logo
Gareth Southgate to receive knighthood at Windsor Castle

Gareth Southgate to receive knighthood at Windsor Castle

Glasgow Times5 hours ago

The 54-year-old, who led the Three Lions to consecutive European Championship finals in 2020 and 2024 and the 2018 World Cup semi-finals, was recognised for his services to association football in the New Year Honours.
He is the fourth England boss to be knighted, after Sir Walter Winterbottom, Sir Alf Ramsey and Sir Bobby Robson.
Sir Gareth Southgate quit as England manager after narrowly missing out on winning Euro 2024 (Bradley Collyer/PA)
Sir Gareth resigned from the role after eight years in charge following England's 2-1 final defeat to Spain in July last year, before being succeeded by Thomas Tuchel.
In a social media post following the announcement in December, he joked that he was unlikely to be called 'Sir' by his family.
'It has been the greatest honour to represent my country as both a player and a manager for some 20 years and to be part of the game I love for almost 40. I am incredibly thankful for the amazing people and teams who have supported me both on and off the field,' he said.
'A special thank you to my family for their constant love and encouragement, though I must admit they've made it clear that the titles I hold at home will remain unchanged.'
Sir Gareth won 57 caps for England as a player between 1995 and 2004 and played at three major tournaments, including the 1998 World Cup.
He also had a distinguished 16-year career at club level, operating mainly as a defender for Crystal Palace, Aston Villa and Middlesbrough and making more than 600 appearances.
Gareth Southgate, centre, at Wembley Stadium in 2016 (Adam Davy/PA)
Sir Gareth first joined the Football Association as head of elite development in February 2011 after being sacked as Middlesbrough manager, and went on to coach the under-21s side before his appointment as England manager, initially on a temporary basis, in September 2016.
England reached the semi-finals of the 2018 World Cup, when Sir Gareth turned the waistcoat into a must-have fashion accessory.
The team then ended its 55-year wait for a men's final at Euro 2020, delayed 12 months by Covid, before being agonisingly beaten on penalties by Italy at Wembley.
A late defeat to Spain three years later again saw the side just miss out on national silverware.
Overall, Sir Gareth took charge of 102 matches and is the only manager of the England men's team to lead them to two major tournament finals.
Giving an address at the University of London in March, he spoke about how the belief and resilience gained throughout his career in football had 'picked me up when I've been down, grounded me in success, and given me purpose amidst the noise of public life'.
Sir Gareth was previously made an OBE for his services to football in the 2019 New Year Honours.
Former British & Irish Lions tour manager Gerald Davies will also receive a knighthood at Windsor Castle (David Davies/PA)
British and Irish Lions wing Gerald Davies is also set to be knighted at the investiture ceremony for his services to rugby union and to voluntary and charitable service in Wales.
Davies, 80, played for Wales for 12 years in the 1960s and 1970s and won three Grand Slams, and went on to serve as president of the Welsh Rugby Union between 2019 and 2023.
Reacting to the honour, he told the PA news agency: 'I feel very emotional about it. I am surprised by it. Words are really quite inadequate to describe it.
'It comes out of the blue. I was dumbstruck in many ways, but you don't achieve these things on your own.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Today's rugby news as Gatland makes Wales job admission and crunch meeting called over Lions row
Today's rugby news as Gatland makes Wales job admission and crunch meeting called over Lions row

Wales Online

timean hour ago

  • Wales Online

Today's rugby news as Gatland makes Wales job admission and crunch meeting called over Lions row

Today's rugby news as Gatland makes Wales job admission and crunch meeting called over Lions row The latest rugby news from Wales and around the world Warren Gatland (Image: Getty Images ) Here are the latest rugby headlines on Wednesday, June 25. Gatland: I stopped enjoying being Wales coach Warren Gatland has revealed the coaching job he would like to do next after admitting he stopped enjoying being Wales head coach. ‌ The 61-year-old left his role with Wales midway through this year's Six Nations following a disastrous second spell in charge. Under Gatland, Wales lost 14 Test matches in a row - plummeting outside of the top 10 in the world rankings. ‌ Since leaving the Wales job four months ago, Gatland has yet to find a permanent coaching role elsewhere. Sign up to Inside Welsh rugby on Substack to get exclusive news stories and insight from behind the scenes in Welsh rugby. He will fill his time this summer working as a pundit during the British and Irish Lions tour of Australia. He also recently spend a few weeks with Uruguayan outfit Penarol as they clinched their third Super Rugby Americas title. Article continues below However, as he looks for his next coaching job, he revealed that he would like to help a team out ahead of the 2027 World Cup - having been denied the chance of coaching at a fifth World Cup with Wales. 'One of the things I'm most proud of is what we achieved at World Cups," he told the Rugby Paper. "I've been thinking about doing some consultancy work and then maybe working with a team in the two-three months heading into a World Cup.' Gatland enjoyed a strong record at World Cups with Wales, reaching the knockout stages in each of his four tournaments. ‌ Semi-final appearances in 2011 and 2019 were sandwiched either side of a quarter-final appearance in 2015 after knocking out hosts England in the pool stage. Wales also reached the quarter-final in France in 2023, after Gatland had taken over from Wayne Pivac the year before. However, the pool stage match against Georgia in October that year marked the last time Wales won at Test level - with Gatland paying the price for over a year without an international victory with his mid-Six Nations departure this year. ‌ Wales are still yet to appoint a new head coach, with Cardiff head coach Matt Sherratt once again taking interim charge for the summer tour of Japan. The head coach search has coincided with more off-field issues, with the real prospect of going down to fewer professional teams. 'Those issues have been there for a long time — we were just papering over the cracks," he added. "We kept saying that when the dam burst, it would take a long time to fix it. ‌ 'I'm the first to admit that international rugby is about performance and results but it just felt like there was so much negativity in the media. In the end, I just wasn't enjoying it.' Crunch meeting called over simmering Lions row Rugby Australia chief executive Phil Waugh will hold talks with British and Irish Lions counterpart Ben Calveley in Perth today in a bid to settle a dispute over the availability of Wallabies players for the Lions' 2025 tour matches. The row was sparked earlier this week when Calveley warned that Wallabies head coach Joe Schmidt could be in breach of the tour agreement if he failed to make Test-calibre players available for the provincial fixtures. ‌ The Lions kick off their nine-match Australian tour on Saturday night against the Western Force in Perth. Responding to Calveley's remarks, Schmidt defended his position, insisting Super Rugby teams would be well stocked with Wallabies talent and highlighting the fact that the Lions themselves won't be fielding their full-strength Test squad in every game. According to WA Today, Rugby Australia maintain there is no threat of breaching the agreement, which is framed around the commitment to field 'the best possible' provincial sides featuring players of Wallabies standard. Waugh is expected to reaffirm this commitment in his meeting with Calveley. ‌ Schmidt has already named five Wallabies squad members to feature for the Force this weekend and said around 25 players will be 'quarantined' to prepare for the first Test against Fiji in Newcastle on July 6, ahead of the Lions Test series later in July. Calveley welcomed the strength of the Force line-up but stressed he would continue discussions with Waugh to ensure Wallabies players are also released for matches against Queensland and New South Wales, as stipulated in the agreement. Lions star surprised team-mate is not 'a d***head' By Duncan Bech, PA Rugby Union Correspondent, Perth ‌ Enemies have become friends on the British and Irish Lions tour to Australia after Dan Sheehan revealed that Ireland target Ellis Genge is now a valued team-mate. Previously front-row rivals, Sheehan and Genge have joined forces on the 10-fixture expedition Down Under with both players strong contenders to start the first Test against the Wallabies on July 19. Sheehan's Ireland would hunt down Genge during the Six Nations knowing he is among England's most impactful players, but since coming into camp the Leinster hooker has seen a different side to the fiery prop. ‌ 'It's mad how fast you can go from despising people to hanging around with them and going for coffee!' Sheehan said. 'It's probably just that rugby blokes are good blokes and you can turn on the hatred when you want it. But getting to know people has been one of the most enjoyable parts of the last few weeks. 'Genge would be a good one. He's obviously a passionate, animated player for England and someone who we, as Ireland, would consider as a talisman and someone, in an Irish jersey, we'd need to target. ‌ 'Now he's one person you enjoy having on the team. And he's a funny bloke off the pitch. Everyone loves him. You can see the passion he brings to meetings, on to the pitch and in the scum. 'He's very real and says it how it is. He's definitely someone that surprises you that he's not a d***head.' Craig Casey backed to thrive as stand-in Ireland captain By Ed Elliot, PA ‌ Stand-in Ireland captain Craig Casey possesses 'all the leadership qualities' required to spearhead his country's summer tour, according to interim attack coach Mike Prendergast. With 15 Ireland players involved with the British and Irish Lions and regular skipper Caelan Doris sidelined, Munster scrum-half Casey will lead a youthful squad into next month's Tests against Georgia and Portugal. The 26-year-old, who is also coached by Prendergast at provincial level, has accumulated 18 caps since making his debut against Italy in 2021 but only six of those appearances have come as a starter. ‌ 'He's full of energy, he's a student of the game,' Prendergast said of Casey, according to the Irish Examiner. 'Guys will listen because he's a guy who is incredibly diligent. 'He's all over his stuff and you always want people to follow that. So he hasn't been any different than what he would be down in Munster. Article continues below 'Obviously through the week and through next week that will ramp up from his point of view, I would imagine. 'But he brings a really good calmness to people as well. It's great to have him within the squad and as a captain. He has all the leadership qualities that you ask for from a person.'

Britain's leading trio have more on the line than just pride at Wimbledon
Britain's leading trio have more on the line than just pride at Wimbledon

South Wales Guardian

timean hour ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Britain's leading trio have more on the line than just pride at Wimbledon

While motivation for a home grand slam is usually a given, there is a battle at the top of the game in this country which is driving Britain's main trio forward. And, unlike in previous generations, when competition on the court often resulted in strained relations off it, Katie Boulter, Emma Raducanu and Sonay Kartal are proving that rivalry really can be friendly. A Boultercanu win 😍🫶#HSBCChampionships — LTA (@the_LTA) June 9, 2025 After two years as the British number one, Boulter was replaced at the top of the domestic tree earlier this month by Raducanu, the woman she had previously usurped. Going into Eastbourne this week, Raducanu led Boulter by just a handful of points, while Kartal is the newcomer on the block, with her ranking having climbed almost 250 places in a year to 49. 'It's really nice to see the state of British tennis getting better and better every single year,' said Boulter. 'I feel like I'm extremely happy to see great people doing really good things.' On being overtaken by Raducanu, the 28-year-old added: 'Of course, I personally want to be getting my ranking moving in the right direction. I'm very happy for her to be British number one. But, at the same time, it's going to be fun for me to chase her now.' In contrast to her record-breaking emergence at the top of the sport four years ago, Raducanu has been making steady progress since returning at the start of last year from surgery on both wrists and one ankle. Physical frailties remain, and an ongoing issue with a back spasm prompted her to pull out of last week's tournament in Berlin, ending her hopes of a Wimbledon seeding. Raducanu has shown she can pull off big results, twice beating top-10 players on grass last season, but she has the most points to defend having made the fourth round at Wimbledon last year. 'I think having Katie in front, it was nice for me to have something to chase,' said the 22-year-old, who played doubles with Boulter at Queen's Club. 'Now I'm sure she's going to enjoy that with me. We have a healthy competition between us two. I want to see her do well, she wants to see me do well.' Arriving quickly in the rear-view mirror, meanwhile, is Kartal, who has not looked back since reaching the third round of Wimbledon as a qualifier last year, making it three British women in the top 50. The 23-year-old, a former junior rival of Raducanu, also made an impressive debut in the Billie Jean King Cup this year, and Anne Keothavong's side will head to the finals in Shenzhen in September looking to better last year's semi-final run. 'We're all very close and spend a lot of time together when we're at home training,' said Kartal of the triumvirate. 'To have us three all together, I think maybe sometimes it is in the back of our heads but I think that's a good mentality, it makes us push harder in training since you know you've got two of your team-mates that are trying to do the same thing. Mimi Xu is going to Wimbledon! 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 — Tennis Wales (@tenniswales) June 18, 2025 'I think it's really good for us to have that rivalry and it's really good for the sport as well. I think we're in a really good place for women's tennis.' While there is currently a gap after Kartal, Wimbledon is a chance for another exciting trio to start making names for themselves. Mimi Xu, 17, and 16-year-olds Hannah Klugman and Mika Stojsavljevic have all been given wild cards for the women's singles for the first time after success in the junior game. Boulter believes having sparring partners at an early age can accelerate their progress, saying: 'I don't feel like I necessarily had that many people around me when I was coming through so I'm a little bit jealous of them having people to push them constantly. 'I'm looking forward to watching them and seeing them all grow.'

Ronaldinho held me as a child and Jay-Jay Okocha is my uncle – I'm desperate to follow in their footsteps
Ronaldinho held me as a child and Jay-Jay Okocha is my uncle – I'm desperate to follow in their footsteps

Scottish Sun

timean hour ago

  • Scottish Sun

Ronaldinho held me as a child and Jay-Jay Okocha is my uncle – I'm desperate to follow in their footsteps

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) ALEX IWOBI was held by his uncle's team-mate and Ballon d'Or king Ronaldinho as a child. Now he is hoping to hold aloft a major trophy for his country - and level up his family bragging rights. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 13 Alex Iwobi with his uncle Jay-Jay Okocha Credit: PROVIDED By Alex Iwobi 13 Ronaldinho also held Iwobi as a youngster Credit: AFP 13 The Fulham star hosted his Project 17 charity's P17 Cup on Sunday Credit: Max Cheshire / Project 17 Brazil icon Ronaldinho won the Copa America in 1999 and then played a pivotal role in the Selecao's 2002 World Cup triumph. That success came at the end of the 2001-02 season, his first with Paris Saint-Germain. Also in the PSG squad that year were Mikel Arteta, Mauricio Pochettino, Nicolas Anelka, Gabriel Heinze and Jay-Jay Okocha, Iwobi's maternal uncle. Ronaldinho and Okocha only had one season together in France as the latter joined Bolton in 2002. READ MORE IN FOOTBALL MARC UP FOR DEAL Barcelona ready to grant Rashford dream move as strict conditions are set But as Iwobi - born in May 1996 - has only just found out, he spent time as a youngster hanging out with one of football's great entertainers. The Fulham winger, 29, revealed to SunSport: 'What was mad was that I was in Barcelona and I saw Ronaldinho. 'I said to my mum, 'I see Ronaldinho.' 'And she was like, 'You know that he held you as a baby when he played for PSG with your uncle?' CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS 'She even showed me a picture.' Okocha earned Premier League cult hero status with four years at Bolton, with Iwobi able to watch and take inspiration to one day follow in his footsteps. Ex-Arsenal ace Alex Iwobi releases music video for his second single What's Luv as fans call it 'great retirement plan' The pair are very close and in regular contact - but the uncle tends to avoid giving his nephew advice on his football. But Iwobi may well turn to Okocha ahead of the upcoming Africa Cup of Nations as he desperately tries to become the second member of the family to lift the trophy for Nigeria. Okocha's side came from behind against Zambia in the 1994 to win the second of the Super Eagles' three Afcon crowns. Iwobi and Co suffered heartache last year, beating hosts Ivory Coast in the group stages before losing to the same opponents in the final. Now the focus is on going one step further on January 18 in Rabat, Morocco. Iwobi - whose Project 17 charity hosted their P17 football tournament on Sunday raising awareness for ACLT, a life-saving organisation working to increase the number of blood, stem cell and organ donors from the black community - said: 'Of course, he can't be the only one having bragging rights. I need to have one up against him. 'So hopefully, at Afcon, I can have the opportunity to do so. 'We want to improve and do better than last time The only way to do that is to win it. 13 Iwobi's dad - Chuka - was also a footballer Credit: Provided by Alex Iwobi 13 Nwankwo Kanu visited Iwobi as a baby Credit: Provided by Alex Iwobi 13 Okocha, in action against Diego Maradona, won Afcon in 1994 Credit: Getty 13 Iwobi is desperate to win Afcon with Nigeria Credit: Getty 13 Iwobi was part of the Nigeria team that lost last year's final Credit: AFP 'Last year, we were so close. What hurts the most is that we beat the hosts and winners in our group. 'Hopefully this year will be our year. There's a lot of big names, big countries in the competition. 'We believe we've got the players to do so. It would make leaving the Premier League even sweeter. 'With Uncle, I was a bit upset because he played in Baller League but I wasn't able to go because I was on holiday. 'We are always in touch and laughing. He messages me all the time but hardly about football. It's just normally on my well-being, how I'm doing. 'He treats me with so much respect and I have so much respect for him. 'He expressed himself by playing with a smile on his face so he told me to literally go on the pitch, do the same and enjoy my football.' Some people rest... even when I'm tired, I'll find energy somewhere to go and play football Alex Iwobi Should Nigeria go all the way to the final of Afcon and qualify for the World Cup - they are currently fourth in Group C with four matches to go - Iwobi could in theory play as many as 60 matches for club and country in 2025-26. For those who played in Euro 2024, the current Club World Cup and next summer's World Cup - especially in the extreme heat - there are concerns of burnout, injuries and the quality of football diminishing. But not from Iwobi. Asked if he shares those fears, he simply said: 'No. 'Obviously, some people rest. Since I was a kid, I've always loved playing football. 'Whenever there's a kick-around or a game of two-touch with friends, I go. 'Whenever I can play football, I'm not one to complain. 'Even when I'm tired, I'll find energy somewhere to go and play football. But that's just me. Some people will see it differently.' 13 Ronaldinho went on to win the World Cup and Ballon d'Or Credit: Reuters 13 Okocha earned cult hero status after his time at Bolton Credit: Getty 13 Iwobi has no concerns about burnout Credit: Max Cheshire / Project 17 13 He could play 60 matches next season - and even featured in his own tournament Credit: Max Cheshire / Project 17

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store