” Gauld says. “You can’t put that pressure on a kid – trying to play catch-up with a guy like Ronaldo won’t do you much good.”

Nowadays Gauld can typically be found as a narrow left-sided midfielder – “not a winger” – in a 4-4-2. Lockdown has afforded him a chance to assess how his game has improved since leaving Scotland. “I’m more of a complete player, certainly without the ball. United have been putting up old games on YouTube and I’ve been watching. I feel sorry for John Rankin and Paul Paton, having to do all my defending.”

Farense, now defined as runners-up in LigaPro, have enjoyed the benefits of Gauld’s maturity and hunger. He finished the season as their top scorer. “Personally and collectively this [stoppage] came at a bad time. Not that it was a good time for anyone, but it was frustrating,” he says. For him you sense the 2020-21 campaign cannot come soon enough.

(The Guardian)



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)
TT

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
TT

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.


African Champions Pyramids Hit Back to Draw in Morocco

An aerial view shows Cairo's traffic with buildings and houses, through the window of a Turkish Airlines plane, in Cairo, Egypt March 12, 2026. REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh
An aerial view shows Cairo's traffic with buildings and houses, through the window of a Turkish Airlines plane, in Cairo, Egypt March 12, 2026. REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh
TT

African Champions Pyramids Hit Back to Draw in Morocco

An aerial view shows Cairo's traffic with buildings and houses, through the window of a Turkish Airlines plane, in Cairo, Egypt March 12, 2026. REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh
An aerial view shows Cairo's traffic with buildings and houses, through the window of a Turkish Airlines plane, in Cairo, Egypt March 12, 2026. REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh

Pyramids of Egypt preserved an unbeaten record in defense of the CAF Champions League title by coming from behind to draw 1-1 at FAR Rabat of Morocco late on Friday.

The home team were ahead after just eight minutes of the quarter-final first leg when Ahmed Hammoudan scored his first goal of the campaign.

Mahmoud Zalaka equalized in the seventh minute of the second half in a match staged behind closed doors due to crowd trouble during an earlier FAR match.

The second leg is set for March 21 in Cairo and the overall winners will face another Moroccan club, Renaissance Berkane, or Al Hilal of Sudan in the semi-finals during April.

Pyramids and FAR also clashed in the quarter-finals last season with the Cairo club winning 4-3 on aggregate.

Surprise winners of the premier African club competition last season, Pyramids have won eight matches and drawn three in pursuit of back-to-back titles.

They pocketed four million dollars (3.5 mn euros) after defeating Mamelodi Sundowns of South Africa in the 2024/25 final.

This week, the Confederation of African Football (CAF) announced that first prize had been increased by 50% to six million dollars. The runners-up prize is unchanged at two million dollars.

FAR rattled Pyramids by taking an early lead amid the silence of the Olympic Stadium in the Moroccan capital, AFP reported.

A pass into space behind the Pyramids defense found Hammoudan, who raced in from the left flank and beat veteran goalkeeper Ahmed El Shenawy with an angled shot into the far corner.

Both sides had spells of territorial dominance in the opening half, but there were no further goals before half-time with few clearcut chances.

Pyramids pressed for an equalizer from the restart and were rewarded on 52 minutes when Zalaka claimed his second goal of the African campaign.

FAR goalkeeper Ahmed Tagnaouti parried a close-range shot from Ahmed Atef after a corner and Zalaka reacted quickest to poke the loose ball into the net.

Mahmoud Mayele, the Democratic Republic of Congo striker and leading scorer in the Champions League last season with nine goals, was substituted after 83 minutes.

After scoring three goals in qualifiers this season, the 31-year-old has gone eight matches without adding to his tally.

The quarter-final in Rabat kicked off only at 2200 local time due to the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.