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Isak breaks silence on Newcastle saga: 'The relationship can't continue'

Isak breaks silence on Newcastle saga: 'The relationship can't continue'

Yahoo2 hours ago
NEWCASTLE, England (AP) — Alexander Isak has gone public for the first time about his discontent at Newcastle, saying the club has broken promises and that 'the relationship can't continue.'
The Sweden striker was the subject of a bid from Liverpool during the offseason and has been training away from the Newcastle squad, having indicated he wanted to explore his options.
Isak was not involved in Newcastle's Premier League opener on Saturday, a goalless draw at Aston Villa.
On Tuesday, the 25-year-old Isak, who scored 27 goals in 42 games for the Magpies last season, was named in the PFA team of the season for the Premier League and used a social media post expressing his gratitude to address his situation at Newcastle for the first time.
'I've kept quiet for a long time while others have spoken,' Isak wrote. 'That silence has allowed people to push their own version of events, even though they know it doesn't reflect what was really said and agreed behind closed doors.
'The reality is that promises were made and the club has known my position for a long time. To act now as if these issues are only emerging is misleading. When promises are broken and trust is lost, the relationship can't continue."
Isak finished his post by saying: "That's where things are for me right now — and why change is in the best interests of everyone, not just myself.'
Isak joined Newcastle in 2022 from Spanish team Real Sociedad and has blossomed into one of the most sought-after strikers in the world.
Newcastle manager Eddie Howe said last week there was still a chance Isak could be reintegrated into the Newcastle squad, despite the difficult current situation.
Howe said the offseason has been challenging given the absence of his star striker but that the squad has "really come together in the latter stages of preseason.'
With 23 goals in the Premier League last season, Isak was second in the scoring chart behind Liverpool's Mohamed Salah.
Newcastle has been linked with a move for Brentford striker Yoane Wissa, who also sat out the opening round of games.
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There is no sugar-coating it now. There can be no more claim or counter-claim about what Alexander Isak might be thinking and it blows apart Newcastle United's policy of containment this summer. They have attempted to tough it out, to see through a testing transfer window with the aim of keeping their best player, tip-toeing around the fact that he is refusing to play for them. They have not attacked him. Advertisement In Eddie Howe's words, they have kept the door 'well and truly open.' Isak has shown Newcastle — his team-mates, staff and fans — what he thinks of that door, slamming it in Howe's face and setting fire to the entire building while he is at it. Although he has not yet submitted an official transfer request, he has done the next worst thing. By going public the intention is to force through a move to Liverpool. The result is a ratcheting up of pressure and a further souring of relations before the two clubs play on Monday night. 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Transfers or non transfers are often a case of wearing, dismal, competing agendas and differing versions of the truth, but even if the Sweden international had right on his side, he is way in the wrong in how he has confronted it. What is a long-term contract if it is not a promise, to play for and represent the club who bought you? Surely that is the most basic definition of trust, one which isn't just spoken out loud or with a handshake or a nod, but written down and signed. How does it serve Isak's cause to behave like this? It obliterates his relationship with the fans who have adored him, it shows zero empathy for the players who have fought alongside him in a team which has made spirit its calling card and the lack of respect afforded to Howe is abysmal. When Isak joined Newcastle from Real Sociedad for £63m in 2022, he was viewed as a player of great potential but with flakiness and inconsistency baked in. His spell at Borussia Dortmund had been poor. On Tyneside, he has developed into one of the world's most adept and deadly centre-forwards and although he must take great credit for that transformation, it is Howe's coaching that has brought it out of him. There are ways of doing things, ways of leaving (this applies to Wissa just as much). Newcastle supporters reel back at the notion of losing their best players, because down the decades it has happened too many times — from Paul Gascoigne to Andy Carroll — but if, back in May, Isak had said that having helped deliver a trophy and seal a return to the Champions League, he wished to move on for another challenge, for more money, there might have been a semblance of understanding. Advertisement In the meantime, keep your head down and work hard, give everything for the club which took a calculated gamble on you and which has given you this platform. By all means be angry, but do your job and keep your promise. In November last year, Wor Flags, the fans group, spent thousands of pounds on a display for Isak. His name, in the blue and yellow of the Swedish flag, filled one end of the stadium. At the other, there was a picture of him above the legend 'Alexander the Great.' This week, ahead of the Liverpool game, they have considered what to do, knowing that there is anger towards Isak but also knowing there is a power in words and an even bigger power in team, club, city, a collective. That consideration has not been returned. Maybe all is fair in love and football. Maybe Isak is just being honest in terms of how he feels and maybe he is desperate. But by releasing this statement on top of not playing, he has subverted the whole notion of a team in favour of himself. He has attempted to shut down the exit route which Howe painstakingly left for him. Ahead of a fixture which was always going to be on the toxic side of lively, Isak might just have made things worse for everybody but that includes himself. Because more than ever, more than before, Newcastle insist he is going nowhere. And where would that leave him, aside from alone? Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

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