Euphoria Sweeps Tyneside as Newcastle Aim Even Higher

(L-R) Manager Unai Emery of Aston Villa shakes hands with manager Eddie Howe of Newcastle United during a Premier League Summer Series match between Aston Villa and Newcastle United at Lincoln Financial Field on July 23, 2023 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Getty Images/AFP)
(L-R) Manager Unai Emery of Aston Villa shakes hands with manager Eddie Howe of Newcastle United during a Premier League Summer Series match between Aston Villa and Newcastle United at Lincoln Financial Field on July 23, 2023 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Getty Images/AFP)
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Euphoria Sweeps Tyneside as Newcastle Aim Even Higher

(L-R) Manager Unai Emery of Aston Villa shakes hands with manager Eddie Howe of Newcastle United during a Premier League Summer Series match between Aston Villa and Newcastle United at Lincoln Financial Field on July 23, 2023 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Getty Images/AFP)
(L-R) Manager Unai Emery of Aston Villa shakes hands with manager Eddie Howe of Newcastle United during a Premier League Summer Series match between Aston Villa and Newcastle United at Lincoln Financial Field on July 23, 2023 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Getty Images/AFP)

Newcastle United will start the season truly back amongst the big boys for the first time in a couple of decades with expectation levels sky high on Tyneside.

After year's of discontent and gloom, the fog that engulfed the serial under-achievers has lifted and a bright new dawn arrived last season when Eddie Howe's side finished fourth.

Fans of the club, majority owned by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund (PIF) since 2021, used to begin campaigns fretting about the possibility of relegation.

Now, after a stunning resurgence they have gate-crashed the top table of English football and will return to the Champions League group stage for the first time since 2003.

Impressively, Newcastle's rise is not all about spending the money that is clearly now at their disposal.

Astute signings, rather than Hollywood buys, have been the order of the day with Howe constructing a team imbued with a high work ethic and well-defined method.

Fans will lament the sale of winger Allan Saint-Maximin.

But it is a case of "in Howe we trust" and the recruitment of English winger Harvey Barnes and Italian midfielder Sandro Tonali have added depth to the squad.

Newcastle also signed teenaged winger Yankuba Minteh from Odense as they look to build a team that can cement their place amongst the elite, rather than be a flash in the pan.

There will be challenges this season. The Champions League will stretch the squad and the likes of Chelsea, Liverpool and Tottenham Hotspur will be eager to re-assert themselves after being replaced by Newcastle in the top four.

And for all the good vibes sweeping the Magpies, the club's trophy cabinet is still gathering dust.

They got close to ending the 55-year wait for a top-level trophy last season, only to lose the League Cup final to Manchester United.

So, while competing towards the top of the Premier League and enjoying the Champions League nights will rekindle the heady days of Bobby Robson and Kevin Keegan, Newcastle can be expected to take the domestic cups seriously too.

The core of Howe's team proved ultra-reliable last season with keeper Nick Pope, central defender Sven Botman, right back Kieran Trippier and midfielder Bruno Guimaraes enjoying levels of consistency that are a manager's dream.

They will have to reach the same standards this season for Newcastle to continue to thrive.

Newcastle finished with 71 points but even as that campaign finished, Howe was focused on the challenges ahead -- knowing they must not stand still.

"There are no guarantees, we have to earn the right to be the team that people want us to be," Howe said.



Milan Come from Behind to Beat Juventus 2-1 in Super Cup Semi-final

Soccer Football - Italian Super Cup - Semi Final - Juventus v AC Milan - Al Awwal Park, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - January 3, 2025 AC Milan's Christian Pulisic scores their first goal from the penalty spot REUTERS/Jennifer Lorenzini
Soccer Football - Italian Super Cup - Semi Final - Juventus v AC Milan - Al Awwal Park, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - January 3, 2025 AC Milan's Christian Pulisic scores their first goal from the penalty spot REUTERS/Jennifer Lorenzini
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Milan Come from Behind to Beat Juventus 2-1 in Super Cup Semi-final

Soccer Football - Italian Super Cup - Semi Final - Juventus v AC Milan - Al Awwal Park, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - January 3, 2025 AC Milan's Christian Pulisic scores their first goal from the penalty spot REUTERS/Jennifer Lorenzini
Soccer Football - Italian Super Cup - Semi Final - Juventus v AC Milan - Al Awwal Park, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - January 3, 2025 AC Milan's Christian Pulisic scores their first goal from the penalty spot REUTERS/Jennifer Lorenzini

AC Milan reached the Italian Super Cup final after coming from behind to beat Juventus 2-1 on Friday in Sergio Conceicao's first game in charge, setting up a derby decider with Inter Milan.

A second-half penalty from Christian Pulisic and an own goal by Federico Gatti completed Milan's comeback after Kenan Yildiz had fired Juve into a 21st-minute lead.

Milan will play Inter in Monday's final, after the Serie A champions overcame Atalanta 2-0 in their semi-final meeting on Thursday, where Conceicao could immediately get his hands on a trophy after replacing the sacked Paulo Fonseca as Milan manager on Monday.

The expected intrigue of a father against son battle failed to materialise, after Juventus winger Francisco Conceicao was named in the starting 11 but was withdrawn after picking up an injury in the warm-up, according to Reuters.

Conceicao's place was taken by Yildiz, and after a slow, cagey start to the game, it was the Turkish forward who broke the deadlock.

A through pass from Samuel Mbangula caught the Milan defence off guard and found Yildiz who took the ball into the area before smashing his shot into the roof of the net, beating Milan keeper Mike Maignan at his near post.

The second half began with another Yildiz effort going just wide in the opening seconds, and shortly afterwards, he played a low pass across the area but Dusan Vlahovic sent his effort wide.

Milan had a massive chance to equalise from a corner kick when the ball fell to Theo Hernandez, but he somehow managed to send a shot over the bar from close range.

The game at last opened up and Nicolo Savona's foul on Hernandez gave Milan a penalty kick in the 71st minute which Pulisic sent straight down the middle to beat Michele Di Gregorio.

Milan went ahead four minutes later, through an own goal. Yunus Musah's cross took a wicked deflection off Juve defender Gatti which took the ball past Di Gregorio who had come off his line.

"For our second-half performance, we deserved the final. In the first half I saw a Milan with many doubts, like a few weeks ago," Conceicao told SportMediaset.

"Then we spoke at halftime. We had to understand what we had to do to win and they were really brave."

Deep into added time, Juventus had one last chance to send the game to penalties, but Gatti's volleyed effort from close range went just wide.

The Milan manager embraced his son after the game before celebrating with his players, and Conceicao will now aim to stop Inter from winning their fourth consecutive Super Cup trophy.

"The second half was completely different, but we haven't done anything yet," Conceicao said.

"We have one less day of rest and this is an important factor."